Organization:Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute
TsAGI's Engineering building (centre) and stall-spin testing aerodynamic tube (left, built 1941) | |
Native name | Центра́льный аэрогидродинами́ческий институ́т имени профессора Н. Е. Жуковского |
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Type | federal state unitary enterprise |
Industry | aerospace |
Founded | 1918 |
Founder | Nikolay Zhukovsky |
Headquarters | Zhukovsky , Russia |
Area served | worldwide |
Key people |
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Owner | Russia |
Number of employees | 4392 (2013) |
Website | tsagi |
The Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute (also (Zhukovsky) Central Institute of Aerodynamics, Russian: Центра́льный аэрогидродинами́ческий институ́т, ЦАГИ, romanized: Tsentral'nyy Aerogidrodinamicheskiy Institut, TsAGI) was founded in Moscow by Russian aviation pioneer Nikolai Yegorovich Zhukovsky on December 1, 1918.
History
From 1925 and up to the 1930s, TsAGI developed and hosted Tupolev's AGOS (Aviatziya, Gidroaviatziya i Opytnoye Stroitelstvo, the "Aviation, Hydroaviation, and Experimental Construction"), the first aircraft design bureau in Soviet Union, and at the time the main one.[1] In 1930, two other major aircraft design bureaus in the country were the Ilyushin's TsKB (Tsentralnoye Konstruksionnoye Byuro means "Central Design Bureau") and an independent, short-lived Kalinin's team in Kharkiv.[1]
In 1935 TsAGI was partly relocated to the former dacha settlement Otdykh (literally, "Relaxation") converted to the new urban-type settlement Stakhanovo. It was named after Alexey Stakhanov, a famous Soviet miner. On April 23, 1947, the settlement was granted town status and renamed to Zhukovsky. The Moscow branch of the institute is known Moscow complex of TsAGI. In 1965 in Zhukovsky a Department of Aeromechanics and Flight Engineering of MIPT was established with support of TsAGI's research and knowledge base to educate specialists for aerospace industry.
Among TsAGI's developments are the participation in the rocket Energia and the Space Shuttle Buran projects.
Heads of the institute
- 1918–1921: N. Y. Zhukovsky
- 1921–1931: S. A. Chaplygin
- 1932–1937: N. M. Kharlamov
- 1938–1939: M. N. Shulzhenko
- 1940–1941: I. F. Petrov (ru)
- 1941–1950: S. N. Shishkin
- 1950–1960: A. I. Makarevsky
- 1960–1967: V. M. Myasishchev
- 1967–1989: G. P. Swischjov (ru)
- 1989–1995: G I. Zagaynov
- 1995–1998: V. Ja. Neuland
- 1998–2006: V. G. Dmitriyev
- 2006–2007: V. A. Kargopoltsev
- 2007–2009: S. L. Chernyshev (ru)
- 2009–2015: B. S. Aljoshin
- 2015–2018: S. L. Chernyshev
- August 2018–present: K. I. Sypalo
Famous scientist (partial list)
- Sergey Chaplygin
- Anatoly Dorodnitsyn
- Mstislav Keldysh
- Sergei Korolev
- Sergey Khristianovich
- Yuri Ryzhov
- Leonid Shkadov
- Max Taitz
- Vladimir Vetchinkin
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Albrecht, Ulrich; Nikutta, Randolph (October 1993). The Soviet armaments industry. pp. 15–16. ISBN 978-3-7186-5313-3. https://books.google.com/books?id=Ygg66pf52OsC&pg=PA16.
External links
- Historical video to celebrate first 100 years of TsAGI
- TsAGI in the Buran programme
- TsAGI on Google Maps
[ ⚑ ] 55°35′36″N 38°06′24″E / 55.59333°N 38.10667°E
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute.
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