Ludvig Faddeev
Award Name : Lomonosov Gold Medal
Year of Award : 2013
Award for : Mathematics
Location : Leningradskiy, Novosibirsk, Russia
Ludvig Dmitrievich Faddeev (born March 23, 1934) is a Soviet and Russian theoretical physicist and mathematician. He is famous for the discovery of the Faddeev equations in the theory of the quantum mechanical three-body problem and for the development of path integral methods in the quantization of non-abelian gauge field theories, including the introduction (with Victor Popov) of Faddeev–Popov ghosts. He led the Leningrad School, in which he along with many of his students developed the quantum inverse scattering method for studying quantum integrable systems in one space and one time dimension. This work led to the invention of quantum groups by Drinfeld and Jimbo.He received Lomonosov Gold Medal award in 2013 for outstanding contribution to quantum field theory and the theory of elementary particles.