Agrophysical Research Institute

The Agrophysical Research Institute (AFI, Агрофизический научно-исследовательский институт) is a public research and higher education facility dedicated to the study of agrophysics, agricultural sciences and research on physical problems of agriculture. The Institute was founded in 1932 in Leningrad, USSR (now St. Petersburg, Russia).

Agrophysical Research Institute
Агрофизический научно-исследовательский институт
Formation1932 (1932)
FounderAbram Ioffe
TypeFederal State Scientific Institution
PurposeResearch and education
Location
  • 195220, Saint-Petersburg; Grazhdanskiy pr., 14, Russia
Coordinates60.00056°N 30.38419°E / 60.00056; 30.38419
Director
Viktor Petrovich Yakushev, RAS, 812-534-12-19, vyakushev@agrophys.ru
Science Deputy Director
Yuri Victorovich Khomyakov
Scientific Secretary
Irina Valentinovna Tarasenkova
Deputy Director
Pavel Anatolievich Popov
Parent organization
Russian Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Russian Academy of Sciences
Websitewww.agrophys.ru/Agrophysical-institute

The Institute is part of the Russian Academy of Agricultural Sciences which, in 2013, became part of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Mission

The AFI conducts research and undertakes education to advance understanding of the agrophysics, including physical mechanisms influencing agriculture, and to communicating this understanding for the benefit of society.

History

The AFI was founded in January 1932 by the Soviet Ministry of Agriculture and Food (which was known at the time as the People's Commissariat for Agriculture-Narkomzem) and the Presidium of the Russian Academy of Agricultural Sciences. The Presidium of the Supreme Soviet recognized the AFI's work in the development of agricultural science and application of scientific achievements to agricultural production. In 1982 it awarded the AFI the Order of the Red Banner, and so the AFI became the Order of the Red Banner of Labor Agrophysical Research Institute of the Lenin All-Union Academy of Agricultural Sciences (AFI of Agricultural Sciences).

In 1992, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, a decree by the president of the Russian Federation created a unified Russian Academy of Agricultural Sciences. The AFI was renamed the Order of the Red Banner of Labor Agrophysical Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Agricultural Sciences (RAAS AFI).[1] In 2003, AFI was renamed the State Scientific Institution of the Order of the Red Banner Agrophysical Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Agricultural Sciences (RAAS GNU AFI).[2] In 2014, the Institute was renamed yet again to the Federal State Scientific Institution "Agrophysical Research Institute" (FGBNU AFI).[3]

Throughout its history, the AFI's scientists have highlighted the importance of physical factors in the life of plants and formulated the main task of agronomic physics to be the comprehensive study of these factors. The AFI uses advances in physics, chemistry, mathematics and biology, to solve problems in agriculture and to increase its efficiency. The AFI sees its work today as continuing the scientific traditions of the world-famous physicist Abram Ioffe and the prominent botanist and geneticist Nikolai Vavilov. In fact, the term 'agrophysics' itself was first proposed by Ioffe to cover the relations within the soil environment, and especially those of the mass and energy transfer in the soil–plant–atmosphere system.[4] Ioffe was founder and director of the AFI for 28 years.

References

  1. Agrophysical Research Institute website (in Russian)
  2. Charter approved by the Presidium of the Academy of Agricultural Sciences (Minutes of 11.02.2003, number 2).
  3. Russian Federal Law 27 sentyabrya 2013 №253-FZ "On the Russian Academy of Sciences, the reorganization of the state academies of sciences and Amendments to Certain Legislative Acts of the Russian Federation" by the order number 943 of November 7, 2014.
  4. Gliński, J., J. Horabik, and J. Lipiec (2011). Agrophysics: physics applied to agriculture. Encyclopedia of Agrophysics, Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences Series, pages 35-48, doi:10.1007/978-90-481-3585-1_11.
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