FOTIADI 110 



The motion of finite masses in the theory of relativity. Zhur. 

 Ekspt'l. i Teoret. Fiz., 1939, 9, #4, p. 375. 

 and A. P. Kotel'nikov . Some Applications of Lobachevsky's 

 ideas in Mechanics and Physics. Moscow- Leningrad: 1950. 

 Zur Quantelektrodynamik. Physikalische Zeitschrift der 

 Sowjetunion (Charkow), 1934, 6, #5, p. 425. 

 Investigations in the Quantum Field Theory. Leningrad: 

 1957. 



Theory of Space, Time and Gravitation. Moscow, 1955 and 

 1961. London, 1959 and 1963. 



Criticism of an attempt to disprove the uncertainty relation- 

 ship between time and energy. Zhur. Ekspt'l. i Teoret. Fiz. 

 42, #4, 1135-39 (1962). 

 Office: Physical Institute 



University of Leningrad 



Leningrad 164, USSR 

 Residence: Vassili Ostrov, 12th line 37, apt. 6 



Leningrad 178, USSR 



FOTIADI, EPAMINQND EPAMINQNDQVICH (Geophysicist) 

 E. E. Fotiadi was born January 23, 1907. He graduated 

 from Leningrad University in 1933. From 1927 to 1939, he 

 worked in the Emba Oil Trust, and in 1946 at the Scientific Re- 

 search Institute of Geophysics. In 1951 he worked at the AU- 

 Union Scientific Institute of Geophysical Methods for Prospect- 

 ing. Since 1958, he has been working at the U.S.S.R. Academy 

 of Sciences Institute of Geology and Geophysics of the Siberian 

 Branch where he is Deputy Director. He has been a member 

 of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union since 1945. In 1958 

 he was elected to the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences as a Corre- 

 sponding Member. 



Fotiadi has worked on geophysical methods of prospecting 

 for oil deposits, and the geological explanation of gravity and 

 magnetic anomalies. He is the author of manuals and in- 

 structions for gravimetric and topogeodesic work. He has com- 

 piled summaries on geophysical data on the Southern part of 

 Emba territory, and has studied the structure of crystalline 

 base and associated sedimentary cover of the Russian platform. 

 Bibliography: 



and others. Course of Gravitational Prospecting. Moscow- 

 Leningrad: 1941. 



