In 1952-1955 he was working with Nobel Laureate Nikolay Semyonov toward his Ph.D. at the Academy of Sciences in Moscow.
Nikolay Nekrasov | Nikolay Atanasov | Yulian Semyonov | Nikolay Rumyantsev | Nikolay Pirogov | Nikolay Bogolyubov | Nikolay Trusov | Nikolay Timofeev-Ressovsky | Nikolay Strunnikov | Nikolay Semyonov | Nikolay Muravyov-Amursky | Nikolay Kozlov | Nikolay Kostomarov | Nikolay Haytov | Nikolay Gnedich | Nikolay Antonov | Andrey Semyonov-Tyan-Shansky | Vladimir Magomedovich Semyonov | Nikolay Yegorovich Makarov | Nikolay Vasilyevich Komarov | Nikolay Smolensky | Nikolay Shkot | Nikolay Raevsky (died 1843) | Nikolay Petrovich Fyodorov | Nikolay Okhlopkov | Nikolay Muravyov | Nikolay Mamonov | Nikolay Kruglov, Jr. | Nikolay Krestinsky | Nikolay Kolosovsky |
In 1951, the famous Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology or Fiztekh, moved to Dolgoprudny, and a construction of its present campus started in the southern part of the town, inspired by the Nobel Prize winners Pyotr Kapitsa, Lev Landau, and Nikolay Semyonov.