
KONSTANTIN LIKHAREV
Distinguished Professor Emeritus/Research Professor
 Physics and Astronomy
konstantin.likharev@stonybrook.edu | (631)-632-8159, Physics B-135 
Teaching Website | Personal Website
Curriculum Vitae. (Last updated: 2024 Aug 30)
Biography 
Konstantin K. Likharev received the Candidate (Ph.D.) degree in Physics from the Lomonosov
                              Moscow State University, Russia in 1969, and the habilitation degree of Doctor of
                              Sciences from the Higher Attestation Committee of the U.S.S.R. in 1979. From 1969
                              to 1988 Dr. Likharev was a Staff Scientist of Moscow State University, and from 1989
                              to 1991 the Head of the Laboratory for Cryoelectronics of that university. In 1991
                              he assumed a Professorship at Stony Brook University (Distinguished Professor 2002-2017,
                              John Toll Professor 2017-2020, Distinguished Professor Emeritus since September 2020).
                              During his research career, Dr. Likharev worked in the fields of nonlinear classical
                              and dissipative quantum dynamics, and solid-state physics and electronics, notably
                              including superconductor electronics and nanoelectronics. Dr. Likharev is an author
                              of more than 350 publications, including 80+ review papers and book chapters, 2 monographs,
                              8 textbooks, and several patents. Dr. Likharev is a Fellow of the APS and the IEEE.
Research Statement
My most recent research efforts were focused on nanoelectronic implementation of high-performance
                           neuromorphic networks.
                                 ESSENTIAL GRADUATE PHYSICSMy open-access series of lecture notes and problems on four core physics courses (Classical Mechanics, Classical Electrodynamics, Quantum Mechanics, and Statistical Mechanics), now with exercise problem solutions, is becoming more and more popular among students from 150+ countries, with more than 30,000 file downloads during the last 12 months – see the graphics below. 
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