Robert Dautray
Born
Ignace Robert Kouchelevitz

(1928-02-01)1 February 1928
Paris, France
Died20 August 2023(2023-08-20) (aged 95)
Paris, France
Alma materÉcole nationale des arts et métiers
École polytechnique
Scientific career
FieldsNuclear energy
InstitutionsFrench Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission

Robert Dautray (1 February 1928 – 20 August 2023) was a French engineer, scientific director of the French Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique (CEA) and High Commissioner for Atomic Energy. He was a member of the French Academy of Sciences, section mechanical and computer sciences,[1] and of the French Academy of Technology.[2]

Biography

Ignace Robert Kouchelevitz was born on 1 February 1928,[3] in the 10th arrondissement of Paris, France, to a Belarusian father who came to France in 1905 and a Ukrainian mother who came to France in 1902, he escaped the Holocaust during the Second World War.

After the war, he prepared as a free candidate for the entrance exam to the École nationale des arts et métiers. He was awarded the top promotion in the promotion that entered Paris in 1945 (Pa45 promotion). On the advice of his professors, he passed the École polytechnique exam in 1949, where he graduated as a major, then joined the CEA Saclay in the mathematical physics department headed by Jacques Yvon [fr], Jules Horowitz, Albert Messiah, Anatole Abragam, Claude Bloch, and others.

Scientific Director of the CEA, he contributes to the development of atomic applications after scientific work on isotopic regulation and the construction of experimental reactors (Grenoble high flux reactor). He is working on the process of separating uranium isotopes. He is the director of the Phébus large laser program. Robert Dautray was High Commissioner for Atomic Energy from 1993 to 1998.

Robert Dautray recounted his memories, especially his difficult youth, in his book of Memoirs, published in 2007.[4] Chairman of the Scientific Programs Committee of the National Space Center (CNES).

Dautray also addressed the problems of climate change (radiative transfer: greenhouse effect.[5]

Dautray died in Paris on 20 August 2023, at the age of 95.[6]

Scientific work

Almost all of Robert Dautray's professional activity has been devoted to the physical sciences contributing to nuclear energy, both in reactor physics (reactor control and command, breeder reactor physics, Pegasus research reactors, high-flow reactors from the Von Laue Langevin Institute, etc.) and in the physics of reactors.) and upstream of the fuel cycle (control command of the uranium isotope separation plant) as well as downstream of this cycle (formation and physics of plutonium and other actinides isotopes, descendants of fission products, activated structure nuclei, etc.).

In addition, Robert Dautray participated in the establishment of the basic physical sciences for the sciences of high densities and powers of materials and electromagnetic radiation (state equations, opacity, radiative transfer, discontinuities of high velocity flows, interface instabilities, laser implosions, thermonuclear reactions, non-linear neutronics of high velocity media of nuclei making the neutron transport and plasma physics equations non-linear, etc.).

Robert Dautray contributed to the development of the mathematical methods necessary to model these phenomena. Robert Dautray co-chaired with the EDF Studies and Research Department the CEA/EDF digital analysis summer schools.

There was a controversy over the attribution to Dautray of the paternity of the French H-bomb. Experts dispute it, highlighting Michel Carayol [fr]'s work.[7][8][9]

Selected works

Scientific works, co-authored by Dautray, non-exhaustive list:

Participation in scientific works

Distinctions

References

  1. ^ "Académie des sciences".
  2. ^ "Académie des technologies".
  3. ^ Who's who in France 2008, Levallois-Perret, Jacques Lafitte, 2007, 39e éd. (ISBN 978-2-85784-048-0), p. 670.
  4. ^ Robert Dautray, Mémoires, du Vel d'Hiv à la bombe H, Paris, Odile Jacob, 2007
  5. ^ Robert Dautray et Jacques Lesourne, L'humanité face au changement climatique, Paris, Odile Jacob, 2009
  6. ^ "Robert Dautray | In memoriam | Membres | Nous connaître". www.academie-sciences.fr. Retrieved 2024-01-16.
  7. ^ Billaud, Pierre (1994). La véridique histoire de la bombe H française (in French). La Pensée universelle.
  8. ^ Barsamian, Ara; Billaud, Pierre (2011). "La bombe H, la vérité". www.bombehlaverite.com (in French). Retrieved 2024-01-16.
  9. ^ RST (2009-05-20). "Robert Dautray". ecodemystificateur.blog.free.fr (in French). Retrieved 2024-01-16.
  10. ^ JORF n°84 du 8 avril 2007 page 6582, NOR: PREX0710140D