The first member of the
Section of Natural Sciences, one of the
three Sections of the Romanian Academic
Societies established in 1867, was chosen in
1870. This was Petrache Poenaru, a truly
remarkable person who had a genuine
Renaissance spirit and was a pioneer in
Romanian science and culture in many
domains. Poenaru, who had studied in Paris
and Vienna and, later, completed his
specialized studies in England, was a
mathematician, physicist, engineer,
inventor, teacher and organizer of the
educational system, as well as a politician,
agronomist, and zootechnologist, founder of
the Philharmonic Society, the Botanical
Gardens and the National Museum of
Antiquities in Bucharest.
Also amongst the pioneers was the physicist
Emanoil Bacaloglu, the first Vice President
of the Scientific Section and then, in 1879,
Poenaru’s successor as President of the
Section of Natural Sciences.
He was the author of the first university
textbooks in mathematics and physics,
through which he normalized scientific
terminologies and nomenclatures in the
Romanian language. To stay within the realm
of physics, we must mention the most
illustrious physicists who were members of
the Romanian Academy. Dragomir Hurmuzescu
invented a sensitive electroscope which was
afterwards used by the discoverers of
radioactivity, and was one of the founders
of Romanian radio broadcasting. Stefan
Procopiu, Professor of Physics at the
University of Iasi, made the theoretical
discovery (independently of Niels Bohr) of
the magneton, that is, the quantum of
magnetism associated to the electron.
He also discovered a phenomenon of
induction, known as the "Procopiu effect",
which many years afterwards would be used in
the United States for the memory devices of
computers. Alexandru Proca published the
fundamental equations of elementary
particles, which Louis de Broglie named
"Proca’s equations".
Closer to our own age, the "golden
generation" of physicists included Badarau,
Hulubei, Titeica, Ciorascu and Agârbiceanu,
all remarkable personalities in the
Academy’s Institutes of Physics and Atomic
Physics. The Institute of Physics was
established and originally directed by Eugen
Badarau, a specialist in plasma physics and
electrical discharges in gases. The
Institute of Atomic Physics was the creation
of Horia Hulubei, who had earned his
doctorate in Paris under the tutelage of
Professor Jean Perrin, and then worked in M.
& Mme. Curie’s laboratory. Hulubei made
important contributions in the fields of
radioactivity, X-ray spectroscopy and
nuclear physics. Serban Titeica was the
founder of the Romanian school of
theoretical physics and made valuable
contributions in statistical physics and
quantum mechanics. Florin Ciorascu, one of
the directors of the Institute of Atomic
Physics, published works on electronics,
physics and nuclear engineering. Ion
Agârbiceanu was the creator of the first
laser in Romania, and was highly regarded in
the field of optics.
In the realm of chemistry, the first name
which must be mentioned is that of Petru
Poni, a professor at the University of Iasi
and two-time President of the Academy. He
initiated the first explorations into the
mineral and petroleum wealth of Romania and
his high-school chemistry textbooks were in
use for over 50 years. Constantin Istrati, a
chemist and physician specialized in organic
chemistry and balneology, was Vice President
and President of the Romanian Academy. He
did for Bucharest what Poni did for Iasi in
terms of organization and pedagogy, as
teacher and minister of education. Nicolae
Teclu, who taught and worked in Vienna, is
renowned for the invention of a
high-performance gas burner known as the
"Teclu burner", still in use today. Gheorghe
Spacu, the best-known Romanian inorganic
chemist, founded new schools of research in
the domains of complex combinations as well
as discovered new methods for the analytic
determination of many metals. His son, Petre
Spacu, continued his father’s tradition both
as Professor at the Bucharest Polytechnic
Institute and as a researcher, primarily in
the field of coordinative chemistry. The
creator of the Romanian school of physical
chemistry was Ilie Murgulescu, Vice
President and President of the Romanian
Academy and founder of the Academy’s
Institute of Physical Chemistry, which now
bears his name. His principal original
contributions were in relation to the
thermodynamic properties of melted salts,
and he authored a monumental six-volume
treatise on physical chemistry. Also among
the most distinguished Romanian chemists is
Costin Nenitescu, the originator of a school
of research in organic chemistry and of the
Academy’s Center for Organic Chemistry,
which currently bears his name. His
principal discoveries include three new
reactions and a hydrocarbon, which was
likewise named after him.
The geonomical sciences, which comprise
geology, geophysics, geography and pedology
(soil science), have been represented in the
Section of Natural Sciences since 1871.
Among its pioneers was Grigore Cobalcescu,
one of the first Romanian geologists and
paleontologists and the author of important
studies regarding the Eastern Carpathian
Mountains and that region’s petroleum
deposits. Sabba Stefanescu primarily studied
tertiary formations and paleontology. His
son, Stefan S. Stefanescu, was a valuable
geophysicist, whose activities were intently
focused on geophysical prospecting through
the use of electromagnetic methods. Gheorghe
Munteanu-Murgoci was a geographer, geologist
and pedologist, who made important
contributions in the fields of mineralogy,
speleology and tectonics. He studied the
natural resources of Romania, especially
salt, petroleum and mineral water deposits.
Ion Simionescu was an eminent geologist,
geographer and paleontologist who served as
Vice President and President of the Academy,
and who was the author of several monumental
works about Moldavia at first, then about
the entire Romanian territory. The
popularization of sciences and the
development of a scientific culture among
the general public were chief among his
preoccupations. Simion Mehedinti is
generally considered to have been the
founder of Romanian geography; he studied
the specific object of geography, its place
among the other sciences, and its laws and
methods, thus becoming the creator of a
veritable philosophy of geography. He was
the author of important works in the areas
of human and economic geography and
ethnographic geography.
In the sciences of agriculture and forestry,
Ion Ionescu de la Brad must be the first to
mention, as founder of modern Romanian
agriculture. He combined research with
social practice, establishing model farms
and participating in the accomplishment of
the agricultural reform of 1864. Gheorghe
Ionescu Sisesti founded the Institute for
Agronomical Research and created new breeds
of cereals with increased fertility.
Among the foreign Honorary Members, we will
only mention those personalities who are
still alive: the chemists and Nobel Prize
laureates Jean-Marie Pierre Lehn and Ilya
Prigogine, and the physicist Alexandr
Prohorov. From among the ranks of scholars
of Romanian origin currently living abroad,
the following scientists are Honorary
Members of the Academy: physicists Radu
Balescu (Belgium), Gabriel Dan Cacuci and
George Comsa (Germany), and chemists
Gheorghe Mateescu and Virgil Percec (United
States) and Alexandre Revcolevschi (France).
At the present, the natural and exact
sciences are grouped into four specialized
sections of the Romanian Academy, these
being the Section of Physical Sciences, the
Section of Chemical Sciences, the Section of
Geonomical Sciencesand the Section of
Agricultural and Sylvicultural Sciences.
Nine institutes and research centers
function under the direction of these
sections:
-
the Center for
Advanced Studies in Physics in
Bucharest, the most recently founded
unit of the Romanian Academy,
established in 1999;
-
the Center for
Organic Chemistry Costin Nenitescu in
Bucharest, involved mostly in the fields
of heterocyclic compounds, theoretical
organic chemistry and nuclear magnetic
resonance;
-
the Institute of
Physical Chemistry Ilie Murgulescu in
Bucharest, principally concerned with
modern methods and instruments in
physical chemistry (catalysis,
electrochemistry, corrosion, etc.);
-
the Institute of
Macromolecular Chemistry Petru Poni in
Iasi, which is mainly involved with
research into high-performance polymers
and their laws, processes and
prospective materials;
-
the Institute of
Chemistry in Timisoara, principally
concerned with colorants and elementary
organic compounds, especially those
which are biologically active;
-
the Laboratory of
Inorganic Chemistry in Timisoara,
dedicated mostly to research into
inorganic compounds with special
properties;
-
the Institute of
Geodynamics Sabba S. Stefanescu in
Bucharest, which studies active
geodynamic systems, in particular the
Vrancea seismogenic zone, and
coordinates a network of seismological
and geophysical instruments;
-
the Institute of
Geography in Bucharest, which has
produced important maps and atlases of
Romania and conducts research into
natural and man-made geographic
modifications;
-
the Center for
Oenological Research in Iasi, dedicated
to the study of Romanian vineyards and
wines, with an emphasis on the methods
of preservation and protection of their
specific characteristics.
Among the most
prestigious periodicals of the four Academy
sections of natural and exact sciences, we
will mention: Romanian Journal of Physics,
Romanian Reports in Physics, Revue Roumaine
de chimie, Romanian Chemical Quarterly
Review, Cellulose Chemistry and Technology,
Revue roumaine de géophysique, and Revue
roumaine de géographie, all of which are
published by the Romanian Academy Publishing
House. |