Kupervasser Oleg Yurjevich, physicist, who currently works as a lecturer in Ariel University (Israel), was born on February 01, 1966, in Moscow. He obtained his MSc at the Moscow Institute of Radioengineering, Electronics and Automation in 1989 and his PhD at Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, in 1999. He has a Certification in Bioinformatics (ATLAS College, 2002). He worked as a scientist for Technion, in Haifa, Israel, between 2005 and 2008 and as a Consultant of Rafael, Haifa, between 2005 and 2008. He worked at Moscow State University between 2008 and 2010. He was the Algorithm Group Leader of Transas Group of Companies in Moscow for …
Kupervasser Oleg Yurjevich, physicist, who currently works as a lecturer in Ariel University (Israel), was born on February 01, 1966, in Moscow. He obtained his MSc at the Moscow Institute of Radioengineering, Electronics and Automation in 1989 and his PhD at Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, in 1999. He has a Certification in Bioinformatics (ATLAS College, 2002). He worked as a scientist for Technion, in Haifa, Israel, between 2005 and 2008 and as a Consultant of Rafael, Haifa, between 2005 and 2008. He worked at Moscow State University between 2008 and 2010. He was the Algorithm Group Leader of Transas Group of Companies in Moscow for the years 2011–2012, and he worked at LG Technology Center of Moscow in 2011. He was also owner of Transist Video LLC, Skolkovo, Moscow in 2012, The Eastern Research and Development Center (under the auspices of Ariel University) in Israel in 2016. He has been awarded a title of involvement specialist in China (Hangzhou) by Party Committee of the Communist Party of China of Hangzhou, the Skolkovo Project Participator Association in 2012 and was included in the new 30th Pearl Anniversary Edition of “Marquis Who's Who in the World” in 2013. His achievements are the resolution of the basic paradoxes of physics; the pole solution in the formation of Saffman–Taylor fingers and flame front propagation; a patent for a continuum solvent model, the DISOLV program–algorithm development, implementation and validation; research in visual–navigation algorithms; and the design of a server for the decomposition of a protein structure on a set of closed loops. His interests include human history and futurology.