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Zinaida Yershova

1904 births1995 deaths20th-century Russian women scientistsBurials at Vagankovo CemeteryMoscow State University alumni
Nuclear weapons program of the Soviet Union peoplePeople from MoscowRecipients of the Order of the Red Banner of LabourRecipients of the Stalin PrizeRussian expatriates in FranceRussian expatriates in KazakhstanRussian expatriates in KyrgyzstanRussian women chemistsScientists from MoscowSoviet space program personnelSoviet women chemistsUse Hiberno-English from November 2018Women space scientists

Zinaida Vasilyevna Yershova (Russian: Зинаида Васильевна Ершова; 23 October 1904 — 25 April 1995), D.N., was a Russian chemist who spent her entire career in radioactive applications in the former Soviet program of nuclear weapons, later in the space program.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Zinaida Yershova (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Zinaida Yershova
Звенигородское шоссе, Moscow Presnensky District

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N 55.768055555556 ° E 37.548333333333 °
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Анатолий Алексеевич Солоницын

Звенигородское шоссе
123182 Moscow, Presnensky District
Moscow, Russia
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Vystavochnaya
Vystavochnaya

Vystavochnaya (Russian: Выставочная) is a station on the Filyovskaya Line of the Moscow Metro. It was opened on 10 September 2005, and was called Delovoy Tsentr (Russian: Деловой центр, "Business Centre") before 1 June 2009.The high-tech design, which was the work of architects Aleksandr Vigdorov, Leonid Borzenkov, and Olga Farstova, is a radical departure from previous Metro stations. The station is built on two levels, with the platform on the lower level. The upper level consists of two walkways which span the length of the platform. One walkway, the larger one, is enclosed in glass and sweeps from one side of the station to the other and back in a large arc. The other walkway is open and straight, running directly above the inbound track. The D-shaped area between the two walkways extends to the full height of the station. The two rows of pillars span both levels and are clad in stainless steel. The walls are faced with white plastic panels and brown marble, and Alucobond was used for the ceiling. The entrance to the station is built into the lower level of Moscow International Business Center (Moscow-City), near the north bank of the Moskva River, also serving access to Moscow Expocenter. In the upper level of the station before you go through the turn styles can be found the public museum to the Moscow Metro. It is free to enter and has photos and displays of memorabilia and artwork spanning the ages. There is also a train cab simulator.