Pavle Savić


Pavle Savić was a Serbian physicist and chemist.

Biography

Born in Thessaloniki, Greece, at a time of much upheaval in the Balkans still not fully free of Ottoman or Austrian control, Savić would go on to graduate with a degree in physical chemistry from the University of Belgrade in 1932. In 1939, he received a 6-month scholarship from the Académie française to study at the Radium Institute, Paris, and he would spend 4 years in France. In the years 1937 and 1938, he worked with Irène Joliot-Curie and Frédéric Joliot-Curie on interactions of neutrons in chemical physics of heavy elements. This turned out to be an important step in the discovery of nuclear fission.Together with Irène Joliot-Curie, Savić was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Physics.
At the start of World War II, Savić left France and returned to Yugoslavia to fight for the liberation of his homeland as a partisan against German occupation. Apparently Savić was in the Soviet Union during World War II.
After the war he was one of the primary promoters of the idea of constructing the Vinča Nuclear Institute in Vinča.He was the principal of the Vinča Institute between 1960–1961.In 1966 he assumed an academic post at his alma mater, the University of Belgrade, as a professor in the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Department of Physical Chemistry and Department of Physics, now Faculty of Physics. In 1981, he took his retirement.
He was also the president of Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts from 1971 to 1981, the year he retired.
He published his last scientific paper a few months before his death, at the age of 85, in Belgrade.