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JULIETTA MURADYAN PASSED AWAY

We regret to inform you that Juliet Gevorg Muradyan, Associate Professor of the Chair of Materials Resistance, PhD in Physical and Mathematical Sciences, and long-time employee of the University, passed away at the age of 88.

Juliet Gevorg Muradyan devoted her professional activities to the University and the development of education for about 64 years. She was one of those individuals whose entire scientific and pedagogical path was inseparable from the idea of ​​serving science and education. Having graduated from the Chair of Mechanics of the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics of Yerevan State University in 1959, she began her working life in the same year and continued to work in the scientific and academic field until the last years of her life.

Her professional path was closely connected with the field of Mechanics and Materials Resistance. For decades, she has taught with great dedication, participated in the improvement of academic programmes, contributed to the improvement of the quality of engineering education, and passed on her knowledge and experience to many generations of students.

The main direction of Julietta Muradyan’s scientific interests was the mechanics of deformable solids, in particular, the study of plane problems of the theory of elasticity for inhomogeneous and anisotropic materials. Her research in this area was reflected in scientific articles and methodological works, which made an important contribution to both the organization of the educational process and the development of scientific research activities.

Having defended her thesis in 1987, she continued her activities as an Associate Professor, always adhering to high professional standards and pedagogical responsibility.

The fact that Julietta Gevorg Muradyan connected her working and creative life with the same educational institution for nearly six decades is especially appreciated, becoming a living participant in the establishment and continuous development of the University’s scientific and educational environment.

Her name will remain in the history of the University as a dedicated scientist, a demanding and caring lecturer, and a dignified person, whose professional legacy and human example continue to inspire colleagues and students today.

11.02.26