In 1902 Lomonosov became a professor at the
Kiev Polytechnic Institute. Later, with a group of 100 students he was sent to inspect the
Chinese Eastern Railways (CER) for the purpose of their reconstruction. During the trip, he visited numerous cities of the
Far East including
Irkutsk,
Harbin,
Port Arthur,
Vladivostok, as well as some cities in Japan (
Nagasaki) and China (
Beijing). The results of the expedition were partly reported in a meeting with the Minister of Finances
Sergei Witte, with whom Lomonosov openly talked about theft and corruption at the CER. This meeting reinforced the image of Lomonosov as an honest and uncompromising public official. During his stay at Kyiv Polytechnic Institute, Lomonosov joined the rapidly growing socialist movement and became an avid Marxist. He however, did not join the Communist Party which hindered many of his further appointments after the
October Revolution. As inspector at the Russian Railways, Lomonosov often traveled abroad to get acquainted with experience of the organization of transport in other countries. In November 1902 he attended the International Congress of Railway Transport Engineers, held in Vienna, where he became acquainted with the work of Austrian and Hungarian engineers. In the spring of 1903 he also visited Italy, Switzerland, France and Spain. In April 1905 Lomonosov defended his
habilitation on the dynamics of locomotives and became the youngest full professor of the institute. In December 1907 he was appointed head of the locomotive section of St. Catherine's railroads. During this period, he became convinced of the futility of steam engines and concluded that the future belongs to the more fuel-efficient locomotives with internal combustion engines. In 1909 he started to design the engine-oil tankers with a friction-based transmission (from the diesel engine to the driving axle). In July 1914 the Ministry of Railways has approved his design and allocated funds for the production of 2 locomotives, but the project was halted by World War I. During these years, Lomonosov became a recognized authority in the field of locomotive equipment in Russia and headed a department at the Kyiv Polytechnic Institute. He had launched the theory of traction locomotives and developed the scientific basis for the exploitation of railways that was summarized in 2 books published in 1912: "Traction calculation and application of graphic methods to them", and "Scientific problems of railway operation ". Together with his students, in 1908 Lomonosov formed the first research institute devoted to locomotives – "The office of the experimentation over the types of engines", which was converted after the October Revolution to the "Experimental Institute of Communications". ==In Soviet Russia==