Kapitsa was born in
Cambridge,
England, the son of Anna Alekseevna (Krylova) and
Pyotr Kapitsa. His maternal grandfather was
Aleksey Nikolaevich Krylov,
naval engineer, applied mathematician and memoirist, and the developer of the
insubmersibility technique. He was
baptized while back in Britain, with
Ivan Pavlov serving as his
godparent. During his late life Kapitsa described himself as a "Russian
Orthodox atheist". In later years, his research focus was on historical demography, where he developed a number of mathematical models of the
World System population
hyperbolic growth and the global
demographic transition. His activities in science popularization included hosting the Russian Television program,
Evident, but Incredible, starting in 1973, for which he was awarded
UNESCO's
Kalinga Prize for the Popularization of Science in 1979 and the USSR State Prize in 1980, and editing the Russian edition of
Scientific American from 1982 onwards. He was also active in issues of science and society through his participation in the
Pugwash conferences and the
Club of Rome. In the 1980s he, along with
Carl Sagan, was outspoken about the possibility that international
nuclear war would bring about a
nuclear winter, making presentations in the US Senate in 1983 and the United Nations in 1985. He was an advocate of planetary exploration and served on the advisory council of the
Planetary Society. In 2012, Kapitsa was awarded the first gold medal of the Russian Academy of Sciences for outstanding achievements in the dissemination of scientific knowledge. Kapitsa was a pioneer of scuba diving in the Soviet Union, he shot the first underwater film about the
Sea of Japan, which was shown at international film festivals, in particular in
Cannes, where it was second only to the film by
Jacques Cousteau. In 1992 the
Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSICOP) presented Kapitsa with the
Public Education in Science Award. On 14 August 2012, Kapitsa died at the age of 84 in
Moscow. He is remembered for his role in the popularisation of science and, after forty years of hosting
Evident, but Incredible, holding the record for being the longest serving host of a TV programme. ==Views==