Great Indian Scientists who Change the Modern Scientific world with their Great Knowledge
Science
and Scientists were the major catalytic force for advancement of
Civilized society. Throughtout the age Scientists were work and
utilized their knowledge silently for the betterment of society and
technology.In India from the ancient time our scientists like Aryabhatta
(Ancient Astronomy, Mathematecian) , Charak (Medicine) , Shrusruta
(Great ancient doctor and sergeon) and lots of unknown scientists
enhance and uplift Hindu Vedic Civilization upto its highest
level.Takshshila and Nalanda were the most famous and Prestigious
ancient university around the ancient world.
After
the the advent of Various invaders Like Saka, Huns, Pathan , Mughals,
Portugese,French and Lastly British who invade and caputured and
exploit Indian economy ,richness,knowledge for their own Country`s
betterment. During this unpleasent and turmoiled time Indian Scientific
work and knowledge scattered and destroyed which cause gradual
degradation of Indian Scientific advancement and socielty.
At the same time Europian scientific community rule and enrich their knowledge throughout the world upto its highest level.
Again
during the last phase of the British rule with the inclusion of
English Education system in Indian College and University cause great
influx of modern scientific knowledge from the Europian countrys .
This
incident was the turning point of the Indian Scientific community. From
that period of time Indian Scientists again gradually return to the
right tract of Scientific advancement which is continue till today 64
years after Indian Indipendence from British Raj.
Here
I will discuss about some renowned Indian Scientists and their works
which enrich and uphold our Modern Indian civilization to the world.
I will discuss about Indian Scientists were from Later Phase of British Rai to till today in continuous order.
Lists Of Indian Scientists in Continuous Order:-
1) Acharya Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose,
(Bengali : 30 November 1858 – 23 November 1937) was a Bengali polymath:
a physicist, biologist, botanist, archaeologist, as well as an early
writer of science fiction. He pioneered the investigation of radio and
microwave optics, made very significant contributions to plant science,
and laid the foundations of experimental science in the Indian
subcontinent. named him one of the fathers of radio science. He is also
considered the father of Bengali science fiction. He was the first
person from the Indian subcontinent to receive a US patent, in 1904.
Born
during the British Raj, Bose graduated from St. Xavier's College,
Calcutta. He then went to the University of London to study medicine,
but could not pursue studies in medicine due to health problems.
Instead, he conducted his research with the Nobel Laureate Lord Rayleigh
at Cambridge and returned to India. He then joined the Presidency
College of University of Calcutta as a Professor of Physics. There,
despite racial discrimination and a lack of funding and equipment, Bose
carried on his scientific research. He made remarkable progress in his
research of remote wireless signaling and was the first to use
semiconductor junctions to detect radio signals. However, instead of
trying to gain commercial benefit from this invention Bose made his
inventions public in order to allow others to further develop his
research.
Bose
subsequently made a number of pioneering discoveries in plant
physiology. He used his own invention, the crescograph, to measure plant
response to various stimuli, and thereby scientifically proved
parallelism between animal and plant tissues. Although Bose filed for a
patent for one of his inventions due to peer pressure, his reluctance to
any form of patenting was well known.
He has been recognised for his many contributions to modern science.
2) Prafulla chandra Prafulla Chandra Ray (
Bengali :2 August 1861 – 16 June 1944) was a Indian academician, a
chemist and entrepreneur. He was the founder of Bengal Chemicals &
Pharmaceuticals, India's first pharmaceutical company. He is the author
of A History of Hindu Chemistry from the Earliest Times to the Middle of
Sixteenth Century (1902).
Prafulla
Chandra returned to India in 1889 and joined Presidency College,
Calcutta as Assistant Professor of Chemistry. Though at that time, the
Chemistry department of Presidency College did not boast of any
well-equipped world standard laboratory, but a lot of original chemical
experimentation occurred there.
In
1896, he published a paper on preparation of a new stable chemical
compound: Mercurous nitrite. This work made way for a large number of
investigative papers on nitrites and hyponitrites of different metals,
and on nitrites of ammonia and organic amines. He started a new Indian
School of Chemistry in 1924.
3) Satyendra Nath Bose (Bengali
; 1 January 1894 – 4 February 1974) was an Indian Bengali mathematician
and physicist noted for his collaboration with Albert Einstein in
developing a theory regarding the gaslike qualities of electromagnetic
radiation. He is best known for his work on quantum mechanics in the
early 1920s, providing the foundation for Bose–Einstein statistics and
the theory of the Bose–Einstein condensate. He is honoured as the
namesake of the boson.He was awarded India's second highest civilian
award, the Padma Vibhushan in 1954 by the Government of India.
Although
more than one Nobel Prize was awarded for research related to the
concepts of the boson, Bose–Einstein statistics and Bose–Einstein
condensate—the latest being the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics, which was
given for advancing the theory of Bose–Einstein condensates—Bose himself
was not awarded the Nobel Prize. Among his other talents, Bose spoke
several languages and could also play the esraj, a musical instrument
similar to a violin.
In his book, The Scientific Edge, the noted physicist Jayant Narlikar observed:
“ S.
N. Bose’s work on particle statistics (c. 1922), which clarified the
behaviour of photons (the particles of light in an enclosure) and opened
the door to new ideas on statistics of Microsystems that obey the rules
of quantum theory, was one of the top ten achievements of 20th century
Indian science and could be considered in the Nobel Prize class.
4) Meghnad Saha (Bengali)
(6 October 1893 – 16 February 1956) was an Indian astrophysicist best
known for his development of the Saha equation, used to describe
chemical and physical conditions in stars.
In
1911 he ranked third in the ISC exam. In the same year Saha came to
Calcutta and joined the Presidency College to study for the B.Sc. degree
in Applied Mathematics. Presidency College by then had spawned numerous
luminaries, and Saha found himself surrounded by many: Satyendra Nath
Bose, Jnan Ghosh, N.R. Sen, and J. N. Mukherjee were his classmates,
P.C. Mahalanobis was one year his senior, N. R. Dhar was senior by two
years, while Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose was one year his junior. His
teachers included Jagadish Chandra Bose in physics, Prafulla Chandra Roy
in chemistry, D.N. Mallik and C. E. Cullis in mathematics. After B.Sc.
came M.Sc. and once again S.N. Bose was his classmate. In M.Sc. and
B.Sc. Saha secured the second rank, while Bose stood first, while in the
M.sc. exam both stood first, Bose in Pure Mathematics and Saha in
Applied Mathematics.
Saha
said "It seems to be the general opinion of the astrophysicists that
there is some sort of a repulsive force on the Sun which neutralizes the
greater part of gravity. " In a short paper entitled On
Radiation-Pressure and the Quantum Theory" contributed in 1919 to the
Astrophysical Journal, Saha showed that what countered gravity was
selective radiation pressure.
Saha
now realized that in order to delve deeply into the matter, he should
go to Europe and consult with other eminent astrophysicists to aid him
in his research. He got hold of two books on astronomy by Agnes Clerke,
which furthered his interest in the subject. But he was short of money,
so he had to compete for studentships and fellowships. Among other
things, the competition required him to submit a technical essay and he
wrote one entitled On the Harvard Classification of Stellar Spectra.
Saha's essay was so much superior to the other entries that both the
Premchand Roychand Studentship and the Guru Prasanna Ghosh Fellowship
easily came to him.With some guarantee for money in pocket, he set sail
for Europe in September 1919. After reaching London Saha realized that
he was short of money of again, and something had to be done quickly
both on the financial side and the scientific as well. Fortunately he
ran into an ex-classmate who was then at the Imperial College. He
acquainted Saha with Prof.A.Fowler, who himself was a famous stellar
astrophysicist and a former assistant to Lockyer. Fowler was impressed
by his prize-winning essay and permitted him to work in his lab under
his guidance. Under his guidance, Saha rewrote the essay, giving it a
new title: On a Physical Theory of Stellar Spectra.Fowler communicated
this paper to the Royal Society, which promptly published it in its
proceedings; the paper attracted wide attention in America. This thesis
won him the Griffith Prize of the Calcutta University in 1920." Saha
later reminisced:
I
took about four months in rewriting the paper, and all the time I had
the advantage of Professor Fowler's criticism, and access to his
unrivalled stock of knowledge of spectroscopy and astrophysics. Though
the main ideas and working of the paper remained unchanged, the
substance matter was greatly improved on account of Fowler's kindness in
placing at my disposal fresh data, and offering criticism whenever I
went a little astray out of mere enthusiasm.
Commenting
on the relationship, astronomer Dingle once observed: "On thinking back
to the relation which existed between Saha and Fowler, I am tempted to
compare it with that between Maxwell and Faraday." In addition to this
paper he also published three other papers on his astrophysical research
in the first six months of 1920 in the Philosophical Magazine viz.
Ionisation of the Solar Chromosphere (March 4, 1920), On Elements in the
Sun (22 May 1920) and On the Problems of Temperature-Radiation of Gases
(25 May 1920). In these papers Saha laid the foundation of what later
came to be known as the Theory of Thermal Ionisation. The absorption
lines of stellar spectra differ widely, with some stars showing
virtually nothing but hydrogen and helium lines while others show vast
numbers of lines of different metals. Saha's great insight was to see
that all these spectral lines could be represented as the result of
ionization. He saw that the degree of ionization, i.e., the number of
electrons stripped away from the nucleus, would depend primarily on
temperature. As the temperature increases, so does the proportion of
ionized atoms. The remaining neutral atoms will thus produce only weak
absorption lines that, when the temperature gets high enough, will
disappear entirely. But the singly, doubly, and even triply ionized
atoms will absorb at different sets of wavelengths, and different sets
of lines will appear in stellar spectra, becoming stronger as the
proportions of these ions grow.He also formulated what is known as the
Saha equation. This equation is one of the basic tools for
interpretation of the spectra of stars in astrophysics. By studying the
spectra of various stars, one can find their temperature and from that,
using Saha's equation, determine the ionisation state of the various
elements making up the star.
As
mentioned earlier, Saha's interest in nuclear physics was aroused
during his foreign trip in 1936-37. Impressed particularly by what he
saw at Berkeley, he sent in 1938 his student B.D.Nag Chowdhary to
Berkeley to study and work under Lawrence, and learn all he could about
the cyclotron. Saha was keen to have a cyclotron in the Calcutta
University and used his influence with Nehru to persuade the Tatas to
give him a grant to build one. The Tatas obliged with Rs. 60,000/- which
wasn't however sufficient to construct a cyclotron. In 1941 Nag
Chowdhary returned, and thanks to his efforts in America, a consignment
of cyclotron parts (mainly for making the magnet) soon followed.
Meanwhile America entered the war and the ship carrying the next batch
of equipments (mainly vacuum pumps) was sunk by the Japanese. This was
major setback, and now there was no hope of getting any parts from
America; anyway, American scientists, Lawrence included, had drifted
towards the Manhattan Project. The parts now all had to be made in
Calcutta, and this proved to be an interminable affair. Eventually it
took many years to complete (it started working after Saha passed away).
Apart from this Saha also started on a modest scale some cosmic-ray
observations in Darjeeling. The event of the atom bomb dropping on Japan
made Saha further aware of the profound importance of nuclear energy.
So he resolved to establish an autonomous institute under the umbrella
of the university devoted exclusively to the study of nuclear science
and its prospects. As a result the Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics
came into being in 1948. It was declared open by Irène Joliot-Curie in
1950. As per the university regulations, Saha had to retire in 1952 both
from the Palit Professorship and the post of the Director of the
Institute of Nuclear Physics. However he retained links with both the
institutes in honorary capacity.
Right
from the early thirties Saha was deeply interested in the IACS (Indian
Association of Cultivation of Science). In 1944 he became its Honorary
Secretary, and following the death of the president in 1946, himself
became its president. At that time the IACS was located in Bowbazar.
Following the golden era in which Raman conducted his research there,
the institute sort of plodded on, and Saha was keen to inject a fresh
life into it by starting several new research programmes. all this took
time and money, and eventually he persuaded the Government of West
Bengal to shift the institute to Jadavpur after buying ten acres of land
there. Obeying the Association rules, Saha stepped down as president in
1950. Meanwhile Shanti Swaroop Bhatnagar, with whom he had maintained a
cordial relation since meeting him in London in 1920, suggested that it
was time that the IACS had a full time director. He further insisted
that the post be offered to Saha so that he could complete the
reorganisation work he had started earlier. Thus in 1953, Saha became
the first director of IACS, a post he held till his death in 1956.
"Meghnad
Saha's ionization equation (c. 1920), which opened the door to stellar
astrophysics" was one of the top ten achievements of 20th century Indian
science could be considered in the Nobel Prize class." - Jayant Vishnu
Narlikar
5) Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis (Bengali:
) (29 June 1893 – 28 June 1972) was an Indian scientist and applied
statistician. He is best remembered for the Mahalanobis distance, a
statistical measure. He made pioneering studies in anthropometry in
India. He founded the Indian Statistical Institute, and contributed to
the design of large scale sample surveys.
Mahalanobis
received his early schooling at the Brahmo Boys School in Calcutta
graduating in 1908. He then joined the Presidency College, Calcutta and
received a B.Sc. degree with honours in physics in 1912. He left for
England in 1913 to join Cambridge. He however missed a train and stayed
with a friend at King's College, Cambridge. He was impressed by the
Chapel there and his host's friend M. A. Candeth suggested that he could
try joining there, which he did. He did well in his studies, but also
took an interest in cross-country walking and punting on the river. He
interacted with the mathematical genius Srinivasa Ramanujan during the
latter's time at Cambridge. After his Tripos in physics, Mahalanobis
worked with C. T. R. Wilson at the Cavendish Laboratory. He took a short
break and went to India and here he was introduced to the Principal of
Presidency College and was invited to take classes in physics.
He
went back to England and was introduced to the journal Biometrika. This
interested him so much that he bought a complete set and took them to
India. He discovered the utility of statistics to problems in
meteorology, anthropology and began working on it on his journey back to
India.
The Indian Statistical Institute
Many
colleagues of Mahalanobis took an interest in statistics and the group
grew in the Statistical Laboratory located in his room at the Presidency
College, Calcutta. A meeting was called on the 17 December 1931 with
Pramatha Nath Banerji (Minto Professor of Economics), Nikhil Ranjan Sen
(Khaira Professor of Applied Mathematics) and Sir R. N. Mukherji. The
meeting led to the establishment of the Indian Statistical Institute
(ISI), and formally registered on 28 April 1932 as a non-profit
distributing learned society under the Societies Registration Act XXI of
1860.
The
Institute was initially in the Physics Department of the Presidency
College and the expenditure in the first year was Rs. 238. It gradually
grew with the pioneering work of a group of his colleagues including S.
S. Bose, J. M. Sengupta, R. C. Bose, S. N. Roy, K. R. Nair, R. R.
Bahadur, G. Kallianpur, D. B. Lahiri and C. R. Rao. The institute also
gained major assistance through Pitamber Pant, who was a secretary to
the Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. Pant was trained in statistics at
the Institute and took a keen interest in the institute.
In 1933, the journal Sankhya was founded along the lines of Karl Pearson's Biometrika.
The
Institute started a training section in 1938. Many of the early workers
left the ISI for careers in the USA and with the government of India.
Mahalanobis invited J. B. S. Haldane to join him at the ISI and Haldane
joined as a Research Professor from August 1957 and stayed on until
February 1961. He resigned from the ISI due to frustrations with the
administration and disagreements with Mahalanobis' policies. He was also
very concerned with the frequent travels and absence of the director
and wrote The journeyings of our Director define a novel random vector.
Haldane however helped the ISI grow in biometrics.
In 1959 the Institute was declared as an Institute of national importance and a deemed university.
A
chance meeting with Nelson Annandale, then the director of the
Zoological Survey of India, at the 1920 Nagpur session of the Indian
Science Congress led to a problem in anthropology. Annandale asked him
to analyse anthropometric measurements of Anglo-Indians in Calcutta and
this led to his first scientific paper in 1922. During the course of
these studies he found a way of comparing and grouping populations using
a multivariate distance measure. This measure, D2, which is now named
after him as Mahalanobis distance, is independent of measurement scale.
Inspired
by Biometrika and mentored by Acharya Brajendra Nath Seal he started
his statistical work. Initially he worked on analyzing university exam
results, anthropometric measurements on Anglo-Indians of Calcutta and
some meteorological problems. He also worked as a meteorologist for some
time. In 1924, when he was working on the probable error of results of
agricultural experiments, he met Ronald Fisher, with whom he established
a life-long friendship. He also worked on schemes to prevent floods
6) Gopal Chandra Bhattacharya: (Bengali:
) (11 August 1895 - 8 April 1981) was an Indian entomologist and
naturalist known for his pioneering work on social insects and the role
of bacteria in metamorphosis. He is the author of bAnglAr kITa-patanga
(insects of Bengal), which won the Rabindra Puraskar, Bengal's highest
literary award, in 1975.
He
is also noted for his work on the popularization of science, especially
the three-volume text on hands-on science, kare dekha, lit. kare =do,
dekha =see). Over his career, he contributed more than 1000 articles on
science to most of the popular Bengali periodicals of the time.
Scientific findings
In
1940, possibly before the fact had been established among naturalists,
Gopal Chandra published an article in the Transactions of the Bose
Institute of Calcutta, outlining how the queen in social insects such as
ants or bees, produces other queens, workers or soldiers, by
appropriately altering the nature of the royal jelly fed to the larvae.
His observations were based on the Indian variety of ants, Occophylia.He
managed to have the ants make nests inside transparent cellophane so
that they could be quietly watched, and he noticed how only a special
food, certain newly sprouted leaves and buds, induces the formation of
queens. This remarkable finding was published in 1940, but the journal
was not well circulated abroad during the war years, and it is only now
that Gopal Chandra's pioneering work is being recognized.
He
was also an early observer of tool use by animals, particularly how
hunting wasps use small stone chips for closing nest holes. He also
observed how earwigs in the breeding period, grow a muddy ball (like a
boxing glove) on its hind legs, which it uses for defending its eggs
from predators. If the mud is washed away, the insect promptly places
its hind legs into the mud until a new ‘boot’ is formed. This behaviour
is not seen outside the breeding season. Since this observation was
reported in a Bengali language article in the 1940s, it was not widely
known.
Another
important observation by Gopal Chandra involves metamorphosis in
amphibians. He showed that administering penicillin inhibits certain
bacteria in tadpoles, which then fail to mature into frogs. This was
against the then prevalent notions that bacteria are always harmful
(pathogenic), and Gopal Chandra may have been among the pioneers in
demonstrating the existence of salogenic i.e., health giving, bacteria.
This pioneering study was later published by his associates in Science
and Culture, a Kolkata-based journal.
His magnum opus, bAnglAr kiTa-patanga (1975), which collects these and many other observations, has yet to be translated.
Science popularization
In
1948 he worked with Satyendra Nath Bose (of Bose-Einstein statistics
fame) to establish the Bangiya Vigyan Parishad (Bengal Science Council),
a society for science research.
Along
with friends like Pulin Behari Das, he worked tirelessly for
popularization of science. In 1950, he officially became the editor of
the Bangiya Vigyan Parishad magazine Jnan o vigyan (lit. jnan=knowledge,
vigyan=science), which he had been editing anyhow from behind the
scenes. In 1977 he became the chief advisor for the magazine. He was
also a member of several groups, including one working on a Bengali
encyclopedia, the Bharatkosh. It is estimated that he had published more
than a thousand articles on popular science across a wide range of
magazines and other media.
He retired from his official job in 1965, but continued to work on insects and writing on popular science.
He
won the Ananda Puraskar for Bengali literature in 1968, and the highest
award for Bengali literature, the Rabindra Puraskar, in 1975.
Less
than three months before he died, this man who never finished college
was awarded an honorary Doctor of Science degree by the University of
Calcutta. In failing health, he died the same
7) C.V.Raman : Sir
Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman, FRS (Tamil:) (7 November 1888 – 21
November 1970) was an Indian physicist whose work was influential in the
growth of science in the world. He was the recipient of the Nobel Prize
for Physics in 1930 for the discovery that when light traverses a
transparent material, some of the light that is deflected changes in
wavelength. This phenomenon is now called Raman scattering and is the
result of the Raman effect.
Early years
Venkata
Raman, a Tamil Brahmin, was born at Thiruvanaikaval, near
Tiruchirappalli, Madras Presidency to R. Chandrasekhara Iyer (b. 1866)
and Parvati Ammal (Saptarshi Parvati). He was the second of their eight
children. At an early age, Raman moved to the city of Vizag, Andhra
Pradesh. Studied in St.Aloysius Anglo-Indian High School. His father was
a lecturer in Mathematics and physics.
In
1917, Raman resigned from his government service and took up the newly
created Palit Professorship in Physics at the University of Calcutta. At
the same time, he continued doing research at the Indian Association
for the Cultivation of Science, Calcutta, where he became the Honorary
Secretary. Raman used to refer to this period as the golden era of his
career. Many students gathered around him at the IACS and the University
of Calcutta.
On
February 28, 1928, through his experiments on the scattering of light,
he discovered the Raman effect. It was instantly clear that this
discovery was an important one. It gave further proof of the quantum
nature of light. Raman spectroscopy came to be based on this phenomenon,
and Ernest Rutherford referred to it in his presidential address to the
Royal Society in 1929. Raman was president of the 16th session of the
Indian Science Congress in 1929. He was conferred a knighthood, and
medals and honorary doctorates by various universities. Raman was
confident of winning the Nobel Prize in Physics as well, and was
disappointed when the Nobel Prize went to Richardson in 1928 and to de
Broglie in 1929. He was so confident of winning the prize in 1930 that
he booked tickets in July, even though the awards were to be announced
in November, and would scan each day's newspaper for announcement of the
prize, tossing it away if it did not carry the news. He did eventually
win the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physics "for his work on the scattering of
light and for the discovery of the effect named after him". He was the
first Asian and first non-White to receive any Nobel Prize in the
sciences. Before him Rabindranath Tagore (also Indian) had received the
Nobel Prize for Literature.
C.V Raman & Bhagavantam, discovered the quantum photon spin in 1932, which further confirmed the quantum nature of light.
Raman
also worked on the acoustics of musical instruments. He worked out the
theory of transverse vibration of bowed strings, on the basis of
superposition velocities. He was also the first to investigate the
harmonic nature of the sound of the Indian drums such as the tabla and
the mridangam.
Raman
and his student of mim high school, provided the correct theoretical
explanation for the acousto-optic effect (light scattering by sound
waves), in a series of articles resulting in the celebrated Raman-Nath
theory. Modulators, and switching systems based on this effect have
enabled optical communication components based on laser systems.
In
1934, Raman became the assistant director of the Indian Institute of
Science in Bangalore, where two years later he continued as a professor
of physics. Other investigations carried out by Raman were experimental
and theoretical studies on the diffraction of light by acoustic waves of
ultrasonic and hypersonic frequencies (published 1934-1942), and those
on the effects produced by X-rays on infrared vibrations in crystals
exposed to ordinary light.
He also started a company called cv Chemical and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. in 1943 along with Dr. Krishnamurthy. The Company during its 60 year history, established four factories in Southern India. In 1947, he was appointed as the first National Professor by the new government of Independent India.
In
1948, Raman, through studying the spectroscopic behavior of crystals,
approached in a new manner fundamental problems of crystal dynamics. He
dealt with the structure and properties of diamond, the structure and
optical behavior of numerous iridescent substances (labradorite, pearly
feldspar, agate, opal, and pearls). Among his other interests were the
optics of colloids, electrical and magnetic anisotropy, and the
physiology of human vision.
8) Srinivasa Ramanujan: Srinivasa
Iyengar Ramanujan (Tamil: ) (22 December 1887 – 26 April 1920) was a
Indian mathematician and autodidact who, with almost no formal training
in pure mathematics, made extraordinary contributions to mathematical
analysis, number theory, infinite series and continued fractions.
Ramanujan's talent was said by the English mathematician G.H. Hardy to
be in the same league as legendary mathematicians such as Gauss, Euler,
Cauchy, Newton and Archimedes and he is widely regarded as one of the
towering geniuses in mathematics.
Born
in Erode, Tamil Nadu, India, to a poor Brahmin family, Ramanujan first
encountered formal mathematics at age 10. He demonstrated a natural
ability, and was given books on advanced trigonometry written by S. L.
Loney. He mastered them by age 12, and even discovered theorems of his
own, including independently re-discovering Euler's Identity. He
demonstrated unusual mathematical skills at school, winning accolades
and awards. By 17, Ramanujan conducted his own mathematical research on
Bernoulli numbers and the Euler–Mascheroni constant. He received a
scholarship to study at Government College in Kumbakonam, but lost it
when he failed his non-mathematical coursework. He joined another
college to pursue independent mathematical research, working as a clerk
in the Accountant-General's office at the Madras Port Trust Office to
support himself. In 1912–1913, he sent samples of his theorems to three
academics at the University of Cambridge. Only Hardy recognised the
brilliance of his work, subsequently inviting Ramanujan to visit and
work with him at Cambridge. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society and a
Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, dying of illness, malnutrition
and possibly liver infection in 1920 at the age of 32.
During
his short lifetime, Ramanujan independently compiled nearly 3900
results (mostly identities and equations). Although a small number of
these results were actually false and some were already known, most of
his claims have now been proven correct. He stated results that were
both original and highly unconventional, such as the Ramanujan prime and
the Ramanujan theta function, and these have inspired a vast amount of
further research. However, the mathematical mainstream has been rather
slow in absorbing some of his major discoveries. The Ramanujan Journal,
an international publication, was launched to publish work in all areas
of mathematics influenced by his work
Mathematical achievements
In
mathematics, there is a distinction between having an insight and
having a proof. Ramanujan's talent suggested a plethora of formulae that
could then be investigated in depth later. It is said that Ramanujan's
discoveries are unusually rich and that there is often more to them than
initially meets the eye. As a by-product, new directions of research
were opened up. Examples of the most interesting of these formulae
include the intriguing infinite series for π, one of which is given
below
This
result is based on the negative fundamental discriminant d = −4×58 with
class number h(d) = 2 (note that 5×7×13×58 = 26390 and that 9801=99×99;
396=4×99) and is related to the fact that
Compare
to Heegner numbers, which have class number 1 and yield similar
formulae. Ramanujan's series for π converges extraordinarily rapidly
(exponentially) and forms the basis of some of the fastest algorithms
currently used to calculate π. Truncating the sum to the first term also
gives the approximation for π, which is correct to six decimal places.
One
of his remarkable capabilities was the rapid solution for problems. He
was sharing a room with P. C. Mahalanobis who had a problem, "Imagine
that you are on a street with houses marked 1 through n. There is a
house in between (x) such that the sum of the house numbers to left of
it equals the sum of the house numbers to its right. If n is between 50
and 500, what are n and x?" This is a bivariate problem with multiple
solutions. Ramanujan thought about it and gave the answer with a twist:
He gave a continued fraction. The unusual part was that it was the
solution to the whole class of problems. Mahalanobis was astounded and
asked how he did it. "It is simple. The minute I heard the problem, I
knew that the answer was a continued fraction. Which continued fraction,
I asked myself. Then the answer came to my mind", Ramanujan replied.
His intuition also led him to derive some previously unknown identities, such as
for
all θ, where Γ(z) is the gamma function. Expanding into series of
powers and equating coefficients of θ0, θ4, and θ8 gives some deep
identities for the hyperbolic secant.
In
1918, Hardy and Ramanujan studied the partition function P(n)
extensively and gave a non-convergent asymptotic series that permits
exact computation of the number of partitions of an integer. Hans
Rademacher, in 1937, was able to refine their formula to find an exact
convergent series solution to this problem. Ramanujan and Hardy's work
in this area gave rise to a powerful new method for finding asymptotic
formulae, called the circle method.
He
discovered mock theta functions in the last year of his life. For many
years these functions were a mystery, but they are now known to be the
holomorphic parts of harmonic weak Maass forms.
The Ramanujan conjecture
Main article: Ramanujan–Petersson conjecture
Although
there are numerous statements that could bear the name Ramanujan
conjecture, there is one statement that was very influential on later
work. In particular, the connection of this conjecture with conjectures
of André Weil in algebraic geometry opened up new areas of research.
That Ramanujan conjecture is an assertion on the size of the tau
function, which has as generating function the discriminant modular form
Δ(q), a typical cusp form in the theory of modular forms. It was
finally proven in 1973, as a consequence of Pierre Deligne's proof of
the Weil conjectures. The reduction step involved is complicated.
Deligne won a Fields Medal in 1978 for his work on Weil conjectures.
Ramanujan's notebooks
Further information: Ramanujan's lost notebook
While
still in India, Ramanujan recorded the bulk of his results in four
notebooks of loose leaf paper. These results were mostly written up
without any derivations. This is probably the origin of the
misperception that Ramanujan was unable to prove his results and simply
thought up the final result directly. Mathematician Bruce C. Berndt, in
his review of these notebooks and Ramanujan's work, says that Ramanujan
most certainly was able to make the proofs of most of his results, but
chose not to.
This
style of working may have been for several reasons. Since paper was
very expensive, Ramanujan would do most of his work and perhaps his
proofs on slate, and then transfer just the results to paper. Using a
slate was common for mathematics students in India at the time. He was
also quite likely to have been influenced by the style of G. S. Carr's
book, which stated results without proofs. Finally, it is possible that
Ramanujan considered his workings to be for his personal interest alone;
and therefore only recorded the results.
The
first notebook has 351 pages with 16 somewhat organized chapters and
some unorganized material. The second notebook has 256 pages in 21
chapters and 100 unorganised pages, with the third notebook containing
33 unorganised pages. The results in his notebooks inspired numerous
papers by later mathematicians trying to prove what he had found. Hardy
himself created papers exploring material from Ramanujan's work as did
G. N. Watson, B. M. Wilson, and Bruce Berndt. A fourth notebook with 87
unorganised pages, the so-called "lost notebook", was rediscovered in
1976 by George Andrews.
Ramanujan–Hardy number 1729
Main article: 1729 (number)
A
common anecdote about Ramanujan relates to the number 1729. Hardy
arrived at Ramanujan's residence in a cab numbered 1729. Hardy commented
that the number 1729 seemed to be uninteresting. Ramanujan is said to
have stated on the spot that it was actually a very interesting number
mathematically, being the smallest natural number representable in two
different ways as a sum of two cubes:
Generalizations of this idea have created the notion of "taxicab numbers". Coincidentally, 1729 is also a Carmichael Number.
Other mathematicians' views of Ramanujan
Hardy
said : "The limitations of his knowledge were as startling as its
profundity. Here was a man who could work out modular equations and
theorems... to orders unheard of, whose mastery of continued fractions
was... beyond that of any mathematician in the world, who had found for
himself the functional equation of the zeta function and the dominant
terms of many of the most famous problems in the analytic theory of
numbers; and yet he had never heard of a doubly periodic function or of
Cauchy's theorem, and had indeed but the vaguest idea of what a function
of a complex variable was...". When asked about the methods employed by
Ramanujan to arrive at his solutions, Hardy said that they were
"arrived at by a process of mingled argument, intuition, and induction,
of which he was entirely unable to give any coherent account."He also
stated that he had "never met his equal, and can compare him only with
Euler or Jacobi."
Quoting
K. Srinivasa Rao, "As for his place in the world of Mathematics, we
quote Bruce C. Berndt: 'Paul Erdős has passed on to us Hardy's personal
ratings of mathematicians. Suppose that we rate mathematicians on the
basis of pure talent on a scale from 0 to 100, Hardy gave himself a
score of 25, J.E. Littlewood 30, David Hilbert 80 and Ramanujan 100.'"
In
his book Scientific Edge, noted physicist Jayant Narlikar spoke of
"Srinivasa Ramanujan, discovered by the Cambridge mathematician Hardy,
whose great mathematical findings were beginning to be appreciated from
1915 to 1919. His achievements were to be fully understood much later,
well after his untimely death in 1920. For example, his work on the
highly composite numbers (numbers with a large number of factors)
started a whole new line of investigations in the theory of such
numbers."
During
his lifelong mission in educating and propagating mathematics among the
school children in India, Nigeria and elsewhere, P.K. Srinivasan has
continually introduced Ramanujan's mathematical works.
9) Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar
Early Life and Education:
Chandrasekhar
was born in Lahore, Punjab, British India (now Pakistan) to
Chandrasekhara Subrahmanya Iyer (1885–1960) and his wife, Sitalakshmi
(1891–1931).[5] He was the eldest of their four sons and the third of
their ten children. The name Chandrasekhar is one of the appellations of
Shiva, meaning "holder of the moon" in Sanskrit. His paternal uncle was
the Indian physicist and Nobel laureate C. V. Raman. C. S. Iyer was
posted in Lahore as the Deputy Auditor General of the Northwestern
Railways at the time of Chandrasekhar's birth. His mother tongue was
Tamil. Chandra's father was also an accomplished Carnatic music
violinist who had authored several books on musicology. His mother was
devoted to intellectual pursuits and had translated Henrik Ibsen's A
Doll's House into Tamil. She is credited with arousing Chandra's
intellectual curiosity early on.
Subsequent career:
In
January 1937, Chandrasekhar was recruited to the University of Chicago
faculty as Assistant Professor by Dr. Otto Struve and President Robert
Maynard Hutchins. He was to remain at the university for his entire
career, becoming Morton D. Hull Distinguished Service Professor of
Theoretical Astrophysics in 1952 and attaining emeritus status in 1985.
Famously, Chandrasekhar declined many offers from other universities,
including one to succeed Henry Norris Russell, the preeminent American
astronomer, as director of the Princeton University Observatory.
Chandrasekhar
did some work at Yerkes Observatory in Williams Bay, Wisconsin, which
was run by the University of Chicago. After the Laboratory for
Astrophysics and Space Research (LASR) was built by NASA in 1966 at the
University, Chandrasekhar occupied one of the four corner offices on the
second floor. (The other corners housed John A. Simpson, Peter Meyer,
and Eugene N. Parker.) Chandrasekhar lived at 4800 Lake Shore Drive,
about a mile from the University, after the high-rise apartment complex
was built in the late 1960s.
During
World War II, Chandrasekhar worked at the Ballistic Research
Laboratories at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland. While there, he
worked on problems of ballistics; for example, two reports from 1943
were titled, On the decay of plane shock waves and The normal reflection
of a blast wave.
Chandrasekhar
developed a style of working continuously in one specific area of
physics for a number of years; consequently, his working life can be
divided into distinct periods. He studied stellar structure, including
the theory of white dwarfs, during the years 1929 to 1939, and
subsequently focused on stellar dynamics from 1939 to 1943. Next, he
concentrated on the theory of radiative transfer and the quantum theory
of the negative ion of hydrogen from 1943 to 1950. This was followed by
sustained work on hydrodynamic and hydromagnetic stability from 1950 to
1961. In the 1960s, he studied the equilibrium and the stability of
ellipsoidal figures of equilibrium, and also general relativity. During
the period, 1971 to 1983 he studied the mathematical theory of black
holes, and, finally, during the late 80s, he worked on the theory of
colliding gravitational waves.
Chandra
worked closely with his students and expressed pride in the fact that
over a 50 year period (from roughly 1930 to 1980), the average age of
his co-author collaborators had remained the same, at around 30. He
insisted that students address him as "Chandrasekhar" until they
received their Ph.D. degree, after which time they (as other colleagues)
were encouraged to address him as "Chandra".
From 1952 to 1971 Chandrasekhar was editor of the Astrophysical Journal.
During
the years 1990 to 1995, Chandrasekhar worked on a project devoted to
explaining the detailed geometric arguments in Sir Isaac Newton's
Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica using the language and
methods of ordinary calculus. The effort resulted in the book Newton's
Principia for the Common Reader, published in 1995. Chandrasekhar was an
honorary member of the International Academy of Science.
Chandrasekhar
died of heart failure in Chicago in 1995, and was survived by his wife,
Lalitha Chandrasekhar. In the Biographical Memoirs of the Fellows of
the Royal Society of London, R. J. Tayler wrote: "Chandrasekhar was a
classical applied mathematician whose research was primarily applied in
astronomy and whose like will probably never be seen again."
Nobel prize:
He
was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1983 for his studies on the
physical processes important to the structure and evolution of stars.
Chandrasekhar accepted this honor, but was upset that the citation
mentioned only his earliest work, seeing it as a denigration of a
lifetime's achievement. He shared it with William A. Fowler
10) Homi Bhabha
Homi Jehangir Bhabha,
FRS (30 October 1909 – 24 January 1966) was an Indian nuclear physicist
and the chief architect of the Indian atomic energy program. He was
also responsible for the establishment of two well-known research
institutions, namely the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR),
and the Atomic Energy Establishment at Trombay (which after Bhabha's
death was renamed as the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC)). As a
scientist, he is remembered for deriving a correct expression for the
probability of scattering positrons by electrons, a process now known as
Bhabha scattering. For his significant contributions to the development
of atomic energy in India, he is known as the father of India's nuclear
program. World War II broke out in September 1939 while Bhabha was
vacationing in India. He chose to remain in India until the war ended.
In the meantime, he accepted a position at the Indian Institute of
Science in Bangalore, headed by Nobel laureate C. V. Raman. He
established the Cosmic Ray Research Unit at the institute, and began to
work on the theory of the movement of point particles. In 1945, he
established the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in Bombay, and
the Atomic Energy Commission of India three years later. In the 1950s,
Bhabha represented India in International Atomic Energy Forums, and
served as President of the United Nations Conference on the Peaceful
Uses of Atomic Energy in Geneva, Switzerland in 1955. He was awarded
Padma Bhushan by Government of India in 1954. He later served as the
member of the Indian Cabinet's Scientific Advisory Committee and set up
the Indian National Committee for Space Research with Vikram Sarabhai.
In January 1966, Bhabha died in a plane crash near Mont Blanc, while
heading to Vienna, Austria to attend a meeting of the International
Atomic Energy Agency's Scientific Advisory Committee.
11) Vikram Sarabhai:
Early years and education
Vikram
Ambalal Sarabhai was born on 12 August 1919 in the city of Ahmedabad,
in the state of Gujarat in western India. The Sarabhai family was an
important and rich Jain business family. His father Ambalal Sarabhai was
an affluent industrialist and owned many mills including some textile
mills in Gujarat. Vikram Sarabhai was one of the eight children of
Ambalal and Sarla Devi.
To
educate her eight children, Sarla Devi established a private school on
the lines of the Montessori method which was gaining fame at the time.
Since the Sarabhai family was involved in the Indian freedom struggle,
many leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Motilal Nehru, Rabindranath Tagore and
Jawaharlal Nehru used to frequent the Sarabhai house.
Sarabhai
matriculated from Gujarat College in Ahmedabad after passing the
Intermediate Science examination. After that he moved to England and
joined St. John's College, University of Cambridge. He received the
Tripos in Natural Sciences from Cambridge in 1940. With the escalation
of the Second World War, Sarabhai returned to India and joined the
Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore and began research in cosmic
rays under the guidance of Nobel Laureate C. V. Raman. He returned to
Cambridge after the war in 1945 and was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy
degree in 1947, for his thesis titled Cosmic Ray Investigation in
Tropical Latitudes.
Indian space programme:
The
establishment of the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) was one
of his greatest achievements. He successfully convinced the government
of the importance of a space programme for a developing country like
India after the Russian Sputnik launch. Dr. Sarabhai emphasized the
importance of a space programme in his quote:
"There
are some who question the relevance of space activities in a developing
nation. To us, there is no ambiguity of purpose. We do not have the
fantasy of competing with the economically advanced nations in the
exploration of the moon or the planets or manned space-flight."
"But
we are convinced that if we are to play a meaningful role nationally,
and in the community of nations, we must be second to none in the
application of advanced technologies to the real problems of man and
society."
Dr.
Homi Jehangir Bhabha, widely regarded as the father of India's nuclear
science program, supported Dr. Sarabhai in setting up the first rocket
launching station in India. This center was established at Thumba near
Thiruvananthapuram on the coast of the Arabian Sea, primarily because of
its proximity to the equator. After a remarkable effort in setting up
the infrastructure, personnel, communication links, and launch pads, the
inaugural flight was launched on November 21, 1963 with a sodium vapour
payload.
As
a result of Dr. Sarabhai's dialogue with NASA in 1966, the Satellite
Instructional Television Experiment (SITE) was launched during July 1975
– July 1976 (when Dr.Sarabhai was no more).
Dr.
Sarabhai started a project for the fabrication and launch of an Indian
satellite. As a result, the first Indian satellite, Aryabhata, was put
in orbit in 1975 from a Russian Cosmodrome.
Dr.
Sarabhai was very interested in science education and founded a
Community Science Centre at Ahmedabad in 1966. Today, the centre is
called the Vikram A Sarabhai Community Science Centre.
He led the family's 'Sarabhai' diversified business group.
His
interests varied from science to sports to statistics. He set up
Operations Research Group (ORG), the first market research organization
in the country.
Sarabhai
established many institutes which are of international repute. Most
notable among them are Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) which are
considered world class for their management studies. Also he helped
establish Physical Research Laboratory (PRL), which is doing commendable
job in R&D in physics. Sarabhai set up Ahmedabad Textiles
Industrial Research Association (ATIRA), which helped the booming
textiles business in Ahmedabad. He also set up Center for Environmental
Planning and Technology (CEPT). Not stopping with all these he went
ahead and set up Blind Men Association (BMA) which helps visually
challenged people with necessary skills and support.
12) Har Gobind Khorana
Early life, education, and career
Khorana
was born to Sikh parents in Raipur, British India (now in Pakistan).
His father was the village "patwari" (or taxation official). He was
named after the sixth Guru of the Sikhs - Guru Hargobind ji. He was home
schooled by his father until high school. He earned his B.Sc from
Punjab University, Lahore in 1943, and his M.Sc from Punjab University
in 1945. In 1945, he began studying at the University of Liverpool.
After earning a Ph.D in 1948, he continued his postdoctoral studies in
Zürich (1948–1949). Subsequently, he spent two years at Cambridge
University. In 1952 he went to the University of British Columbia,
Vancouver and in 1960 moved to the University of Wisconsin–Madison. In
1970 Khorana became the Alfred Sloan Professor of Biology and Chemistry
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he worked until
retiring in 2007.
Khorana's research relevant to his Nobel Prize
Ribonucleic
acid (RNA) with two repeating units (UCUCUCU → UCU CUC UCU) produced
two alternating amino acids. This, combined with the Nirenberg and Leder
experiment, showed that UCU codes for Serine and CUC codes for Leucine.
RNAs with three repeating units (UACUACUA → UAC UAC UAC, or ACU ACU
ACU, or CUA CUA CUA) produced three different strings of amino acids.
RNAs with four repeating units including UAG, UAA, or UGA, produced only
dipeptides and tripeptides thus revealing that UAG, UAA and UGA are
stop codons.
With
this, Khorana and his team had established that the mother of all
codes, the biological language common to all living organisms, is
spelled out in three-letter words: each set of three nucleotides codes
for a specific amino acid. Their Nobel lecture was delivered on December
12, 1968.Khorana was the first scientist to synthesize
oligonucleotides.
Subsequent research
He
extended the above to long DNA Polymers using non-aqueous chemistry and
assembled these into the first synthetic gene, using polymerase and
ligase enzymes that link pieces of DNA together.as well as methods that
anticipated the invention of PCR.These custom-designed pieces of
artificial genes are widely used in biology labs for sequencing, cloning
and engineering new plants and animals. This invention of Khorana has
become automated and commercialized so that anyone now can order a
synthetic gene from any of a number of companies. One merely needs to
send the genetic sequence to one of the companies to receive an
oligonucleotide with the desired sequence.
His
lab has since mid 1970s studied the biochemistry of the membrane
protein bacteriorhodopsin responsible for converting photon energy into
proton gradient energy and most recently studying the structural related
visual pigment rhodopsin.
Khorana
died of natural causes on November 9, 2011 in Concord, Massachusetts,
aged 89.A widower, he was survived by his children Julia and Dave.
13) Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam
Abdul
Kalam, is a renowned aerospace engineer, professor (of Aerospace
engineering), and first chancellor of the Indian Institute of Space
Science and Technology Thiruvananthapuram (IIST), who served as the 11th
President of India from 2002 to 2007. During his term as President, he
was popularly known as the People's President. He was awarded the Bharat
Ratna, India's highest civilian honor in 1997.
Before
his term as India's president, he worked as an aeronautical engineer
with DRDO and ISRO. He is popularly known as the Missile Man of India
for his work on development of ballistic missile and space rocket
technology. Kalam played a pivotal organizational, technical and
political role in India's Pokhran-II nuclear test in 1998, the first
since the original nuclear test by India in 1974. Dr. Kalam has even
been circled with various controversies as many scientific experts
called him a man with no authority over "nuclear physics" and a man who
just carried the works of Dr. Homi Bhabha and Dr. Vikram Sarabhai.
He
is currently the a visiting professor at Indian Institute of Management
Ahmedabad,chancellor of Indian Institute of Space Science and
Technology Thiruvananthapuram, a professor at Anna University (Chennai),
a visiting professor at Indian Institute of Management Indore, and an
adjunct/visiting faculty at many other academic and research
institutions across India.
In
May 2011, Dr. Kalam launched his mission for the youth of the nation
called the What Can I Give Movement.Dr. Kalam better known as a
scientist, also has special interest in the field of arts like writing
Tamil poems, and also playing the music instrument Veena.
Early life and education
Abdul
Kalam was born in Rameshwaram, presently Tamil Nadu, in India in 1931.
He spent most of his childhood in financial problems and started working
at an early age to supplement his family's income.
After
completing his school education, Kalam graduated in physics from St.
Joseph's College, Tiruchirappalli. He then graduated with a diploma in
Aeronautical Engineering in the mid-1950s from the Madras Institute of
Technology. As the Project Director, he was heavily involved in the
development of India's first indigenous Satellite Launch Vehicle
(SLV-II).
Career
After
graduation from Madras Institute of Technology (MIT - Chennai) he was
the Project Director, he was heavily involved in the development of
India's first indigenous Satellite Launch Vehicle (SLV-III). As Chief
Executive of the Integrated Guided Missile Development Program
(I.G.M.D.P), he played a major part in developing many missiles in India
including Agni and Prithvi although the entire project has been
criticised for being overrun and mismanaged. He was the Chief Scientific
Adviser to the Prime Minister and the Secretary of Defence Research and
Development Organisation from July 1992 to December 1999. Pokhran-II
nuclear tests were conducted during this period and have been associated
with Kalam although he was not directly involved with the nuclear
program at the time.
Future India: 2020
In
his book India 2020, Kalam strongly advocates an action plan to develop
India into a knowledge superpower and a developed nation by the year
2020. He regards his work on India's nuclear weapons program as a way to
assert India's place as a future superpower.
It has been reported that there is a considerable demand in South Korea for translated versions of books authored by him.
Kalam
continues to take an active interest in other developments in the field
of science and technology. He has proposed a research program for
developing bio-implants. He is a supporter of Open Source over
proprietary solutions and believes that the use of free software on a
large scale will bring the benefits of information technology to more
people
14) Jayant Vishnu Narlikar
Early life
Narlikar
was born in Kolhapur, India on July 19, 1938. His father, Vishnu
Vasudev Narlikar, was a mathematician who served as a professor and
later as the Head of the Department of Mathematics at Banaras Hindu
University, Varanasi. Jayant's mother, Sumati Narlikar, was a scholar of
Sanskrit language. He studied in Kendriya Vidyalaya Banaras(till class
12) and Banaras Hindu University(12th Onwards) campus, Varanasi.
Career
Narlikar
received his Bachelor of Science degree from Banaras Hindu University
in 1957 and a B.A. in mathematics from the University of Cambridge in
1960, winning the Tyson Medal. During his doctoral studies at Cambridge,
he won Smith’s Prize in 1962. After receiving his Ph.D. in 1963 under
the guidance of Fred Hoyle, he served as a Berry Ramsey Fellow at King's
College in Cambridge and earned an M.A. in astronomy and astrophysics
in 1964. He continued to work as a Fellow at King's College until 1972.
In 1966, Fred Hoyle established the Institute of Theoretical Astronomy
in Cambridge, and Narlikar served as the founder staff member of the
institute during 1966-72.
In
1972, Narlikar took up Professorship at the Tata Institute of
Fundamental Research (TIFR) in Mumbai, India. At the TIFR, he was in
charge of the Theoretical Astrophysics Group. In 1988, the Indian
University Grants Commission set up the Inter-University Centre for
Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA) in Pune, and Narlikar became the
Founder-Director of IUCAA.
Narlikar
is internationally known for his work in cosmology, especially in
championing models alternative to the popular Big Bang model. During
1994-1997, he was the President of the Cosmology Commission of the
International Astronomical Union. His research work has involved Mach’s
Principle, quantum cosmology, and action-at-a-distance physics.
During
1999-2003, Narlikar headed an international team in a pioneering
experiment designed to sample air for microorganisms in the atmosphere
at heights of up to 41 km. Biological studies of the collected samples
led to the findings of live cells and bacteria, which introduced the
possibility that the earth is being bombarded by microorganisms, some of
which might have seeded life itself on earth.
Narlikar
was also appointed the Chairperson, Advisory Group for Textbooks in
Science and Mathematics, the textbook development committee responsible
for developing textbooks in Science and Mathematics, published by NCERT,
which are used widely as standard textbooks in many Indian schools
15) Ananda Mohan Chakrabarty
Education and home life
Ananda
(generally called "Al" by scientific colleagues) Chakrabarty was born
in India on 4 April 1938. He attended Sainthia High School, Belur
Bidyamandir and St. Xavier's College, Calcutta in that order during the
course of his undergraduate education. Prof. Chakrabarty received his
Ph.D. from the University of Calcutta in Kolkata, West Bengal in 1965.
Early scientific work
Prof.
Chakrabarty genetically engineered a new species of Pseudomonas
bacteria ("the oil-eating bacteria") in 1971 while working for the
Research & Development Center at General Electric Company in
Schenectady, New York.
At
the time, four known species of oil-metabolizing bacteria were known to
exist, but when introduced into an oil spill, competed with each other,
limiting the amount of crude oil that they degraded. The genes
necessary to degrade oil were carried on plasmids, which could be
transferred among species. By irradiating the transformed organism with
UV light after plasmid transfer, Prof. Chakrabarty discovered a method
for genetic cross-linking that fixed all four plasmid genes in place and
produced a new, stable, bacteria species (now called pseudomonas
putida) capable of consuming oil one or two orders of magnitude faster
than the previous four strains of oil-eating microbes. The new
microbe, which Chakrabarty called "multi-plasmid hydrocarbon-degrading
Pseudomonas," could digest about two-thirds of the hydrocarbons that
would be found in a typical oil spill.
The
bacteria drew international attention when he applied for a patent—the
first-ever patent for living organism.He was initially denied the patent
by the Patent Office because it was thought that the patent code
precluded patents on living organisms. The United States Court of
Customs and Patent Appeals overturned the decision in Chakrabarty's
favor, writing,
“ ...the fact that micro-organisms are alive is without legal significance for purposes of patent law. ”
Sidney
A. Diamond, Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks, then appealed to
the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court case was argued on 17 March 1980
and decided on 16 June 1980. This patent was granted by the U.S. Supreme
Court (Diamond v. Chakrabarty), in a 5-4 decision, when it determined
that
“
A live, human-made micro-organism is patentable subject matter under
101. Respondent's micro-organism constitutes a "manufacture" or
"composition of matter" within that statute. ”
Prof.
Chakrabarty's landmark research has since paved the way for many
patents on genetically modified micro-organisms and other life forms,
and catapulted him into the international spotlight.
Current work
Currently,
his lab is working on elucidating the role of bacterial cupredoxins and
cytochromes in cancer regression and arresting cell cycle
progression.These proteins have been formerly known for their
involvement in bacterial electron transport. He has isolated a bacterial
protein, azurin, with potential antineoplastic properties. He has
expanded his lab's work to include multiple microbiological species,
including Neisseria, Plasmodia, and Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans. In
2001, Prof. Chakrabarty founded a company, CDG Therapeutics,
(incorporated in Delaware) which holds proprietary information related
to five patents generated by his work at the University of Illinois at
Chicago. The University of Illinois owns the rights to the patents but
has issued exclusive licences to CDG Therapeutics.
In
2008, Prof. Chakrabarty co-founded a second bio-pharmaceutical
discovery company, Amrita Therapeutics Ltd., registered in Ahmedabad,
Gujarat, to develop therapies, vaccines and diagnostics effective
against cancers and/or other major public health threats derived from
bacterial products found in the human body. Amrita Therapeutics Ltd.
received initial funding in late 2008 from GVFL, and more recently
received a grant for a 2-year research program in 2010 from the Indian
Department of Biotechnology under the Biotechnology Industry Promotion
Program (BIPP).
16) Subhash Mukhopadhyay
Early life
He
was born on January 16, 1931 in Hazaribag, Bihar (now in jharkhand),
India. He studied and graduated (in 1955) with an honours degree in
physiology from the Calcutta National Medical College, which was then
affiliated with the prestigious University of Calcutta.He would later
earn a doctorate from the University of Calcutta in 1958 reproductive
physiology under the stewardship of Prof. Sachchidananda Banerjee. Later
he would earn a second doctorate from the University of Edinburgh in
1967 in reproductive endocrinology,
His
life and death has been the subject of countless newspaper reviews and
inspired the Hindi movie Ek Doctor Ki Maut (Death of a doctor), directed
by Tapan Sinha.
Career
He
created history when he became the first physician in India (and second
in the world after British physicians Patrick Steptoe and Robert
Edwards) to perform the In vitro fertilization resulting in a test tube
baby "Durga" (alias Kanupriya Agarwal) on October 3, 1978.
Facing
social ostracization, bureaucratic negligence, reprimand and insult
instead of recognition from the West Bengal government and refusal of
the Government of India to allow him to attend international conferences
he committed suicide in his Calcutta residence on 19 June 1981.
His
feat has been given belated recognition as the Indian physician who in
1986 was "officially" regarded as being the first doctor to perform
in-vitro fertilization in India.
His
recognition is attributable to TC Anand Kumar who is credited to be the
mastermind behind India's second (officially the first) test-tube baby.
Kumar took the crown off his own head after reviewing Subhash
Mukhopadhyay's personal notes. He was ably helped by Sunit Mukherji, who
was a one-time colleague of Mukhopadhyay.
Kumar is currently active in setting up a research institute in reproductive biology in memory of Mukhopadhyay.
In vitro culture techniques
The
freshly aspirated oocytes were incubated for 4 hours before
inseminating them with the husband’s semen that was processed in
protein-supplemented Tyrode's solution. This is exactly what is done
even to this day in almost all IVF programmes to accomplish in vitro
oocyte maturation; processing semen is essential for ‘sperm activation’.
The oocytes were exposed to processed semen for a period of 24 hours
and later incubated for another 72 hours in a mixture of
cervical-uterine fluids. The use of such fluid is not described
elsewhere. However, the use of a synthetic fluid, similar to that found
in the human Fallopian tube, has been described to be useful for in
vitro embryo culture procedures.
The
methods of in vitro fertilization and embryo growth are described in
detail in Mukherjee ’s letter to the DHS dated 19 October 1978 as well
as in a publication in an obscure journal. Mukherjee ’s stated ‘…It also
appears that for cryogenic preservation of embryos with a relatively
larger number of blastomeres (more than 8 cells) may be preferable’.
‘Few
pre-ovulatory human oocytes collected from a married woman by surgery
were fertilized with spermatozoa from the husband and cleaved in vitro
and subsequently frozen slowly to about 196oC after stepwise treatment
with dimethyl sulfoxide. One such frozen embryo was subsequently thawed
slowly and when transferred into the uterus of the woman apparently
resulted in the production of a clinically normal female baby after
normal period of gestation’.
Here is clear published evidence of how exactly Mukherjee carried out his version of in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer.
Cryopreservation
of embryos from mice, rabbits, sheep and goats were reported between
1971 and 1979. The first report on the successful cryopreservation of
four to eight cell human embryos appeared as late as 1981 and Trounson
and Mohr reported the first successful clinical outcome of the transfer
of thawed human embryos in 1983. A WHO report states ‘embryo
cryopreservation has now become a routine adjunct to IVF procedures, and
various methods of freezing are employed. The method that has yielded
the best results in terms of simplicity, efficiency and reproducibility
is one that involves freezing of one to three-day-old embryos (one to
eight cells) in a controlled biological chamber that cools the embryos
to sub-zero temperatures in the presence of a cryoprotectant 1,2
propanediol. Other cryoprotectants that are used are dimethyl sulfoxide
(the same cryoprotectant was used by Mukherjee ) and glycerol.
It
may be noted that Subhas Mukherjee reported the successful
cryopreservation of an eight cell embryo, storing it for 53 days,
thawing and replacing it into the mother’s womb, resulting in a
successful and live birth as early as 1978- a full five years before
anyone else had done so. This small publication of Mukherjee in 1978
clearly shows that Mukherjee was on the right line of thinking much
before anyone else had demonstrated the successful outcome of a
pregnancy following the transfer of a 8-cell frozen-thawed embryo into
human subjects transferring 8-cell cryopreserved embryos.”
17) Dr. Sankar Chatterjee
Dr.
Chatterjee's work has focused on the origin, evolution, functional
anatomy, and systematics of Mesozoic vertebrates, particularly basal
archosaurs, dinosaurs, pterosaurs, and birds. He has done important
work on poorly known Late Triassic reptiles in India, including
phytosaurs, rhynchosaurs, and prolacertiforms, but he is best known for
his work on vertebrates recovered in the 1980s from the Post Quarry in
the Late Triassic Cooper Canyon Formation (Dockum Group) of West Texas.
This material includes the large rauisuchian Postosuchus (named for the
nearby town of Post), and controversial specimens Chatterjee identified
as being avian (Protoavis). The recognition of these specimens as
avian pushes back the origin of birds at least 75 million years.
Dr.
Chatterjee continues to participate in Dockum vertebrate paleontology,
and takes an active interest in the fieldwork and research being
conducted by his students and other workers at Texas Tech. In recent
years, his interests have focused on flying archosaurs. He has worked
on the biomechanics of flight in birds and pterosaurs and cranial
kinesis in birds, and has also delved into ontogenetic and evolutionary
issues relating to heterochrony in birds. Dr. Chatterjee is also
involved with explorations into the neuroanatomy of these archosaurs.
Larger scale interests involve plate tectonics (his original specialty)
and paleobiogeography. Recently, Dr. Chatterjee proposed the Shiva
structure in India as an impact crater of the asteroid that caused the
Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction.
18) Venkatraman Ramakrishnan
Early life
Ramakrishnan
was born in Chidambaram in Cuddalore district of Tamil Nadu, India[4]
to C. V. Ramakrishnan and Rajalakshmi. Both his parents were scientists
and taught biochemistry at the Maharaj Sayajirao University in
Baroda.[5] He moved toVadodara in Gujarat at the age of three, where he
had his schooling at Convent of Jesus and Mary, except for spending
1960–61 in Adelaide, Australia. Following his Pre-Science at the
Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, he did his undergraduate
studies in the same university on a National Science Talent Scholarship,
graduating with a B.Sc. in Physics in 1971.
In
a January 2010 lecture at the Indian Institute of Science, he revealed
that he failed to get admitted at any of the Indian Institutes of
Technology, or Christian Medical College, Vellore, Tamil Nadu.
Immediately
after graduation he moved to the U.S.A., where he obtained his Ph.D. in
Physics from Ohio University in 1976. He then spent two years studying
biology as a graduate student at the University of California, San Diego
while making a transition from theoretical physics to biology.
Career
Ramakrishnan
began work on ribosomes as a postdoctoral fellow with Peter Moore at
Yale University. After his post-doctoral fellowship, he initially could
not find a faculty position even though he had applied to about 50
universities in the U.S.
He
continued to work on ribosomes from 1983-95 as a staff scientist at
Brookhaven National Laboratory. In 1995 he moved to the University of
Utah as a Professor of Biochemistry, and in 1999, he moved to his
current position at the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular
Biology in Cambridge, England, where he had also been a sabbatical
visitor during 1991-2.
In
1999, Ramakrishnan's laboratory published a 5.5 Angstrom resolution
structure of the 30S subunit. The following year, his laboratory
determined the complete molecular structure of the 30S subunit of the
ribosome and its complexes with several antibiotics. This was followed
by studies that provided structural insights into the mechanism that
ensures the fidelity of protein biosynthesis. More recently, his
laboratory has determined the atomic structure of the whole ribosome in
complex with its tRNA and mRNA ligands. Ramakrishnan is also known for
his past work on histone and chromatin structure.
Honors
Ramakrishnan
is a Fellow of the Royal Society, a member of EMBO and the U.S.
National Academy of Sciences and a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge.
He was awarded the 2007 Louis-Jeantet Prize for Medicine, the 2008
Heatley Medal of the British Biochemical Society and the 2009
Rolf-Sammet Professorship at the University of Frankfurt. In 2009,
Ramakrishnan was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry along with Thomas
A. Steitz and Ada Yonath. He received India's second highest civilian
honor, the Padma Vibhushan, in 2010.
Early life and education
Vilayanur
Subramanian Ramachandran (in accordance with Indian family name
traditions, his family name, Vilayanur, is placed first) was born in
1951 in Tamil Nadu, India. In Tamil, one of the classical languages of
India, his name is written as. His father, Vilayanur Subramanian, was a
UN diplomat, and as a consequence, Ramachandran spent much of his youth
moving among several different posts in India and other parts of Asia.
As a young man he attended schools in Madras, Bangkok and England, and
pursued many scientific interests, including conchology.Ramachandran
obtained an M.B.B.S. from Stanley Medical College in Madras, India, and
subsequently obtained a Ph.D. from Trinity College at the University of
Cambridge. While a graduate student at Cambridge
Ramachandran also collaborated on research projects with faculty at
Oxford, including David Whitteridge of the Physiology Department. He
then spent two years at Caltech, as a research fellow working with Jack
Pettigrew. He was appointed Assistant Professor of Psychology at the
University of California, San Diego in 1983, and has been a full
professor there since 1998.
Ramachandran
is the grandson of Sir Alladi Krishnaswamy Iyer, Advocate General of
Madras and co-architect of the Constitution of India. He is married to
Diane Rogers-Ramachandran and they have two boys, Mani and Jaya.
Scientific career
Ramachandran
has studied neurological syndromes to investigate neural mechanisms
underlying human mental function. Ramachandran is best known for his
work on syndromes such as phantom limbs, body integrity identity
disorder, and Capgras delusion. His research has also contributed to the
understanding of synesthesia. More recently his work has focused on the
theoretical implications of mirror neurons and the cause of autism. In
addition, Ramachandran is known for the invention of the mirror box. He
has published over 180 papers in scientific journals. Twenty of these
have appeared in Nature, and others have appeared in Science, Nature
Neuroscience, Perception and Vision Research. Ramachandran is a member
of the editorial board of Medical Hypotheses (Elsevier) and has
published 15 articles there.
Ramachandran's
work in behavioral neurology has been widely reported by the media. He
has appeared in numerous Channel 4 and PBS documentaries. He has also
been featured by the BBC, the Science Channel, Newsweek, Radio Lab, and
This American Life, TED Talks, and Charlie Rose. In the episode "The
Tyrant" of the television show House, M.D., Dr. House cures phantom limb
pain using a mirror box.
He
is author of Phantoms in the Brain which formed the basis for a two
part series on BBC Channel 4 TV (UK) and a 1-hour PBS special in the
USA. He is the editor of the Encyclopedia of the Human Brain (2002), and
is co-author of the bi-monthly "Illusions" column in Scientific
American Mind.
Ramachandran
has recently lamented that science has become too professionalized. In a
2010 interview with the British Neuroscience Association he stated:
"But where I'd really like to go is back in time. I'd go to the
Victorian age, before science had professionalized and become just
another 9–5 job, with power-brokering and grants nightmares. Back then
scientists just had fun. People like Darwin and Huxley; the whole world
was their playground.
Phantom limbs
When
an arm or leg is amputated, patients continue to feel vividly the
presence of the missing limb as a "phantom limb". Building on earlier
work by Ronald Melzack (McGill University) and Timothy Pons (NIMH),
Ramachandran theorized that there was a link between the phenomenon of
phantom limbs and neural plasticity in the adult human brain. In
particular, he theorized that the body image maps in the somatosensory
cortex are re-mapped after the amputation of a limb. In 1993, working
with T.T. Yang who was conducting MEG research at the Scripps Research
Institute, Ramachandran demonstrated that there had been measurable
changes in the somatosensory cortex of several patients who had
undergone arm amputations. Ramachandran theorized that there was a
relationship between cortical reorganization in the brain and the
referred sensations he observed in his subjects. He presented this
theory in a paper titled "Perceptual correlates of massive cortical
reorganization." However, in 1996 Knecht et al., using magnetic source
imaging, demonstrated that there was no relationship between cortical
reorganization and a particular pattern of referred sensation after
amputation.In 1998 Ramachandran and Hirstein published a review of
research on phantom limbs that proposed a five factor model of phantom
limb sensations and experience.
20) Ashoke Sen
Ashoke Sen (Bengali: অশোক সেন),
FRS, (born 1956) is an Indian theoretical physicist. He has made a
number of major original contributions to the subject of string theory,
including his landmark paper on strong-weak coupling duality or
S-duality, which was influential in changing the course of research in
the field. He pioneered the study of unstable D-branes and made the
famous Sen conjecture about open string tachyon condensation on such
branes. His description of rolling tachyons has been influential in
string cosmology. He has also co-authored many important papers on
string field theory. One of his most recent contributions include the
entropy function formalism for extremal black holes and its applications
to attractors. His current research interests are centered around the
attractor mechanism and the precision counting of microstates for black
holes in string theory. Of his nearly 200 research papers, as many as 47
papers have over 100 citations each.
Sen,
now above 50, received his bachelor’s of science degree in 1975 from
Calcutta University, and his master’s three years later from the Indian
Institute of Technology Kanpur. He did his doctoral work in physics at
Stony Brook University, where he graduated in 1982, subsequently
spending the next three years as a post-doc at Fermilab and another two
and a half at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). In March
1988, he moved back to India and the Tata Institute of Fundamental
Research. Since 1995 he has been a full professor at the Harish-Chandra
Research Institute. Between 1998 and 2003, Sen visited the Isaac Newton
Institute in Cambridge, U.K., as Rothschild Visiting Professor, and,
between 2004 and 2005, was at MIT as Morningstar Visiting Professor. He
is married to Dr. Sumathi Rao, a condensed matter physicist at HRI.
Those Were The Top Most Scientists from Modern India who have planted their firm believe and discovery to every fields of Science Throughout the World. Future of The Science will be formed or take into shape on the shoulder of their discovery and inventions .
Credit : Online Wikipedia
Those Were The Top Most Scientists from Modern India who have planted their firm believe and discovery to every fields of Science Throughout the World. Future of The Science will be formed or take into shape on the shoulder of their discovery and inventions .
Credit : Online Wikipedia
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