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The Great Indian Scientists: C V Raman

C V Raman won the Nobel Prize in 1930 for discovering Raman scattering, which occurs when light changes wavelength after passing through a transparent material. Homi Bhabha played a key role in convincing India's leaders to start an ambitious nuclear program and became the first chairman of India's Atomic Energy Commission. Venkatraman Radhakrishnan was a renowned space scientist who helped unravel mysteries of pulsars and galaxy structures through his observations and theories. S. Chandrasekhar won the 1983 Nobel Prize for his theory of black holes and model explaining the structure of white dwarf stars through relativistic mass-velocity effects.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
910 views1 page

The Great Indian Scientists: C V Raman

C V Raman won the Nobel Prize in 1930 for discovering Raman scattering, which occurs when light changes wavelength after passing through a transparent material. Homi Bhabha played a key role in convincing India's leaders to start an ambitious nuclear program and became the first chairman of India's Atomic Energy Commission. Venkatraman Radhakrishnan was a renowned space scientist who helped unravel mysteries of pulsars and galaxy structures through his observations and theories. S. Chandrasekhar won the 1983 Nobel Prize for his theory of black holes and model explaining the structure of white dwarf stars through relativistic mass-velocity effects.
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The Great Indian Scientists

C V Raman
Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman won the Nobel Prize for Physics in
1930 for his pioneering work on scattering of light. Born
in Tiruchirapalli on November 7, 1888, he was the first Asian to receive
any Nobel Prize in the sciences. He discovered that, when light traverses
a transparent material, some of the deflected light changes in
wavelength. This phenomenon is now called the Raman scattering and is
the result of the Raman effect.

Homi J. Bhabha
Born on October 30, 1909 in Bombay, Homi Jehangir Bhabha played
an important role in the Quantum Theory. He was the first person to
become the Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission of India.
Having started his scientific career in nuclear physics from Great
Britain, Bhabha returned to India and played a key role in convincing
the Congress Party’s senior leaders, most notably Jawaharlal Nehru,
to start the ambitious nuclear programme.

Venkatraman Radhakrishnan
Venkatraman Radhakrishnan was born on May 18, 1929 in Tondaripet,
a suburb of Chennai. Venkataraman was a globally renowned space
scientist and a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. He
was an internationally acclaimed Astrophysicist and also known for his
design and fabrication of ultralight aircraft and sailboats. His
observations and theoretical insights helped the community in
unraveling many mysteries surrounding pulsars, interstellar clouds,
galaxy structures and various other celestial bodies.

S. Chandrashekar
Born on October 19,1910 in Lahore, British India, he was awarded the 1983
Nobel Prize for Physics for his mathematical theory of black holes, The
Chandrasekhar limit is named after him. His most celebrated work concerns
the radiation of energy from stars, particularly white dwarf stars, which are
the dying fragments of stars. At the University of Cambridge, he developed
a theoretical model explaining the structure of whi te dwarf stars that took
into account the relativistic variation of mass with the velocities of
electrons that comprise their degenerate matter.

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