Category Great Scientist

How ‘Eureka’ Moments in Science Happen?

When the Apple fell on Newton or when Archimedes took a bath, history as we know it changed. Those are the ‘Aha’ moments when scientific discoveries were made. A look at some of these breakthrough moments.

Archimedes’ principle – Archimedes

This was history’s first-ever ‘Eureka’ moment. The story of how the Greek mathematician Archimedes discovered the principle of buoyancy is a tale worth recounting. It was whilst taking a bath in a tub that the idea hit Archimedes. When Archimedes noticed the amount of water being displaced from the tub as soon as he entered it, he reasoned that the volume of the water displaced is equal to the volume of the body that was submerged. He is said to have run across the streets naked, shrieking “Eureka” at his discovery of the law of buoyancy. And that gave us the Archimedes’ principle.

Periodic Table – Dmitri Mendeleev

For Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev, it all happened in a dream. The Periodic Table of Elements as we know it was conceptualised in a dream. For months, he was trying to arrive at a logical way to organise the chemical elements. Although he knew the atomic weight was a crucial element, he couldn’t find a way to arrange it. One day, after racking his brain over the arrangement pattern, he fell asleep. And lo, the periodic table was born. The idea for the logical arrangement of the elements dawned on him during his dream. He later wrote “In a dream, I saw a table where all the elements fell into place as required.”

Law of Gravity – Isaac Newton

Every child grew up listening to the tale of how an apple’s fall changed science. It was when Isaac Newton noticed the apple fall that he first got the idea of gravity. He wondered what force attracted everything towards the Earth. The tree that inspired the idea of gravity in Newton still stands in the garden of Newton’s old home.

Penicillin – Dr. Alexander Fleming

The discovery of penicillin, the world’s first antibiotic, revolutionised the course of medicine. Dr. Alexander Fleming had just returned from a holiday and found mould growing on a petri dish of Staphylococcus bacteria. The green mould Penicillium notatum prevented the bacteria around it from growing. He isolated the mould, and understood it produced a substance that could kill the bacteria. He named the active agent penicillin and thus the world’s first antibiotic was discovered.

First synthetic dye – William Perkin

The fashion industry must thank William Perkin for his discovery of the first synthetic dye. He was trying to find a cure for malaria, but he accidentally invented the first synthetic purple dye. Perkin was assisting German chemist August Wilhelm von Hofmann in the process of using coal tar to produce quinine which was an expensive anti-malarial drug. As he mixed different coal tar components with potassium dichromate and sulphuric acid, Perkin produced a purple sludge. The rest is history.

DID YOU KNOW? Newton recounted the story that inspired his theory of gravitation to scholar William Stukeley. It appeared in Stukeley’s 1752 biography, “Memoirs of Sir Isaac Newton’s Life.” The UK’s Royal Society converted the fragile manuscript into an electronic book in 2010 and made it accessible online to the public.

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WHO WAS CHARLES DARWIN?

Charles Darwin was an English scientist who proposed that evolution happened through ‘natural selection’. According to Darwin, the organisms that lived on are those which had the best traits to survive their environment, and passed on those traits to following generations.

Charles Robert Darwin, (12 February 1809 – 19 April 1882) was an English naturalist, geologist and biologist, best known for his contributions to the science of evolution.

The Theory of Evolution by natural selection was first formulated in Charles Darwin’s book “On the Origin of Species” published in 1859. In his book, Darwin describes how organisms evolve over generations through the inheritance of physical or behavioral traits, as National Geographic explains. The theory starts with the premise that within a population, there is variation in traits, such as beak shape in one of the Galapagos finches Darwin studied.

According to the theory, individuals with traits that enable them to adapt to their environments will help them survive and have more offspring, which will inherit those traits. Individuals with less adaptive traits will less frequently survive to pass them on. Over time, the traits that enable species to survive and reproduce will become more frequent in the population and the population will change, or evolve, according to BioMed Central. Through natural selection, Darwin suggested, genetically diverse species could arise from a common ancestor.

Credit: Live Science

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Are laser devices inspired by Einstein’s Theory of Stimulated Emission?

You might have come across laser pointers while attending a seminar or conference, or perhaps used it to play with your cat or dog. In the sixty years since physicists demonstrated the first laboratory prototype of a laser in 1960, it has been put to use in numerous ways from barcode readers to systems for hair removal.

The technology behind laser devices is based on Einstein’s Theory of Stimulated Emission. This theory came a year after the discovery of general relativity. Einstein imagined a bunch of atoms bathed in light. He had earlier discovered that atoms sitting in their lowest energy state can absorb photons and jump to a higher energy state. Similarly, higher energy atoms can emit photons and fall back to lower energies.

After sufficient time passes, the system attains equilibrium. Based on this assumption, he developed an equation that can be used to calculate what the radiation from such a system would look like. Unfortunately, Einstein’s calculations differed from the laboratory results. It was obvious that a key piece of the whole puzzle was missing.

Einstein resolved this by guessing that photons like to march in step. This would mean that the presence of a bunch of photons going in the same direction will increase the probability of a high-energy atom emitting another photon in that direction. Einstein labelled this process stimulated emission. He was able to rectify the disparity between his calculations and the observations by including this in his equations.

A laser is a device to harness this phenomenon. It excites a bunch of atoms with light or electrical energy. The photons released as a result are channelled precisely in one direction. Lasers are used in delicate surgery or industrial processes that require precision.

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Why is it said that Albert Einstein had even contributed to the daily functioning of Wall Street?

Wall Street in New York is the home of the New York Stock Exchange. An army of mathematicians are employed there to analyze and predict the stock price variations. Their employers can potentially earn millions of dollars based on their predictions about which way the prices will jump.

Mathematicians however say that stock markets follow a random walk. This means that unless some spectacular event occurs, the prices have the same chances of decreasing and increasing at the end of any day. If patterns do exist, they will be elusive and difficult to find, which is why financial mathematicians are paid huge sums.

Some of the intricate mathematics used for stock market analyses can be traced back to Einstein. He developed the fluctuation-dissipation   theorem to explain the random movement of particles found in liquids or gases.

This movement called ‘Brownian motion’ was first observed by the Scottish biologist Robert Brown. Brownian motion is highly similar to the price fluctuations seen in stock markets. The similarity was observed in 1970 and since then it has been used on Wall Street. Einstein’s paper on Brownian motion is still used as the basis for certain stock market predictions.

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Does GPS primarily use the General Theory of Relativity?

Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity has predominantly found applications in astronomy through gravity waves, big bangs and black holes. One of its rather unexpected applications was in the multi-billion-dollar industry centred around the Global Positioning System (GPS).

All GPS navigators including Google Maps work by measuring the distance from one point on Earth to one of the satellites orbiting our planet. Though GPS was originally developed with military use in mind, it has since become an inherent part of everyday life.

GPS is based on a collection of 24 satellites, each carrying a precise atomic clock. A hand-held GPS receiver which detects radio emissions from any satellite overhead can find the latitude, longitude and altitude with accuracy up to 15 metres and local time to 50 billionths of a second. The clocks on satellites are ahead of those on Earth by 38,000 nanoseconds. The reason for this is explained by the General Theory of Relativity. Though it may appear as an inconsequential amount of time, if these nanoseconds are not taken into account, GPS systems would be highly inaccurate.

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In which universities did Einstein serve as a professor till the 1930s?

Despite publishing four ground-breaking scientific papers in 1905 and earning his doctorate, Einstein still had difficulty finding a teaching job. He finally became a lecturer at the University of Berne in 1908. He received more opportunities in academia as his reputation as a theoretical physicist grew.

A year after joining the University of Berne he became an associate professor of physics at the University of Zurich. In 1911, he became a full professor at the University of Prague but returned after a year as a full professor to Zurich. The highlight of his academic career was when he became a professor at the University of Berlin and a member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences.

He had also been the Director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics. Einstein earned the salary of a professor without any teaching duties at the University of Berlin. As a result, he could pursue his research full time. He remained in the University of Berlin until the early 1930s.

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What was the role Satyendra Nath Bose played in Einstein’s scientific life?

 

 

Einstein received a paper from Indian scientist Satyendra Nath Bose in 1924. The paper was on a new perspective: to think of light as a gas filled with indistinguishable particles. Einstein recognized the relevance of the paper. He translated it to German and submitted it on behalf of Bose to the famous journal Zeitschrift fur Physik. Bose went to Europe and worked with Einstein at the X-ray and crystallography laboratories there.

Einstein worked with Bose to extend his idea to atoms and they predicted a new state of matter which came to be called the Bose-Einstein Condensate. A Bose-Einstein Condensate is a dense collection of particles with integer spin known as Bosons.

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Were Einstein’s researches after the General Theory of Relativity mostly based on universal field theories?

Einstein was primarily in pursuit of a universal field theory after the General Theory of Relativity. He engaged in a series of unsuccessful attempts to further generalize the theory of gravitation in order to unify and simplify the fundamental laws of physics, in particular, gravitation and electromagnetism.

This ‘theory of everything’ was supposed to refute the quantum theory. Though he published a paper in 1929 which supposedly had such a theory, Einstein himself had to acknowledge the errors in his argument.

Einstein remained in the cocoon of his research, largely ignoring other developments in physics and quantum theory. He however, did a few collaborations with the Indian scientist Satyendra Nath Bose, the Austrian Erwin Schrodinger and his Hungarian former student Leo Szilard.

In the 1930s he worked together with Russian physicist Boris Podolsky and the Israeli physicist Nathan Rosen. Nevertheless, his search for the ‘theory of everything’ and his distrust of the quantum theory consumed him in his later years.

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Why was Einstein not a great supporter of the quantum theory?

Einstein had also made contributions to the development of the quantum theory. The concept of light quanta (photons) was used by him in 1905 to explain the Photoelectric Effect and to develop the quantum theory of specific heat.

Despite playing a main role in its development, Einstein regarded the quantum theory only as a temporarily useful structure.

His efforts were primarily in formulating the unified field theory which he believed would turn out to be the reason behind quantization of energy and charge. He felt that the quantum theory lacked the simplicity and beauty befitting a rational interpretation of the universe.

He engaged in a series of private debates with physicist Niels Bohr about the validity of the quantum theory later on. The 1920s witnessed his prolonged public debates with Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg over quantum mechanics. Einstein was rather lukewarm about the quantum theory even from a philosophical standpoint, saying in 1926 that he was convinced God does not throw dice. However, Bohr showed the ambiguities in Einstein’s reasoning.

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Which was the year Einstein received the Nobel Prize?

The Nobel Prize in Physics 1921 was awarded to Albert Einstein “for his services to Theoretical Physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect.”

Albert Einstein received his Nobel Prize one year later, in 1922. During the selection process in 1921, the Nobel Committee for Physics decided that none of the year’s nominations met the criteria as outlined in the will of Alfred Nobel. According to the Nobel Foundation’s statutes, the Nobel Prize can in such a case be reserved until the following year, and this statute was then applied. Albert Einstein therefore received his Nobel Prize for 1921 one year later, in 1922.

However, Einstein did not attend his prize giving. Though he was informed that he was to receive the prize, he continued with a lecture tour of Japan.

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How did the General Theory of Relativity prove to be correct in 1919?

Einstein has published four papers on the general theory of relativity. In the third paper, he used general relativity to explain why Mercury’s closest point to the Sun (its perihelion) is erratic.

Gravitational influence of the Sun and other planets was not sufficient explanation for this movement. Some even went as far as to suggest in the 19th century that a new planet, Vulcan, orbiting close to the Sun was the reason! But this was disproved as Einstein succeeded in calculating the shift in Mercury’s perihelion using the general theory of relativity.

The theory not only explained previously unexplained phenomena, it could even predict events that have not occurred yet. In 1919, the theory was validated again when Sir Arthur Eddington, secretary of the Royal Astronomical Society of London travelled to the island of Principe off the coast of West Africa. There, he had the perfect view of the Sun during a total eclipse.

The light emitted from a certain strand was measured and it was found that the light was deflected, or bent, by just the amount that Einstein had predicted. Einstein’s fame skyrocketed after this.

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What is the General Theory of Relativity?

The General Theory of Relativity predicted that the space-time around Earth would be warped and twisted due to Earth’s rotation. The theory gave a new framework for all of physics and proposed new concepts of space and time.

In 1907, Einstein had certain realizations about his theory. He understood that special relativity could not be applied to gravity or to an object undergoing acceleration. Consider a person sitting inside a closed room on Earth. That person experiences Earth’s gravity. Now imagine if the same room was placed in space, away from the gravitational influence of any object.

If it is given an acceleration of 9.8 m/s2 (same as Earth’s gravitational acceleration), the person inside the room won’t be able to tell whether he is feeling gravity or uniform acceleration. This idea laid the foundation of the General Theory of Relativity.

Einstein’s next question was how light would behave in the accelerating room. When we shine a torch across the room, the light looks like it is bending forward. This is because the floor of the room would be coming up to the light beam at an ever-faster speed, so the floor could catch up with the light. As gravity and acceleration are equivalent, light would bend in a gravitational field.

It took Einstein several years to find the correct mathematical expression of these ideas. In 1912, his friend, mathematician Marcel Grossman, introduced him to the tensor analysis of some mathematicians. This helped him. After three more years of work, the foundations of this theory were laid in the four papers he published in 1915.

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Why is it said that Einstein was not the first one to follow the photoelectric effect?

Einstein was not the first scientist to observe and study the photoelectric effect. However, he was the first to properly understand the nature of light and draw the correct assumptions from it. Physicists James Clerk Maxwell in Scotland and Hendrik Lorentz in the Netherlands had already proved the wave nature of light in the late 1800s. This was proven by seeing how light waves demonstrate interference, diffraction and scattering- which are common to all waves including water.

Einstein’s 1905 argument that light behaves as sets of particles (initially called quanta and later ‘photon’) was contradictory to the classical description of light as a wave. A completely new model of light was needed to explain the phenomenon. Einstein developed a model for this purpose and according to this, light sometimes behaved as particles of electromagnetic energy or photons. Though others had presented this theory before Einstein, he was the first to explain why it occurred and consider its potential.

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What is photoelectric effect?

Photoelectric effect is the emission of electrons from a substance when electromagnetic radiations fall on it. For instance, when light falls on a metal plate, electrons are ejected.

Light with energy above a particular point frees electrons from the surface of the solid metal. Each photon (particle of light) collides with an electron and uses some of its energy to remove the electron. Photon’s remaining energy transfers to the free negative charge which is called a photoelectron. This was a discovery that revolutionized modern physics as it clarified many doubts regarding the nature of light.

The photoelectric effect proposed by Einstein in 1905 remains valuable in various areas of research such as material science and astrophysics. It is also the basis of many useful devices. The ‘electric eye’ door openers, light metres used in photography, solar panels and Photostat copying are all applications of the photoelectric effect.

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What is the most famous equation formulated by Albert Einstein?

The equation E=mc2 is perhaps one of the most famous scientific equations of all time. As mentioned previously, this equation came up in the fourth paper Einstein published in 1905. It states that energy is equal to the product of mass and the square of the speed of light. Which means that, matter can transform into energy if it moves fast enough.

One of the factors making this equation so remarkable is that it establishes a connection between hitherto seemingly unrelated entities. Before Einstein’s fourth paper was published, time and Space, and mass and energy were separate entities.

Through establishing the concepts of space-time and E=mc2, he formulated his theory of relativity. Though special relativity is one of the last intuitive theories ever made in the history of science, it turned out to be a crucial one for physics.

Scientists proved all the theories Einstein proposed in 1905. The uses of these theories did not always turn out to be for the benefit of mankind. Changing matter into energy is the principle behind the generation of nuclear energy which provides electricity to millions of people.

However, the same principle was used to split atoms and release the destructive energy of atom bombs. Thus, the equation which is a blessing in electricity production and medical diagnostic tools also became the foundation of the nuclear bomb.

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What is the Special Theory of Relativity?

The Special Theory of Relativity was published in 1905. It presented the astonishing idea that space and time are not absolute but relative. Or simply put, changes in the measurements of distance and passing of time depends on the observer who is measuring them. Einstein added a fourth dimension (time) to the three existing dimensions (length, width and height).

Einstein revealed that time is experienced differently by observers in relative motion. Two events might appear as if they are happening at the same time for one observer, but they might happen at different times from the perspective of another. And the observers would be right in both cases.

Einstein later demonstrated this point with an experiment. Imagine a man standing on a railway platform as a train goes by. Each end of the train is struck by a bolt of lightning just as the midpoint of the train passes him. Because the lightning strikes are the same distance from the observer, their light reaches his eye at the same instant. Therefore, he would correctly say that they happened at the same time.

Meanwhile, there is an observer sitting in the exact midpoint of the train. From her perspective, the light from the two strikes also has to travel equal distances. She will therefore measure the speed of light to be the same in either direction.

However, as the train is moving, light from the lighting that struck the rear must travel more to catch up and will be slower to reach than the light from the front. This causes the observer inside the train to conclude that lightning struck the front of the train first rather than simultaneously. Einstein says that simultaneity is relative.

These new ideas were published in a paper titled On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies.

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Why was the year 1905 considered an annus mirabilis for Einstein?

Einstein too had an annus mirabilis like Newton. In 1905, Einstein published four scientific papers in the German journal Annalen der Physik. These four papers laid the foundation of modern physics by revolutionizing how the scientific community perceived fundamental concepts of space, time, mass, and energy. As all four papers were published in 1905, this year is considered Einstein’s annus mirabilis or miracle year.

The first paper introduced the revolutionary idea that light is composed of both energy and particles. The foundation for quantum physics that physical systems can behave both as waves (energy) and as particles (matter) began here.

The second paper, though without any revolutionary concepts, was important in its own right. Einstein discovered the empirical evidence behind Brownian Motion which refers to the random movement displayed by small particles that are suspended in fluids. Though many scientists had accepted this already, empirical evidence had been lacking.

The third paper which contained the special theory of relativity possibly had the most ground-breaking content among all four papers.

The last of these papers published on 21 November 1905 had the mathematical confirmation of the Special Theory of Relativity, the most famous equation: E=mc2.

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How did Einstein end up working in a patent office?

Following his graduation in 1900, Einstein spent 2 years looking for a teaching job. Though he wrote to different universities, he was not able to impress anyone sufficiently to land a job as a teacher. Meanwhile three of his fellow students became assistants at the university in Zurich. In 1902, while he had been still writing to universities, Einstein took the job of assistant examiner in the patent office.

In his new job, Einstein evaluated patent applications for devices such as a gravel sorter and an electromechanical typewriter. He became a permanent employee of the Swiss Patent Office in 1903.

The job was a lowly one for a man of Einstein’s intellect but he thoroughly enjoyed working with the technical and mechanical ideas of various inventors. He later described it as his best time. The job also did not take too much effort, and he could pursue his own interests along with it.

While working at the patent office Einstein developed his work in special relativity and other areas of physics which later made him famous.

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Why did Einstein’s father think Zurich Polytechnic was a good place for his son?

From the age of 12 to 14, Einstein mastered integral and differential calculus by himself. As he showed immense interest and aptitude for maths and science, his father thought he should become an engineer. And Zurich Polytechnic (now Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland) seemed like the best place to go for this. It had been one of the best scientific schools in Europe. Einstein went to Zurich to write the entrance exam. He performed well in science and maths but failed the foreign language section.

Einstein took the advice of the polytechnic school’s principal and joined the Old Cantonal School in Aarau, Switzerland, in 1895 and 1896 to finish his secondary schooling. In January 1896 Einstein gave up his citizenship in the German Kingdom of Wurttemberg to avoid military service. This was done with the approval of his father. In September 1896 he cleared the Swiss Matura exam with good marks. He scored the highest grade in science and mathematics.

Thus, Einstein became a student of the four-year mathematics and physics teaching diploma program in the Zurich Polytechnic School at the age of 17.

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Why did Einstein’s family shift to Milan, Italy?

In 1894, Hermann and Jakob’s company lost a bid to supply electrical lighting to Munich city. This was because they didn’t have enough funds to convert their equipment from direct current (DC) to the more efficient alternating current (AC). Without the deal, they were forced to sell their factory in Munich and move to Italy in search of business. They first moved to Milan and then to Pavia. However, Einstein stayed back in Munich to complete his education at Luitpold Gymnasium.

He found it more difficult to cope with school after his family moved away. His attitude was so negative that a teacher suggested he leave. The teacher said that Albert’s presence adversely affected the other students. In December 1894 Einstein left the school and went to Pavia.

While in Italy, he penned the essay On the Investigation of the State of the Ether in a Magnetic Field. Einstein had always excelled in mathematics and physics and reached mathematical levels years ahead of his peers. At the age of twelve, Einstein had already discovered his own original proof of the Pythagorean Theorem and learned algebra and Euclidean geometry on his own.

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How did the young medical student, Max Talmud influence Einstein?

A young medical student by the name Max Talmud was an informal tutor who introduced Einstein to higher mathematics and philosophy.

Talmud often had dinner in Einstein’s home and shared several books with him. Einstein loved reading these books and also discussed philosophical matters with Talmud. Quickly grasping the contents of the books, Einstein was soon baffling Talmud with his questions.

Once when Talmud gave 12-year-old Einstein a geometry textbook, he finished the entire book in a surprisingly short time. His mathematical genius was such that Talmud soon found himself unable to catch up.

A turning point in Einstein’s life was when he was 16. Talmud had introduced him to a children’s science series by Aaron Bernstein titled Naturwis-senschaftliche Volksbucher (popular Books on Physical Science). In the series, the author imagined himself travelling along-side the electricity coursing through a telegraph wire.

The question this image raised in young Einstein’s mind dominated his thoughts for the next decade. What would a beam of light look like if someone ran alongside it? A light beam should appear stationary if it was a wave. But even as a child he realized that stationary light waves haven’t been seen. This remained a paradox he tried to solve.

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What was Einstein’s experience in school?

 

Einstein studied in a strict Catholic primary school where the students wore military type uniforms. Einstein was generally bored by the classes. Though he excelled in certain subjects like mathematics and Latin, his performance in other subjects was poor. Einstein’s teachers considered him to be a dreamy, absentminded child.

However, Jakob Einstein, Albert’s uncle discovered the boy’s latent brilliance when Albert was able to give his own mathematical proof of the Pythagorean Theorem. (Pythagoras was a Greek mathematician who lived in the 6th century BC.)

Albert’s parents encouraged him to ask questions and gave him many books to read. Eager to learn more, Albert taught himself advanced maths.

In 1894, Einstein began attending a secondary school at Munich’s Luitpold Gymnasium. The new school turned out to be stricter than his primary school.        

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Did music have a profound influence on Einstein?

Einstein’s mother bought a violin and hired a music teacher to give him lessons when he was six years old. Though he was not too eager to attend classes in the beginning, he soon came to love playing the violin. Einstein and his mother would play duets with her accompanying him on the piano.

His love for music stayed with him throughout his life. Einstein was often seen carrying his violin case during his time at Princeton. He would solve complex mathematical problems in his head while improvising on the violin he nicknamed Lina. Playing his violin alone or with others gave Einstein great pleasure and relaxation. He resolved many problems in his personal life and science by taking refuge in music.

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Where was Albert Einstein born?

Einstein was born on March 14, 1879, in Ulm, Wurttemberg, Germany. Though his parents were Jews they were not religious. This could have been a matter of survival in Germany at the time. Until a few years before Einstein’s birth, Jews were not even considered German citizens. Albert’s father Hermann Einstein had been a salesman and an engineer. Hermann and his brother started Elektrotechnische Fabrik J. Einstein & Cie, an electrical equipment manufacturing company based in Munich. Meanwhile, Einstein’s mother Pauline Koch ran the household.

The Einstein family shifted to Munich when Albert was a year old. Little Albert started speaking only at the age of three. He had a sister, Maja, two years younger to him. Maja recollects Albert’s intense concentration while building multiple-storied card houses.

Einstein mentions two events as having immense impact on his early years. The first was at the age of 5, when he saw a compass. He was puzzled to hear that some invisible forces could make the compass needle always point north. This marked the beginning of his lifelong fascination with invisible forces. The second event was his introduction to geometry at the age of 12.

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What makes Albert Einstein one of the legends in the history of science?

Albert Einstein is considered to be one of the most influential persons of the 20th century. His thoughts on space, time, motion and energy revealed new trajectories to the world.

Astronomers use his work till day to study everything from gravitational waves to Mercury’s orbit. His contribution also extends to the philosophy of science.

Einstein’s formula on mass – energy equivalence, E=mc2(square) has been called the world’s most famous equation. Even those unfamiliar with the underlying physics know about this equation.

In 1921 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for the law of the photoelectric effect. His theory of general relativity gives an explanation of gravity while the law of photoelectric effect explains the behaviour of electrons in certain conditions.

Einstein’s theories and discoveries marked a turning point in the development of quantum theory and influenced the development of atomic energy.

The ‘theory of everything’ was a single theory under which Einstein tried to unify all the forces of the universe. He worked on this unified field theory, though unsuccessfully, till the time of his death.

Einstein’s insight and inquisitiveness made him the most influential physicist of the 20th century.

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Why is it said that it is nearly impossible to sum up Newton’s contributions to the scientific world?

 

 

Newton’s contributions to science are truly staggering. In a foreword to a twentieth century edition of Newtons Opticks, Albert Einstein wrote:

“Nature was to him an open book, whose letters he could read without effort… In one person, he combined the experimenter, the theorist, the mechanic and, not least, the artist in exposition. He stands before us strong, certain and alone; his joy in creation and his minute precision are evident in every word and every figure.”

Newton summarized his achievements in these words: “I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the seashore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me…”

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When did Newton die?

Sir Isaac Newton led an active life until his old age when age-related afflictions became a barrier. As he experienced inconsistencies due to weakness in the bladder, he was forced to limit his movements and follow dietary restrictions.

He became ill with gout in 1725 and suffered haemorrhoids the next year. In the months prior to his death, Newton was ill and bedridden. He lost consciousness on 19 March 1727 due to pain from his bladder stone and never regained consciousness. Newton passed away on 31 March 1727 at the age of 84. He was buried in London’s Westminster Abbey on April 4, to rest among the kings and queens, dukes and earls of England.

Isaac Newton’s pallbearers included two dukes, three earls and the Lord Chancellor. Voltaire described Newton’s funeral as the funeral of a king who had done well by his subjects.

In the last years of his life, Newton’s circle of friends included Prince George (later George II) and his wife Caroline, whom he visited regularly. He was successful, famous and wealthy by the time he died. Newton is said to have helped his extended family generously and was a charitable person. As he had never married, his estate went to the descendants of his stepfather, Barnabas Smith.

His papers were given to his half-niece Catherine Barton and her husband John Conduitt.

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What were the connections between Newton and alchemy?

Alchemy is a proto-science which studies, among other things, the possible methods to transform base metals such as lead and copper into silver or gold. Alchemy also involves the search for the cure for diseases and a way to extend life.

Alchemy is shrouded in mystery and secrecy. Newton has been considered as a credulous alchemist by many. He had even described a recipe for the Philosopher’s Stone in one of his manuscripts. Philosopher’s Stone is said to have the ability to turn base metals into silver and gold and had magical properties and could even help humans achieve immortality.

Newton’s belief that he had discovered a blueprint for the Philosopher’s Stone was rather surprising, considering his status as a serious and empirical scientist.

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How did Newton’s entry into the Parliament come about?

Despite his success as a scientist, Newton was at first largely inactive in the political arena. Later, he became the Member of Parliament, representing Cambridge University from 1689 to 1690. This had been the period when the Parliament enacted the Bill of Rights, which limited the power of the monarchy and laid out the rights of Parliament and individuals. However, Newton was anything but an active parliamentarian. He reportedly spoke just once and that had been to ask an usher to close a window on a chilly day!

Despite his lacklustre contributions as a parliamentarian, he became acquainted with many influential individuals including King William III and philosopher John Locke, during his time in London. Newton served a second term in the parliament from 1701 to 1702 but this time too his participation in the proceedings of Parliament was minimal.

In 1705, he was knighted by Queen Anne for his contributions to science and public service. The event was held at a lavish ceremony at Trinity College. Newton became the first scientist to be given this honour.

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Why is it said that Newton was a scientific warden in the Royal Mint?

Among all the duties Newton had at the Royal Mint, the most impossible one was testing the purity and accuracy of coins. The coins had to be of the correct weight and fineness, with only the least difference from each other.

The task of determining whether each coin was identical to the other, turned out to be a tedious one. However, Newton’s scientific training came in useful to tackle this job.

Newton visited the pressing plant next to his office at the Royal Mint every day. Workmen would take out a small sample of the molten metal using ladles designed for this purpose. The sample would be taken back to the warden’s laboratory where he conducted chemical experiments on the metal to verify if it met the required standards of purity.

Newton claimed that he had brought the coinage to a much greater degree of exactness than ever before. Naturally, he reacted angrily when a judgment by the jury in the Trial of the Pyx in 1710 declared that the gold coins were substandard. (The Trial of the Pyx is a procedure in which the integrity of the coinage of England was tested.)

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When was Isaac Newton appointed as the warden of the Royal Mint?

Isaac Newton was appointed as the warden of the Royal Mint in 1696. He received the position on the recommendation of Charles Montague, a well-known politician of the time. The prestigious post was intended as a reward for Newton’s scientific achievements.

Newton took up the position at a crucial time as England was in the process of changing its silver coinage prevalent from the time of Elizabeth I. As these coins had a smooth edge, people could easily clip small amounts of silver from them and still use the same coin. Making counterfeit coins was also a common occurrence. Newton took a firm stance on counterfeiting. He cracked down on the group of thieves known as clippers who clipped off small pieces of coins, melted down the metal and extracted the silver.

Under Newton’s wardenship, auxiliary mints were set up on different parts of the country. He supervised the processing of new coins and its distribution to various banks across the country. Newton was so successful that in 1699, within 3 years of his appointment, he was made the Master of the Royal Mint.

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When did Isaac Newton become the President of the Royal Society?

Isaac Newton became the president of the Royal Society in 1703. The 60-year-old Newton undertook responsibilities with his characteristic determination and energy. In the preceding years the Society had a series of politicians as its presidents. They were not concerned about the Society’s aims and the weekly meetings were no longer based on the scientific interests which laid the foundation of the Society.

Once Newton took charge, he devoted his time to bring the Society back to its old grandeur. He developed a scheme and methodology for conducting its meetings. According to the scheme, weekly meetings would have to be held, where serious discussions would take place. Moreover, he also made a provision for people with good scientific reputations to give demonstrations at the meetings. This succeeded in increasing the attendance and improving the quality of the deliberations.

The Royal Society became stronger during and following the 24 years of Newton’s presidentship. He played a significant role in making the Society into the world-famous organization it is today. However, Newton is also said to have exploited his position as the president to make public his disagreements with scientists such as John Flamsteed, the astronomer.

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When did Isaac Newton join the Royal Society? Who was his greatest rival there?

Newton was invited to join the Royal Society in early 1672. The Society had distinguished personalities such as Robert Boyle and Christopher Wren as its members at the time. Newton had seen the invitation to join as a great honour.

He found a rival of his rank at the Society. It was Robert Hooke, who had been a member of the Royal Society right from its start. Hooke was a brilliant and inventive man whose mind moved from discipline to discipline, making discovery after discovery.

Though Hooke was mainly interested in mechanics, he built amazing microscopes and researched the structure of the plant cell. He was also a gifted inventor who created dozens of devices ranging from an early form of the telegraph to a diving bell.

He had also ventured into the study of combustion, musical notes and the nature of light, the last of which became the bone of contention between Hooke and Newton. The conflict between the duo began with conflicting opinions about the nature of white light. Newton presented his first paper to the Royal Society in February 1672, in which he detailed his work on the nature of light and advanced his theory that white light was a composite of all the colours of the spectrum. Newton asserted that light was composed of particles.

Hooke had his own ideas about the nature of light. He believed that light travelled in waves, in contradiction to Newton’s belief. Hooke was critical of Newton’s paper.

He went on to attack Newton’s methodology and conclusions. Hooke was certainly not the only person to take a critical stand. Huygens, the great Danish scientist and a number of French Jesuits also raised objections. However, due to his work in the same field and prominence within the society, Hooke’s remarks were the most cutting.

Newton responded to the criticism by being angry and defensive. This came to be his characteristic response to any critique of his work.

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Why was the Royal Society formed?

The Royal Society was the leading national organization for the promotion of scientific research in Britain. It is also the oldest national scientific society in the world.

The origin of the society can be traced back to November 28, 1660, when twelve men met. They decided to set up a College for promoting ‘Physico-Mathematicall Experimentall Learning’. These men included scientist Robert Boyle, architect Christopher Wren, Bishop John Wilkins and the courtiers Sir Robert Moray and William, 2nd Viscount Brouncker.

Brouncker went on to become the first president of the Royal Society. King Charles II granted a royal charter for it as ‘The Royal Society’. Through the royal charter the society got an institutional structure- a president, treasurer, secretaries, and council. The society has always remained a voluntary organization, independent of the British state despite receiving royal patronage from the beginning.

The conduct and communication of science was revolutionized by the Society. In 1665 itself, Hooke’s Micrographia and the first issue of Philosophical Transactions were published. Philosophical Transactions is now the oldest continuously-published science journal in the world.

The Royal Society also published Isaac Newton’s Principia Mathematica, and Benjamin Franklin’s kite experiment demonstrating the electrical nature of lightning.

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Why is it said that Isaac Newton was not a good teacher?

Newton was a mathematics professor at Trinity College, Cambridge. But he was not a successful teacher. Newton preferred to spend his time alone in the laboratory, which he built himself, or in the small garden outside his rooms.

Only a few students attended his classes and fewer still understood what he said. A secretary later commented that often, Newton ended up teaching his walls with no students in front of him!

Not even one student who studied mathematics under Newton in the thirty years of his teaching career dedicated himself to the study of mathematics.

Newton’s absent-mindedness was also well known. He would sometimes stay in bed an entire day pondering upon a particular problem. If he received visitors while he was immersed in a new idea, Newton would simply walk into another room to continue thinking; completely forgetting that somebody was awaiting him in the other room.

By the 1670s, Trinity College became a lonely place for him. He enjoyed the brotherhood of similar minds and hence, he eagerly accepted the offer to join the Royal Society.

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When was Newton’s Opticks published?

The English version of Opticks: or A Treatise of the Reflexions, Refractions, Inflexions and Colours of Light was published in 1704. A Latin translation of the book appeared in 1706. This is Newton’s second major book on physical science. It analyses the fundamental nature of light.

The book covers discoveries and theories concerning light and colour made by Newton in 33 years. It deals with ideas ranging from the spectrum of sunlight to the invention of the reflecting telescope. It also includes the first workable theory of the rainbow and the first colour circle in the history of colour theory. Newton also discusses various other subjects such as metabolism, blood circulation and a study of the haunting experiences of the mentally ill.

One of the major impacts of Opticks was that it overthrew the idea that ‘pure’ light (such as sunlight) is white or colourless, and it becomes coloured by mixing with darkness caused by interactions with matter. Newton showed that this assumption from the time of Aristotle and Theophrastus was wrong.

Newton also illustrated that colour is a result of the physical property of light, as each hue is refracted at a characteristic angle by a prism or lens. He also added that colour is a sensation within the mind and not an inherent property of material objects or of light itself. Considering the impact of the book on science, it is astonishing to think that it was initially published anonymously with just the initials I.N. at the end of an advertisement at the front of the book.

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How did Edmond Halley inspire Newton to publish Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica?

Astronomer Edmond Halley persuaded Newton to expand his studies. Halley was the driving force behind the publication. He acted as a critic as well as supporter for this work.

Edmond Halley even convinced Newton to allow him to edit the Principia. Halley covered the various expenses, corrected the proofs himself, and ultimately got Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica printed in 1687.

Newton was famously reluctant to publish his works. Without Edmond Halley’s compulsion to publish Principia, Newton may have never become an outstanding figure in the history of science.

Newton would probably be known only for his mathematics and optics, and remain a relatively obscure professor in Cambridge.

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What is the relevance of Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica by Newton?

Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (Latin for Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy) is often simply referred to as Principia. This work in three books, written by Isaac Newton in Latin was first published on 5 July 1687. In retrospect, its publication was a landmark event in the development of modern physics and astronomy.

Newton published two more editions in 1713 and 1726 after annotating and correcting his personal copy of the first edition. Principia contains the laws of motion, law of universal gravitation and a derivation of Kepler’s laws of planetary motion (Kepler originally obtained these empirically). The work also forms the foundation of classical mechanics. Principia is considered as one of the most important works in the history of science.

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Did the Newtonian reflector change astronomy?

The significance of the Newtonian reflector does not lie in the discovery of new celestial bodies or celestial phenomena. Newton neither discovered the moons around Jupiter like Galileo nor did he plot the return of a comet – like Halley. However, the Newtonian reflector and Newton’s theory of universal gravitation made an invaluable contribution: they tied together Mathematics, Astronomy, and our understanding of the universe.

He mathematically established that gravitation was a two-way operation. While the Earth pulled on a falling apple, the apple too pulled on Earth. This was seen, calculated and confirmed in the motions of heavenly bodies. It was made possible by the science of the reflector telescopes which can be credited to Newton. The work of Copernicus and Galileo were carried through by Newton and his telescope.

While it is commonly assumed that Newton invented the first reflector telescope, claims to the contrary are also there. The Italian monk Niccolo Zucchi claimed to have experimented with the idea as far back as 1616. It is possible that Newton read James Gregory’s 1663 book Optica Promota which contained designs for a reflecting telescope using mirrors. Gregory had been trying to build such a telescope, but he did not succeed. Ultimately, Newton’s telescope was the one that worked well and brought reflectors to the scientific world.

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What is a Newtonian reflector?

The first successful practical reflecting telescope was built by Newton. Until then telescopes were large unwieldy instruments. The design of the telescope was recast by Newton on the basis of his theory of optics. He used mirrors instead of lenses and the result was a new telescope 10 times smaller than the traditional ones.

Earlier also many efforts were made to make more powerful telescopes using larger lenses. They were unsuccessful as the lens kept producing coloured rainbows around bright objects like the Moon and the planets. The coloured fringes formed due to the unequal refraction of colours by the lens were unavoidable in simple telescopes.

Newton was under the assumption that no lens could rectify this issue. Though this was a mistaken assumption, it led him to use a mirror to form an image and thereby to build a reflecting telescope. This is now called the Newtonian reflector. A curved mirror brings rays of light to a focus and forms an image by reflection (whereas a lens does it by bending or refraction). Some of the largest telescopes used today are based on the telescope made by Newton in 1668.

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What is the application of the laws of motion for astronauts in space?

The laws of motion are applicable even in outer space. Newton’s Second Law states that force is needed to increase or decrease the speed of a body. This implies that astronauts must learn to push themselves through their spacecraft, or else they will float around helplessly. They also need to remember to stop themselves as they near their destination or else they’ll keep moving till they hit something.

During their first attempt, astronauts usually end up a little worse for the wear after stumbling around the spacecraft. Unlike humans, animals flown to space often fail to learn this. A set of new-born quails aboard Russia’s Mir space station couldn’t adapt to life in space and died in a few days. Newton’s Third Law too has application for astronauts. The law states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. While turning a screw, astronauts have to anchor themselves to a wall, or else they’ll be the ones twisting. Even the mildest action like typing at a computer keyboard will send an astronaut floating away. To remedy this problem, workstation on the international space station has restraining loops for the crew to anchor their feet.

Though it may seem like the laws of motion are different in space and on Earth that is not the case. The overwhelming force of Earth’s gravitational field simply masks its exact effects. Gravity plays an astonishing part in many phenomena we take for granted. For instance, hot air (which is lighter than cool air) rises, and a convection current is formed which enables natural air circulation in our houses. In space however, nothing is lighter than anything else and ordinary convection currents do not exist. Thus, to make sure that the astronauts don’t suffocate due to carbon dioxide accumulation, a ventilation fan is installed to facilitate air circulation.

The International Space Station is a perfect example of the laws of motion. Though intuition and common-sense points otherwise, Newton realized that a bullet shot from a gun should continue to move indefinitely. On Earth, atmospheric friction slows the projectile while gravitational force pulls it to the ground. But the faster the bullet is shot, the farther it will travel before falling. And if you can manage to shoot something at a speed of around 11.2 km/s, it will never finish its trajectory. It will instead orbit the Earth in a state of perpetual free fall. This particular velocity (11.2 km/s) cancels the pull of Earth’s gravity and is used to launch spacecraft.

Even fire is not exempt from the laws of motion in space. Behaviour of weightless flames is rather different from those on Earth. However, such a fire is best limited to the lab as fire aboard a spacecraft can have catastrophic effects.

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How are Newton’s laws of motion involved in launching a space rocket?

The sizes of rockets range from small fireworks used by ordinary people to massive Saturn Vs that once carried payloads toward the Moon. Newton’s third law of motion explains the propulsion of all rockets, jet engines, deflating balloons, and even the movement of squids and octopuses.

The engines of rockets need to overcome both the pull of gravity and the inertia of the rocket as stated in the first law. According to Newton’s Third Law, “every action has an equal and opposite reaction”. A rocket is pushed forward by the push of the burning fuel at its front. This also creates an equal and opposite push on the exhaust gas backwards.

Once they’re in motion, they won’t stop until a force is applied. As per Newton’s second law, as mass of the object increases, the force needed to move it also increases. The larger a rocket, the stronger the force (for instance, more fuel) to make it accelerate. A space shuttle requires around three kilograms of fuel for every kilogram of payload it carries.

Astronauts in space must also keep the laws of motion in mind. During his pioneering orbit of the Earth in 1961, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin was the first to experience the practical effects. Gagarin put down his pencil while writing his log. In keeping with Newton;s first law, by which the planets move around the Sun, the pencil floated out of reach. He ended up completing the log using a tape recorder. Now astronauts keep their equipment tethered to a surface with Velcro or bungee straps.

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Did scientists and engineers benefit from Newton’s laws of motion?

The publication of Newton’s laws of motion proved to be greatly advantageous for scientists and engineers across the globe. His laws have found applications in everything with moving parts whether it is the design for machines and scientific equipment or clocks and wheeled devices. On the basis of these laws, it was possible to predict whether a machine would work even before it was built.

In the nineteenth century, British engineer lsambard Kingdom Brunel, built huge steamships and suspension bridges using Newton’s laws. James Watt couldn’t have made the first working steam engine without the laws of motion. We use these laws even today to solve the problems related to the construction of modern structures and tall buildings.

Newton’s laws of motion are still the basis of modern mechanical engineering. Its application is spread across different fields. Everyone from oil-well technicians to space engineers and car designers to satellite constructors utilise these laws.

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How Newton’s laws of motion are directly connected to our daily life?

Newton presented the three laws on motion in 1687 in his book Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica. The universal laws of motion describe the relationship between any object, the forces acting upon it and the resulting motion.

The first law of motion or the law of inertia states that if a body is at rest or moving at a constant speed, it will continue in that state unless it is acted upon by an external force. This tendency of massive bodies to resist changes in their state of motion is called inertia.

Using this law of motion, we can explain why a car stops when it hits a wall but the human body in the car will keep moving at the earlier speed of the car until the body hits an external force, like a dashboard or airbag.

Similarly, an object thrown in space will continue infinitely in the same speed, on that path until it comes into contact with another object that exerts force to slow it down or change direction.

Newton’s second law of motion is F=ma or force equals mass times acceleration. For example, when you ride a bicycle, your pedalling creates the force necessary to accelerate. This law also explains why larger or heavier objects require more force to move and why hitting a small object with a cricket bat creates more damage than hitting a large object with the same bat.

The third law of motion is, for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. This is a simple symmetry to understand the world around us. When you sit in a chair, you are exerting force down upon the chair, but the chair is exerting an equal force to keep you upright.

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When was the universal law of gravitation proposed by Isaac Newton?

The universal law of gravitation was proposed by Newton in 1687. He used it to explain the observed motions of the planets and the Moon. Mass is a crucial quantity in Newton’s law of gravity.

According to the law, every particle in the universe attracts every other particle with a force. This force is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. It implies that the attractive force of gravity increases with the increase in mass and decreases with the increase in distance.

For example, if we transported an object of the mass ‘m’ to the surface of Neptune, the gravitational acceleration would change because both the radius and mass of Neptune differ from those of Earth. Thus, our object has mass ‘m’ both on the surface of Earth and on Neptune, but it will weigh much more on the surface of Neptune because the gravitational acceleration there is 11.15 m/s2. Thus, Newton was able to mathematically prove Kepler’s observations that the planets move in elliptical orbits.

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Is gravity what holds the entire solar system together?

Isaac Newton was the first to connect gravity to planets other than Earth. He proposed that other planets and stars also have gravitational force. In fact, it was present everywhere in the universe. Planets including Earth remain in their orbits and rotate around the Sun due to the force of gravity exerted by the Sun. It is Earth’s gravitational force that keeps the Moon moving in its orbit. The pull of the Earth causes Moon to travel in a curved path. 

The same principle applies to satellites in orbit around Earth. If Earth had no gravity, the satellites would fly off into space. We can very well say that gravity is what binds the solar system together.

The planets also disturb each other’s orbits due to gravity. These disturbances are termed as ‘perturbations.’ Scientists discovered Neptune because of the unexpected perturbations observed in the orbit of Uranus.

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How did Newton develop the idea of gravity?

The story commonly told is that Newton saw an apple falling from a tree and discovered gravity while thinking about the forces of nature. Another version says that the apple landed directly on his head. Either way, Newton realized that there must be some force acting upon all objects, causing them to fall.

He also considered the moon which should actually fly away from Earth in a straight-line tangent to its orbit if there hadn’t been a force binding it to Earth. He concluded that the moon is a projectile rotating around the Earth due to gravitational force.

Newton called this force ‘gravity’, something that pulls everything to the ground. The weight of an object is the measurement of the strength with which it is being pulled by gravity. Or in other words, gravity gives weight to physical objects. The reason we can keep our feet firmly on the ground and walk around is gravity. It is what stops objects from flying off into space.

Gravity is the force that had the effect of pushing on the planets and was equal to the pull of the sun. It is in fact responsible for many of the large-scale structures in the universe. Newton also explained the astronomical observations of Kepler using the concept of gravity.

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How did the publication of Newton’s researches with light help the people of his time?

Newton was famously slow in publishing his researches. His New Theory of Light and Colours appeared in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society only in 1672. The publication resulted in a dispute with Robert Hooke who was a dominant figure in the Society.

Newton’s experiments with white light had many practical applications that benefited the common man. Spectacles were a luxury only affordable for the upper classes in the seventeenth century. Even then, the glasses were of poor quality. In the decades following the publication of Newton’s research, amazing advancements were made in the design and manufacture of lens and spectacles.

Similarly, Newton’s findings were also applied to create sophisticated microscopes. Though microscopes existed even during his time, they were basic models that produced blurred images. With the development of better microscopes came breakthroughs in medicine and biology.

However, the most resounding impact of Newton’s work was perhaps the creation of an entirely new science, the science of spectroscopy. Spectroscopy is the study of light in relation to the length of the wave that has been emitted, reflected or shone through a solid, liquid, or gas.

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How did Newton’s experiments prove the components of white light?

Newton’s discoveries revolutionized our understanding of the most common aspects of nature such as light. Prisms were seen as trivial toys used for fun in laboratories until Newton came across them. He conducted a series of experiments with sunlight and prisms after getting a prism at a fair in 1664.

Newton made the astonishing discovery that clear white light was composed of seven visible colours. The visible spectrum, the seven colours of the rainbow, was scientifically established by Newton. This discovery opened new vistas in optics, physics, chemistry, and the study of the colours in nature.

One bright sunny day, Newton darkened his room and made a hole in his window shutter, allowing just one beam of sunlight to enter the room. He then took a glass prism and placed it in the sunbeam. The result was a spectacular multi-coloured band of light just like a rainbow.

Newton believed that all the colours he saw were in the sunlight shining into his room. He thought he then should be able to combine the colours of the spectrum and make the light white again. To test this, he placed another prism upside-down in front of the first prism. He was right. The band of colours combined again into white sunlight. Newton was the first to prove that white light is made up of all the colours that we can see.

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Why is Isaac Newton considered to be one among the greatest mathematicians?

We may remember Newton mostly in association with the theory of gravity and the story of the apple tree. But he was also a great mathematician on par with legendary figures like Archimedes and Gauss. Newton’s contributions paved the path for numerous mathematical developments in the succeeding years.

Until Newton, algebraic problems where the answer was not a whole number posed a problem for mathematicians. The formula published by Newton in 1676 called ‘binomial theorem’ effectively resolved this issue. It has been said that through Newton’s works, there was remarkable advancement in every branch of mathematics at the time.

Newton (along with mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz) is credited with developing the essential theories of calculus. He developed the theory of calculus upon the earlier works by British mathematicians John Wallis and Isaac Barrow, and prominent mathematicians Rene Descartes, Pierre de Fermat, Bonaventura Cavalieri, Johann van Waveren Hudde and Gilles Personne de Roberval.

While Greek geometry was static, calculus allowed mathematicians and engineers to make sense of the dynamic world around them. They could now make sense of motion such as the orbits of planets and the flow of fluids.

Many modern historians believe calculus was developed independently by Newton and Leibniz, using different mathematical notations. Leibniz was however, the first to publish his results.

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Why the year Newton spent in his home during the Great Plague is called his ‘year of wonders’?

With the outbreak of the bubonic plague, Cambridge University closed its doors in 1665. As a result, Newton was forced to return home to Woolsthorpe Manor where he ended up staying with his mother for over a year. In the peaceful countryside, he concentrated on the scientific problems about which he had wondered during his post graduate years.

Some of his greatest discoveries such as the laws of gravity, laws of motion, and the components of white light had their origin during this time.

It is said that Newton was sitting in the orchard when he saw an apple falling from a tree. Contrary to popular versions of this event, there is no evidence to suggest that the apple had fallen on his head. Pondering upon what he saw, Newton wondered why apples fall straight to the ground rather than going upwards or sideways. Following this line of thought, he finally formulated the law of universal gravitation.

This was the account of his discovery given by Newton himself to his acquaintances including the French philosopher Voltaire; his assistant at the Royal Mint, John Conduitt who was the husband of his niece Catherine Barton; his friend William Stewkeley; and Christopher Dawson who was a student at Cambridge. The note on Newton’s life collected by John Conduitt in 1726 contains the first written account.

The year he spent in Woolsthorpe later came to be called his annus mirabilis (year of wonders). Newton returned to Cambridge in 1667.

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What is the life story of Stephen Hawking?

The genius in the wheelchair

When Stephen Hawking was 21, he was given only a few years to live after being diagnosed with a rare form of motor neurone disease. Undaunted, Hawking made breakthroughs in quantum physics and cosmology with his “The Theory of Everything” and his work on black holes. Although a number of biographies have been written about the genius, a new memoir gives an affectionate account of Hawking and his indomitable spirit.

Written by Leonard Mlodinow, who worked closely with Hawking for nearly 11 years and co-authored two bestselling books with him (“A Briefer History of Time” and “The Grand Design”), “Stephen Hawking – A Memoir of Physics and Friendship gives fresh insights into Hawking’s character and his famous sense of adventure and fun.

A daredevil

Hawking was born on January 8, 1942 in Oxford. At 17, he won a scholarship to study at University College, Oxford. Despite his brilliance in academics, Hawking hated studying. According to his own estimates, he studied for only 1,000 hours during his three undergraduate years at Oxford. Once he even joined the college boat dub. But earned himself a daredevil reputation as he steered his crew on risky courses that often damaged boats.

Living with a rare disease

After being diagnosed with a rare form of motor neurone disease known as ALS, Hawking sunk into depression. Though the disease progressed slowly, it began to interfere with his daily activities, and his condition worsened in 1985 during a trip to Cern. Hawking underwent a tracheotomy, which saved his life but destroyed his voice. He started using a voice synthesiser.

The early diagnosis of the terminal disease ignited a sense of purpose in Hawking and he embarked on his career in earnest. He pursued his work with black holes and relativity with new zest. In 1988, Hawking published “A Brief History of Time, which turned him into an instant icon.

Writing for children

Hawking and his daughter Lucy came up with a series of illustrated books to explain the “secret keys to the universe” to young readers. The books deal with complex topics, including the Big Bang, black holes, atoms. planets and their moons, in the form of space adventures embarked on by junior astronaut George and his best friend Annie. The series helped simplify cosmology for children.

Love for adventures

Hawking enjoyed his fame, taking many opportunities to travel and to have unusual experiences such as going down a mine shaft visiting the south pole and undergoing the zero-gravity of free fall, and to meet other distinguished people.

Legacy

Hawking died at his home in Cambridge on March 14, 2018, at the age of 76. In the same year in June, Hawking’s words, set to music by Greek composer Vangelis, were beamed into space from a European Space Agency satellite dish in Spain with the aim of reaching the nearest black hole 1A 0620-00.

 

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WHO WAS THE FIRST PHOTOGRAPHER?

The first person to take a photograph was a Frenchman, Joseph Nicephore Niepce, in 1822. However, as is often the case with new inventions, many other scientists had been experimenting with light, lenses and light-sensitive chemicals. Working with Niepce was a man called Louis Daguerre, who later improved on Niepce’s process. Some early photographs were called daguerreotypes.

Around 1717 Johann Heinrich Schulze captured cut-out letters on a bottle of light-sensitive slurry, but he apparently never thought of making the results durable. Around 1800 Thomas Wedgwood made the first reliably documented, although unsuccessful attempt at capturing camera images in permanent form. His experiments did produce detailed photograms, but Wedgwood and his associate Humphry Davy found no way to fix these images.

In the mid-1822s, Nicephore Niepce first managed to fix an image that was captured with a camera, but at least eight hours or even several days of exposure in the camera were required and the earliest results were very crude. Niépce’s associate Louis Daguerre went on to develop the daguerreotype process, the first publicly announced and commercially viable photographic process. The daguerreotype required only minutes of exposure in the camera, and produced clear, finely detailed results. The details were introduced to the world in 1839, a date generally accepted as the birth year of practical photography. The metal-based daguerreotype process soon had some competition from the paper-based calotype negative and salt print processes invented by William Henry Fox Talbot and demonstrated in 1839 soon after news about the daguerreotype reached Talbot. Subsequent innovations made photography easier and more versatile. New materials reduced the required camera exposure time from minutes to seconds, and eventually to a small fraction of a second; new photographic media were more economical, sensitive or convenient. Since the 1850s, the collodion process with its glass-based photographic plates combined the high quality known from the Daguerreotype with the multiple print options known from the calotype and was commonly used for decades. Roll films popularized casual use by amateurs. In the mid-20th century, developments made it possible for amateurs to take pictures in natural color as well as in black-and-white.

The commercial introduction of computer-based electronic digital cameras in the 1990s soon revolutionized photography. During the first decade of the 21st century, traditional film-based photochemical methods were increasingly marginalized as the practical advantages of the new technology became widely appreciated and the image quality of moderately priced digital cameras was continually improved. Especially since cameras became a standard feature on smartphones, taking pictures (and instantly publishing them online) has become a ubiquitous everyday practice around the world.

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WHO DISCOVERED GRAVITY?

The fact that objects dropped from a height fall to the ground, that the Moon is near enough to be seen from Earth, and that we do not float into the air when we are standing still has, of course, been known for thousands of years. What was not known was the reason for these phenomena. It was a British scientist, Isaac Newton, who, in 1666, put forward the idea that the same force — gravity — might be responsible for all these events. Gravity is a force of attraction caused by the huge mass of the Earth.

Four fundamental forces govern all interactions within the Universe. They are weak nuclear forces, strong nuclear forces, electromagnetism, and gravity. Of these, gravity is perhaps the most mysterious. While it has been understood for some time how this law of physics operates on the macro-scale – governing our Solar System, galaxies, and superclusters – how it interacts with the three other fundamental forces remains a mystery.

Naturally, human beings have had a basic understanding of this force since time immemorial. And when it comes to our modern understanding of gravity, credit is owed to one man who deciphered its properties and how it governs all things great and small – Sir Isaac Newton. Thanks to this 17th century English physicist and mathematician, our understanding of the Universe and the laws that govern it would forever be changed.

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Who was the first person to closely observe the Moon?

          Ever since Man started looking at the Moon with his naked eyes, he was curious to learn about this brightly shining heavenly body. It was an Italian scientist who closely observed the Moon for the first time. His name was Galileo Galilei.

          It happened in 1609. Galileo built an equipment called telescope that made objects in space look larger and closer.

          For centuries, scientists had believed that the Moon had a smooth surface. Galileo shattered this belief; he observed that the Moon’s surface was not so smooth; instead it had mountains, pits, valleys, shadows and other features, just like the surface of the Earth. He thought the vast dark shadowy areas to be seas of water and called them ‘maria’, the Latin word for sea. Galileo’s work laid the foundation for modern studies in astronomy.

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Har Gobind Khorana

Har Gobind Khorana

Har Gobind Khorana (9 January 1922 – 9 November 2011) was an Indian American biochemist. While on the faculty of the University of Wisconsin, he shared the 1968 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine with Marshall W. Nirenberg and Robert W. Holley for research that showed the order of nucleotides in nucleic acids, which carry the genetic code of the cell and control the cell’s synthesis of proteins. Khorana and Nirenberg were also awarded the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize from Columbia University in the same year.

Fields

  • Molecular biology

Known for

  • First to demonstrate the role of nucleotides in protein synthesis

Awards

  • Nobel Prize in Medicine (1968)
  • Gairdner Foundation International Award (1980)
  • Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize
  • ForMemRS (1978)
  • Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research
  • Padma Vibhushan
  • Willard Gibbs Award (1974)

Institutions

  • MIT (1970–2007)
  • University of Wisconsin, Madison (1960–70)
  • University of British Columbia (1952–60)
  • University of Cambridge (1950–52)
  • Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich (1948–49)

To know more about click Har Gobind Khorana  Click  Har Gobind Khorana

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Swapan Chattopadhyay

Swapan Chattopadhyay is a particle accelerator physicist noted for his pioneering contributions of innovative concepts, techniques and developments in high energy particle colliders, coherent and incoherent light sources, ultrafast sciences in the femto- and atto- second regimes, superconducting linear accelerators and various applications of interaction of particle and light beams.

Fields

  • Physics

Institutions

  • Northern Illinois University and Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (2014–)
  • Cockcroft Institute (2007–2014)
  • Universities of Liverpool, Manchester and Lancaster, UK (2007–2014)
  • Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (2001–2007)
  • University of California at Berkeley (1974–1982, 1984–2001, 2010–)
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (1976–1982, 1984–2001)
  • CERN (1982–1984, 2008–)

Known for

  • Particle accelerator science and technology

Awards

  • Fellow of American Physical Society,
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science,
  • Institute of Physics (UK), and
  • the Royal Society of Arts (UK)

To know more about Swapan Chattopadhyay Click Swapan Chattopadhyay

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Srinivasa Ramanujan

Srinivasa Ramanujan was an Indian mathematician who lived during the British Rule in India. Though he had almost no formal training in pure mathematics, he made substantial contributions to mathematical analysis, number theory, infinite series, and continued fractions, including solutions to mathematical problems considered to be unsolvable.

During his short life, Ramanujan independently compiled nearly 3,900 results (mostly identities and equations). Many were completely novel; his original and highly unconventional results, such as the Ramanujan prime, the Ramanujan theta function, partition formulae and mock theta functions, have opened entire new areas of work and inspired a vast amount of further research.

Known for

  • Landau–Ramanujan constant
  • Mock theta functions
  • Ramanujan conjecture
  • Ramanujan prime
  • Ramanujan–Soldner constant
  • Ramanujan theta function
  • Ramanujan’s sum
  • Rogers–Ramanujan identities
  • Ramanujan’s master theorem
  • Ramanujan–Sato series

Awards

  • Fellow of the Royal Society

Fields

  • Mathematics

Institutions

  • Trinity College, Cambridge

To know more about Srinivasa Ramanujan Click S. Ramanujan

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Rajesh Gopakumar

Rajesh Gopakumar (born 1967 in Kolkata, India) a theoretical physicist is director of the International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS-TIFR) in Bangalore, India. He was previously a professor at Harish-Chandra Research Institute (HRI) in Allahabad, India. He is known for his work on topological string theory.

Awards

  • Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Award,
  • ICTP Prize

Fields

  • String Theory,
  • Theoretical Physics

Institutions

  • Harish-Chandra Research Institute
  • Institute for Advanced Study

To know further more about click Rajesh Gopakumar Click Rajesh Gopakumar 

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Who was Galileo?

            Galileo (1564-1642), the great Italian scientist and mathematician, was the first astronomer to use a telescope, the discoverer of the pendulum’s laws and the founder of modern physics.

            Two of his great contributions to knowledge are associated with famous buildings in Pisa, the northern Italian city where he was born. When Galileo was 19, he observed a lamp swinging in the cathedral. From its movement he concluded that a pendulum swinging to and fro could be used for measuring time, and so prepared the way for the invention of the modern clock. By dropping objects from the Learning Tower of Pisa he demonstrated that bodies of different weights fall at the same rate.

            While Professor of Mathematics at the University of Padua (1592-1610), Galileo made his first telescope by fitting a lens at each end of an organ pipe. Later he made a telescope that magnified 30 times. He found that the Milky Way was a mass of stars, studied the moon and discovered the four largest satellites of the planet Jupiter.

            Galileo’s observations convinced him that Nicholaus Copernicus (1473-1543), the Polish astronomer, was right in his theory that the earth rotates on its axis and revolves round the sun. This view was contrary to the teaching of the Church, and in 1616 he was given o formal warning. But in 1632 he published a dialogue in support of the Copernican system that offended the Church by its satire and use of Holy Scripture. He was summoned before the Inquisition, forced to retract his views and made to live in seclusion for the rest of his life.

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Anil Kumar Gain

Anil Kumar Gain (1 February 1919 – 7 February 1978) (also spelt Anil Kumar Gayen) was an Indian mathematician and statistician best known for his works on the Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient in the field of applied statistics, with his colleague Ronald Fisher. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge under the supervision of Henry Ellis Daniels, who was the then President of the Royal Statistical Society. He was honoured as a Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society and the famous Cambridge Philosophical Society.

Gain was the president of the statistics section of the Indian Science Congress Association, as well as the head of the Department of Mathematics at the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur. He later went on to found Vidyasagar University, naming it after the famous social reformer of the Bengali renaissance, Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar.

Fields

  • Mathematics and Statistics

Institutions

  • University of Cambridge
  • University of Calcutta
  • Presidency College, Calcutta
  • Indian Statistical Institute
  • Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

Awards

  • RSS
  • FCPS

To know more about Anil Kumar Click Anil Kumar

Yellapragada Subbarow

Yellapragada Subbarow (12 January 1895 – 8 August 1948) was an Indian biochemist who discovered the function of adenosine triphosphate as an energy source in the cell, and developed methotrexate for the treatment of cancer. Most of his career was spent in the United States. Despite his isolation of ATP, Subbarow did not gain tenure at Harvard though he would lead some of America’s most important medical research during World War II. He is also credited with the first synthesis of the chemical compounds folic acid and methotrexate. Subbarow died in the United States.

Known for

  • Discovering the role of phosphocreatine and adenosine triphosphate in muscular activity;
  • synthesis of folic acid;
  • synthesis of methotrexate;
  • discovery of diethylcarbamazine

Fields

  • Biochemistry

Institutions

  • Lederle Laboratories, a division of American Cyanamid (Acquired by Wyeth in 1994, now Pfizer)

To read more Click Yellapragada Subbarow

Samir Kumar Brahmachari

Samir Kumar Brahmachari (born 1 January 1952) is an Indian biophysicist and Former Director General of the Council of Scientific & Industrial Research (CSIR) and Former Secretary, Department of Scientific and Industrial Research (DSIR), Government of India. He is the Founder Director of Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (IGIB), New Delhi and the Chief Mentor of Open Source for Drug Discovery (OSDD) Project. He is the recipient of J.C Bose Fellowship Award, DST (2012).

Fields

  • Functional Genomics;Structural & Computational Biology

Known for

  • Open Source Drug Discovery for Affordable
  • Healthcare

For more details Click Samir Kumar Brahmachari

Satyendra Nath Bose

Satyendra Nath Bose, FRS (Bengali: Sôtyendronath Bosu; 1 January 1894 – 4 February 1974) was an Indian physicist from Bengal specialising in theoretical physics. 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. A Fellow of the Royal Society, he was awarded India’s second highest civilian award, the Padma Vibhushan in 1954 by the Government of India.

Known for

  • Bose–Einstein condensate
  • Bose–Einstein statistics
  • Bose–Einstein distribution
  • Bose–Einstein correlations
  • Bose gas
  • Boson
  • Ideal Bose Equation of State
  • Photon gas

Awards

  • Padma Vibhushan
  • Fellow of the Royal Society

Fields

  • Physics

To know more Click Satyendra Nath Bose 

Raghunath Anant Mashelkar

Raghunath Anant Mashelkar, also known as Ramesh Mashelkar. FREng, FIChemE (born on 1st January, 1943) is an Indian chemical engineer and a former Director General of the Council of Scientific & Industrial Research (CSIR), a chain of 38 publicly funded industrial research and development institutions in India.

Awards

  • Padma Vibhushan
  • Padma Bhushan
  • Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar
  • G.D. Birla Award for Scientific Research
  • FREng

Fields

  • Chemical Engineering

Known for

  • Intellectual Property Rights; R&D; Innovation

For more details about Raghunath Anant Mashelkar

Ganapathi Thanikaimoni

Ganapathi Thanikaimoni (1 January 1938 – 5 September 1986), often referred to as Thani was an Indian palynologist.

Known for

  • Contributions to the science of palynology

Scientific career

Thani took a position of scientist in the newly founded (1960) Palynology Laboratory of the French Institute of Pondicherry (French: Institut Français de Pondichéry) under the direction of Dr. Prof. Guinet. In a few years Thani’s scientific and administrative abilities were recognized by his promotion to the directorship of the laboratory.

For more detail Click Ganapathi Thanikaimoni

Biman Bagchi

Biman Bagchi (born in 1954) is an Indian biophysical chemist, theoretical chemist and an Amrut Mody Professor at the Solid State and Structural Chemistry Unit of the Indian Institute of Science. He is known for his studies on statistical mechanics; particularly in the study of phase transition and nucleation, solvation dynamics, mode-coupling theory of electrolyte transport, dynamics of biological macromolecules (proteins, DNA etc.), protein folding, enzyme kinetics, supercooled liquids and protein hydration layer.

Known for

  • Statistical Mechanics
  • Solvation Dynamics
  • Biological Water
  • Mode Coupling Theory

Awards

  • 1986 INSA Medal for Young Scientists
  • 1990 INSA A. K. Bose Memorial Medal
  • 1991 Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize
  • 1997 G. D. Birla Award
  • 1998 TWAS Prize
  • 2002 Indian Institute of Science Alumni Excellence Award
  • 2003 Goyal Prize in Chemistry

Fields

  • Biophysical Chemistry
  • Theoretical Chemistry
  • Statistical Mechanics

For more detail click here

Salim Yusuf

Salim Yusuf (born November 26, 1952) is an Indian-born Canadian physician, the Marion W. Burke Chair in Cardiovascular Disease at McMaster University Medical School and currently the President of the World Heart Federation, a world-renowned cardiologist and epidemiologist. In 2001, he published a landmark study that proved the benefits of clopidogrel in acute coronary syndrome without ST elevation.

Known for

  • President of the World Heart Federation

Awards

  •   Rhodes Scholarship
  • Canadian Medical Hall of Fame
  • Canada Gairdner Wightman Award

Fields

  • Medicine
  •  Cardiology
  • Epidemiology

Institutions

  • Population Health Research Institute
  •  McMaster University Medical School
  • National Institutes of Health

To know further more about Salim Yusuf click Salim Yusuf

Salim Ali

        Salim Moizuddin Abdul Ali (12 November 1896 – 20 June 1987) was an Indian ornithologist and naturalist. Sometimes referred to as the “birdman of India”, Salim Ali was among the first Indians to conduct systematic bird surveys across India and wrote several bird books that popularised ornithology in India.

        He became a key figure behind the Bombay Natural History Society after 1947 and used his personal influence to garner government support for the organisation, create the Bharatpur bird sanctuary (Keoladeo National Park) and prevent the destruction of what is now the Silent Valley National Park. Along with Sidney Dillon Ripley he wrote the landmark ten volume Handbook of the Birds of India and Pakistan, a second edition of which was completed after his death.

         He was awarded the Padma Bhushan in 1958 and the Padma Vibhushan in 1976, India’s third and second highest civilian honours respectively. Several species of birds, a couple of bird sanctuaries and institutions have been named after him.

Fields

  • Ornithology
  • Natural history

Awards

  • Padma Bhushan (1958)
  •  Padma Vibhushan (1976)

To read more about Salim Ali Click Salim_Ali

Anil Kakodkar

            Anil Kakodkar (born 11 November 1943) is an Indian nuclear scientist and mechanical engineer. He was the chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission of India and the Secretary to the Government of India, he was the Director of the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Trombay from 1996–2000. He was awarded the Padma Vibhushan, India’s second highest civilian honour, on 26 January 2009.

            Apart from playing a major role in India’s nuclear tests asserting sovereignty, Kakodkar champions India’s self-reliance on thorium as a fuel for nuclear energy.

Known for

  • Smiling Buddha
  • Pokhran-II
  • Indian nuclear program

Awards

  • Padma Shri (1998)
  • Padma Bhushan (1999)
  • Padma Vibhushan (2009)

Fields

  • Mechanical Engineering

Institutions

  • Atomic Energy Commission of India
  • Department of Atomic Energy
  • Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC)

To read more about Anil Kakodkar  Click Anil Kakodkar 

Pandurang Sadashiv Khankhoje

Pandurang Sadashiv Khankhoje

                Pandurang Sadashiv Khankhoje (7 November 1884 – 22 January 1967) was an Indian revolutionary, scholar, agricultural scientist and historian who was among the founding fathers of the Ghadar Party.

                Khankhoje was born in November 1884 to a Marathi family at Wardha, where his father worked as a petition-writer. Young Khankhoje spent his childhood in Wardha, where he completed his primary and middle school education before moving to Nagpur for higher education. He was at the time inspired by the nationalist work of Bal Gangadhar Tilak.

               At some time in the first decade of the 1900s, Khankhoje left India on a voyage that ultimately saw him settle in the United States. Here he enrolled in the Washington State College (now called Washington State University), graduating in 1913. His earliest nationalist work abroad dates back to the time around 1908 when he, along with Pandit Kanshi Ram founded the Indian Independence League in Portland, Oregon. His works also brought him close to other Indian nationalists in United States at the time, including Taraknath Das.

To read more about Pandurang Sadashiv Khankhoje  Click P. S. Khankhoje

 

C. V. Raman

C. V. Raman

Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman (7 November 1888 – 21 November 1970) was an Indian physicist born in the former Madras Province in India presently the state of Tamil Nadu, who carried out ground-breaking work in the field of light scattering, which earned him the 1930 Nobel Prize for Physics. He discovered that when light traverses a transparent material, some of the deflected light changes wavelength. This phenomenon, subsequently known as Raman scattering, results from the Raman effect.  In 1954, India honoured him with its highest civilian award, the Bharat Ratna.

Known for

  • Raman effect

Fields 

  • Physics

Awards

  • Knight Bachelor (1929)
  • Hughes Medal (1930)
  • Nobel Prize in Physics (1930)
  • Bharat Ratna Ribbon.svg Bharat Ratna (1954)
  • Lenin Peace Prize (1957)
  • Fellow of the Royal Society

Institutions

  • Indian Finance Department
  • University of Calcutta
  • Banaras Hindu University
  • Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science
  • Indian Institute of Science
  • Raman Research Institute

To know more about C.V. Raman click C.V. Raman

 

G. Madhavan Nair

G. Madhavan Nair

G. Madhavan Nair (born October 31, 1943, erstwhile Travancore, presently Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala) is the former Chairman of Indian Space Research Organisation and Secretary to the Department of Space, Government of India since September 2003 and was also the Chairman, Space Commission. He was succeeded by K. Radhakrishnan. He was also the Chairman of Governing Body of the Antrix Corporation, Bangalore. Madhavan Nair was awarded the Padma Vibhushan, India’s second highest civilian honour, on January 26, 2009. He also served as the Chairman, Board of Governors, Indian Institute of Technology Patna until he stepped down voluntarily due to his alleged involvement in Antrix-Devas deal.

Known for

  • Indian Space Program

Awards

  • Padma Bhushan (1998)
  • Padma Vibhushan (2009)

Fields

  • Rocket Technology
  • Electrical and Electronics Engineering

Institutions

  • Indian Space Research Organisation
  • Bhabha Atomic Research Center

To read more about G. Madhavan Nair click G. Madhavan Nair

 

Narinder Singh Kapany

Narinder Singh Kapany

Narinder Singh Kapany (born 31 October 1926) is an Indian-born American Sikh physicist known for his work in fibre optics. He was named as one of the seven ‘Unsung Heroes’ by Fortune in their ‘Businessmen of the Century’ issue (1999-11-22).[4][5][6] He is also known as “Father of Fiber Optics”. The term fibre optics was coined by Singh Kapany in 1956. He is a former IOFS officer.

Known for

  • Pioneering work on Fiber optics

Awards

  • Pravasi Bharatiya Samman
  • The Excellence 2000 Award
  • FREng (1998)

Fields

  • Physics

Institutions

  • Agra University
  • Ordnance Factories Board
  • Imperial College of Science
  • British Royal Academy of Engineering
  • Optical Society of America
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science
  • Professor at the University of California, Berkeley (UCB)
  • University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC)
  • Stanford University

To read more about N. S. Kapany  Click  Narinder Singh Kapany

Homi Jehangir Bhabha

Homi Jehangir Bhabha (30 October 1909 – 24 January 1966) was an Indian nuclear physicist, founding director, and professor of physics at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR). Colloquially known as “father of the Indian nuclear programme”, Bhabha was also the founding director of the Atomic Energy Establishment, Trombay (AEET) which is now named the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre in his honor. TIFR and AEET were the cornerstone of Indian development of nuclear weapons which Bhabha also supervised as director.

Known for

  • Indian nuclear programme
  • Cascade process of Cosmic radiations
  • point particles
  • Bhabha Scattering
  • Theoretical prediction of Muon

Awards

  • Adams Prize (1942)
  • Padma Bhushan (1954)
  • Fellow of the Royal Society

Fields

  • Nuclear Physics

Institutions

  • Atomic Energy Commission of India
  • Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
  • Cavendish Laboratory
  • Indian Institute of Science
  • Trombay Atomic Energy Establishment

To read more about Homi Jehangir Bhabha click H. J. Bhabha

Vijay Bhatkar

Vijay P. Bhatkar is an Indian computer scientist, IT leader and educationalist. He is best known as the architect of India’s national initiative in supercomputing where he led the development of Param supercomputers. He is a Maharashtra Bhushan, Padma Shri, Padma Bhushan awardee. Indian computer magazine Dataquest has placed him among the star pioneers who shaped India’s IT industry. He was the founder executive director of C-DAC and is currently working on the developing Exascale supercomputing mission for India.

Known for

  • Architect of PARAM series of Supercomputers

Awards

  • Padma Shri
  • Padma Bhushan
  • Maharashtra Bhushan

Institutes

  • Indian Institute of Technology Delhi
  • Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda
  • Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology

To Read more about Vijay Bhatkar  Click Vijay Bhatkar 

Harish-Chandra

Harish-Chandra (11 October 1923 – 16 October 1983) was an Indian American mathematician and physicist who did fundamental work in representation theory, especially harmonic analysis on semisimple Lie groups.

Fields

  • Mathematics
  • Physics

Institutions 

  •    Indian Institute of Science
  • Harvard University
  • Columbia University
  • Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
  • Institute for Advanced Study

Awards

  • Fellow of the Royal Society
  • Cole Prize in Algebra (1954)
  • Srinivasa Ramanujan Medal

To read more about Harish-Chandra click Harish-Chandra?

Sivaraj Ramseshan

Sivaraj Ramseshan (October 10, 1923 – December 29, 2003) was an Indian scientist known for his work in the field of crystallography. Ramaseshan served as Director of the Indian Institute of Science and was awarded the Padma Bhushan. Ramaseshan is the nephew of Indian scientist and Nobel laureate Sir C. V. Raman and cousin of Subramanyan Chandrasekhar.

Fields

  • Physics

Institutions

  • Indian Institute of Science
  • Indian Institute of Technology

Awards

  • Padma Bhushan

As scientist

On completion of his doctorate, Ramaseshan joined the Indian Institute of Science as a lecturer. During this time, he developed an interest in X-ray crystallography and was instrumental in improving the material science division in the National Aerospace Laboratories. Ramaseshan also taught as a professor in the Indian Institute of Technology.

To read more about Sivaraj Ramseshan Click S. Ramseshan

Ravi Sankaran

Ravi Sankaran (October 4, 1963 – January 17, 2009) was an Indian ornithologist whose work concerned the conservation of several threatened birds of India. He was the Director of the Salim Ali Centre for Ornithology and Natural History, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu. Ravi studied at the Rishi Valley School, Madanapalli, Andhra Pradesh; obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in Zoology from Loyola College, Chennai and a doctorate from Bombay Natural History Society Ravi joined the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) in 1985 in the endangered species project on the great Indian bustard (Ardeotis nigriceps) and florican species (family Otididae) and played a role in developing recovery plans for these species. He also established Florican Watch, involving local people.

Ravi Sankaran studied several endangered birds of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. His work on the Narcondam hornbill, Nicobar megapode and the edible-nest swiftlets aided the development of conservation management of these species. Ravi was also involved in a project Strengthening community conservation efforts in Nagaland: a programme to impart technical support on biodiversity conservation and livelihood options to communities, a collaborative programme between the Nagaland Empowerment of People through Economic Development, Kohima (NEPED), and SACON, in collaboration with other organisations such as Kalpavriksh, Pune; Ecosystems India, Guwahati; Aranayak, Assam; ATREE, Bangalore; and Nature Conservation Foundation, Mysore.funded by Sir Dorabji Tata Trust, Mumbai.

Awards

  • WTI Endangered Species Award-2004

To know more about Ravi Sankaran click Ravi_Sankaran

Giridhar Madras

Giridhar Madras is an Indian professor at the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India.

Education

Madras speaks four languages, English, Hindi, Tamil, and Kannada. Madras received his chemical engineering degree from Indian Institute of Technology at Madras in 1990. He obtained his Ph.D. degree in chemical engineering from Texas A&M University, United States, in 1994. Subsequently, he worked in the University of California at Davis, USA. He returned to India as an Assistant Professor of chemical engineering at the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore in 1998.

Fields

  • Chemistry

Awards

  • Scopus Young Scientist Award from Elsevier for being the most cited young author in engineering
  • Presidential Swarnajayanthi fellowship by the Department of Science and Technology, India, 2006
  • Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar prize from CSIR, India, 2009
  • J.C. Bose National fellowship, 2014

To know more about  Giridhar Madras CLICK Giridhar Madras

Kedareswar Banerjee

Kedareswar Banerjee (15 September 1900 – 30 April 1975) was an X-ray crystallographer and director of the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, Kolkata. Early in his career he determined the structures of naphthalene and anthracene. In 1931, he worked with Sir William Henry Bragg and developed one of the first direct methods of crystal structure determination. He was Professor of Physics at the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science from 1943 to 1952 and Director of the Association from 1959 until his retirement in 1965. Between 1952 and 1959 he was Head of the Department of Physics at Allahabad University.

               His interests in crystallography were widespread and, with his death, India has lost a renowned teacher. K. Banerjee joined the research group of Sir C. V. Raman at the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science (IACS), Calcutta, a premier Indian research institute of India. He worked in various institutions including IACS, the India Meteorological Department, University of Dhaka and Allahabad University and finally retired as the Director of IACS, Calcutta in 1965.

Field

  • X-ray Crystallographic

Institutions

  • University of Allahabad,
  •  India Meteorological Department, University of Dhaka,
  •  Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science

To Read More About Kedareswar Banerjee click on K. Banerjee

 

Koppillil Radhakrishnan

Koppillil Radhakrishnan (born 29 August 1949) is an Indian scientist. He is chairman of the Indian Institute of Engineering Science and Technology, Shibpur, having taken the position in December 2014, and is chairman for the Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology.Radhakrishnan previously served as chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) between 2009 and 2014. He is a life fellow of the Indian Geophysical Union and is also an accomplished vocalist (Carnatic music) and Kathakali artist.

Fields

  • Electrical engineering
  • Space research

Awards

  • Padma Bhushan (2014)

Radhakrishnan hails from Irinjalakuda in Thrissur district, Kerala. After his studies from Christ College, Irinjalakuda, he completed his B.Sc. degree in Electrical Engineering in 1970 from the Government Engineering College, Thrissur. He started his career in the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) as an Avionics Engineer at the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, Trivandrum, in 1971.

to know more about K. Radhakrishnan Click Koppillil Radhakrishnan

M. G. K. Menon

Mambillikalathil Govind Kumar Menon, FRS (28 August 1928 – 22 November 2016)also known as M. G. K. Menon, was a physicist and policy maker from India. He had a prominent role in the development of science and technology in India over four decades. One of his most important contributions was nurturing the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, which his mentor Homi J. Bhabha founded in 1945.

Born

  • Mambillikalathil Govind Kumar Menon
  • 28 August 1928
  • Mangalore, Karnataka, India

Field

  • Physics

Institutions

  • Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
  • Indian Space Research Organisation
  • Department of Science & Technology, Government of India

Awards

  • Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize for Science and Technology (1960),
  • Fellow of the Royal Society(FRS)(1970)
  • Abdus Salam Medal (1996)

 

To know more about M. G. K. Menon click M. G. K. Menon

Roddam Narasimha

Roddam Narasimha (born 20 July 1933) is an Indian aerospace scientist and fluid dynamicist. He was a Professor of Aerospace Engineering at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Director of National Aerospace Laboratories (NAL) and the Chairman of Engineering Mechanics Unit at Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR), Bangalore, India. He is now an Honorary Professor at JNCASR and concurrently holds the Pratt & Whitney Chair in Science and Engineering at the University of Hyderabad. Narasimha has been awarded the Padma Vibushan, India’s second highest civilian award, in 2013.

Education and career

He obtained his BE from Mysore University , from University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering in 1953 and his ME from Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore in 1955. He worked with Satish Dhawan during his time at IISc. He then worked with Hans Liepmann at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), United States to obtain his PhD degree in 1961.

To know more about  Roddam Narasimha click Roddam Narasimha

Vinod Johri

Vinod Johri

Vinod Johri (10 June 1935) was an Indian astrophysicist. He was an eminent cosmologist, a retired professor of astrophysics at Indian Institute of Technology, Madras and an emeritus professor at Lucknow University since 1995. Johri had over 75 research publications and articles published in pioneering journals. His major contributions in cosmological research included ‘power law inflation, genesis of quintessence fields of dark energy and phantom cosmologies’. He was the co-author of the first model of power law inflation in Brans–Dicke theory along with C. Mathiazhagan. He was honored by Uttar Pradesh Government by Research Award of the Council of Science & Technology (CSIR).

Institution 

  • Indian Institute of Technology
  • Lucknow University
  • Gorakhpur University
  • Allahabad University

Fields

  • Astrophysics
  •  Physics
  •  Cosmology

Johri spent over 45 years researching in cosmology, acting as a research guide and principal investigator of various research projects of Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, Department of Science & Technology and University Grants Commission of India. Johri was a Commonwealth Fellow, a senior visitor at Cambridge University (UK) and a Fellow of Royal Astronomical Society of London. He worked as consultant for UNESCO at United Nations Development Program[6] in Iran and as a DAAD Fellow at University of Mainz (Germany), as a visiting scientist at Hansen Lab (Gravity Probe B Group) Stanford University (USA) and as an International Scholar at Fine Theoretical Physics Institute at University of Minnesota at Minneapolis (USA). He died in Dallas, USA at the age of 78 due to complications arising from Kidney failure.

TO READ MORE ABOUT VINOD JOHRI CLICK VINOD JOHRI 

Why Edison is called the Inventor of Inventors?

               ‘Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration’. Thomas Alva Edison, the greatest inventor of all times, is the most suitable example of his own saying. This great outstanding US inventor had the credit of making 1001 inventions. Can you imagine a world without electric light, recorded music, cinema etc., which are the contributions of this great genius?

               Edison was born on February 11, 1847 at Milan, Ohio. His father was an incharge of a light house at Lake Huron. Although he could not continue his studies in his school, he was very inquisitive from his boyhood to learn by understanding. When he was only ten years old he set up a laboratory in the basement of his father’s working place. He loved to mix liquids and powders to observe the reactions.

               At the age of 12, he began selling newspapers and candy in trains. As a very keen observer he learnt some preliminary techniques of telegraphy from the Station Master, which led him later to work as a roving telegrapher. During his stint as a supervisor in a Telegraph company he created a stock printer. With the money received from it, he set up a laboratory for carrying out his experiments and research work. In subsequent years he invented phonograph – the machine for recording and reproducing sound. Edison thus had made man’s voice immortal. In 1878, he demonstrated the light bulb – a carbon filament electric bulb. 

               While experimenting on electric lamp, he discovered an important scientific principle known as ‘Edison effect’. This discovery led to the invention of electron valves and the modern electronics industry rests on this principle. In 1882, he set up a power generating station which supplied power to a few residents of New York City. Later he developed the kinetograph which was the first step towards motion picture camera. Cinema houses are here today because of the inventive genius of Edison. His other inventions include the spheres of X-rays, telephone and other electronic items. His inventions made him one of the richest men in America.

This great genius passed away on 18 October, 1931.

 

 

Why Galileo is called a great scientist?

          Galileo, even after 350 years of his death, is still considered as one of the greatest scientists of the world. He was the first man to disprove many old notions about nature and to use modern scientific methods.

          He was born in the town of Pisa, Italy, in 1564. His father was a merchant and taught music in his spare time. Young Galileo was a talented boy, interested in music and painting. He used to make scientific toys in his childhood. He was a keen observer. Galileo studied at the University of Pisa.

          When in an evening he went to chapel to pray, it was getting dark and the caretaker was lighting the candles in candelabra which hung from the roof by a chain. When he released it, it started swinging to and fro. Young Galileo observed it keenly and noticed that with each swing it covered shorter distance. Galileo felt that although the distance of the swing was becoming less and less, yet the time taken in each swing was the same. There was no watch during those days. It was a problem for him to test his idea. Immediately an idea flashed in his mind. He knew that the beat of human pulse is fairly regular. He felt his own pulse and then counted the number of beats for each swing. To his great delight his observation seemed to indicate that his idea was correct. This discovery was used 60 years later in making the pendulum clocks.

          At the age of 23 Galileo became Professor of mathematics at Pisa University. After two years of teaching he was declared the best teacher. During those days he had read in a religious book that if two bodies of different weights are allowed to fall simultaneously from the same height, the heavier body will hit the ground first. He proved this statement to be wrong. From the leaning tower of Pisa he dropped two spheres, one of 100 pounds and the other of 1 pound simultaneously. This great experiment was seen by thousands of people. It was highly surprising to everybody that both the spheres hit the ground at the same time.

          Galileo made the first telescope of the world. He observed many heavenly bodies through it. With his telescope he saw the satellites of Jupiter and studied many stars of the Milky Way.

         Galileo established the validity of the views of Copernicus. Copernicus had said that the earth is not the centre of the universe but it is simply a member of the solar system. Galileo proved for the first time that the sun was the centre of universe and that the earth revolves around the sun. These views of Galileo were published in a book.

          His discoveries offended the leading churchmen because he had disproved many notions cherished by religious people. As a result he was put in prison. By that time he had become quite old. The authorities were willing to pardon him if he accepted that his statements were wrong. He was pressurized; Galileo bowed before the authorities and said, “I am in your hands. God only knows the truth, but I feel earth revolves around the sun”. Later in 1637, Galileo became blind and in January 1642 the great discoverer died.

 

Why Einstein is called the greatest scientist of the 20th century?

          Albert Einstein, the mathematical physicist famous for his Theory of Relativity, is called the father of modern physics. He was born on March 14, 1879 at Ulm in Germany. When he was only one year old, his family moved to Munich. Einstein spent his boyhood there. He was shy and dreamy in his childhood. Since his mother was fond of playing piano, he also learnt it from her.

          Right from the beginning, Einstein showed a keen interest in scientific instruments. He was very sharp in mathematics, but just mediocre in other subjects. When he was fifteen, his family moved to Italy. From there he was sent to the Zurich University of Switzerland. Here his genius began to flower. He turned to be an extraordinary scholar of physics and mathematics.

          He completed his education in the year 1900. He wanted to become a teacher, but could not get a teaching job of his choice. Finally he joined the Swiss Patent Office at Berne as a clerk. He married a young Yugoslav science student, Mileva Marec. The couple had two sons.

 

Continue reading “Why Einstein is called the greatest scientist of the 20th century?”

Charusita Chakravarty

Charusita Chakravarty (1964 – 2016) was an Indian academic and scientist. She was a professor of Chemistry at the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi since 1999. In 2009 she was conferred Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize for Science and Technology in the field of Chemical Science. In 1999, she received B.M. Birla Science Award. She was an Associate Member of the Centre for Computational Material Science, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Bangalore.

Research fields

  • Theoretical Chemistry and Chemical Physics
  • Classical and Quantum Monte Carlo
  • Molecular Dynamics
  • Structure and Dynamics of Liquids
  • Water and Hydration
  • Nucleation
  • Self-assembly

Awards

  • Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize for Science and Technology (2009)
  • B.M. Birla Science Award (1999)
  • Indian National Science Academy Medal for Young Scientists (1996)
  • Anil Kumar Bose Memorial Award of Indian National Science Academy (1999)
  • Fellowship of Indian Academy of Sciences (2006)
  • Fellowship of the Department of Science and Technology (India) (2004)

To read more about  Charusita Chakravarty Click Charusita Chakravarty

 

What was discovered by Enrico Fermi?

          Enrico Fermi was a great Italian-American theoretical physicist. He was one of the chief architects of the nuclear physics. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1938 for his outstanding discovery of neutron-induced nuclear reactions.

          Fermi was born in Rome on 29th September 1901. He was a brilliant student and obtained his doctorate in Physics from the University of Pisa at the age of 21. His research was on X-rays.

          In 1926 Fermi became a full time Professor of theoretical physics at the University of Rome. In 1929, he was elected a member of the Italian Academy. In 1934 he succeeded in making a fundamental discovery in the field of physics. This was the result of 10 years of arduous research. He discovered that when elements are bombarded with slow neutrons, the material becomes radioactive and begins to emit radiation. In this process the element changes into a different material. For example, iron, when made artificially radioactive by neutron bombardment, turned into manganese. In this way Fermi found about 80 new artificial nuclei. 

           About this time, Italy, under Mussolini, was in the grip of a Fascist government. This affected Fermi directly because his wife was a Jew. So he wanted to leave Italy. Fortunately at this time (in 1938) he was named for Nobel Prize. He was given permission to go to Sweden to receive the award. Fermi left Italy with his family never to return. After receiving the award, he went to U.S. and became a citizen of United States. Subsequently he became Professor for Nuclear Studies at Columbia University.

            In 1942, during World War II, Fermi built the first atomic reactor in an empty Squash court in Chicago. Here he set off the first man-made nuclear chain reaction. Later he helped to develop the atom bomb.

 

How did Archimedes detect impurity in the golden crown?

          Archimedes, the “Father of experimental science”, was an ancient Greek physicist and mathematician. He was born at Syracuse in Sicily in the year 287 B.C. and educated in Alexandria. His teacher was a disciple of Euclid. The principles of science discovered by him are still taught to students. The famous “Archimedes’ Principle” tells us that if we weigh an object in air and then weigh it again when submerged in a liquid, it will apparently lose weight equal to the weight of the liquid it displaces.

          The story of discovery of the famous Archimedes’ Principle is very interesting. Once King Heron of Syracuse gave him a crown made of gold. He suspected that it was alloyed with silver. He asked Archimedes to test its purity without damaging it. It was absolutely a new problem for him. Interestingly he found its solution one day in a very peculiar manner. When he entered his bathtub, he found that his body displaced some water, and the water level in the tub rose. He then jumped out and ran down the street, naked, shouting “Eureka! Eureka!” (“I have found it! I have found it!”). He filled a vessel with water and dipped the crown in it. The water displaced by it was measured. Again he filled the vessel with water and dipped an equal mass of pure gold in it. The water displaced was again collected and measured. The amount of water displaced in the two observations was different. From this experiment he estimated the impurity in the gold crown. On the basis of this discovery he gave the method of finding out the relative density of different substances. 

          Archimedes also gave the laws of flotation of bodies and the principle of lever. He, for the first time, calculated the value of pi. In addition to these, he discovered the use of levers and pulleys and how to pump water uphill using Archimedean screw. The system is still used to irrigate fields in Egypt. He also designed war machines.

          Romans captured Syracuse in 212 B.C. At that time Archimedes had become quite old. One day while he was drawing some geometrical figure on the sand, one of the Roman soldiers asked him to accompany him. And when he refused, the soldier pulled out his sword and killed him. He was cremated with great honours. 

Why Newton is called the Father of Physics?

          Sir Isaac Newton is considered as one of the greatest scientists and mathematicians of all time. He was born on the Christmas morning of 1642 at Woolsthorpe in Lincolnshire. It was also the year in which the famous scientist Galileo died.

          At the age of twelve Newton was sent to school. When he was eighteen, he went to Trinity College at the Cambridge University. There he showed his brilliance in mathematics. In 1669 he became Professor of mathematics in the same college.

          Newton was very fond of making mechanical toys in his childhood. It is said that one day while sitting in a garden, he saw an apple falling to the ground. He began to wonder: “Why did the apple fall towards the ground? Why did not it go towards the sky?” Such questions puzzled him. He worked on this problem and finally gave his famous ‘Law of Universal Gravitation’. According to this law, everybody in this universe attracts every other body with a force which is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. He established the fact that the earth attracts all objects towards its centre. That is why anything thrown upwards falls back to the earth.

          Great scientist as he was, he solved many mysteries of the nature. He showed that the sunlight which appears white is in reality made up of seven colours. He could split these seven colours with the help of a prism. He also showed that the mixture of these seven colours produces white light. He also built the first reflecting telescope. His work on light and colour was published in 1704 in a book called Optics. He did monumental work in the field of mathematics. He gave the famous Laws of motion. He invented calculus. Newton’s discoveries were published in his book called Principia. It is one of the most important books of science ever published. On account of these researches Newton is called the ‘Father of Physics’.

          In 1689 Newton was elected as a member of parliament. In 1703 he was elected President of the Royal Society and was re-elected as president every year until his death. When he was 85 years old, he went to London to preside over a meeting of the Royal Society. But on his return he fell ill and he died on March 20, 1727.

 

Man Mohan Sharma

Man Mohan Sharma (born May 1, 1937 in Jodhpur, Rajasthan) is an Indian chemical engineer. He was educated at Jodhpur, Mumbai and Cambridge. At the age of 27 years, he was appointed Professor of Chemical Engineering in the Institute of Chemical Technology (UDCT), Mumbai. He later went on to become the Director of Institute of Chemical Technology (ICT/ UDCT/ UICT), the first chemical engineering professor to do so from ICT.

In 1990, he became the first Indian engineer to be elected as a Fellow of Royal Society, UK. He was awarded the Padma Bhushan (1987) and the Padma Vibhushan (2001) by the President of India. He has also been awarded the Leverhulme Medal of the Royal Society, the S.S. Bhatnagar Prize in Engineering Sciences (1973), FICCI Award (1981), the Vishwakarma medal of the Indian National Science Academy (1985), G.M. Modi Award (1991), Meghnad Saha Medal (1994), and an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi (2001).

Field:

  • Chemical Engineering

Awards

Professor Sharma is a recipient of a number of prestigious academic honours and awards including the 1977 Moulton Medal of the Institution of Chemical Engineers, and is himself commemorated in the M M Sharma Medal awarded by the same institution for outstanding research contributions.

 

He won the Leverhulme Medal of the Royal Society for “for his work on the dynamics of multi-phase chemical reactions in industrial processes”. He was awarded the Padma Vibhushan (2001), and Padma Bhushan (1987) by the President of India. He was INSA President (1989-90). He is a Fellow of the Indian Academy of Sciences, Bangalore, Honorary Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences (India), Allahabad, Fellow of the Royal Society, London. Subsequently he was elected Honorary Fellow by the Royal Academy of Engineering and is Foreign Associate of the US National Academy of Engineering.

To read more about Man Mohan Sharma Click Man Mohan Sharma

 

Shankar Abaji Bhise

Dr. Shankar Abaji Bhise  was an Indian scientist. Bhise has to his credit 200 inventions, for about 40 of which he took patents. In 1910, Sir Ratan Tata set up the Tata-Bhise invention syndicate in order to finance Bhise’s inventions. Among his inventions were a washing compound and type-caster machines, including the Bhisotype which could output 1,200 characters a minute.

To Know more about Dr. Shankar Abaji Bhise Click Dr. Shankar Abaji Bhise 

Shivram Baburao Bhoje

Shivram Baburao Bhoje (born 9 April 1942) is a distinguished Indian nuclear scientist who worked in the field of fast-breeder nuclear reactor technology for forty years in the design, construction, operation, and research and development. Indian government has honoured him with Padma Shri in 2003, the fourth highest civilian award in India, for his distinguished service to science and engineering fields.

Professional

Bhoje completed one year training in Nuclear Science and Engineering at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre Training School and joined as a Scientific Officer at BARC, Trombay. He started working in the Fast Reactor Section for design of an experimental reactor. He was on a one-year deputation to the Centre d’Etudes Nucleare Cadarache, France, as a member of the design team of the 13-mW fast-breeder test reactor (FBTR) in 1969–70.

Field

  • fast-breeder nuclear reactor

Awards

  • Padma Shri, for his contribution to science and engineering 2003.
  • H K Firodia awards for his contribution science and technology 2006.
  • VASVIK Industrial Research Award, in the field of Mechanical Sciences and Technology, 1992.
  • Sir Visvesvaraya Memorial Award from Engineers Foundation.

 To read more about Shivram Baburao Bhoje Click  Shivram_Bhoje

Subbayya Sivasankaranarayana Pillai

Subbayya Sivasankaranarayana Pillai was an Nagercoil native Indian mathematician specialising in number theory. His contribution to Waring’s problem was described in 1950 by K. S. Chandrasekharan as “almost certainly his best piece of work and one of the very best achievements in Indian Mathematics since Ramanujan”.

Fields

  • Mathematics

Known for

  • Pillai’s conjecture
  • Pillai’s arithmetical function
  • Pillai prime

Contributions

He proved the Waring’s problem for K ? 6 in 1935 under the further condition of (3k +1)/ (2k – 1) ? [1.5k] + 1 head of Leonard Eugene Dickson who around the same time proved it for K ? 7.

He showed that g(k) = 2k + l -2 where l is the largest natural number  ? (3/2)k   and hence computed the precise value of  g(6) = 73.

To read more about Subbayya Sivasankaranarayana Pillai Click  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subbayya_Sivasankaranarayana_Pillai 

 

Sandip Trivedi

Sandip Trivedi  is an Indian theoretical physicist working at Tata Institute for Fundamental Research (TIFR) at Mumbai, India, while he is its current Director. He is well known for his contributions to string theory, in particular finding (along with Renata Kallosh, Andrei Linde, and Shamit Kachru) the first models of accelerated expansion of the universe in low energy supersymmetric string. His research areas include string theory, cosmology and particle physics. He is now member of program advisory board of International Center for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS). He is also the recipient of the Infosys Prize 2010 in the category of Physical Sciences.

Fields

  • Theoretical physics

Institutions

  • Indian  Institute of Technology Kanpur
  • California Institute of Technology
  • Institute for Advanced Study
  • TIFR

Notable awards

  • Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Award
  • Infosys Prize
  • TWAS Prize

To read more about Sandip Trivedi Click https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandip_Trivedi 

Har Gobind Khorana

Har Gobind Khorana (9 January 1922 – 9 November 2011), was an Indian-American biochemist who shared the 1968 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine with Marshall W. Nirenberg and Robert W. Holley for research that showed how the order of nucleotides in nucleic acids, which carry the genetic code of the cell, control the cell’s synthesis of proteins. Khorana and Nirenberg were also awarded the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize from Columbia University in the same year.

Khorana was born in Raipur, British India (today Tehsil Kabirwala, Punjab, Pakistan) and later moved to become an Indian citizen after the partition of 1947. 

Fields 

  • Molecular biology

Institutions

  • MIT (1970–2007)
  • University of Wisconsin, Madison (1960–70)
  • University of British Columbia (1952–60)
  • University of Cambridge (1950–52)
  • Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich (1948–49)

Notable awards

  • Nobel Prize in Medicine (1968)
  • Gairdner Foundation International Award (1980)
  • Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize
  • ForMemRS (1978)
  • Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research
  • Padma Vibhushan
  • Willard Gibbs Award

 To read more about Har Gobind Khorana  Click https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Har_Gobind_Khorana

Why is it said that Thales of Miletus played a major role in the history of electricity?

Thales of Miletus is an important figure in the history of electricity. It is said that he discovered static electricity around 600 BC.

Static electricity was first observed when amber, rubbed with animal fur, got charged, and attracted light objects such as dry leaves, or bits of straw. Even though other people may have noticed this before, it was Thales who first recorded his findings. But Thales has never identified it as static electricity. At that time magnetism was also confused with static electricity.

Later, it was proved that the force that works between amber and animal fur is nothing but static electricity. Thales’ role was remarkable because he was the first to record his findings regarding static electricity. Thales was born in the city of Miletus around the mid 620 BC. He was a philosopher, and astronomer and the one who conducted the earliest studies in electricity. Thales’ findings were recorded but none of them survived to modern times. 

Why is it said that Stephen Gray played a major role in the history of electricity?

             Stephen Gray was an English astronomer who made significant contributions to science. These include his experiments with conduction, insulation, and electrostatic induction.

           One of his experiments was done using a glass tube. Gray observed that when the glass was rubbed with a dry hand or dry paper, it obtained electric charge. As a result, it attracted a feather to the glass, as well as the cork with which it was closed. The cork was in fact, used to keep the dust out when not in use.

          From the experiment, Gray concluded that the ‘attractive virtue’ passed from the tube to the cork.

         To clear his doubts, Gray proceeded with a similar experiment. This time, he attached an ivory ball to a piece of wood, and inserted the other end of the wood into the cork. Once it was done, he confirmed that attraction and repulsion passed to the ball, that too stronger than that on the cork.

         Gray observed that substances like silk do not conduct electricity. And that Earth was somehow responsible for conducting electric charge away from the body.

         For his electrical experiments, Stephen Gray received the first Copley Medal instituted by the Royal Society, in 1731. However most of his works went unacknowledged and he died as a poor man.

 

Why was the introduction of the fuel cell a milestone?

        Fuel cells are devices that generate electric current through chemical reactions. To put it better, a fuel cell uses chemical energy of hydrogen (or another fuel) to produce electricity in a clean and efficient manner. Its only products are electricity, heat, and water, and hence it is clean.

            There are a wide range of applications for which fuel cells can be used. This includes transportation, emergency power back up, material handling etc. compared to other technologies, fuel cells have many advantages. They are more efficient, and have lower emissions. That is, they do not emit dangerous substances like carbon dioxide or air pollutants, as their only products are water and heat. Yet another advantage is that fuel cells operate in a silent manner.

            The history of fuel cells began with the Welsh physicist Sir William Grove. In 1839, he demonstrated the first crude fuel cells. Although many people have tried to work on the concept of converting chemical energy into electric power, most of them were unsuccessful due to lack of resources.

            The first successful fuel cell was developed by the British engineer Francis Bacon in 1932, using hydrogen, oxygen, an alkaline electrolyte and nickel electrodes.

 

Why is it said that the invention of the transformer was a turning point?

            A transformer is an electrical device that works on electromagnetic induction to transfer electrical energy between two or more circuits. It is used in a wide range of power appliances to increase, or decrease voltage.

            We see transformers in almost every city. They are used to convert high-voltage electricity from incoming power lines, to lower-voltages.

         

Continue reading “Why is it said that the invention of the transformer was a turning point?”

Why is the introduction of the transistor a major turning point in history?

            To put it simply, a transistor is an electronic component that can do two different jobs. It can act as an amplifier or a switch, depending on the need.

            As an amplifier, a transistor does the job of boosting current. That is, it takes in a tiny input current at one end and produces a bigger output current at the other end.

            It was at the Bell Laboratories in New Jersey that transistor was demonstrated for the first time. That happened on December 23rd, 1947. William Shockley, John Bardeen and Walter Brattain are the three persons credited with its invention.

            In 1956, they were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics “for their researches on semiconductors and their discovery of the transistor effect”.

 

Why is the Edison effect an important milestone in history?

         In one of his experiments, Thomas Alva Edison discovered that electrons can flow from one metal conductor to another, through a vacuum. This discovery was later named as the Edison Effect.

         Sometime in the early 1880s, Edison and his team were working to find a light bulb filament. Their carbonized bamboo filament did well, but even so, carbon deposits were seen inside the bulb after hours. That was when he noticed that the carbon came from the end of the filament which was attached to the power supply. It looked as though it was flying through a vacuum onto the walls!

          Edison realized that there was electric charge flowing not just through the filament, but through the evacuated bulb as well.

          Although Edison was right about the flow, he could not find the reason behind it. He moved on to other experiments.

           Later, it was proved that Edison, with his experiment, discovered the basis of the vacuum tube. And the modified light bulbs were later used to control the flow of electrons through vacuum. 

Why is it said that William Staite and Warren de la Rue’s contributions are remarkable?

         Different kinds of electric lamps were invented by masters in the past.

         The English inventor Humphrey Davy’s electric arc lamp was one such creation that made great changes in the field of electricity and lighting.

         However, the arc lamps were not flawless. Their biggest disadvantage was that they were not fit for practical use. They emitted too much of light and also, burnt out quickly. Nevertheless, the principle of arc lamps was used till the 1900s by various inventors for developing electric lights and bulbs. Among them were Warren de la Rue and William Staite.

            In 1840, the British scientist Rue developed a light bulb using coiled platinum filament instead of copper. Staite, on the other hand, had been working on increasing the longevity of conventional arc lamps. In 1848, he developed a clockwork mechanism. Through this, he was able to regulate the movement of the carbon rods used in the lamps that eroded very quickly. 

Why is it said that Humphrey Davy’s contributions are unique?

        The story of the invention of the electric bulb was very interesting. Even though many believe that it is Thomas Alva Edison who discovered the light bulb, it was not so. He played a major role in the development of the light bulb, and its popularity. The story of the light bulb begins long before Edison patented the first commercially successful bulb in 1879.

          Alessandro Volta’s invention of the battery in 1800, gave inspiration to many scientists. One among them was Humphrey Davy. He produced the world’s first electric lamp by connecting voltaic piles to charcoal electrodes. It cannot be called an electric bulb as such. It was an electric arc lamp, and he introduced it in 1802. It was named so for the bright arc of light emitted between its two carbon rods. However, Davy’s arc lamp wasn’t a very practical source of lighting. It was much too bright for use in a home, and it burned quickly. But the principles behind this arc light were used throughout the 1800s, and many took inspiration from this invention.

Why is it said that Joseph Swan, along with his contemporaries, made a significant change in electric bulb?

          Another person who made significant contributions to the making of the electric bulb is Sir Joseph Wilson Swan.

          Swan was an English chemist. During the 1850s and 1860s, he conducted many experiments on bulbs using carbon filaments. Most of them failed, because the vacuum pumps used in those times were not good, so they couldn’t remove enough air from the lamps. Besides, the lamp deposited a dark layer of soot in its inner surface. This obscured the light.

          In 1878, Swan demonstrated an improved working lamp. It had a better vacuum, and carbonized thread as a filament. The method of processing was such that the bulb avoided early blackening. Soon after the demonstration, Swan was granted a UK patent. After that, light bulbs were installed in homes in England. In 1880, he received a US patent too.

              For his contributions, Swan was knighted in 1904. The same year he also received the prestigious Hughes Medal, instituted by the Royal Society of London. 

Why is it said that Edison’s contribution to the development of the electric bulb is unmatchable?

          We saw that during the 1800s, many inventors have worked hard to develop an effective light bulb. But, the most successful among these inventors was Thomas Alva Edison.

          Edison’s serious research into making a practical incandescent lamp began around 1878. He wanted to invent a safe, yet cheap electric light that could replace the earlier ones. Between 1878 and 1880, he conducted many experiments, with carbon filaments, platinum, and other metals. In 1879, he successfully tested a bulb with a carbon filament that lasted 13.5 hours.

          The following year, Edison and his team discovered that a carbonized bamboo filament could last over 1200 hours. This marked the beginning of commercially made light bulbs in 1880.

          As we know, this is just one of the many inventions made by Edison.

          Thus, Edison’s contributions remain unparalleled and, for his tireless work, he was rightfully described as one of the greatest inventors. 

Who invented light bulbs with tungsten filaments that are widely used today?

Scientists and inventors have used a number of filaments for incandescent bulbs in the past. But today, the most popular one is the tungsten filament.

It was William David Coolidge, who developed a method to manufacture tungsten filaments in 1910.

The biggest advantage of tungsten was that it had a high melting point, and was able to withstand heat and corrosion. That is exactly what attracted inventors to it. Besides, using inert gases inside the bulb increased its luminescence.

As years passed, the element was used in other lamps too, including halogen, fluorescent, mercury vapour etc. Tungsten is perhaps the most durable type of filament used in bulbs even today.

It is said that Thomas Alva Edison himself knew that tungsten would prove to be the best choice for filaments. But in his day, the technology and machinery required to produce the wire in fine form was not available.

Ashok Das

 
 
Ashok Das (born March 23, 1953) is an Indian American theoretical physicist, an author and award winning teacher of Physics. He is professor of physics at University of  Rochester  and  Ajunct professor of Physics at Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, Kolkata and India and Institute of Physics, Bhabaneswar, India.
 
 Das was born in  Puri, Odisha. He received his BS (honours) in 1972 and MS in 1974 in physics from University of Delhi. He did his graduate studies in supersymmetry and supergravity at State University of New York at Stony Brook. He received his PhD (Spin 3/2 Fields and Supergravity Theories) in 1977.
 
He was a research associate at the City College of New York, the University of Maryland and at Rutgers University before joining the University of Rochester in 1982. He was promoted to professor in 1993 and is still there. He is also the adjunct professor of physics at Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics in India.
 
Das’ research is in the area of theoretical high energy physics. He works on supersymmetry and supergravity. In recent years, he has worked extensively on non-linear integrable systems, which are systems which in spite of their complicated appearance can be exactly solved. He has also been working on finite temperature field theories, generalization of the Standard Model to incorporate CP violation, and problems in quantum field theory and string theory.
 
Institutions:
  • University of Rochester
  • Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, Kolkata
Fields
  • Theoretical Physics
Awards
  • William H.Riker University Award for Excellence in Graduate Teaching (2006)
  • Fulbright Fellowship (1997, 2006)
  • Rockefeller Foundation Award (2004)
  • Department of Energy Outstanding Junior Investigator (1983-1989)
  • Edward Peck Curtis Award (1991)

To know more about Ashok Das Click  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashok_Das 

Patcha Ramachandra Rao

Patcha Ramachandra Rao (21 March 1942 – 10 January 2010) was a metallurgist and administrator. He has the unique distinction of being the only Vice-Chancellor (2002–05) of the Banaras Hindu University (BHU) who was also a student (1963–68) and faculty (1964–92) at that institution. From 1992 to 2002, Rao was the Director of the National Metallurgical Laboratory Jamshedpur. After his tenure as Vice-Chancellor of B.H.U., in 2005, he took the reins of the Defence Institute of Advanced Technology (DIAT) as its first Vice-Chancellor. He was to serve DIAT until his superannuation in 2007. From 2007 till the end, Rao was a Raja Ramanna Fellow at the International Advanced Research Centre for Powder Metallurgy and New Materials, in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh.

Institutions

  • Indian Institute of Technology (BHU)
  • National Metallurgical Laboratory
  • Defence Institute of Advanced Technology
  • Indian Institute of Science, Osmania University?

Fields

  • Metallurgy
  • Material science
  • Engineering

Awards

  • Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize (1985)
  • National Metallurgist Award (2004)
  • Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Gold Medal. INSA (2005)?

Honorary positions

·        President, The Asia-Pacific Academy of Materials (APAM), India Chapter

·        President, Indian Institute of Metals

·        Vice-President, Materials Research Society of India

·        Vice-President, Indian National Science Academy, New Delhi.

·        Sectional President, Materials Science Section, Indian Science Congress

 

To know more about Patcha Ramachandra Rao Click  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patcha_Ramachandra_Rao

Why is C. V. Raman considered to be a scientist par excellence?

Sir C. V. Raman is best known for his work in the field of light scattering. Raman was intrigued by the blue colour of glaciers and the Mediterranean Sea and wanted to unravel the mystery as to why water, a colourless liquid, appeared blue to the eyes.

    Thus, he began a series of experiments on the scattering of light which ultimately led to what came to be known as the ‘Raman Effect’. Raman also discovered that when light interacts with a molecule, the light can donate a small amount of energy to te molecule. As a result of this, the light changes its colour and the molecule vibrates.

   The change of colour can act as a ‘fingerprint’ for the molecule. Today, Raman spectroscopy, which relies on these ‘fingerprints,’ is used in laboratories all over the world to identify molecules and to detect disease such as cancer.

     Sir C. V. Raman received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1930. He was the first Indian to win the Nobel Prize for Physics, and is considered to be a scientist par excellence.

Why Srinivasa Ramanujan is considered a mathematical genius?

Srinivasa Ramanujan was, without doubt, a mathematical genius. Without any formal training in the subject, he made significant contributions to the theory of numbers, investigation of elliptical functions, infinite series, continued fractions, and Mock theta functions.

    Ramanujan showed a natural inclination towards mathematics when he was ten years old. By age 11 he had more mathematical knowledge than two college students who were lodgers at his home. He completely mastered advanced trigonometry by the age of 13, and discovered sophisticated theorems on his own.

   His memory for mathematical formulae and constants seems to have been boundless- he amazed classmates with his ability to recite the values of irrational numbers to as many decimal places as they asked for.

   Ramanujan went to Cambridge in April 1914, thanks to the help of Prof. G. H. Hardy. Two years later, he was awarded the equivalent of a PhD. for his work. The notebooks he had brought from India were filled with thousands of identities, equations and theorems which he had discovered for himself.

   In 1918 Ramanujan became the first Indian Mathematician to be elected a Fellow of the British Royal Society.

What were Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose’s contributions?

Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose is one of the most famous among Indian scientists. He was a physicist, biologist, biophysicist, botanist and archaeologist, as well as a writer of science fiction.

  Bose proved by experimentation that both animals and plants share much in common. He demonstrated that plants are also sensitive to heat, cold, light, noise and various other external stimuli.

   Bose built a very sophisticated instrument called Crescograph which could record and observe the minute responses of plants to external stimulants. He authored two illustrious books and extensively researched the behavior of radio waves.

       Bose devised another instrument called ‘Coherer’. In 1917, he founded the Bose Institute, and dedicated it to the promotion of scientific studies in India.

Why is Aryabhata considered to be a giant among mathematicians?

Aryabhata was a great mathematician and astronomer in Ancient India. He wrote many mathematical and astronomical treatises. His chief work was the ‘Ayrabhatiya’ which was a compilation of mathematics and astronomy.

   Ayrabhatiya covers several branches of mathematics such as algebra, arithmetic, plane and spherical trigonometry. Included in it are theories on continued fractions, sum of power series, sine tables, and quadratic equations.

  Aryabhata also did a considerable amount of work in astronomy. He knew that the Earth is rotating on an axis around it. He discovered the position of nine planets and stated that these also revolved around the sun.

    Aryabhata stated that the correct number of days in a year is 365. He was the first person to mention that the Earth was not flat but, in fact spherical shape. This great man has been honored in many ways. The first Indian satellite was named ‘Aryabhata’. A lunar crater and Indian research centre also bear his name.

Who was Sushruta?

Sushruta, who lived in the 7th century BC, was an ancient Indian surgeon who was famous for his pioneering operations and techniques. His book the’ Sushruta Samhita’, is an advanced collection of the surgical, as well as information on other specialties, geriatrics, diseases of the ear, nose, throat and eye, toxicology, aphrodisiacs and psychiatry.

   Examples of some of Sushruta’s groundbreaking operations include rhinoplasty which involves repairing or restructuring the nose, removal of a dead foetus, and surgical removal of stones in organs like the urinary bladder.

      Sushruta used wine to dull the pain during operations. He encouraged his students to practice surgical techniques by operating on objects like watermelons and reeds.

    Sushruta took surgery in ancient India to admirable heights and because of his numerous contributions to the science and art surgery in India; he is regarded as the ‘father of surgery’ and ‘father of plastic surgery’.

What makes Stephen Hawking truly remarkable?

Stephen Hawking, theoretical physicist and cosmologist, is remarkable in many ways. Despite challenging physical impairments, he has contributed hugely to he world of science.

   Hawking suffers from a type of motor neuron disease that has left him almost completely Paralyzed. This did not stop him from working on the subject of black holes and providing theories for their behavior, including the idea that they emit radiation.

    Hawking believed black holes to be celestial death traps that swallowed up all energy. However, he determined there was room for this phenomenon, through the merging of quantum theory, general relativity and thermodynamics, distilling it all into one path breaking formula in 1974.

      Hawking wanted to write a book about the mysteries of the universe that would connect with the public. This task seemed impossible after he lost the abilities to write and speak. But Hawking did not give up, and his vision was finally realized when finally realized when his ‘A Brief History of Time’ became a best-seller. 

Why James Watson is considered one of the titans of science?

James Watson, an American molecular biologist, geneticist, and zoologist shared the 1962 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discovering the structure of DNA in 1953. He gained worldwide fame and prominence as the joint author of the scientific papers between 1953 and 1954 which he co-wrote with fellow scientist Francis Crick. Their work laid down the double helical structure of deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA.

    The DNA molecule is a mega molecule that is the process of genetic  replication. One of the most celebrated science writers, Watson published his textbook ‘Molecular Biology of the Gene’ in 1965 and his best-selling autobiographical book ‘The Double Helix,’ in 1968.

    Watson helped to establish and direct the Human Genome Project at the National Institute of Health, where he oversaw the mapping of the genes in human chromosomes. His own genome was sequenced in 2007, making him the second person to have this done.

Why in Richard Feynman a great scientist?

Richard Feynman was an American Scientist who is considered to be one of the greatest and most influential theoretical physicists in history.

  Feynman revolutionized the field of quantum mechanics and formulated te theory of quantum electrodynamics.

  Feynman is responsible for the introduction of fundamental computational techniques and notations into physics. The Feynman diagrams have dramatically changed the way in which basic physical processes are conceptualized and calculated. He also studied the physics of super cooled liquids. In order to increase the understanding of physics among the general public,

   Feynman wrote two important books- ‘The Character of Physical Law’ and “Q.E.D: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter’. He was awarded the 1965 Nobel Prize in Physics for successfully resolving problems related to the theory of quantum electrodynamics.

Why Christiaan Huygens is considered a leading scientist of his time?

Christiaan Huygens, a Dutch philosopher and mathematician, was one of the leading scientists in the 17th century. He started by trying to disprove theories that had been established by Ancient Greeks in geometry.

      He was interested in telescopes and astronomy, and spent a lot of time designing methods to improve the mechanical and optic performance of telescopes.

In his book entitled ‘Systema Saturnium’ published in 1659, he noted the discovery of the rings around the planet Saturn, and made observations about the planets, the Moon, and Orion Nebula. His keen interest in the field of astronomy led him to measure time and other matters that relate to mechanical physics.

      One of his most important contributions was that he explained the vital principles of classical physics like centripetal force and gravity in a vacuum in another book of his.

      Huygens also put forward a theory explaining the wave behavior of light. His reputation as a scientist and a scholar became known worldwide, and remains so to this day.

 

Why is Robert Boyle referred to as a founder of modern chemistry?

Robert Boyle was a famous Anglo Irish scientist who transformed chemistry in the 17th century. Till then, chemistry was confined to alchemy and mysticism.

       Alchemy was the study of how to change basic substances such as metals into other more valuable substances. Boyle made chemistry a science based on measurement.

       He defined elements, compounds and mixture and he coined the new term ‘chemical analysis,’ a field in which he made several contributions. Robert Boyle is most famous for Boyle’s law. It was the first of the gas laws linking the pressure of a gas to its volume. He established that electrical forces are transmitted through a vacuum, but sound is not.

       Boyle also stated that the movement of particles is responsible for heat. He was the first person to write specific experimental guidance for other scientists, telling them the importance of achieving reliable results. He was indeed a ‘mighty chemist.’

      Robert Boyle is regarded as the first modern chemist, and is referred to as one of the founders of modern chemistry.

Why will Alexander Graham Bell be always remembered?

Alexander Graham Bell was an influential scientist engineer, and inventor who is considered to be the inventor of the first practical telephone. Bell’s mother and wife were both deaf, and this motivated his research on hearing and speech.

         Bell experimented with sound, working with devices such as ‘harmonic telegraph,’ that is used to send multiple messages over a single wire. While trying to discover the secret to transmitting multiple messages on a single wire, Bell heard the sound of a plucked string along some of the electrical wire. This was caused because one of Bell’s assistants, Thomas A. Watson, was trying to reactivate a transmitter. It made Bell believe he could send the sound of a human voice over the wire.

        After receiving a patent on March 7th, 1876, for transmitting sound along a single wire, he successfully transmitted human speech on March 10.

        Bell’s first words with the working telephone were spoken to his assistant Watson. They were “Mr. Watson, come here. I want to see you.”

        Bell also had a strong interest in other scientific fields, conducting medical research, searching for alternative fuel sources, developing hydrofoil watercraft and much more.

Why is it said that J.J. Thomson took science to new heights?

J.J. Thomson, an English physicist, took science to new heights with his 1897 discovery of the electron the subatomic particle.

     When Thomson began his research career, it was thought that atoms were the smallest particles. Nobody had a clear picture of how atoms might look. It was already known that atoms were associated in some way with electric charges.

   In 1897, aged40, Thomson carried out a now famous experiment with a cathode ray tube. His experiment proved the existence of a new fundamental particle that was much smaller than the atom. It was named the electron.

     In discovering the electron, Thomson also moved toward the invention of an immensely important new tool for chemical analysis the mass spectrometer.

      Then, in 1912, Thomson discovered that stable elements could exist as isotopes. Isotopes are different forms of the same element that exist with different atomic masses.

    J.J. Thomson was awarded the Nobel Prize for physics in 1906

What was Sigmund Freud’s greatest achievement?

Sigmund Freud was an Austrian neurologist. He is best known for developing the theories and techniques of psychoanalysis.

       Psychoanalysis is a method of treatment through which an analyst uncovers unconscious conflicts based on the free associations, dreams, and fantasies of the patient.

     All of Freud’s work revolved around the mind how it worked, and how to diagnosis and treat certain maladies of the mind. He analyzed himself as well. He began to pick apart his dreams, and tried to decipher their meaning.

    In doing so, he provided an incredible account of how dreams originate and why. He explored what would become known as Freudian slips, where one has a slip of the tongue and either misreads something, or forgets a name.

    Freud established a theory as to why this happens often to some people. Sigmund Freud’s greatest achievement was in the area of the unconscious mind.

    Although many before him were aware of its existence, he was the one who was finally able to achieve scientific recognition in the area of psychoanalysis.

Why does Max Planck’s work have far reaching benefits?

Max Planck was a German theoretical physicist, who made significant contributions. He changed our understanding of physics when he discovered that hot objects do not radiate a smooth, continues range of energies as was earlier believed.

      Instead, he found that the energies radiated by hot objects have distinct values. His discovery was the beginning of the Quantum theory an entirely new type of physics that revolutionized our understanding of atomic and subatomic processes. In fact, we can say that the quantum theory grew from the ideas of Max Planck.

    A quantum is the smallest possible amount of energy. Planck’s constant a fixed number is used to calculate the energy of quanta. The theory has been developed to explain the behavior of particles and the energy they emit. Planck was awarded the Nobel Prize for physics in 1918.

How did Henri Becquerel discover radioactivity?

Henri Becquerel was a French physicist who discovered radioactivity through his investigations of uranium and other substances.

       Becquerel had become a highly respected physicist by 1896. After the discovery of the x-ray in 1895, Becquerel began to investigate whether there was a fundamental connection between this form of invisible radiation and visible light.

      His expertise with phosphorescent materials, his familiarity with uranium compounds, and his general skill in laboratory techniques, including photography, all played a key role in his discovery of radioactivity. Becquerel experimented by placing phosphorescent crystals on a sealed photographic plate that had been wrapped in opaque paper, and never exposed to direct light.

    After the plate was developed, images were visible on it. He passed the results on to Madame Curie, who named this phenomenon radioactivity. In 11903, Becquerel shared the Nobel Prize for physics with the chemists Pierre and Marie Curie.

Why is Emil Fischer one of the great scientists of all time?

Emil Hermann Fischer, more commonly known as Emil Fischer, was an eminent German chemist. He received the Nobel Prize for chemistry in 1902 in recognition of his work in the sugar and purine groups.

        Emil Fischer helped to reorganize the teaching of chemistry, and to establish research facilities. His work in organic chemistry was primarily on the constitution and synthesis of substances present in organisms.

       Fischer laid the chemical foundations for biochemistry by his study of sugars, enzymes, purines, and proteins. He was also instrumental in the discovery of barbiturates, a class of sedative drugs used for insomnia, epilepsy, anxiety, and anaesthesia.

       Fischer’s keen understanding of scientific problems, his intuition and love of truth, and his insistence on experimental proof of hypotheses, marked him as one of the truly great scientists of all time.

Why is Ivan Pavlov an iconic figure in science?

 

Ivan Pavlov, a Russian physiologist, is an iconic figure who was the first to offer a scientific approach to psychology.

     Pavlov studied medicine under a famed physiologist of the time, S.P. Botkin, who taught him a great deal about the nervous system. Pavlov is known primarily for his work in conditioned response.

     He conducted a legendary experiment in which he trained hungry dogs to drool at the sound of a bell, or buzzer. Moments before feeding, a bell was rung to measure the dogs’ saliva production when they heard the bell.

     Pavlov found out that once the dogs had been trained to associate the sound of the bell with food, they would produce saliva, whether or not food followed. Pavlov became fully convinced that human behavior could be understood and explained best in physiological terms, rather than in mentalist terms. He won the 1904 Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine.

Why is Thomas Alva Edison a colossus in the world of science?

Thomas Edison’s story is truly an inspiring one. He struggled at school, but loved reading and conducting experiments.

      This American inventor began sending and receiving messages via Morse code an electronically conveyed alphabet using different clicks for each letter at the age of 15. Later, he invented a version of the telegraph that could send four messages at once. In 1877, Edison invented the phonograph. The phonograph was a machine that recorded and played back sounds. He perfected the phonograph by recording ‘Mary had a little Lamb’ on a piece of tin foil!

     In 1878, Edison invented the light bulb, as well as the power grid system, which could generate electricity, and deliver it to homes through a network of wires.

    Edison registered 1,093 patents in the US, as he continued to invent products. He made significant contributions to storage batteries and motion pictures. His inventions changed the world forever, and Edison remains a colossus in the field of science to this day.

What was Wilhelm Rontgen’s claim to fame?

Wilhelm Rontgen, a German scientist, was the recipient of the first Nobel Prize in physics. Rontgen carried out research in several fields, but his main claim to fame is the discovery of X-rays.

        In 1895, Rontgen was conducting an experiment by passing an electric current through a gas at extremely low pressure. He noticed that even though the room was dark, and the tube was covered with black carbon, a screen covered with fluorescent material was being lit up.

      By placing a photographic plate at the other end, Rontgen was able to capture the image that was being lit up by these unknown rays. Since he did not know the nature of these rays, he called them X-rays. The first X-ray ever taken was an image of Rontgen’s wife’s hand. His discovery of X-rays ushered in a great revolution in the fields of physics and medicine.

What are the contributions Robert Heinrich Herman Koch is known for?

Robert Koch was a famous German physician who gained renown as one of the founders of bacteriology and microbiology. Koch was very much interested in how the disease known as anthrax spread from cattle to humans.

           He laid down four criteria in 1890 for establishing the cause of an infectious disease. These rules are known as ‘Koch’s postulates’. Many of the basic principle and techniques of modern bacteriology were adapted, or devised by Robert Koch, who therefore is often regarded as the chief founder of that science.

        Robert Koch’s brilliant contributions were acknowledged in 1905, and he won the Nobel Prize for medicine for his groundbreaking work on tuberculosis. Directly or indirectly, Koch has influenced authorities in many countries to introduce public health legislation based on knowledge of the origin of various infections.

     He is also responsible for a more enlightened attitude towards the measure for controlling such disease, and the hygiene that must be observed for preventing, as well as treating them.

Why is August Weismann considered to be one of the greatest biologists of all time?

August Weismann was a German biologist and one of the founders of the science of genetics. He is best known for his ‘germ plasm’ theory. Weismann’s early studies were on the hydrozoa, which are small predatory animals which live mostly in the sea.

      Weismann’s research on hydrozoa convinced him that the germ cells of animals contain ‘something essential for the species, something which must be carefully preserved and passed on from one generation to another’.

      Thus was born the theory of the germ plasm, which he embodied in a book first published in German and then in English. Its essence was the notion that all living things contain a special hereditary substance, the germ plasm.

     The general idea is still accepted as valid today, though in place of germ plasm one speaks of chromosomes, genes, and DNA. Weismann’s ideas made him one of the leading biologists of the world.

Why was James Maxwell a remarkable scientist?

James Maxwell, a Scottish physicist and mathematician, was a remarkable scientist. He brought together a large number of equations, experiments, and observations related to electricity and magnetism, and showed them to be different manifestations of the same phenomenon.

       Maxwell produced a set of equations that explain the properties of magnetic and electric fields, and help show that light is an electromagnetic wave. He also described the nature of Saturn’s rings as numerous small particles, rather than a solid or fluid ring.

      Maxwell’s contributions in the fields of kinetic theory and thermodynamics are many. He is even believed to have created the first true colour photograph. His contributions played an important role in the advances made in 20th century physics.

What is Wilhelm Wundt remembered for?

Wilhelm Wundt, a German doctor and philosopher, is acknowledged as one of the greatest and most influential psychologists of all time.

       As one of the early pioneers of scientific psychology, Wundt introduced the usage of experimental methods in psychology. He developed psychology as an independent field of science, and set up a laboratory to explore the nature of religious beliefs, identify mental disorders and abnormal behavior, and find damaged part of the brain.

      He also published the first journal of psychology, ‘philosophische studies’ or ‘philosophical studies’ in 1881. Wilhelm Wundt was in fact, the first person to ever call himself a ‘psychologist’.

Why is Joseph Lister known as the ‘father of modern surgery’?

Joseph Lister, a British surgeon, made surgery safer for generations of patients by introducing sterilization techniques in the operation theatre. His greatest contribution to medicine was to promote the use of carbolic acid as an antiseptic.

     He lived in an era when surgeons wore dirty aprons, surgical instruments were unclean, and surgeons didn’t even wash their hands before carrying out operations. Lister soon realized that urgent changes were needed to prevent so many people dying after surgery, due to infection. He tested what would happen if the surgical instruments and bandages were treated with carbolic acid, and he was pleased to see that infection was significantly reduced.

     Other surgeons soon followed his example. Carbolic acid was used on bandages, and was even sprayed into the air during operations to kill bacteria, and reduce the risk of the wound becoming infected.

    Lister is often called the ‘father of modern surgery’ because of the life saving precautions he introduced in the field of surgery.

Why was Gustav Kirchhoff an outstanding scientist?

Gustav Kirchhoff, a German physicist, is remembered for his pioneering work in spectroscopy, which permitted investigation of the chemical composition of stars.

       His circuit laws are the foundation of electrical engineering. In 1845, while still only a student at the university, Kirchhoff wrote a paper detailing his circuit laws.

      Kirchhoff discovered that radiation is given off by all objects that have a temperature greater than absolute zero, and gave a proof for his law of thermal radiation in 1861. He experimented with electrical circuits and spectroscopy, and coined the term ‘black-body’ radiation in 1862.

       Along with Robert Bunsen, Kirchhoff founded the science of spectrum analysis by proving that every element gives off a characteristic wave length of light when heated to incandescence.

     He also discovered that when light is passed through a gas, the gas absorbs those wavelengths it would have emitted if heated. This discovery was of great importance to the field of astronomy.

Why is Louis Pasteur a scientific trailblazer?

Louis Pasteur, a French chemist and microbiologist made many important discoveries related to the immune system, vaccinations, chemistry, and the nature of diseases.

     Pasteur’s work helped show that microorganisms are the true cause of many diseases. Pasteur used his knowledge of germs to investigate how beverages such as wine and milk were spoiled by microbes such as bacteria.

      He found that heating up the liquids would kill most of the microbes, and allow the beverages to last longer, and be safer to drink. This process became known as pasteurization, and is still done on many foods such as milk, vinegar, wines, cheese, and juices. He studied the immune system and vaccination through his research, and helped produce the first vaccine for rabies, saving the life of a young boy in 1885.

     Pasteur is also responsible for many breakthroughs in the field of chemistry. He discovered the molecular basis for the asymmetry of certain crystals, and made important discoveries related to the nature of tartaric acid.

     Today, Louis Pasteur is known as one of the most important scientist in history.

Why is Gregor Mendel known as the ‘fonder of modern genetics’?

Gregor Mendel, a 19th century monk, is the founder of modern genetics. He is famous for his pea plant experiments which helped to establish some of the now accepted laws of heredity. Heredity is when certain traits like eye colour, height, and athletic ability are passed from the parents to the children. In biology the study of heredity is called genetics.

     In 1856, Mendel began studying hereditary features in pea plants, and concluded that all living things, including humans, passed on their characteristics to their children in predictable ways.

    Mendel grew, and tested almost 28,000 pea plants during 8 years of research. He came up with the terms recessive and dominant, to describe type of genes that are passed down through generations.

     Mendel’s findings, which he presented on meetings of the natural history society of Brno, in 1865, were rejected by his fellow scientists while he was alive. It wasn’t until later that his work was rediscovered and confirmed through further experimentation.

Why was James Joule an extraordinary scientist?

The English physicist James Joule studied the nature of heat, and established its relationship to mechanical work.

         He showed that the various forms of energy mechanical, electrical, and heat are basically the same, and can be changed, one into another. This is known as the conservation of energy, and the idea was proved by Joule in a series of experiments.

        In his early years, joule proved that heat produced in a small electromagnet built by him was from electrical energy, which was in turn, generated by mechanical energy which powered the dynamo. The principle of conservation of energy became the first law of thermodynamics, a field of physics that Joule is referred to as the chief founder of.

       Joule was the first person to calculate the speed of a molecule of gas, about 457 meters a second for oxygen at average temperatures. This would lay the foundations for the kinetic theory of gases in the future. Joule recognized the need for standard units of electricity. In fact, the unit of energy is named the ‘joule’ in recognition of his contributions.

What were Hermann Ludwig Helmholtz’s contributions to science?

Hermann Ludwig Helmholtz, a German physician and physicist, is best known for the law of the conservation of energy. He also made significant contributions to physiology, optics electrodynamics, mathematics, and meteorology.

         In 1847, he published his paper ‘On the Conservation of Force’. This was the first explanation of the fundamental concept of conservation of energy. His inventions of the ophthalmoscope allowed physicians to see inside the eye, and revolutionized the field of ophthalmology.

       Helmholtz was a keen mathematician, and in 1858 published the paper which provided a key to the fundamental structure of matter. He also investigated the physics of tone and colour perception. But above all, it is his theory of the conservation of energy that is his greatest contribution, for it is one of the broadest and most important generalizations ever known in the history of science.

Why Claude Bernard is called one of the greatest of all men of science?

Claude Bernard, a French physiologist, has been called one of the greatest of all men of science. Bernard was fascinated with the mechanics of digestion.

        He made a number of experiments in which he made opening into the stomachs of live animals in order to study their workings. His experiments resulted in a number of important discoveries, including the finding that the small intestine played a key role in the digestive process.

      His experimentation also helped show the significance of the pancreas. In 1857, Bernard discovered glycogen, the large molecule found in animals’ livers which acts as a reserve store of carbohydrates, and helps to regulate blood sugar. Bernard also studied the nervous system. While engaged in this research, Bernard made the important discovery that oxygen was carried around the body by red corpuscles in an animal’s blood.

     Bernard was one of the founders of experimental medicine, and played a vital role in laying down the basic rules of experimentation in the life sciences.

Why is Charles Darwin one of the most influential scientists in history?

Charles Darwin was an English naturalist who is best known for his ideas on evolution. In 1831, Darwin set sail on the HMS Beagle, a naval survey ship. Darwin’s job was to collect plant and animal specimens from the countries the ship visited. The voyage took five years.

      For Charles Darwin, the most important part of the journey was the time spent in the Galapagos Islands which are the home to plants and animals that can’t be found anywhere else in the world.

      On his return to England, Darwin stated to piece together his theory of natural selection which explains how populations evolve. In 1859, Charles Darwin published his book ‘On the Origin of Species’.

     According to this theory, all species of life have evolved over time from common ancestors. Charles Darwin changed the way humans viewed themselves.

Who was Jean Louis Agassiz?

Jean Louis Agassiz, a Swiss-American naturalist, was an outstanding comparative anatomist. When he was only 21 years old, he published the work that launched him on his long and distinguished scientific career. It was titled ‘The Fishes of Brazil’ and it was the most important account of a local fish fauna published till that time.

       Later, Agassiz worked under Georges Cuvier, another brilliant comparative anatomist. Agassiz made extensive contributions to ichthyological classification, including of extinct species.

      Ichthyology is the branch of biology devoted to the study of fish. Agassiz also played an important role in the study of geological history including the founding of glaciology. He was a person with many interests- a biologist, physician, geologist, teacher, and most importantly, a prominent innovator in the field of the study of natural sciences.

What did we know about John Dalton?

John Dalton, a British scientist, is probably best known for his groundbreaking research and contributions to two completely different fields- atomic theory and colorblindness.

It was discovered in 1995 that Dalton actually had a very rare form of color blindness- he was only able to see one colour, yellow.

So, he studied the problem in great detail and concluded that colorblindness was a genetic feature, as his brother was also colour blind.

Dalton was also very influential in the study of meteorology, specifically barometric pressure. This led to his publication of a series of papers called experimental essays in which he discussed the makeup of mixed gases.

The most important of all Dalton’s investigations are those concerned with the atomic theory in chemistry. The research had a great impact on atomic theory. He created a listing of atomic weights for six different elements – hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, sulfur, and phosphorous.

Dalton’s interpretation of atomic theory maintained that atoms are combined in chemical reactions, but also that they can be separated and rearranged. Without doubt, it was John Dalton’s atomic theory that laid the foundations of modern chemistry.

Why is Friedrich Wohler one of the Luminaries of the scientific world?

Friedrich Wohler was a German chemist who chose to be a teacher of chemistry. He was one of the finest scientists of the 19th century.

        Wohler gained international renown from two path breaking discoveries. In 1827, Wohler prepared the first pure sample of aluminum. This metal is the third most prevalent element in the earth’s crust, but it is exceedingly difficult to isolate it from its compounds.

        He also discovered how to make urea in the laboratory without the use of a living kidney. This was an important discovery, because it heralded the end of an existing theory that organic compounds could only be made by living things. Wohler was the co-discoverer of beryllium, silicon, and silicon nitride.

       In 1832, Wohler, along with another scientist Justus Liebig published a study on the oil of bitter almonds which proved that a group of atoms can act like a single element, and be exchanged for elements in chemical compounds. This too, took the scientific world by storm.

Why is Michael Faraday known as the ‘father of electricity’?

Michael Faraday was 19th century British chemist and physicist. He is often called the father of electricity with good reason.

       His work on electrochemistry and electromagnetism laid the foundation for many areas of science. It was in 1831 that Faraday discovered electromagnetic induction, the principle behind the electric transformer and generator. This discovery was crucial in allowing electricity to be transformed from a curiosity, into a powerful new technology. He was partly responsible for coining many familiar words including ‘electrode’, ‘cathode’ and ‘ion’ Faraday laid the basis of the electromagnetic field concept in physics, discovered the laws of electrolysis, and invented electromagnetic rotary devices that were vital in the creation of electric motors. Faraday has thus played a key role in the development of electricity for use in, modern technology.

Why is Humphrey Davy regarded as one of the Luminaries of the scientific world?

Sir Humphrey Davy was an English chemist who made many notable contributions to science, especially in electrochemistry. He is renowned for the invention, in 1815, of the Davy safety lamp that helped to prevent explosions in coal mines. Davy was the first to isolate several chemical elements, including sodium and potassium.

        He discovered boron, and found that nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, had anaesthetic properties that could be useful in surgery. Davy did many experiments on the effect of breathing in certain gases- and once, almost killed himself by inhaling a mixture of toxic gases.

      His research included work on early forms of electric batteries, and the use of electricity to isolate chemical elements. He also analyzed mineral, and completed many studies in tanning and agriculture chemistry.

    Did you know that in 1809, Humphrey Davy invented the very first electric light? He did this by connecting two wires to a single battery, and then attaching a charcoal strip between the other two ends of the wires. The charged carbon then glowed, making the very first arc lamp. Humphrey Davy was one of the greatest scientists, ever in the history of mankind.

What were Amedeo Carlo Avogadro’s contributions to physics?

Amedo Avogadro was an outstanding Italian physicist who lived in the 18th century.

    Although he had followed the family tradition by studying law, he gradually lost interest in legal matters. He found science was much more intellectually stimulating.

    Mathematics, and physics, in particular attracted his logical mind. Avogadro is chiefly remembered for his molecular hypothesis, first presented in 1811. He stated that equal volumes of different gases contain an equal number of molecules, provided they are at the same temperature and pressure.

     Amedeo Avogadro was a great scientist who made important contributions to physics. However, he never received any awards for his discoveries.

      Avogadro’s hypothesis gained acceptance only after his death as people did not recognize their significance. In honour of his contribution to molecular theory, the number of molecules in one mole was named Avogadro’s number.

Why Andre-Marie Ampere is considered a scientific genius?

Andre-Marie Ampere was a French physicist and mathematician, who made the revolutionary discovery that a wire carrying electric current, can attract or repel another wire next to it, that’s also carrying electric current. The attraction is magnetic, but no magnets are necessary for the effect to be seen.

      Ampere went on to formulate Ampere’s law of electromagnetism and produced the best definition of electric current of his time. He also proposed the existence of a particle we now recognize as the electron, discovered the chemical element fluorine, and grouped elements by their properties.

     In recognition of Ampere’s contribution to modern electrical science, the ‘ampere’ was established as a standard unit of electrical measurement, in 1881, forty-five years after his death

Why is Samuel Hahnemann famous?

Samuel Hahnemann, a German physician, founded homeopathy.

        Hahnemann believed that the medicine he had been taught to practice some-times did the patient more harm than good.

       He carried out experiments on the curative power of bark, which was the source of quinine. He was the first person to observe that a remedy that produces symptoms in a healthy person will cure those same symptoms when manifested by a person in a disease state.

     This principle that ‘likes are cured by likes’ is the very foundation of homeopathy. Hahnemann is called the ‘father of experimental pharmacology’ because he was the first physician to prepare medicines in a specialized way, by first trying them on healthy human beings, to determine how the medicines acted to cure diseases.

Why Pierre-Simon Laplace is always remembered?

Pierre-Simon Laplace was a French physicist and astronomer of the 19th century. He had a phenomenal natural mathematical faculty, and predicted many things, using only maths.

           These predictions were later confirmed with powerful telescopes. He wrote a book explaining his theory of the origin of the solar system.

           Laplace presented a steady stream of remarkable mathematical papers that spread his fame. Pierre-Simon Laplace is highly regarded for his influential, five-volume treatise which developed a strong mathematical understanding of the motion of the heavenly bodies. This work interpreted the geometric study of classical mechanics, starting up a wider range of problems.

          Laplace’s work, and the results he produced, made him one of the most important and influential scientists that the world has seen. The Laplacian differential operator that is named after him is widely used in mathematics.

           Laplace won many awards for his studies, and he was made a marquis, but he remained modest, saying, “What we know is little. What we know not is immense.”

         His work regarding the theory of probability and statistics is considered pioneering.

What do we know about jean Babtiste Lamarck?

Jean Babtiste Lamarck was one of the pioneers in the field of biology.

   In fact, the very name ‘biology’ was coined by this French naturalist. He is best remembered for his theory, the characteristics an organism develops during its lifetime in response to its environment are inherited by, or passed on to, its offspring.

       Lamarck was the first to use the term invertebrate to describe animals without backbones. He began collecting fossils and studying all sorts of simple species.

        As a result of these studies, he was able to revise the classification of lower animals that had been unfinished by the Swedish biologist Linnaeus.

        Lamarck’s study of invertebrates also led to the publication of his major work ‘The Natural History of Invertebrate Animals’ in 1815-22.

Why William Herschel is considered a great astronomer?

William Herschel was a German-born British scientist who became one of the most important astronomers of the 18th century. He built his own telescopes.

           From the garden of his house, William Herschel noted ‘every star in the heavens’ through a telescope that he had constructed himself.

         He also manufactured over 400 telescopes that were in great demand worldwide. His study of the heavens led him to the discovery of a planet that would eventually be called Uranus. William Herschel would also discover Titania and Oberon, which were the moons of Uranus as well as Enceladus and Mimas, the moons of Saturn.

          Herschel maintained that the solar system is moving through space, and found out the direction of that movement. He also suggested that the Milky Way was in the shape of a disc. Herschel is considered to be the founder of modern stellar astronomy.

       William Herschel, a great scientist was a gifted musician too. He played the oboe, violin, harpsichord and organ.

How did Antoine Lavoisier revolutionize chemistry?

Antoine Lavoisier revolutionized chemistry. It was he who coined the name oxygen for the element released by mercury oxide.

            He found that oxygen made up 20 per cent of air, and was vital for combustion and respiration. He also concluded that when phosphorus or sulfur is burned in air, the products are formed by the reaction of these elements with oxygen.

                  The elements carbon and hydrogen were also named by him. Another milestone was when Lavoisier correctly identified sulfur as an element. A year later, he found that when mercury oxide is heated, its weight decreases. The oxygen it releases has exactly the same weight as the weight lost by the mercury oxide. After carrying out further experiments, Lavoisier announced a new fundamental law of nature- the law of conversation of mass. This law states that the total mass of a chemical reaction’s products is identical to the total mass of the starting materials.

Why is William Harvey’s work a milestone in medicine?

William Harvey was an English physician who lived in the 17th century. He was the first person to correctly describe blood’s circulation in body.

       He showed that arteries and veins form a complete circuit starts at the heart, and leads back to the heart. He also established that the heart’s regular contractions drive the flow of blood around the whole body.

        Before his discoveries, blood was thought to ebb and flow through the body by the contraction of arteries. Harvey’s knowledge came from observations he made of blood flowing through the veins and arteries of living animals that he cut open. This may seem cruel, as there were no anaesthetics in Harvey’s time.

        Nevertheless, it is how we arrived at an understanding of blood and its circulation in the body.

       William Harvey’s work also laid down the foundations of physiology, which is the study of body functions. 

Why is Joseph Black famous?

Joseph Black, a British chemist and physicist, is famous for his discovery of carbon dioxide. Black was always a meticulous chemist, keeping careful note of all his results and measurements. It was this which led to his discovery of carbon dioxide.

      Black also took an interest in the science of heat. In the 18th century, there were several competing theories about the nature of heat, and how it related to temperature.

      Black’s investigations not only clarified the distinction between temperature and heat, but also resulted in the theory of latent heat. Black was gifted and effective teacher. His course in chemistry proved so popular that many students, even those with no particular interest in the subject, were eager to attend.

     Alongside his teaching, black carried on an active and demanding medical practice. Joseph Black, widely respected both as a scientist and a physician, is truly one of the titans in the world of science.

Why was Joseph Priestley a remarkable scientist?

Joseph Priestly, an Englishman is noted for his groundbreaking contributions to experimental chemistry, electricity, and the chemistry of gases.

       Before him, scientists thought that the air on earth consisted of carbon dioxide and hydrogen. Priestley brought 10 more gases to this light, such as nitrogen, hydrogen chloride, carbon monoxide, nitrous oxide and oxygen.

       He isolated oxygen in its gaseous state, and conducted a series of experiments to distinguish each gas based on its properties. Priestley also made another discovery that has been highly appreciated by surgeons worldwide. He discovered nitrous oxide, which was also known as laughing gas. It was the first surgical an aesthetic to be used.

      Priestley’s best known achievement in the field of biology in 1772 was his work with photosynthesis. Priestley’s other interesting discoveries include the fact that graphite is a good electric conductor, and that gummy tree sap is a good eraser for pencil marks.

      Did you know that you can enjoy your favorite fizzy drink thanks to Joseph Priestley, for he was the one who invented soda water?

What was Henry Cavendish renowned for?

The English scientist Henry Cavendish was an experimental chemist and physicist par excellence. Cavendish was the first to recognize hydrogen gas as a distinct substance. He called it inflammable air.

         Cavendish showed that hydrogen is much less dense than air. In 1785, he published a paper showing the earth’s atmosphere consists of four parts nitrogen to one part oxygen.

         In addition, to his achievements in chemistry, Cavendish is also known for the Cavendish experiment. He was the first to measure the force of gravity between masses in a laboratory, and to produce an accurate value for earth’s density.

       Henry Cavendish also experimented with electricity, but much of his work on the subject was only published after his death. He was renowned for the great accuracy and precision of his scientific research.

Why is Carl Linnaeus one of the giants of natural science?

In the 18th century, the Swedish naturalist and physician Carl Linnaeus introduced the scientific system of classifying plants and animals that is used all over the world to this day.

      Under this system, each living thing is assigned a name consisting of two Latin word is the name of the genus, and the second, the species. The classification of living things is called taxonomy.

     In 1737, Linnaeus published the first edition of his book titled systema naturae or system of nature. Over the years, Linnaeus continued to develop his ideas and add new species so that the book grew in period of about 30years from 12 outsize pages in its first edition, to 2400 pages in its 12th edition.

     This was the first serious attempt ever made to document all of our planet’s species. It was a huge effort, and it won Linnaeus acclaim as the ‘Father of Taxonomy’.

What is Halley’s Comet?

Edmond Halley was an English scientist who became very interested in a comet that he saw in 1682. After being told that a similar comet had appeared in 1531 and 1607, he suspected that it was the same comet that he had seen.

        By using the laws of gravity discovered by his friend Sir Isaac Newton, Halley realized that he could predict when it would return. Halley worked out that he comet would appear in our skies every 75 to 76 years.

        He was correct in his prediction, but sadly when the comet did reappear, he was no more, and he could not witness the confirmation he had waited for so eagerly. In his honour, the comet was named after him.

     Though he is remembered foremost as an astronomer, Halley also made significant discoveries in the fields of geography, mathematics, meteorology, and physics. Halley was very close to Newton.

What makes Sir Isaac Newton legendary figure?

Sir Isaac Newton, an Englishman who lived in the 17th century, is scientific legend. He came up with numerous theories and contributed ideas to many different fields including physics, mathematics, and philosophy.

      In 1687, Newton published his book philosophiae Natural is principia mathematica. In it, he describes universal gravitation, and the three laws of motion. It is widely regarded to be one of the most important books in the history of science. It is well known that his work on formulating a theory of gravitation was inspired by watching an apple fall from a tree!

        During his lifetime, Newton developed a new type of mathematics called calculus, and made breakthroughs in the area of optics such as the reflecting telescope. He also discovered that white light is made up of a wide range of different colors.

       Newton was a deep thinker with an insatiable curiosity to know everything about everything he saw. His contributions are so numerous, that e changed forever the way in which we look at the world.

Who was Tycho Brahe?

Tycho Brahe was a famous Danish astronomer who played a vital role in the development of various astronomical instruments.

    He devised his own instrument even before the invention of the telescope, to observe the heavens. These instruments allowed Brahe to determine the movements of heavenly objects more precisely.

     Brahe made significant contributions in the study of the moon and the planet Mars, which would later prove extremely useful to other astronomers. Instruments built by Brahe proved to be very helpful in accurate determinations of latitude and longitude.

       Brahe built his first observatory at Herrevead Abbey in 1572, and another one named ‘Uraniborg’ in 1576. He also built a third one called ‘Stjerneborg’ IN 1581

Why does the work of Andreas Vesalius represent a milestone in medicine?

Andreas Vesalius was the founder of modern anatomy. This 16th century physician and surgeon completely revolutionized the science of biology and medicine.

     By careful and painstaking dissections of cadavers, he learned a great deal about the structure of the human body and laid the foundation for modern physiology.

    In 1543, he published a remarkable book ‘De humani corporis fabrics’. It was a fully illustrated anatomy of the human body, based on the observations Vesalius had made during his dissections. The book destroyed the misconceptions in anatomy that had persisted for over a thousand years.

    Vesalius’ anatomical studies corrected many religious beliefs and the finding of a previous physician Galen, who had dissected apes because religion forbade him to dissect real human cadavers.

     Vesalius was the first surgeon to actually cut open a cadaver or dead body of a human being, and his exceptionally detailed muscle drawings changed medical history for all time.

Who was Paracelsus?

Paracelsus was a renowned German physicist, and botanist of Swiss origin. His path breaking findings in botany and medicine made him a pioneer in his field.

     Paracelsus became a notable physician in the early 16th century. He rejected most of the prevalent and widely accepted world views, and magic theories of medicine. While working on medicines, Paracelsus brought together the use of chemicals in medicines. In1526, he coined the term ‘ZINCUM’ for the chemical element zinc. He is also known for discovering ‘Laudanum’ which is an alcoholic herbal preparation.

      Paracelsus was a strict follower, and a firm believer of the classical Greek concept of elements. However, he added his own findings to this concept. Paracelsus’ real name was Philipp us von Hohenheim.

       The name ‘Paracelsus’ was actually a nickname. It means ‘equal to or greater than celsus’ and refers to his medical skill.

Why is Nicolaus Copernicus considered to be a key figure in the field of astronomy?

Nicolaus Copernicus was a 15th century astronomer, mathematician, translator, artist, and physicist, among other things.

      He is best known as the first astronomer to put forward the idea of a system in which the planets and planetary objects orbit the sun.

         By 1508, Copernicus had begun to create his model of the planetary system, suggesting that the sun, and not our Earth, was the centre of the universe. His model of the universe was accepted, whereas earlier models had not been, because his was more detailed and accurate. He also had a better formula for the calculation of the positions of the planets at different times of the year.

     The Roman Catholic Church criticized Copernicus’ theories. It went so far as to ban his book ‘De Revolution bus Erbium Coelestium,’ after he died, and it remained a forbidden book for almost three hundred years.

          The ideas of Copernicus were instrumental in the evolution of the field of astronomy. In fact, almost every notable astronomer who came after him was influenced by his theories.

Why was Roger Bacon called Doctor Mirabilis?

Roger Bacon was an English philosopher and Franciscan monk who promoted experimental science and was deeply interested in the study of nature.

      He studied mathematics, astronomy, optics, alchemy and languages. His studies on the nature of light, and on rainbows, are especially noteworthy, and he seems to have planned and interpreted these experiments carefully.

     He seriously studied the problem of flying in a machine with flapping wings. He was also the first person in the West to give exact directions for making gun-powder.

     Roger Bacon’s work was talked about everywhere, and eventually won him a place in popular literature as a kind of wonder worker. He was also called Doctor Mirabilis- ‘mirabilis’ in Latin means ‘wonderful teacher.’

Why are Galen’s contributions to medicine important?

Galen was a Greek who became the Ancient Roman Empire’s greatest physician. He had great expertise in anatomy, surgery, pharmacology and therapeutic methods.

    Galen had an absolute belief in the power of experiment and observation. He did not believe in merely following what books told him was true. He needed to verify the truth for himself.

     His anatomical reports, based mainly on dissection of monokeys, remained uncontested until 1543, when printed descriptions and illustrations of human dissections were published.

   Galen, the great scientist, consolidated the work of previous Greek medical researchers, adding the results of his own research, to create an incredibly long-lasting medical doctrine. This medical doctrine dominated the Western world for 1500 years.

What are the contributions of Ptolemy?

Ptolemy was a Greek astronomer, astrologer, mathematician and geographer who lived and worked in Alexandria in Ancient Egypt, in the second century AD.

      His work ‘Almagest,’ is one of the most important works in ancient astronomy. It covers the motion of sun, moon, and the planets around the Earth. It also contains a catalogue of stars with their brightness on a logarithmic scale.

      Ptolemy’s description of the universe was accepted by the astronomical community for more than a thousand years. Ptolemy’s second important work is called ‘Geography.’ It is a thorough discussion of the geographic knowledge of the Greco-Roman world.

       Ptolemy’s treatise on astrology was influential because of its practical treatment of astrology. Ptolemy discarded practices that did not have a logical basis, and also believed that astrology was not a completely reliable science.

What is Eratosthenes famous for?

Eratosthenes was an Ancient Greek scientist born in the town of Cyrene, which is no in Libya, in about 276 BC. He was famous as a mathematician and geographer.

         Eratosthenes produced a reliable, logical method to discover prime numbers. It’s known as the sieve of Eratosthenes, and is still important in modern number theory in an updated form.

    Assuming that the earth was a sphere, Eratosthenes calculated its size with good accuracy. He also calculated the tilt of earth’s axis fairly accurately. Eratosthenes produced the first map of the world which used meridian lines and parallel lines. These were similar to our modern lines of latitude and longitude. This great scientist can be said to have invented geography

     In fact, today we still use the word he invented for this new discipline. ‘Geo’ was Greek for ‘Earth’ and ‘graphy’ meant ‘field of study.’

      Eratosthenes also wrote books on philosophy, mathematics, astronomy, history, comedy, and poetry. His all-round knowledge made him the ideal choice for the most prestigious job an academic could enjoy in Ancient Greece. He was the director of the library of Alexandria, the greatest intellectual institution of the ancient world.

Why Johannes Kepler is considered one of the leaders of the scientific revolution?

Johannes Kepler was a leading astronomer of the scientific revolution. The scientific revolution is the term used to describe the emergence of modern science that took place throughout the 16th and 17th centuries.

        Before the scientific revolution, astronomy was closely tied to astrology, which is the belief that the movement of the stars and planets can be interpreted to predict the future.

      As the scientific revolution progressed, astrology increasingly came to be replaced by astronomy as a modern, legitimate science. Johannes Kepler is best known for his discovery that the orbits in which the earth and the other planets of the solar system travel around the sun are elliptical, or oval, in shape.

     He was also the first to explain correctly hoe human beings see, and demonstrated what happens to light when it enters a telescope.

      In addition, he designed an instrument that serves as the basis of the modern refractive telescope.

      Since he was such a prominent figure in the field of astronomy, a lot of spots on distant planets have been named after him such as ‘Kepler’s Crater on Mars’ and ‘The Kepler Crater,’ on the Moon.

Why is Alhazen known as the pioneer of modern optics?

Born in the tenth century AD, Alhazen was an Arab who was known as the first true scientist.

           He developed the scientific method of experimentation, and was the first person to formulate hypothesis and conduct verifiable experiments. A scientist, philosopher, astronomer, and mathematician, Alhazen wrote over a hundred books, more than half of which have been preserved.

        One of his most influential writings was in the field of optics. In this book, Alhazen gave experimental proof of the nature of light, the structure of the eye and the basic principles of reflection via mirror. He stated that contrary to popular belief, the eye does not send out rays to the object it sees. Rather it is the light reflected via the object that the eye beholds.

     This was a completely new and revolutionary concept. The book comprises seven volumes, and was translated into Latin.

What makes Galileo Galilei a remarkable scientist?

Galileo Galilei was a groundbreaking Italian astronomer, physicist, mathematician, philosopher and inventor. He opened the eyes of the world to a new way of thinking about how the solar system works.

       For many years, scientist had believed that the solar system revolved around the earth, and that the earth was the centre of the universe.

         Galileo was the first scientist to prove that this wasn’t correct. He stated that in fact, the solar system revolved around the sun.  he also invented an improved telescope so that he could gaze far into space. He was the first to see Jupiter’s moons, and the first to realize that our moon was covered with craters. Besides inventing the improved telescopes, he also invented the compass and a thermometer. Galileo has played a major role in the scientific revolution of the 17th century.

 

What are the major contributions made by Archimedes?

Archimedes is best remembered as an ancient Greek scientist who made legendary contributions to mathematics, physics, engineering, and astronomy. Archimedes, who lived about 300 years before Christ, is also remembered for his discovery of the relation between the surface and volume of a sphere, and its circumscribing cylinder.

       He played a major role in developing calculus and analysis. This scientist explained how levers worked, and built war machines levers. But, Archimedes principle which explains how to measure the volume of an irregular object.

      Archimedes discovered his principle quite by accident. He noticed that the water level of the bathtub rose when he got in, and he realized that you could measure volume by putting it on water, and measuring how much scientist got so excited by this discovery that he ran through the streets naked, yelling ‘Eureka!’ which is Greek for ‘I figured it out!’

 

Why Euclid is called the ‘father of geometry’?

Euclid, who was born in Alexandria in Egypt, lived more than 300 years before Christ. He is renowned to this day for his book ‘Elements’.

      For centuries, this book was one of the main texts for teaching geometry. ‘Elements’ is divided into thirteen books, which cover plain geometry, arithmetic and number theory, irrational numbers, and solid geometry.

     His books begin with basic definitions, and then go on to prove different mathematical theories. So, it is only natural that Euclid is called the father of geometry. He stressed the importance of logic and reason in teaching and understanding maths. Though some of his books are lost, at least five of them are still in existence, and are proof of his remarkable gift for mathematics.

What makes Aristotle a giant among scientists?

Aristotle was one of the most respected Greek thinkers. He was the star pupil of Plato, a famous Greek philosopher. He was also the teacher of Alexander the great!

     Aristotle wrote on many subjects including physics, biology, zoology, meta-physics, logic, ethics, aesthetics, poetry, theatre, music, rhetoric, linguistics, politics, and government.

        He believed that the universe was eternal, that there was neither a beginning nor an end. Aristotle accepted that things can change, but fundamentally believed that the overall conditions would always remain the same. He studied zoology very closely, and through careful observation, he was able to arrive at his conclusions. His careful study of animals enabled him to classify them into different groups and species.

     Aristotle’s influence on western culture and science has been enormous. His writings show him to be a man of tremendous intellect, who thought deeply about the world.

 

Why Hippocrates is called the ‘father of western medicine’?

Hippocrates, a Greek physician, lived in the 5th century BC, and founded the Hippocratic School of medicine. He revolutionized Greek medicine, for he believed in, and developed the practice of the clinical method of observation. This was the careful nothing of all the symptoms of a disease, and of the changes in a patient’s condition during the illness.

       Hippocrates believed that the body must be treated as a whole. He made medicine a discipline distinct from other fields, and his biggest contribution was that he rejected superstition and the belief that supernatural, or divine forces, were the cause of illness.

       In short, it was Hippocrates who transformed medicine into a science. He wrote on a variety of medical topics including diagnosis, epidemics, obstetrics, paediatrics, nutrition and surgery.

       To this day, newly qualified doctors take an oath called the Hippocratic Oath that lays down the basic rules of conduct that doctors must follow.

 

Why Pythagoras is considered one of the greatest scientists of all time?

Pythagoras was an ancient Greek mathematician and philosopher who lived more than 500 years before Christ.

        He spent most of his life in the Greek colonies in Sicily and southern Italy. He was also a philosopher, and founder of the religious movement called Pythagoreans.

        Pythagoras had a group of disciples who followed him around, and taught other people what he had taught them. He made crucial contributions to modern philosophy, as well as mathematics, science, and religious mysticism. It is also believed that he had a significant influence on medicine, music, astronomy, and divination.

        Pythagoras is best known for the mathematical theory named after him. He is without doubt, one of the greatest scientists not only of the ancient world, but of all time.