Born: October 6, 1893
Died: February 16, 1956
Achievements: Made outstanding contribution to the field of
Astrophysics. He put forward an "ionization formula" which
explained the presence of the spectral lines.
Meghnad Saha was an outstanding Indian scientist. He made remarkable
contribution to the field of Astrophysics.
Meghnad Saha was born on October 6, 1893 in Sheoratali, a village in
the District of Dacca, now in Bangladesh. He was the fifth child of his
parents, Sri Jagannath Saha and Smt. Bhubaneshwari Devi. His father was
a grocer in the village. Meghnad Saha had his early schooling in the
primary school of the village. As his family could hardly able to make
both ends meet, Meghnad Saha managed to pursue his schooling only due to
the generosity of a local medical practitioner, Ananta Kumar Das, who
provided him with boarding and lodging in his house.
In
1905, British Government took the decision of partition of Bengal. There
was great political unrest in Bengal as popular opinion was against the
partition. Sir Bampfylde Fuller was governor of East Bengal at that
time. One day he came to visit the Collegiate school. Meghnad Saha along
with other students boycotted his visit. As a result he was suspended
from the school and his scholarship was terminated. He took admission in
the Kishorilal Jubili School and passed the Entrance Examination of the
Calcutta University in 1909, standing first among the student from East
Bengal obtaining the highest marks in languages (English, Bengali and
Sanskrit combined) and in Mathematics. In 1911, he ranked third in the
ISc exam while the first position went to another great scientist
Satyendranath Bose.
Meghnad Saha took admission in Presidency College Calcutta. In 1913 he
graduated from Presidency College with Mathematics major and got the
second rank in the University of Calcutta while the first one was taken
by S.N. Bose. In 1915, both S.N.Bose and Meghnad Saha ranked first in
M.Sc. exam, Meghnad Saha in Applied Mathematics and S.N. Bose in Pure
Mathematics.
While studying in Presidency College, Meghnad got involved with
Anushilan Samiti to take part in freedom fighting movement. He also came
in contact with nationalists like Subhash Chandra Bose and Rajendra
Prasad.
In 1917, Meghnad Saha joined as lecturer at the newly opened University
College of Science in Calcutta. He taught Quantum Physics. Along with
S.N. Bose, he translated the papers published in German by Einstein and
Minkowski on relativity into English versions. In 1919, American
Astrophysical Journal published - "On Selective Radiation Pressure
and it's application" - a research paper by Meghnad Saha. He put
forward an "ionization formula" which explained the presence
of the spectral lines. The formula proved to be a breakthrough in
astrophysics. He went abroad and stayed for two years. He spent time in
research at Imperial College, London and at a research laboratory in
Germany. In 1927, Meghnad Saha was elected as a fellow of London's Royal
Society.
Meghnad Saha moved to Allahabad
and in 1932 Uttar Pradesh Academy of Science was established. He
returned to Science College, Calcutta in 1938. During this time Saha got
interested in Nuclear Physics. In 1947, he established Institute of
Nuclear Physics which later was named after him as Saha Institute of
Nuclear Physics. He took the first effort to include Nuclear Physics in
the curriculum of higher studies of science. Having seen cyclotrons used
for research in nuclear physics abroad, he ordered one to be installed
in the institute. In 1950, India had its first cyclotron in operation.
In 1952 he stood as an independent candidate for Parliament and was
elected by a wide margin. He died on February 16, 1956 due to a heart
attack.
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