Dr. C V Raman |
One of the most prominent Indian scientists in history, C.V.
Raman was the first Indian person to win the Nobel Prize in science for his
illustrious 1930 discovery, now commonly known as the “Raman Effect”. It is
immensely surprising that Raman used an equipment worth merely Rs.200 to make
this discovery. The Raman Effect is now examined with the help of equipment
worth almost millions of rupees.
Early Life:
Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman was born at
Tiruchirapalli in Tamil Nadu on 7th November 1888 to a physics teacher. Raman
was a very sharp student. After doing his matriculation at 12, he was supposed
to go abroad for higher studies, but after medical examination, a British
surgeon suggested against it. Raman instead attended Presidency College,
Madras. After completing his graduation in 1904, and M.Sc. in Physics in 1907,
Raman put through various significant researches in the field of physics. He
studied the diffraction of light and his thesis on the subject was published in
1906.
Raman was made the Deputy Accountant General
in Calcutta in 1907, after a successful Civil Service competitive examination.
Very much occupied due to the job, he still managed to spare his evenings for
scientific research at the laboratory of the Indian Association for Cultivation
of Sciences. On certain occasions, he even spent the entire nights. Such was
his passion that in 1917, he resigned from the position to become the Professor
of Physics at Calcutta University.
Contributions and Achievements:
On a sea voyage to Europe in 1921, Raman
curiously noticed the blue color of the glaciers and the Mediterranean. He was
passionate to discover the reason of the blue color. Once Raman returned to
India, he performed many experiments regarding the scattering of light from
water and transparent blocks of ice. According to the results, he established
the scientific explanation for the blue color of sea-water and sky.
There is a captivating event that served as
the inspiration for the discovery of the Raman Effect. Raman was busy doing
some work on a December evening in 1927, when his student, K.S. Krishnan (who
later became the Director of the National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi), gave
him the news that Professor Compton has won the Nobel Prize on scattering of
X-rays. This led Raman to have some thoughts. He commented that if the Compton
Effect is applicable for X-rays, it must also be true for light. He carried out
some experiments to establish his opinion.
Raman employed monochromatic light from a
mercury arc which penetrated transparent materials and was allowed to fall on a
spectrograph to record its spectrum. During this, Raman detected some new lines
in the spectrum which were later called ‘Raman Lines’. After a few months,
Raman put forward his discovery of ‘Raman Effect’ in a meeting of scientists at
Bangalore on March 16, 1928, for which he won the Nobel Prize in Physics in
1930.
The ‘Raman Effect’ is considered very
significant in analyzing the molecular structure of chemical compounds. After a
decade of its discovery, the structure of about 2000 compounds was studied.
Thanks to the invention of the laser, the ‘Raman Effect’ has proved to be a
very useful tool for scientists.
Some of Raman’s other interests were the
physiology of human vision, the optics of colloids and the electrical and
magnetic anisotropy.
Later Life and Death:
Sir C.V. Raman became the Fellow of the Royal
Society of London in 1924. A year later, he set up Raman Research Institute
near Bangalore, where he continued the scientific research until his death
which was caused by a strong heart attack on November 21, 1970. His sincere
advice to aspiring scientists was that “scientific research needed independent
thinking and hard work, not equipment.”
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