Meghnad Saha
Meghnad Saha was
born on
6 October 1893 in Sheoratali village
near Dhaka in present day Bangladesh. His father Jagannath Saha
was a grocer in the village.
After
primary education, he was admitted to a middle school that was seven miles away from home. He stayed with a doctor near the school
and had to work in that house to pay for his boarding and lodging. Overcoming all
these difficulties, he
stood first in the Dhaka
middle school test, thus securing a Government
scholarship and joined the Dhaka Collegiate School in 1905.
Great political unrest was prevailing in Bengal, caused by the partition
of the province by the British
against strong popular opinion. Meghnad
Saha was among the
few senior
students who staged a boycott of
the visit
by the then Governor, Sir
Bampfylde Fuller and as a consequence
forfeited his scholarship and had
to leave
the institution.
He then
joined the Kisori Lal Jubilee School where he passed the entrance test of the University of Calcutta
standing first among students from East Bengal. He graduated from Presidency
College with mathematics as his major.
He then joined the
newly established Science College in
Kolkata as a lecturer and pursued
his research
activities in physics. By 1920,
Meghnad Saha had established
himself as one of the leading physicists of the time. His
theory of high-temperature ionization of elements and its application to stellar
atmospheres, as expressed by
the Saha
equation, is fundamental to modern astrophysics; subsequent development of his
ideas has led to increased
knowledge of the pressure and temperature distributions of stellar atmospheres.
In 1920, Saha went to Imperial College, London and later to Germany. Two years
later he returned to India
and joined
the University
of Calcutta
as Khaira Professor. He then
moved to the University of Allahabad
and remained
there till 1938, establishing the Science Academy in Allahabad (now known as the National Academy of Science). In 1927, he was elected a Fellow of the
Royal Society of London.
He returned to the
University of Calcutta in 1938
where he introduced nuclear physics
into the post-graduate physics curriculum.
In 1947
he established the Indian Institute of
Nuclear Physics (now known as the Saha Institute of Nuclear
Physics).
Later in his life, Saha played an active role in the development of scientific institutions throughout India as well as in national
economic planning involving technology.
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