Homi Bhabha:7 Things You Need To Know About The Father Of India’s Nuclear Program

Date

November 4, 2015

Post by

arZan

Category

Science

Today is the 106th birth anniversary of the father of India’s nuclear program, Homi J. Bhabha. Not many know that he had initiated a successful nuclear programme in Great Britain and was in India on vacation. As luck would have it, that’s when World War II began in September 1939 and he was forced to stay back.

Article by Kunal Anand, indiatimes.com

1. He had a meteoric rise in India

From the position of “reader” in theoretical physics at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore, he was promoted to professor of cosmic ray research. 5 years later, he was chairman of the newly formed Atomic Energy Research Committee, and then became the Atomic Energy Commission chairman.

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2. Some of the papers he published are still held in very high esteem even now.

His doctorate in nuclear physics (1933) was on “The Absorption of Cosmic radiation” about absorption features and electron shower production in cosmic rays, winning him the Isaac Newton Studentship in 1934.

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3. He worked with a Nobel Prize winner as a student

As a student, he split his time between Cambridge and working with Nobel Prize winner Niels Bohr in Copenhagen, going on to determine the cross section of electron-positron scattering, a phenomenon renamed Bhabha scattering, in his honor.

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4. He gave India’s nuclear program a new direction

He was instrumental in identifying how India could extract power from its vast thorium reserves, instead of its meagre uranium reserves, an approach never seen before in the world.

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5. He wasn’t the typical scientist

Don’t picture Sheldon. In his spare time, he dabbled in painting, classical music and opera, and botany.

6. His cause of death is still debated

En route Vienna to a meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s Scientific Advisory Committee, he died in a mysterious plane crash. Conspiracy theorists believe the CIA killed him, to paralyse India’s nuclear program of India.

10th January 1966: Lal Bahadur Shashtri dies in Tashkent, from a heart attack. His wife claimed he was poisoned, but there was no medical inquiry of his death. Exactly, 14 days later, Bhabha died. Decades later, a series of mysterious deaths of India’s nuclear scientists has continued, unexplained, to this day.

7. For his contributions, he never got any recognition from India

For his contribution to India’s nuclear program, he never received the Bharat Ratna.

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