Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar Born: 19-Oct-1910 Birthplace: Lahore, Pakistan Died: 21-Aug-1995 Location of death: Chicago, IL Cause of death: Heart Failure
Gender: Male Religion: Atheist Race or Ethnicity: Asian/Indian Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Astronomer, Physicist Nationality: United States Executive summary: Evolutionary stages of stars American astrophysicist Subrahmanyan "Chandra" Chandrasekhar is responsible for much of the modern baseline understanding of stellar evolution — the origins, structure, dynamics, and deaths of stars. In his 1939 book Introduction to the Study of Stellar Structure, he calculated that a star with a remaining mass greater than 1.4 times that of the Sun (now called the Chandrasekhar limit) will, following its red giant phase, collapse and become a neutron star during a supernova explosion. He also showed that a star will collapse once it has exhausted its nuclear fuel, a process that will end in most stars because of the outward pressure exerted by a degenerate gas; but that stars more enormous than about three solar masses can collapse into themselves, becoming black holes.
Acceptance of Chandrasekhar's work was delayed for decades by the opposition and ridicule of Arthur Eddington, who was among the most respected astronomers of the era, and described Chandrasekhar's theory that stars could evolve into anything but white dwarfs as "almost a reductio ad absurdum of the relativistic degeneracy formula". Unwilling to feud with Eddington, he let his exceptionally lucid work speak for itself and moved on to study several other areas of astrophysics, including the theory of radiative transfer, the quantum theory of the negative ion of hydrogen, and hydrodynamic and hydromagnetic stability.
He won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1983, almost four decades after Eddington's death. Chandrasekhar's students included Carl Sagan and Donald E. Osterbrock, and his paternal uncle, Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman, won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1930. Father: Chandrasekhara Subrahmanya Ayyar (civil servant) Mother: Sita Balakrishnan (translator) Wife: Lalitha Doraiswamy (b. 1911, m. 1936)
High School: Hindu Higher Secondary School, Triplicane, Chennai, India (1925) University: BS Physics, Presidency College, Madras (1928) University: MS Physics, Presidency College, Madras (1930) University: PhD Physics, Trinity College, Cambridge University (1933) Scholar: Institute of Theoretical Physics, University of Copenhagen (1932-33) Fellow: Trinity College, Cambridge University (1933-37) Professor: Physics, University of Chicago (1937-43) Scholar: Yerkes Observatory, University of Chicago (1937-71) Professor: Physics, University of Chicago (1943-52) Professor: Hull Professor of Theoretical Astrophysics, University of Chicago (1952-86)
ACS Roger Adams Medal 1947
Bruce Medal 1952 Royal Astronomical Society Gold Medal 1953 Rumford Prize 1957 INSA Srinivasa Ramanujan Medal 1962
Royal Medal 1962 National Medal of Science 1966 Padma Award 1968 (Vibhushan)
Henry Draper Medal 1971 PPS Smoluchowski Medal 1973
Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics 1974
Nobel Prize for Physics 1983 (with William A. Fowler) Copley Medal 1984 IPA R. D. Birla Memorial Award 1984
Tomalla Prize 1984
INSA Vainu Bappu Memorial Gold Medal 1985
Gordon J. Laing Award 1989
Astrophysical Journal Managing Editor, 1952-71
American Astronomical Society International Academy of Science
National Academy of Sciences 1955 Royal Astronomical Society Foreign Member, 1932 Royal Society Foreign Member, 1944 Naturalized US Citizen 1953 Heart Bypass Operation 1977 Indian Ancestry
Pakistani Ancestry
Heart Attack 21-Aug-1995 (fatal) Asteroid Namesake 1958 Chandra
Author of books:
Introduction to the Study of Stellar Structure (1939) Principles of Stellar Dynamics (1942) Radiative Transfer (1950) Plasma Physics (1960) Hydrodynamic and Hydromagnetic Stability (1961) Ellipsoidal Figures of Equilibrium (1969) The Mathematical Theory of Black Holes (1983) Truth and Beauty: Aesthetics and Motivations in Science (1987) Newton's Principia for the Common Reader (1995)
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