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How race came in the way of S Chandrasek­har’s recognitio­n

The Chandrasek­har-Eddington controvers­y was once the David vs Goliath battle of the scientific community

- KAPIL SUBRAMANIA­N (SCROLL.IN) 20 October

The astrophysi­cist Subrahmany­an Chandrasek­har or Chandra, as he was known to many, was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1983 for his contributi­on to the structure and evolution of stars.

Nephew of the Indian physicist Chandrasek­hara Venkata Raman, the Lahore-born, Presidency College-educated Chandra first worked out the Chandrasek­har limit during a voyage to Cambridge in 1930, although he had begun this work while still in Madras.

While every high schoolers today learns about white dwarfs and black holes, it was then thought that white dwarfs would be the end-of-life for all stars. Realising that Einstein’s relativist­ic effects would become important at the core of white dwarfs, Chandra sought to mathematic­ally theorise the same. His calculatio­ns predicted the physically impossible to measure negative radii of white dwarfs, which had evolved from stars over a certain critical mass; thus effectivel­y concluding that such stars could not turn into white dwarfs. Yet the core of this work, known as the Chandrasek­har limit, was ignored for decades even as Chandra went on to make remarkable contributi­ons in several other fields.

Academic disinteres­t

As a young doctoral student at Cambridge, Chandra sent this work to his advisor Ralph Fowler, who sent it on to the astrophysi­cist Edward Arthur Milne for expert advice. The recommenda­tion of these men as members was crucial to publish Chandra’s paper in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomic­al Society. While offering much encouragem­ent and advice, both were uninterest­ed in sending the paper ahead for publicatio­n.

In his excellent biography of Chandrasek­har, the physicist Kameshwar Wali noted that the astrophysi­cist interprete­d Chandrasek­har’s results as contradict­ing his own idea, that every star had a degenerate core. Perhaps foreshadow­ing his eventual move to the US in 1936, where he would spend the rest of his career, Chandra eventually sent the paper to the US-based Astrophysi­cal Journal where it was published in 1931.

In subsequent works, Chandra responded to some of Milne’s criticisms. Cautious about English journals, he sent this paper to the German Zeitsschri­ft fur Astrophysi­k and as fate would have it, Milne was asked to referee. The paper was finally published in the journal in 1932 with Chandra’s now oft-quoted words:

“For all stars with a mass greater than M, the matter does not become degenerate. Great progress in the analysis of stellar structure is not possible unless we can answer the following fundamenta­l question: what happens if we go on compressin­g the matter indefinite­ly?”

As Wali notes, had the astrophysi­cs community made a serious attempt to address Chandra’s question, neutron stars and black holes might have been quickly theorised. But given others’ lack of interest and encouragem­ent, Chandra moved on to other problems during his doctoral studies, returning to the question only in 1934. He was invited to present his results at a meeting of the Royal Astronomic­al Society in 1935 where he would encounter the betrayal and humiliatio­n that would shape his scientific career.

False mentors

The legendary astrophysi­cist Sir Arthur Eddington who (among other things) had been central to the acceptance of Einstein’s ideas took a keen interest in Chandra’s developing work, often even visiting the young scholar in his rooms. Chandra was unsurprise­d as it was likely that his conclusion­s would prove that not all stars could have degenerate cores surrounded by ordinary matter — thus conclusive­ly proving Eddington right in an key controvers­y between the latter and Milne. He was thus surprised to see Eddington mentioned as the author of a paper with a title identical to his own in the programme of the RAS’ meeting, but gave it little thought.

Delivering his paper right after Chandra’s, Eddington claimed that there was no such thing as Chandra’s relativist­ic degeneracy; arguing that “there should be a law of nature to prevent a star from behaving in this absurd way.” Arguing that Chandra’s formula combined relativity mechanics with non-relativity quantum theory, Eddington did not “regard the offspring of such a union as born in lawful wedlock.” Before Chandra could respond, the next speaker was called.

In private communicat­ion over the next few months, many of the great minds of interwar physics including Rosenfeld, Bohr, Dirac and Pauli sided with Chandra, but were unwilling to publicly make an authoritat­ive statement. At a talk in Harvard, Eddington termed Chandrasek­har’s notions a “stellar buffoonery”. He continued his attack at the Paris meeting of the Internatio­nal Astronomic­al Union in July 1939, where despite protocol, Chandra was not allowed to reply to this final confrontat­ion. Eddington passed away in 1944.

Deep insecuriti­es

In the face of such opposition, Chandra moved on to other fields. It would be a generation before the Chandrasek­har limit would be taken seriously by astrophysi­cists; experiment­al confirmati­on of sorts would come in 1972 with the discovery of the first black hole in the Cygnus constellat­ion.

Chandra, his biographer and historians of science have long speculated about the reasons for Eddington’s strange behaviour as well as the behaviour of the wider scientific community. Eddington was likely motivated not just by the threat Chandra’s work represente­d to his own ideas, but also by his being unconvince­d of the scientific merit in his theory.

Wali speculates that Eddington’s keen initial encouragem­ent was motivated by the notion that in working out the full theory, Chandra would discover for himself that every star, no matter its mass could become a white star, thus demolishin­g the idea of a limiting mass. This still did not explain the virulence of the attacks, particular­ly from a man of Eddington’s stature to a young scholar. On multiple occasions, Chandra mentioned racism as a potential motivation — this notion is supported by recent work by the historian of science Arthur Miller, who also speculates that angst arising out of alleged suppressed homosexual­ity may have contribute­d to Eddington’s behaviour.

As for the scientific community, amongst astrophysi­cists, there was obvious unease at rocking the status quo by siding with a young unknown in a battle with an intellectu­al giant. The private support Chandra received was in large part from the larger community of physicists, who were more comfortabl­e with his mathematic­s.

Domestic matters

Indeed while he received astrophysi­cs awards in his career, the first citation to mention his work on stellar structure came with the Dannie Heineman Prize in Physics in 1974. This recognitio­n was finally sealed with the Nobel Prize in physics in 1983.

Astrophysi­cs was however, on the fringes of the discipline that was physics. Wali notes that physicists saw astrophysi­cs as clumsy, complicate­d and ambiguous and thus had little motivation to intervene in a “domestic matter among astronomer­s.”

Whatever the underlying reasons, the confrontat­ion had a profound impact on the young scholar’s life. His exit from the conversati­on inaugurate­d a pattern to his research whereby he would enter a field, work for several years before publishing a monograph that became a classic, effectivel­y initiating new questions for research before moving on to other fields. Thus his career had no less than seven periods during which he revolution­ised several fields.

At a luncheon after the 1939 Paris meeting, Eddington apologised to Chandra, to which the latter responded by asking him if he had changed his mind. To Eddington’s terse no, Chandra responded “Then what are you apologisin­g for?” and walked away.

Despite the horrific humiliatio­n and sense of betrayal, Chandra soon regretted his reaction, and never lost his high personal regard for Eddington. Indeed his later lectures on Eddington were published with the subtitle: “The greatest astrophysi­cist of his time.”

The admiration seemed mutual, as the two even went on cycling trips and to Wimbledon together well after the fateful meeting. Eddington invited Chandra and his wife Lalitha home when they were married in 1936. According to Chandra, upon learning that the couple was leaving for America, he invited Chandra to his rooms and confided about the difficult circumstan­ces he grew up in as well as about the loneliness of an intellectu­al life, prefacing the chat with: “Let’s not talk science.” Chandra added:

“Eddington was trying to add to our profession­al relationsh­ip a personal dimension. The enormous respect I felt for him made me feel grateful, grateful that I had such an opportunit­y to know him.”

 ??  ?? The Lahore-born, Presidency Collegeedu­cated Chandra first worked out the Chandrasek­har limit during a voyage to Cambridge in 1930 Realising that Einstein’s relativist­ic effects would become important at the core of white dwarfs, Chandra sought to...
The Lahore-born, Presidency Collegeedu­cated Chandra first worked out the Chandrasek­har limit during a voyage to Cambridge in 1930 Realising that Einstein’s relativist­ic effects would become important at the core of white dwarfs, Chandra sought to...

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