Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

‘He was more than just about his science publicatio­ns’

- Snehal Fernandes snehal.fernandes@hindustant­imes.com ■ (with inputs from Malavika Vyawahare)

NEW DELHI: Astrophysi­cist and mathematic­ian SM Chitre is among very few Indian scientists who saw British physicist Stephen Hawking on his feet during their student days at the University of Cambridge.

Professor Chitre, 82, who retired from the Tata Institute of Fundamenta­l Research (TIFR), Mumbai in 2001, describes Hawking as his “office mate” between 1962 and 1963 when they were doing their PhD at the Department of Applied Mathematic­s and Theoretica­l Physics at the University Cambridge.

Though their area of research was different, having offices next door gave them a chance to have “conversati­ons that were delightful and stimulatin­g”, said Chitre.

“He taught me to play croquet,” said the 82-year-old who was conferred a Padma Bhushan in 2012. “A friend is no more.”

The last time Chitre saw Hawking standing was in July 1963 when he was leaving Cambridge after completing his PhD to visit his parents in India. “I saw him strong-built and sturdy, climbing two floors where our offices were housed. Next I saw him on a wheelchair in 1965 during a conference in London,” said Chitre. “It felt terrible to see him on a wheelchair, emaciated.”

Jayant Vishnu Narlikar, an Indian astrophysi­cist, who was a contempora­ry of Hawking as a PhD scholar at Cambridge, believes one of his biggest breakthrou­ghs came at 32, when along with Jacob Bekenstein, he showed that black holes, where gravitatio­nal force is so strong that not even light can pass, leak radiation and in doing so, die out.

“People thought this was strange. Black holes are not supposed to radiate, rather they absorb everything. Hawking was able to show that once you put quantum mechanics into it is not true,” Narlikar said.

It was on his personal mobility device that Hawking visited India only once for 16 days in 2001. In Mumbai, he delivered a public lecture titled ‘The Universe in a Nutshell’ and ‘Predicting the Future: From Astrology to Black Holes.’ As a postgradua­te student in physics at IIT-Bombay, Aniket Sule, now faculty at the Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education was among the scores of students who attended the lecture at TIFR.

“Hawking was more than just about his science publicatio­ns. Unlike many scientists, he was an effective science communicat­or who inspired millions of people across the world,” said Sule.

Sunil Mukhi, physics profes- sor at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Pune, recalled Hawking’s answer to the famous question of whether he believed in God. Mukhi said, “Hawking answered, ‘I view god as a metaphor for the laws of nature.”

Mukhi added, “Hawking’s theories from the 70s-80s still influences work today. He has given us a whole new way of looking at gravitatio­nal wave theory without changing Albert Einstein’s theory.”

While in Mumbai, the TIFR conference banquet celebrated his 59th birthday. “I vividly remember his dance ... swirling his chair around and back and forth ... he had a zest for life!” said Spenta R Wadia, Internatio­nal Centre for Theoretica­l Sciences, TIFR.

During the same India visit, Hawking called astrology bunkum. In his address at the Siri Fort in Delhi, Hawking said, “When it was discovered that the Earth was not the centre of the universe, astrology became impossible.”

 ??  ?? ■ Hawking with Indianorig­in engineer Arun Mehta in the former’s office in Cambrigde in 2003. Mehta had attempted to design communicat­ion software for Hawking. ARUN MEHTA/ BAPSI
■ Hawking with Indianorig­in engineer Arun Mehta in the former’s office in Cambrigde in 2003. Mehta had attempted to design communicat­ion software for Hawking. ARUN MEHTA/ BAPSI

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