Hindustan Times (East UP)

In a galaxy far, far away...

- Dipanjan Sinha letters@hindustant­imes.com

Kanak Saha doesn’t remember when he started counting stars as a hobby. He became fascinated by the heavens “around the age of 12”, he says.

Born to an onion and potato vendor in Dinhata, in West Bengal’s Cooch Behar district, he grew up with few luxuries. The clear skies of Dinhata and its small public library shaped his childhood.

“One of my teachers introduced me to the local library and a local science club where I was the only school student,” says Saha, 44. “There we had an arrangemen­t to watch the night sky with a telescope. It was one of the most fascinatin­g experience­s of my life to see the stars and planets so clearly.”

In college, Saha picked physics so he could “get close to astronomy”. When he signed up for a post-graduate degree at Banaras Hindu University, he was still struggling with finances. In fact, when he asked a professor if he could discuss pursuing a PhD, the latter dryly suggested Saha find a way to feed himself first.

Saha eventually got that PhD, in astrophysi­cs, from the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru. He is now an associate professor at the Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysi­cs in Pune. And he is credited with discoverin­g the galaxy AUDFs01, situated 9.3 billion light years away — and the first known distant galaxy emitting extreme-ultraviole­t light.

This is a major developmen­t in a field where light is almost the only clue available to those trying to formulate theories about the earliest stars. “The first galaxies were formed with massive stars that were mostly hydrogen and almost no metal. These stars would explode and the theory was that they would radiate extreme ultraviole­t light. Though the galaxy we found is not one of the first, we spotted extreme ultraviole­t light coming from it, which reaffirms the direction we are all working in,” says Saha.

As he’d expected, the discovery caused ripples when he released his findings in 2020, and has since won him an Astronomic­al Society of India award.

The pandemic year hit his scientific tour plans hard, though. He had to postpone his visit to Santiago, Chile, which has some of the largest ground-based telescopes in the world. Before Covid-19, he’d enjoyed travelling to observator­ies in cities such as Paris and Cape Town. “The trip to South Africa in 2017 was tremendous. It seems strange for an astronomer to say this but the sky was unbelievab­ly full of stars,” he says.

For children fascinated by the heavens, Saha suggests pairing passion with a good academic base. “A good foundation in physics or engineerin­g is a must if one wants to pursue a career in astronomy,” Saha says.

Schools need to play a role by making the pursuit of science more enjoyable and less tedious, he adds. All it takes is a telescope.

 ??  ?? Kanak Saha recently won an award for discoverin­g a giant, ancient galaxy 9.3 billion light years away.
Kanak Saha recently won an award for discoverin­g a giant, ancient galaxy 9.3 billion light years away.

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