Jagdish Chandra Bose
Born: November 30, 1858
Died: November 23, 1937
Achievements:
Jagdish Chandra Bose was an eminent Indian scientist. He was the first to prove that plants and metals too have feelings.
Jagdish Chandra Bose was born on
November 30, 1858 in Mymensingh (now in Bangladesh). His father
Bhagabanchandra Bose was a Deputy Magistrate. Jagadish Chandra Bose had
his early education in village school in Bengal medium. In 1869,
Jagadish Chandra Bose was sent to Calcutta to learn English and was
educated at St.Xavier's School and College. He was a brilliant student.
He passed the B.A. in physical sciences in 1879.
In 1880, Jagdishchandra Bose
went to England. He studied medicine at London University, England, for a
year but gave it up because of his own ill health. Within a year he
moved to Cambridge to take up a scholarship to study Natural Science at
Christ's College Cambridge. In 1885, he returned from abroad with a
B.Sc. degree and Natural Science Tripos (a special course of study at
Cambridge).
After his return Jagadish
Chandra Bose, was offered lectureship at Presidency College, Calcutta on
a salary half that of his English colleagues. He accepted the job but
refused to draw his salary in protest. After three years the college
ultimately conceded his demand and Jagdish Chandra Bose was paid full
salary from the date he joined the college. As a teacher Jagdish Chandra
Bose was very popular and engaged the interest of his students by
making extensive use of scientific demonstrations. Many of his students
at the Presidency College were destined to become famous in their own
right. These included Satyendra Nath Bose and Meghnad Saha.
In 1894, Jagadish Chandra Bose
decided to devote himself to pure research. He converted a small
enclosure adjoining a bathroom in the Presidency College into a
laboratory. He carried out experiments involving refraction, diffraction
and polarization. It would not be wrong to call him as the inventor of
wireless telegraphy. In 1895, a year before Guglielmo Marconi patented
this invention, he had demonstrated its functioning in public.
Jagdish Chandra Bose later
switched from physics to the study of metals and then plants. He
fabricated a highly sensitive "coherer", the device that detects radio
waves. He found that the sensitivity of the coherer decreased when it
was used continuously for a long period and it regained its sensitivity
when he gave the device some rest. He thus concluded that metals have
feelings and memory.
Jagdish Chandra Bose showed
experimentally plants too have life. He invented an instrument to record
the pulse of plants and connected it to a plant. The plant, with its
roots, was carefully picked up and dipped up to its stem in a vessel
containing bromide, a poison. The plant's pulse beat, which the
instrument recorded as a steady to-and-fro movement like the pendulum of
a clock, began to grow unsteady. Soon, the spot vibrated violently and
then came to a sudden stop. The plant had died because of poison.
Although
Jagdish Chandra Bose did invaluable work in Science, his work was
recognized in the country only when the Western world recognized its
importance. He founded the Bose Institute at Calcutta, devoted mainly to
the study of plants. Today, the Institute carries research on other
fields too.
Jagdish Chandra Bose died on November 23, 1937.
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