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Ambarish pote

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Mar 29, 2010, 8:01:57 AM3/29/10
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On Sat, Mar 27, 2010 at 11:23 AM, <astronomy-study...@googlegroups.com> wrote:

Group: http://groups.google.com/group/astronomy-study-online/topics

    Vijay <gonu.w...@gmail.com> Mar 26 05:22AM -0700 ^
     
    Narlikar was born in Kolhapur, India on July 19, 1938. His father,
    Vishnu Vasudev Narlikar, was a mathematician who served as a professor
    and later as the Head of the Department of Mathematics at Banaras
    Hindu University, Varanasi. Jayant's mother, Sumati Narlikar, was a
    scholar of Sanskrit language.
     
    Jayant received his Bachelor of Science degree from Banaras Hindu
    University in 1957, and a B.A. in mathematics from the University of
    Cambridge in 1960, winning the Tyson Medal. During his doctoral
    studies at Cambridge, he won Smith’s Prize in 1962. After receiving
    his Ph.D. in 1963 under the guidance of Fred Hoyle, he served as a
    Berry Ramsey Fellow at King's College in Cambridge and earned an M.A.
    in astronomy and astrophysics in 1964. He continued to work as a
    Fellow at King's College until 1972. In 1966, Fred Hoyle established
    the Institute of Theoretical Astronomy in Cambridge, and Narlikar
    served as the founder staff member of the institute during 1966-72.
     
    In 1972, Narlikar took up Professorship at the Tata Institute of
    Fundamental Research (TIFR) in Mumbai, India. At the TIFR, he was in
    charge of the Theoretical Astrophysics Group. In 1988, the Indian
    University Grants Commission set up the Inter-University Centre for
    Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA) in Pune, and Narlikar became the
    Founder-Director of IUCAA.
     
    Narlikar is internationally known for his work in cosmology,
    especially in championing models alternative to the popular Big Bang
    model. During 1994 – '97, he was the President of the Cosmology
    Commission of the International Astronomical Union. His research work
    has involved Mach’s Principle, quantum cosmology, and action-at-a-
    distance physics.
     
    During 1999-2003, Narlikar headed an international team in a
    pioneering experiment designed to sample air for microorganisms in the
    atmosphere at heights of up to 41 km. Biological studies of the
    collected samples led to the findings of live cells and bacteria,
    which opened the intriguing possibility that the earth is being
    bombarded by microorganisms some of which might have seeded life
    itself on earth

     

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  thanks for information 

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