Valangiman Subramanian Ramamurthy (born 2 April 1942) is an Indian nuclear physicist with a broad range of contributions from basic research to Science and Engineering administration.Prof.Ramamurthy started his career in Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai in the year 1963. He made important research contributions in the area of nuclear fission, medium energy heavy ion reactions, statistical and thermodynamic properties of nuclei and low energy accelerator applications. During the period 1995-2006, Prof.Ramamurthy was fully involved in Science administration as Secretary to Government of India, Department of Science and Technology, (DST), New Delhi.Other important assignments held by him include Director, Institute of Physics, Bhubaneswar, (1989-1995), DAE Homi Bhabha Chair in the Inter-University Accelerator Centre, New Delhi (2006-2010), and Director of the National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bengaluru (2009-2014).[1][2] He is a former chairman of the Recruitment and Assessment Board of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research and has served as a member of the design team of the first Indian nuclear experiment in Pokhran on 18 May 1974.[3] The Government of India awarded him the third highest Indian civilian honour of Padma Bhushan in 2005.[4]
Biography
Born on 2 April 1942[5] in the part of Madras Presidency that is now the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu, Ramamurthy secured his graduate and master's degrees in Physics from the University of Madras and joined the training school of the Atomic Energy Establishment, Trombay, (present day Bhabha Atomic Research Centre) in 1963 for advanced training.[3] He continued at the institution to start his career where he stayed till 1989 during which period he secured a doctoral degree (PhD) in 1971 from the University of Mumbai for his thesis on stochastic theory of fragment mass and charge distributions in low energy fission.[3]
Ramamurthy was a member of the team which designed the Smiling Buddha project for carrying out the first Indian nuclear experiment at Pokhran on 18 May 1974.[3] During his stint as the director of the Institute of Physics, he was the leader of the atomic and molecular clusters and low energy accelerator project and contributed to the setting up of the 3 MV accelerator centre at the institute.[3] He was also involved in the high energy nuclear physics programme using the heavy ion accelerators at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Geneva.[3] His researches covered the theoretical and experimental aspects of Nuclear fission physics and he is credited with advanced research on nuclear shell effects,[8] nuclear level densities[9] and pre-equilibrium fission and sub-barrier fusion dynamics.[3] His researches have been documented by way of several articles published in peer reviewed journals[10] and a book, Nuclear Radiation Detectors, released in 1986.[11] He has also written on the sociological aspects of science and technology.[12]
Selected Bibliography
S. S. Kapoor; V. S. Ramamurthy (1986). Nuclear Radiation Detectors. New Age International. p. 236. ISBN9780852264966.
S. K. Kataria; V. S. Ramamurthy & S. S. Kapoor (July 1978). "Semiempirical nuclear level density formula with shell effects". Phys. Rev. C. 19 (1): 549–563. Bibcode:1978PhRvC..18..549K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevC.18.549.
V.S. Ramamurthy; S.S. Kapoor (December 1972). "Statistical properties of excited nuclei and the determination of the ground-state shell correction energies". Physics Letters B. 42 (4): 399–403. Bibcode:1972PhLB...42..399R. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(72)90091-3.
Saurabh Kumar; V. S. Ramamurthy (March 2015). "Pedal Power as the 21st Century Charkha". The Pioneer.
^V.S. Ramamurthy; S.S. Kapoor (December 1972). "Statistical properties of excited nuclei and the determination of the ground-state shell correction energies". Physics Letters B. 42 (4): 399–403. Bibcode:1972PhLB...42..399R. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(72)90091-3.
^S. K. Kataria; V. S. Ramamurthy & S. S. Kapoor (July 1978). "Semiempirical nuclear level density formula with shell effects". Phys. Rev. C. 19 (1): 549–563. Bibcode:1978PhRvC..18..549K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevC.18.549.