Professor Govind Swarup is the pioneer of radio astronomy in India. Over the last 7 decades, he has built two of the world’s largest radio telescopes, nurtured a community of Indian radio astronomers that is among the best in the world, and continues to inspire many generations of astronomers, engineers and students to this day. Let us explore this unique story through the eyes of Prof. Swarup himself.
Govind Swarup was born on 23 March 1929 and spent his early year in the small town of Thakurdwara in the Moradabad district of the state of Uttar Pradesh.
He obtained his MSc degree from Allahabad University in 1950 and joined the newly formed National Physical Laboratory (NPL).
He began working in the area of paramagnetic resonance under the direction of the eminent physicist K. S. Krishnan.
In September 1957, he enrolled at Stanford University to work with Prof. Ron Bracewell (famous as the author of the leading textbook on Fourier transforms) and finished his thesis by 1960 on studies of the Sun using the cross-antenna interferometer at Stanford.
He was immediately offered the position of Assistant Professor at Stanford University.
The proposal received enthusiastic support from the leading astronomers of the time, particularly from Bart Bok of Leiden University.
Within India, Prof. Homi Bhabha, the Director of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in Mumbai moved quickly to approve the proposal. Bhabha sent Govind Swarup a telegram conveying TIFR’s decision to set up a radio astronomy group. This marked the golden beginning of radio astronomy in India.
After spending nearly a decade abroad in Australia and USA, Swarup returned to India in 1963 and joined TIFR. By 1965, he had used the dishes from the Pott’s Hill Telescope (which had finally arrived in India) to set up a solar telescope at Kalyan, near Mumbai.
Bhabha enthusiastically supported the idea and a suitable site was identified near Ooty at an altitude of about 2100 m.
Many critical mechanical and electronic components required for the telescope were manufactured for the first time in India. The design and construction effort was led by a young team with a median age of 27 years.
This massive telescope, a 500 m long and 30 wide parabolic cyclinder had its rotation axis parallel to the earth’s rotation axis and could follow a radio source from rise to set. By 1970, the Ooty Radio Telescope (ORT) was complete.
Over the next decade, the Ooty Radio Telescope made many new discoveries in astronomy and contributed to studies of the Sun, interplanetary scintillation, pulsars and the most distant radio quasars. Swarup and his student Vijay Kapahi showed that radio source counts were consistent with the predictions of the Big Bang theory.
Here is a more detailed story on the Ooty Radio Telescope.
The GMRT consists of 30 parabolic dishes of 45m diameter each. A novel design allowed the reflecting surface to be made from thin stainless steel wires, making the dish light and reducing wind effects.
The telescope was ready by the year 2000, and has since then been open to the international astronomy community. Astronomers from 40 countries have used the facility so far for studies of almost all kinds of radio sources.
Here is a more detailed story on the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope.
After his retirement in 1994, Govind continued to pursue his interests in radio astronomy.
Awards and accolades have flowed in from around the world.
Today, as he steps into his 90th year his enthusiasm for his subject is undiminished. He still attends research seminars regularly and gives occasional talks on his research. In 2017, he co-authored a paper on radio observations of the planet Venus, 62 years after he wrote his first research paper in 1955!
This virtual story is developed by National Centre for Radio Astrophysics, a unit of Tata Institute of Fundamental Research.
Thanks to:
Prof. Govind Swarup
Prof. Divya Oberoi
Prof. Yogesh Wadadekar
Prof. Niruj Mohan
Ms. Sonalika Purkayastha
and Ms. Bhavya Ramakrishnan from TIFR archives.
Do see the story on the Ooty Radio Telescope.
Do see the story on the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope.