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Showing posts from January, 2017

The Sachins, Dravids and Dhonis of Science

Analogies and comparisons are always interesting, even if not useful! From declaring poetically that life is a bed of roses to calling Rajnikanths and Bachchans 'superstars'- analogies are omnipresent. So when I read somewhere about scientists who 'played' with machines in their childhood and sportspersons who get 'scientifically' trained, the analogy between the two instantaneously pops up in my mind. Sportspersons vie for cups and medals just like scientists who strive to grab a Nobel or a Fields medal. Sports and science both have had prodigies come up. Both have had the stories of some prodigies end up as tragedies. In sports, among the prodigies some fulfill their promise and dazzle others with their flamboyance and are revered as geniuses. And there are others, less prodigal but industrious, who methodically come up the ladder and stand up to the prodigies as equals. And there are champions of   a third kind, ...

Mind Matters- Introduction to the column

1.23 grams.  That's all it weighed! A crumpled mass years before- as watery as a melon , grey here and white there just like a middle aged man's beard- scattered in labs and museums across the world today, attracting handful of scientists poring into its secrets and countless awestruck visitors jostling to get a glimpse of genius- this was once the private property of a German immigrant in America, long deceased. One Mr. Albert Einstein. Humans, by design or by accident, are highly curious creatures. We are ever eager to know stuffs like how Swarzneggers build their beefy torsos, how Beckhams could bend it so well, or how gallons of milk that Dhoni drank in his adolescence contributed to his helicopter shot and what not! It is the same curiosity that made an Archimedes storm out of his bath and run into the town, which induced a Newton to churn formulae reportedly out of an rendezvous with an apple- which also led an Einstein turn physics world on its head...

Are you cut out for research?

            A common question which bogs the mind of kids (and grown-ups) wanting to pursue a research career is - Am I capable of doing research? Answer to this rests on two other questions- 1) What do we mean by research? 2) What do we mean by success in research? Research, to most of us, means developing a path-breaking idea that can stun the world and be remembered for posterity.  For us to be impressed, it must be an other-worldy idea- a rocket launch to the moon or a new theory to explain the origin of the universe. We think that researchers, like leaders, are only born and not made. How else could you explain the genius of Einstein or an Edison? Can such a great feat be accomplished by mortals like us who hardly know anything beyond our books? How could one conceive new idea and tackle such complex intangible problems as, say, the motion of electrons and planets.  Also, when so many stalwarts hav...