Origins of Radio Astronomy at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research and the Role of J.L. Pawsey
W.M. Goss

TL;DR
This paper explores the historical development of radio astronomy at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, emphasizing the pivotal role of J.L. Pawsey and international collaborations in establishing the field in India.
Contribution
It provides a detailed account of the formation of India's radio astronomy group and highlights the influence of key figures and international networking in its development.
Findings
Pawsey's mentorship was crucial for Indian radio astronomy's inception.
The formation of the TIFR radio astronomy group was driven by international collaborations.
50 years of groundbreaking research at TIFR and GMRT are celebrated.
Abstract
I will discuss the interactions of a number of individuals that played major roles in the formation of radio astronomy in India in the period 1952-1962, particularly Dr. Joseph L. Pawsey. The story began in 1953-1954: Pawsey brought Govind Swarup to Australia as a Colombo Fellow in 1953, where he worked with Christiansen, Mills, Wild and Bolton. Later, Swarup went to Stanford where he completed a PhD with Ron Bracewell working on the new Solar Microwave Spectroheliograph. In the era 1960-1963, with the encouragement of Pawsey, several colleagues in Australia and Bracewell, discussions began among a number of Indian colleagues to form a radio astronomy group in India. The main players were G. Swarup, T.K. Menon, M.R. Kundu and T. Krishnan. Homi J. Bhabha, the Director of TIFR, made the decisive offer to this group to start a radio astronomy project in early 1962. Swarup joined TIFR in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Developments in Astronomy · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · History of Science and Medicine
