
Include a chapter on Narlikar in school textbooks, says Mashelkar
Pune: Jayant Narlikar's legacy should be a chapter in textbooks to inspire young scientists, said Raghunath Mashelkar, president, Pune International Centre (PIC), at a memorial organised for the astrophysicist on Saturday.
Ajit Kembhavi, former director, Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics, and R. Srianand, the current director of IUCAA, also spoke about Narlikar and his work.
Mashelkar, who joined the meet via a video call, recalled, "He fought pseudoscience with reason, not ridicule. At a meeting in Delhi, there was an effort to introduce astrology in the syllabus, and he was one of the first to stand up and say astrology is not science.
There are very few people who dare to do that. When we write the next set of textbooks in all languages, there should be a lesson on the legacy that Dr Narlikar left behind, particularly in Maharashtra.
Budding scientists will learn from his legacy."
Kembhavi, who was a PhD student of Narlikar and went on to work with him for 53 years, spoke about the science that made the man. "Everybody knows about the Big Bang theory— that the universe began with a big explosion.
But Narlikar didn't believe in it; he believed in the quasi-steady state theory, which in a way meant the universe has always remained the same. He did not like a universe which was born on Wednesday and was finished on Friday, along with space and time," quipped Kembhavi, adding how, in the beginning, he worked on something close to Narlikar's theory but soon changed course—yet never faced any opposition from Narlikar.
"He always said, 'Do what you like and believe in it.' That was his principle, which was also reflected in the way IUCAA was built and run," said Kembhavi. He spoke about the Hoyle–Narlikar theory of gravity, which is an alternative to Einstein's general theory of relativity, and Narlikar's belief in life beyond Earth and the atmospheric experiments he proposed to trace whether life originated from outside.
R. Srianand, director of IUCAA, spoke about how it was IUCAA's associateship programme that helped him—a PhD student in Bhubaneswar—finally become the director of IUCAA.
"Not everybody can be in Tata Institute of Fundamental Research or Cambridge. IUCAA is for every scientist who thinks he or she missed the bus. Doing astronomy is an expensive affair, and resources are confined to a few elite institutes. What Narlikar did was to give a chance to researchers from across the country to access these resources at IUCAA.
So, I am standing here to just say that whatever was envisioned in establishing IUCAA has already happened. The fact that I am the director of IUCAA is the success of professor Narlikar and also the success of IUCAA's concept," said Srianand.

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Indian Express
2 days ago
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At memorial for Jayant Narlikar, IUCAA remembers a legend
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Time of India
2 days ago
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