Piara Singh Gill

Piara Singh Gill

Piara Singh Gill
Born (1911-10-28)28 October 1911
Chela, near Kot Fatuhi, Hoshiarpur district,
Punjab
British India
Died 23 March 2002(2002-03-23) (aged 90)
Residence India
Nationality Indian
Fields Nuclear physics
Institutions Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Atomic Energy Commission of India
Aligarh Muslim University
Punjab Agricultural University
University of Chicago
First Director of Central Scientific Instruments Organization (CSIO)
Alma mater University of Southern California
University of Chicago
Doctoral advisor Arthur Compton
Known for Advanced nuclear cosmic ray research. Scientists who worked on the Manhattan project & First director of CSIO.

Piara Singh Gill (28 October 1911 – 23 March 2002) was an Indian nuclear physicist who was a pioneer in cosmic ray nuclear physics and worked on the American Manhattan project.[1] He was the first Director of Central Scientific Instruments Organisation (CSIO) of India.[2] He was research fellow of University of Chicago (1940).[3] He was research Professorship fellow of Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) (1947), Officer-on-Special Duty (OSD) with the Atomic Energy Commission in New Delhi. Professor and head of the Department of Physics at Aligarh University (1949), Director of Central Scientific Instruments Organization (CSIO) (1959) and Professor Emeritus Punjab Agricultural University (1971).[3]

Personal life

He was born on 28 October 1911 in a Gill Jat family in the village of Chela in Hoshiarpur district of Punjab. He attended Khalsa High School in Mahilpur (1928) and left for America in 1929. He attended and graduated with a bachelor's and master's degrees from University of Southern California. He worked for his PhD in Physics at University of Chicago under the supervision and guidance of Arthur Compton, the Nobel Prize winning scientist. He received his PhD in March 1940. He was a good friend and close colleague of Homi J. Bhabha, who offered him the research fellow professorship at Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in 1947.[3]

He was a close friend of Nehru, who was impressed with his scientific breakthroughs.[4] Nehru offered him the post of Officer-on-Special Duty (OSD) with the Atomic Energy Commission in New Delhi; he asked him to become the first Director of Central Scientific Instruments Organization (CSIO) of India.[2]

Photo of Professor Piara Singh Gill.

He as its Director established (CSIO) as a leader in advanced scientific instrument design in Asia.[3] Gill was a key advisor and planner to Nehru on India's nuclear weapons strategy in the 1950s-1960s.[1]

Robert Oppenheimer was a close colleague and friend who he worked with on the Manhattan project. Oppenheimer asked Gill to present a paper at the California Institute of Technology at a conference arranged to celebrate the 80th birthday of Professor Robert Millikan, winner of the 1928 Physics Nobel Prize.

Some free excerpts from Professor Piara Singh Gill's autobiography can be read at Google Books.[5]

Positions held

Honorary professor of physics

Membership of learned societies

Positions held in the societies

Membership of learned bodies

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Up Against Odds: Autobiography of an Indian Scientist. (South Asia Books, 1993. ISBN 81-7023-364-X)
  2. 1 2 The Hindu : P.S. Gill (1911-2002): Physicist and instrument designer
  3. 1 2 3 4 http://www.ias.ac.in/currsci/jun102002/1404.pdf
  4. PROLA Search
  5. Click on this to read free book preview at Google: Up Against Odds: Autobiography of an Indian Scientist. (South Asia Books, 1993. ISBN 81-7023-364-X)
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