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Since Harish-Chandra's father spent most of his time travelling around the country inspecting canals, Harish-Chandra spent most of his childhood living in his maternal grandfather's home in Kanpur. Ram Sanehi Seth was a wealthy man with a large house which was home to many of his relatives. Harish-Chandra, despite being a rather weakly child, did sometimes spend time travelling with his father. His education was treated by the family as of the utmost importance :
He then attended the University of Allahabad. Here he studied theoretical physics, this direction being the result of reading Principles of Quantum Mechanics by Dirac which he found himself in the university library. He was awarded a B.Sc. in 1941, then a master's degree in 1943. Harish-Chandra worked as a postgraduate research fellow on problems in theoretical physics under Homi Bhabha, at the Indian Institute of Science at Bangalore in Southern India. Bhabha had been a student of Dirac in the 1930s. Harish-Chandra began publishing papers on theoretical physics while at Bangalore, and he published a couple of joint papers with Bhabha extending some of Dirac 's results. For the first six months he spent in Bangalore he lived with Dr Kale, a botanist from Allahabad, and his wife who had taught Harish-Chandra French when he was an undergraduate. The Kales had a daughter Lalitha who at this time was a young girl, but about eight years later in 1952 he returned from the United States to India and there married Lalitha. Bhabha and Harish-Chandra's teacher, K S Krishnan at Allahabad University, recommended him to Dirac for research work at Cambridge which would lead to Ph.D. degree. In 1945 Harish-Chandra went to Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where he studied for his doctorate under Dirac 's supervision. However Harish-Chandra saw comparatively little of his supervisor, giving up attending Dirac 's lecture course when he realised that Dirac was essentially reading from one of his books. He wrote that Dirac was (see for example ):
During his time in Cambridge he began to move away from physics and became more interested in mathematics attending the lecture courses of Littlewood and Hall . He also attended a lecture by Pauli and pointed out a mistake in Pauli 's work. The two were to become life long friends. Harish-Chandra obtained his degree in 1947 for his thesis Infinite irreducible representations of the Lorentz group in which he gives a complete classification of the irreducible unitary representations of SL(2,C). Dirac visited Princeton for the year 1947-48 and Harish-Chandra went to the United States with him, working as his assistant during this time. However he was greatly influenced by the leading mathematicians Weyl , Artin and Chevalley who were working there. It was during this year in Princeton that he finally decided that he was a mathematician and not a physicist. He later wrote (see for example ):
After Dirac returned to Cambridge, Harish-Chandra remained at Princeton for a second year. He spent 1949-50 at Harvard where he was influenced by Zariski . The period 1950 to 1963, spent at Columbia University, New York, was his most productive. During this time he worked on representations of semisimple Lie groups. Also during this period he had close contact with Weil . When we say that he spent the years 1950-63 at Columbia University we really mean that he was on the faculty there for this period, but it is fair to say that he spent long periods in other institutions. He spent 1952-53 at the Tata Institute in Bombay and it was during this year that he married Lalitha Kale (often known as Lily); they had two daughters :
He spent 1955-56 at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, 1957-58 as a Guggenheim Fellow in Paris where he was able to work with Weil and the two often went walking together. He was a Sloan Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study from 1961 to 1963. In Harish-Chandra is quoted as saying that he believed that his lack of background in mathematics was in a way responsible for the novelty of his work:
Armand Borel describes some of Harish-Chandra's contributions in . Schwermer reviews that work as well as and what follows is taken from these reviews:
Harish-Chandra worked at the Institute of Advanced Study at Princeton from 1963. He was appointed IBM- von Neumann Professor in 1968. He died of a heart attack at the end of a week long conference in Princeton, having earlier suffered from three heart attacks, the first being in 1969 and the third in 1982. In October 1983 a conference in honour of Armand Borel was held in Princeton :
Harish-Chandra received many awards in his career. He was a Fellow of the Royal Society (1973), a Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences (United States) (1981), the Indian Academy of Sciences and the Indian National Science Academy (1975). He won the Cole prize from the American Mathematical Society in 1954 for his papers on representations of semisimple Lie algebras and groups, and particularly for his paper On some applications of the universal enveloping algebra of a semisimple Lie algebra which he had published in the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society in 1951. In 1974, he received the Ramanujan Medal from Indian National Science Academy. He was awarded honorary degrees by Delhi University (1973) and Yale University (1981). Having been both a physicist and a mathematician it is interesting to see Harish-Chandra's view of their relationship. This is described nicely in :
His character is described in :
Source:School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland |