S Pakkur Subramanyan - meaning and definition. What is S Pakkur Subramanyan
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What (who) is S Pakkur Subramanyan - definition

INDIAN-AMERICAN ASTROPHYSICIST
Subramanyan Chandrasekhar; S. Chandrasekhar; Subrah. Chandrasekhar; Chandrasekhar, Subrahmanyan; Subrahamanyan Chandrasekhar; Chandrasakhar; S Chandrashekhar; S Chandrasekhar; S. Chandrashekhar; Subramanyam Chandrasekhar; Subramanyam Chandrashekhar; Subramanyan Chandrashekar; Subrahmanyan Chandresekhar; Padma Vibhushan Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar; Padma Vibhushan Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, FRS; சுப்பிரமணியன் சந்திரசேகர்; Subrahmanian Chandrasekhar; Subramaniam Chandrasekhar

S. Pakkur Subramanyan         
FORMER MEMBER OF THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY
S. Pakkur Subramanyam was a Politician and former Member of the Legislative Assembly of Tamil Nadu.
long s         
  • ct}} ligature, as in "attraction") was the removal of the long s from the typeface.
  • Italic capitals: long s (right) and round s
  • Cycle Deſign (Cycle Design) in [[Berlin]], 2002
  • "Miss Austen's"—an example of a handwritten long s in a letter from [[Charlotte Brontë]] to G. H. Lewes, 12 January 1848
  • [[Wayside cross]] near [[Hohenfurch]], Germany, erected 1953, showing the long s in Roman typeface
  • Unusual capital form of long s in Ehmcke-Antiqua typeface
  • ligature]] and a nub on the long s
  • Wasser-Aufsehers-Gattin}} ("water attendant's wife") containing a long s adjacent to an ''f''
  • The medial ''s'' in Old Roman cursive
  • German handwriting ([[Bastarda]]), 1496, showing long and round s (as well as an [[r rotunda]]) in "priesters"
ARCHAIC FORM OF THE LATIN LETTER S (S)
Medial s; Long S; Non-terminal s; Non-terminal S; Old letter s; Long ess; Long ſ; Long-s; Uſes; Descending s
¦ noun an obsolete form of lower-case s, written or printed as ?.
Long s         
  • ct}} ligature, as in "attraction") was the removal of the long s from the typeface.
  • Italic capitals: long s (right) and round s
  • Cycle Deſign (Cycle Design) in [[Berlin]], 2002
  • "Miss Austen's"—an example of a handwritten long s in a letter from [[Charlotte Brontë]] to G. H. Lewes, 12 January 1848
  • [[Wayside cross]] near [[Hohenfurch]], Germany, erected 1953, showing the long s in Roman typeface
  • Unusual capital form of long s in Ehmcke-Antiqua typeface
  • ligature]] and a nub on the long s
  • Wasser-Aufsehers-Gattin}} ("water attendant's wife") containing a long s adjacent to an ''f''
  • The medial ''s'' in Old Roman cursive
  • German handwriting ([[Bastarda]]), 1496, showing long and round s (as well as an [[r rotunda]]) in "priesters"
ARCHAIC FORM OF THE LATIN LETTER S (S)
Medial s; Long S; Non-terminal s; Non-terminal S; Old letter s; Long ess; Long ſ; Long-s; Uſes; Descending s
The long s , also known as the medial s or initial s, is an archaic form of the lowercase letter . It replaced the single s, or one or both of the letters s in a 'double s' sequence (e.

Wikipedia

Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar

Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar (; Punjabi pronunciation; 19 October 1910 – 21 August 1995) was an Indian-American theoretical physicist who spent his professional life in the United States. He shared the 1983 Nobel Prize for Physics with William A. Fowler for "...theoretical studies of the physical processes of importance to the structure and evolution of the stars". His mathematical treatment of stellar evolution yielded many of the current theoretical models of the later evolutionary stages of massive stars and black holes. Many concepts, institutions, and inventions, including the Chandrasekhar limit and the Chandra X-Ray Observatory, are named after him.

Chandrasekhar worked on a wide variety of problems in physics during his lifetime, contributing to the contemporary understanding of stellar structure, white dwarfs, stellar dynamics, stochastic process, radiative transfer, the quantum theory of the hydrogen anion, hydrodynamic and hydromagnetic stability, turbulence, equilibrium and the stability of ellipsoidal figures of equilibrium, general relativity, mathematical theory of black holes and theory of colliding gravitational waves. At the University of Cambridge, he developed a theoretical model explaining the structure of white dwarf stars that took into account the relativistic variation of mass with the velocities of electrons that comprise their degenerate matter. He showed that the mass of a white dwarf could not exceed 1.44 times that of the Sun – the Chandrasekhar limit. Chandrasekhar revised the models of stellar dynamics first outlined by Jan Oort and others by considering the effects of fluctuating gravitational fields within the Milky Way on stars rotating about the galactic centre. His solution to this complex dynamical problem involved a set of twenty partial differential equations, describing a new quantity he termed "dynamical friction", which has the dual effects of decelerating the star and helping to stabilize clusters of stars. Chandrasekhar extended this analysis to the interstellar medium, showing that clouds of galactic gas and dust are distributed very unevenly.

Chandrasekhar studied at Presidency College, Madras (now Chennai) and the University of Cambridge. A long-time professor at the University of Chicago, he did some of his studies at the Yerkes Observatory, and served as editor of The Astrophysical Journal from 1952 to 1971. He was on the faculty at Chicago from 1937 until his death in 1995 at the age of 84, and was the Morton D. Hull Distinguished Service Professor of Theoretical Astrophysics.