C.V. Vishveshwara (6 March 1938 – 16 January 2017), commonly known as Vishu, was an Indian scientist and black hole physicist. Specializing in Einstein's General Relativity, he worked extensively on the theory of black holes and made major contributions to this field of research since its very beginning.[1] He is popularly known as the 'black hole man of India'.[2]
Vishveshwara was one of the first to analyze the structure of black holes employing spacetime symmetries thereby demonstrating the existence of the ergosphere.[4] He proved the stability of the non-rotating Schwarzschild black hole, a crucial factor that ensures its continued existence after formation.[5] Further, he discovered the quasinormal modes of black holes.[6] These modes of black hole vibrations are one of the main targets of observation using the gravitational wave detectors. In later years, he investigated black holes in cosmological backgrounds, an important aspect of black hole physics that had hardly been explored. Vishveshwara has also made significant contributions to other areas of general relativity such as the exact solutions of Einstein's field equations, gravitational collapse, compact stellar objects, inertial forces, and spacetime perturbations.
Books and other publications
In addition to authoring a number of technical papers, Vishveshwara has co-edited ten volumes on relativity, astrophysics and cosmology including those published by Cambridge University Press and Kluwer Academic Publishers. He has contributed articles to these volumes and illustrated two of the volumes with his cartoons. Further, he has written a number of popular articles on various topics in science.
"Black Holes, Gravitational Radiation and the Universe: Essays in Honour of C.V. Vishveshwara,- Bala R. Iyer and Biplab Bhawal(eds)", (Kluwer Academic Publishers (1999)) contains essays contributed by Roger Penrose, Jacob Bekenstein, Abhay Ashtekar, Ashoke Sen etc.
Planetarium and promotion of science
As founder-director of the Planetarium in Bangalore, he has written the scripts of several planetarium programmes and directed them. These are aimed at presenting difficult concepts in a simple and attractive manner. Vishveshwara has also produced two short science films.
^Sumangala S. Mummigatti, Science Reporter, NISCAIR, CSIR, Dr KS Krishnan Marg, New Delhi - 110 012. p. 31 (ed. April 2017)
^Dadhich, Naresh; Nayak, K. Rayesh (18 February 2024). "C. V. Vishveshwara (Vishu) On The Black Hole Trek". arXiv:2402.11503 [gr-qc].
^Vishveshwara, C. V. (1968). "Generalization of the Schwarzschild Surface to Arbitrary Static and Stationary Metrics". Journal of Mathematical Physics. 9 (8). AIP Publishing: 1319–1322. Bibcode:1968JMP.....9.1319V. doi:10.1063/1.1664717. ISSN0022-2488.