Prabhu Lal Bhatnagar (8 August 1912 – 5 October 1976), commonly addressed as P. L. Bhatnagar, was an Indian mathematician known for his contribution to the Bhatnagar–Gross–Krook operator used in Lattice Boltzmann methods (LBM).
Early years and career
He was born in Kota in Rajasthan and was the second of five sons. He did his schooling in Rampura and later at Herberter College in Kota. After schooling he went to Maharajah's College in Jaipur where in 1935 he completed BSc with first rank, followed by MSc.[citation needed]
His research career started at the Allahabad University under the supervision of Prof. B. N. Prasad on summability theory but soon he joined Prof. Amiya Charan Banerjee to work in differential equations. The results of his work (with Prof. Banerji, published in Proceeding of National Academy of Sciences, 1938) are included in the book of Erich Kamke.[1][2] He became interested in the area of astrophysics after coming in contact with Meghnad Saha. In 1939 he obtained DPhil degree in mathematics for his thesis titled On the Origin of the Solar System.
In 1952 he was invited to Harvard University as a Fulbright scholar. There he worked together with Donald Howard Menzel and Hari Kesab Singh in the field of non-linear gases.[3] His work with the Boltzmann equation led to his well-known BGK collision model in 1954 together with Eugene P. Gross and Max Krook.[4] It was at first extensively developed for ionized gases with many applications. These days, the BGK collision operator is essential for the recent development of lattice Boltzmann automata methods.
During the early 1960s he developed complications in the lower spinal region and was operated on in the United States. In 1969 he moved to Rajasthan University in Jaipur as Vice-Chancellor and in 1971 joined Himachal Pradesh University in Shimla as Head of the Mathematics Department. He was also member of the Union Public
Service Commission and the first Director of the Mehta Research Institute (now renamed as the Harish-Chandra Research Institute).
Honors and awards
He was awarded the Padma Bhushan by the President of India on 26 January 1968.[7] After he died on 5 October 1976 at Allahabad, the
Illustrated Weekly of India paid a tribute to him through an article on him by the well-known science writer Jagajit Singh.
^Kamke, Erich (1971). Differentialgleichungen-Lösungsmethoden und Lösungen. Chelsea Publishing Company. ISBN978-0-8284-0044-2.
^Bhatnagar, P. L.; A. C. Banerji (1938). "On the solution of certain types of differential equations". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, India. 8: 85–91. doi:10.1007/BF03045671. S2CID118847626.
^Bhatnagar, P. L.; D. H. Menzel; H. K. Sen (1963). Stellar Interiors. International Astrophysics. Chapman and Hall.