'No radio without Bose' the man who invented radio, Not Marconi
'No radio without Bose' the man who invented radio, Not Marconi
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The Indians' wisdom is renowned across the world. India hoisted many flags in the world of science even while it was a slave and a source of riches for educational institutions and scientific endeavours. Jagdish Chandra Basu is one such Indian scientist. Currently, Prof. Jagdish Basu's death anniversary is today. On November 23, 1937, he passed away.

Radio and microwave optics are credited to Jagdish Chandra Basu. He is most known among Indians as a scientist who found life in trees. Basu was born on November 30, 1858, in Memon Singh's Rarauli village. This location is currently in Bangladesh. Basu received his early schooling in a local school. His father founded this institution. His financially wealthy father could easily send him to an English school, but he preferred that the boy learn his mother tongue and have a thorough understanding of his culture before studying English.

Basu graduated from the University of London with a bachelor's degree in natural science and a bachelor's degree in science in 1884. Basu created a gadget known as the kescograph. It was capable of measuring the many waves that surrounding it. In the Royal Society, he later utilised an experiment to show life in trees and trees, and his finding was lauded by the entire globe. He used a placard to convey the plant's delight in the equipment. Basu then poured bromide into the plant's root system. As a result, plant activity became erratic. The stimulus measurement equipment on the plant then stopped working. That meant the plant was no longer alive. But marconi is credited with the invention of radio for patenting in his name.

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