Raman was born in Tiruchi Rapari, Madras. His father is a teacher in a missionary school, teaching math and physics. Under British colonial rule, Raman's family was not respected, but he was brilliant and became a local celebrity.
/kloc-When he was 0/4 years old, the local authorities recommended him to attend Madras College because he was smart and studious. The hospital saw the children who came to report for duty and thought that the local official documents were wrong. Raman was among the best in the entrance examination and entered the college with excellent results. Two years later, he received a bachelor's degree in literature and a medal for outstanding students. Two years later, he got a master's degree.
Shortly after entering the university, he became interested in optics and acoustics. His first paper was published in Philosophy Monthly published in London on 1906, entitled "On the Scattering of Light Beams". After graduating from college, he wanted to stay as a teaching assistant, but he was opposed by the school board. Because the teachers of Indian universities were almost all British at that time, the college students trained in India were looked down upon. In order to make a living, Raman had to change to a shop assistant. /kloc-at the age of 0/9, Raman defeated a large number of competitors and was admitted as a clerk by the Ministry of Finance of the Indian Governor's Office. Although this career is not satisfactory, he works hard and seems to be a very competent clerk, but he is always worried about the established scientific goals. In the past few years, he has been to several cities, and wherever he is, he is conscientious and tries his best to do research in local laboratories. In order to balance work and research, he has to grasp life and keep the time accurate to every minute of every day.
Raman has worked in the government for 10 years, but his career has not improved, but he has unswervingly adhered to his hobby and made amazing progress in the research of optics and acoustics. 1907, he published a paper entitled "Experimental Study on Huygens Wavelet" in the first issue of Indian Council for Scientific Development. In the following seven years, the magazine published his papers in succession. 19 12 won the kezeng research award, and 19 13 won the woodburn research medal. Because India was a British colony at that time, Indians were discriminated against, and Raman's research results were of course given a cold shoulder. After his "Theory of Beam Propagation" was published in the quarterly journal of the French Physical Society, it attracted the attention of scholars all over the world.
Raman's A New Radiation pointed out for the first time that there are new components with different wavelengths in scattered light, which are closely related to the structure of scattered matter. This phenomenon was later called "Raman effect". In addition, Raman has also made great contributions in vibration, sound, musical instruments, ultrasound, diffraction, meteorological optics, colloid optics, optoelectronics, X-ray diffraction and other fields.