The year 1977 also saw the publication of Chandrasekhar's book on liquid crystals by the
Cambridge University Press. The book is popular amongst workers in the field, and has been translated into Russian and Japanese. An enlarged second edition of the book was published in 1992. Chandrasekhar also organized several international conferences, including the one in 1973 on the occasion of the
Silver Jubilee of the founding of the RRI. Many stalwarts in the field of liquid crystals like
Glen H. Brown, George William Gray,
Alfred Saupe and
Pierre-Gilles de Gennes (who was to receive the Nobel Prize in 1991, partly for his work on liquid crystals) participated in this conference. He was awarded
A. Cemal Eringen Medal in 1996. Other major conferences Chandrasekhar organized include the Ninth International Liquid Crystals Conference in 1982 and the Second Asia-Pacific Physics Conference in 1986. After retiring from the RRI in 1990, Chandrasekhar started the Centre for Liquid Crystal Research in a building made available by BEL in
Bangalore. Chandrasekhar's scientific achievements brought him many honours. He was elected Fellow of all the three scientific academies in India, including the
Indian Academy of Sciences (FASc, 1962) and the Indian National Science Academy (FNA, 1978). He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1983, and was also a fellow of the
Institute of Physics (London) and of the
Third World Academy of Sciences. He was a member of several international and national committees on science and education. Chandrasekhar was the founder president of the
International Liquid Crystal Society for 1990–92, and was an editor of the journal
Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals for 20 years. He was the recipient of the
Bhatnagar Award (1972), the Homi Bhabha (1987) and Meghnad Saha (1992) medals of the
Indian National Science Academy, C.V. Raman Centenary Medal of the
Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science (1988), the Royal Medal of Royal Society (1994),
Niels Bohr International Gold Medal of UNESCO (1998), and the Freedericksz Medal of the
Russian Liquid Crystal Society (2000). He was also the recipient of the
Karnataka Rajyotsava award (1986),
Padma Bhushan (1998) and the honour of Knight of the
Order of Academic Palms by the French Government (1999). Chandrasekhar was largely responsible for placing
India on the international map in the field of liquid crystals. Chandrasekhar hailed from the most illustrious family of physicists in India. == References ==