Salam – The forgotten genius
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                       Dr.Abdus Salam . – file photo AP
On a hot summer afternoon in 1940, a  boy of 14 was rushing on his bicycle to his hometown near Jhang, part of  present day Pakistan. He covered his head under a heavy turban because the  barber had accidentally shaved off his hair.
When he reached the town, he saw  people lined up on either side of the road, greeting him with loud cheers. The  boy had earned a distinction in his matriculation examinations; the young  genius had broken all previous records within the province, he was Abdus Salam.
Salam was born on January 29, 1926  in Jhang, then a small town in Punjab. After attending Government College,  Jhang he went to Government College, Lahore in 1946 where he was awarded a  masters degree in Mathematics, securing first place in the College with 95.5  per cent.

The home of Abdus Salam in Jhang,  Pakistan. – AFP Photo
  
A wrangler in Cambridge
After his masters, Salam had two  choices: Join the civil services or go abroad for further education. Luckily,  he was offered a scholarship and instantly opted for the latter.
  
In 1946 at St. John’s College in  Cambridge, Salam did his Tripos (BA honors) in just two years (the course  usually takes three years) and because of this, he was given the title of  ‘wrangler’ – a term given to students at Cambridge for obtaining first-class  honours in the University’s undergraduate degree in mathematics.
Salam was appointed as a fellow at  the Institute of Advanced Study, Princeton University, USA In 1951, where he  attended a lecture by Albert Einstein.
Author Zakaria Virk mentions a witty  incident between Salam and Einstein in her book “Dr. Abdus Salam – Champion of  Science in the Third World”:
  
“One day, when Prof Salam was  studying in Princeton, New Jersey, he met Prof Einstein casually on the campus  of the Institute for Advanced Study. Einstein asked him, ‘what kind of research  are you doing?’ Salam replied, ‘I am working on the renormalisation theory,’ to  which Einstein replied, ‘I am not interested in that.’ After a few moments of  silence, Einstein asked the Pakistani, ‘have you studied my Relativity  Theory.?’ Salam replied, ‘I am not interested in that.’”
The story of his doctoral thesis too  is truly inspiring; he had taken up the complex task of eliminating infinities  from the Meson Theory. Salam found a unique solution to this problem in just  three short months! However, as per the regulations at Cambridge, he had to  wait three years to receive his doctorate degree in 1952.
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Back to Pakistan
While he was waiting to get his  degree, Salam returned to Pakistan with the hope of serving his country. Upon  his return, Salam was appointed the head of the Mathematics Department at  Government College, Lahore from 1951-54. However, in that period with no  research, minimal contacts or updated material to work with, Salam faced  complete intellectual isolation.
  In addition to this, neglecting  Salam’s outstanding academic career at Cambridge and Princeton, his principal  at the college advised him to put aside his research, offering him three  substandard jobs: warden of the hostel, chief treasurer of the college or  president of the football club. Resignedly, Salam took up the football club  offer. However, this occurrence resulted in major disappointment for Salam,  prompting him to return to Cambridge as a lecturer. He was the pioneer of the  Theoretical Physics Department at Imperial College, London, where he taught  from 1957 to 1993.
  Back at Cambridge, he studied and  interacted with PAM Dirac, Max Born, Wolfgang Pauli and other great minds of  the time.
  
 
A view of Abdus Salam’s primary  school in Jhang, Pakistan. — AFP Photo
In 1959, Salam became the youngest  Fellow of the Royal Society at the age of 33 years. The Royal Society is the  oldest science association on the planet
 During the 50s, Salam visited  Pakistan often as an advisor on science policy to the government and in 1961 he  was finally appointed as a Chief Scientific Advisor to the President of  Pakistan. He laid the foundation of Pakistan Upper Atmosphere Research  Commission (SUPARCO) and made remarkable contributions in creating a culture of  science in Pakistan.
In 1973, at the Conference of  Islamic Countries in Lahore, Salam presented a memorandum for the creation of  Islamic Science Foundation.
The dream of ICTP 
 During a meeting at the  International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Salam proposed the Idea of an  International Center for Theortical Physics (ICTP). He planned a platform for  physicists from the developing world to stop the ‘brain drain.’
In his book Salam wrote, “The notion  of a centre that should cater particularly to the needs of physicists from  developing countries had lived with me from 1954, when I was forced to leave my  own country. I realised that if I stayed there much longer, I would have to  leave physics, through sheer intellectual isolation” (Ideals and Realities 3rd  ed., World Scientific, 392, 1989).
 Salam was interested to establish  the centre in Pakistan. He also passed on this idea to President Ayub Khan.  When Ayub Khan briefed his Finance Minister, Mohammad Shoaib, about the idea,  the minister dismissively replied, “Salam wants to make a hotel for scientists  rather than a centre.”
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Unification of Fundamental Forces 
Dr Salam was often quoted as saying,  “Progress, begins with the belief that what is necessary is possible.” With  this spirit he presented the unification theory of electromagnetic and weak  forces – the basic but very different forces of nature; he named it the  ‘Electroweak Force.’

Salam, receiving the Nobel Prize in  traditional Pakistani dress. — File Photo / AFP
 The theory predicted basic particles  of W and Z bosons. The experimental stamp was put to theory when Carlo Rubbia  discovered them in atom smashing machines at the Center for European Nuclear  Research (CERN). Rubbia was also conferred the Noble Prize in 1984 with Simon  Van Der Meer for the discovery of the particles.
Despite being afflicted with  Parkinson’s disease, Salam produced high level research papers until 1995. He  worked on Chirality and its role in the origin of life, gravity, fermions,  superconductivity, symmetry, proton decay and science and human development.
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The Nobel Prize medal and  memorandum. — courtesy of the Marie Curie Library, ICTP, Trieste
The Nobel Prize 
   In 1979, he shared the Noble Prize  of Physics with US physicists Steven Weinberg and Sheldon Glashow. For the  Nobel Prize ceremony, he wore the traditional Pakistani dress of shalwar and sherwani with a turban. He was also allowed to give his speech in  Urdu.
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   ICTP and TWAS 
   Beside the unification of Physics,  Salam had another passion; to unify humanity for science. He often said science  is the common heritage of mankind.
  In 1964, he setup a rendezvous for  science called the International Centre for Theoretical Physics. And due to the  laudable efforts of the Italian government, the centre still continues to do  wonders in the beautiful city of Trieste. Unesco and IAEA also supported the  effort for the centre which was set up to bridge the gap between the scientists  of the south and the north. The ICTP mission statement says:
    “Foster the growth of advanced  studies and research in physical and mathematical sciences, especially in  support of excellence in developing countries. Develop high-level scientific  programmes keeping in mind the needs of developing countries, and provide an  international forum of scientific contact for scientists from all countries.  Conduct research at the highest international standards and maintain a  conducive environment of scientific inquiry for the entire ICTP community.”
  The center also offers strong  scientific research and outreach programs, organising more than 60  international conferences, seminars and numerous workshops annually. Thousands  of scientists and scholars visit the ICTP every year to avail the center’s  travel fellowships as well.
  Salam was the Founding Director for  the ICTP from 1964 to 1993.
  Apart from his passion for Physics,  Salam also felt strongly about providing a platform for scientists from the  developing world.  He established the Third World Academy of Sciences  (TWAS), also located in Trieste, for this very reason. TWAS supports scientists  in the developing world through a variety of grants and fellowships.
  Salam breathed his last in Oxford,  England on November 21, 1996.
  In an email to Dawn.com, world  renowned physicist, author and professor of physics at the University of Texas,  USA, Steven Weinberg said:

Nobel Laureate Physicist, Steven  Weinberg. – image credit, Matt Valentine
“As a graduate student, though I had  not yet met Salam, I spent a good deal of time reading his papers on quantum  field theory.  So I was very pleased when he invited me to spend 1961-2 at  Imperial College, where he was the leading theorist.  We became friends  and collaborators, and wrote a paper together (with Jeffrey Goldstone) that  turned out to be pretty important. Of course, before and after that Salam did  work of the highest importance in theoretical physics. Physicists in general,  and I in particular, miss him greatly.”
 http://dawn.com/2013/01/29/3156050/