|  Nobel Prize winners from India  are with due respect enlisted below, these are great people from India who  showed the world the untapped potential India has, even though it may not have  facilities and luxuries at par with the likes of USA,Britain and other big  social economies but the talent, hard work and skill here is  unfathomed.
 
  VENKATRAMAN RAMAKRISHNAN Born in 1952 in  Chidambaram, Tamil Nadu, India, he is a U.S. citizen. Indian origin senior  scientist at the MRC Laborartory of Molecular Biology at Cambridge, Venkatraman  Ramakrishnan, has been awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2009 along with  two others. The Nobel Committee announced on Wednesday that the Tamil Nadu born  Ramakrishnan shares the Nobel Prize with Thomas E Steitz (US) and Ada E Yonath  (Israel) for their “studies of the structure and function of the ribosome”.  Ramakrishnan graduated in B.Sc. in Physics from Baroda University in 1971 and  did Ph.D. in Physics in 1976 from Ohio University.“This year’s Nobel Prize in  Chemistry awards Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, Thomas A Steitz and Ada E Yonath for  having showed what the ribosome looks like and how it functions at the atomic  level,” the Nobel committee said. All three have used a method called X-ray  crystallography to map the position for each and every one of the hundreds of  thousands of atoms that make up the ribosome, it said. “This year’s three  Laureates have all generated 3D models that show how different antibiotics bind  to the ribosome. These models are now used by scientists to develop new  antibiotics, directly assisting the saving of lives and decreasing humanity’s  suffering,” the citation said. 
 
  AMARTYA SEN (b-1933) : Prof. Amartya Sen is the recipient of the Nobel  Prize for Economics for the year 1998, becoming the first Asian to have been  honored with the award. The Santiniketan-born economist who is a pioneer in  Welfare Economics has to his credit several books and papers on aspects of  welfare and development. An economist with a difference,     Prof. Sen is a  humanist. He has distinguished himself with his outstanding writings on famine,  poverty, democracy, gender and social issues. The ‘impossibility theorem’  suggested earlier by Kenneth Arrow states that it was not possible to aggregate  individual choices into a satisfactory choice for society as a whole. Prof. Sen  showed mathematically that  societies could find ways to alleviate such a poor  outcome. 
 
 
  
 SUBRAMANIAN  CHANDRASHEKAR (1910-1995) : The Nobel  Prize for Physics in 1983 was awarded to Dr S. Chandrashekar, an Indian-born  astrophysicist. Educated in Presidency College, Chennai, Dr. Chandrashekar  happened to be the nephew of his Nobel forbear, Sir C.V. Raman. He later  migrated to the United States where he authored several books on Astrophysics  and Stellar Dynamics. He developed a theory on white dwarf stars which posts a  limit of mass of dwarf stars known also as Chandrashekar Limit. His theory  explains the final stages of stellar evolution.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  MOTHER TERESA (1910-1997)  : The  Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Mother Teresa in 1979. Albanian parentage,  Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu was born at Skopje, now in Yogoslavia. She joined the  Irish order of the Sisters of Loretto at Dublin in 1928 and came to Kolkata in  1929 as a missionary, only to find the misery of the abandoned and the  destitute. Concern for the poor and the sick prompted her to found a new  congregation, Missionaries of Charity. Having become an Indian citizen, Mother  Teresa served the cause of dying destitute’s, lepers and drug addicts, through  Nirmal Hriday (meaning Pure Heart), the main centre of her activity. Her  selfless service and unique devotion, not only to helpless fellow-Indians but  also to the cause of world peace, earned her and India the first Nobel Peace  Prize. 
 
  HARGOBIND KHORANA (b.  1922) : Hargobind Khorana was awarded the  Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1968. Of Indian origin, Dr Khorana was born in  Raipur, Punjab (now in Pakistan). He took his doctoral degree in Chemistry from  Liverpool University and joined the University of Wisconsin as a Faculty Member  in 1960. His major breakthrough in the field of Medicine—interpreting the  genetic code and analyzing its function in protein synthesis—fetched him the  Nobel Prize.
 
 
 
 
 
 
  CHANDRASHEKAR VENKATARAMAN (1888-1970) : India’s  first Nobel Prize for Physics was claimed in 1930 by the renowned physicist Sir  C.V. Raman. Born at Thiruvanaikkaval near  iruchirapalli in Tamil Nadu, Raman  studied at Presidency College, Chennai. Later, he served as Professor of Physics  at Calcutta University. Recipient of many honors and awards, including the title  of ‘Sir’, Sir C.V. Raman received the Nobel Prize for an important optics   research, in which he discovered that diffused light contained rays of other  wavelengths—what is now popularly known as Raman Effect. His theory discovered  in 1928 explains the change in the frequency of light passing through a  transparent medium. 
 
 
 
   RABINDRANATH TAGORE (1861-1941) : Rabindranath  Tagore was the first Indian ever to receive a Nobel Prize. Popularly  known as Gurudev, India’s Poet Laureate Tagore was born on 7 May 1861 in  Kolkata. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in recognition of his  work Geetanjali, a  collection of poems, in 1913. Tagore wrote many love lyrics.  Geetanjali and Sadhana are among his important works. The poet, dramatist and  novelist is also the author of India’s National Anthem. In 1901 he founded the  famous Santiniketan which later came to be known as Vishwabharati  University.
 
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