Try GOLD - Free
Flash drive
Hindustan Times Pune
|February 01, 2026
Space isn't just an endless canvas to be studied at leisure; there is real-time change we'll miss if we aren't looking for it, says astronomer Kulkarni. Over decades, he has changed how his peers view the heavens. His 'field-defining' work just won him the Royal Astronomical Society's Gold Medal. Unusually, Kulkarni switches areas of focus every few years. 'I'm not aiming for a Nobel,' he says, smiling. 'A life of discovery... what more can one want?'
He likes to joke that his initials are SRK, but he hobnobs with a very different set of stars.
Astronomer Shrinivas Ramchandra Kulkarni, 69, loves bunnies, is mercilessly irreverent, and switches focus areas every five years. "I like to identify emerging fields, make a splash and then exit, once the field has become popular," he says.
It's an unusual approach, but one that's served him well. Kulkarni, who teaches astronomy and planetary science at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), won the $1.2 million Shaw Prize in Astronomy (instituted by Hong Kong businessman Run Run Shaw and known as the Nobel of the East) in 2024, and followed that up, this January, with the highest award handed out by UK's Royal Astronomical Society (RAS), its Gold Medal.
Kulkarni's area of specialisation is time-domain astronomy, or the study of real-time change in the universe. What does this mean?
Rather than just an endless canvas to be studied at leisure, he and others like him argue that the universe is also a bit like a bowl of popcorn in the microwave.
Dramatic changes are occurring on all sorts of timescales, from seconds to years, and are visible, if one is watching for them, and knows where to look.
Kulkarni has helped define what to look for, and where, in ways that the RAS citation calls "field-defining... innovative and groundbreaking".
For an indication of how complex this work is, consider that, even with popcorn, one would have to figure out which kernels to focus on, in what order, and how much information to record before moving on to the next one about to pop.
In astrophysics, the "kernels" consists of things like pulsars and gamma-ray bursts that cannot be seen; only sensed by certain space telescopes. And are gone in a flash.
This story is from the February 01, 2026 edition of Hindustan Times Pune.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Hindustan Times Pune
Hindustan Times Pune
SAUDI-PAKISTAN MUTUAL DEFENCE PACT WILL NOT INCLUDE TURKEY
Turkey will not join a mutual defence pact between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, a source close to the Saudi military told AFP on Saturday, after a Turkish official said earlier this month they had entered talks aimed at entering the alliance.
1 min
February 01, 2026
Hindustan Times Pune
Promising wrestler Antim Panghal wants to focus on aggressive starts
Antim Panghal has raised the bar for herself this year.
2 mins
February 01, 2026
Hindustan Times Pune
Sunetra Pawar sworn in, finance goes to Fadnavis
Rajya Sabha member Sunetra Pawar took oath as the first woman deputy chief minister of Maharashtra at a low-key ceremony on Saturday evening, three days after her husband and former Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) chief Ajit Pawar died in a plane crash.
1 min
February 01, 2026
Hindustan Times Pune
S.1T. FORMED TO PROBE SUSPECTED SUICIDE OF CJ ROY
A special investigation team (SIT) of Karnataka Police has been formed to investigate the suspected suicide of Confident Group founder and chairman CJ Roy, police said on Saturday, a day after he was found dead with bullet injuries by Income Tax authorities while they were searching his firm's office in Bengaluru.
1 min
February 01, 2026
Hindustan Times Pune
How to survive an asteroid
When the Chicxulub impactor hit, the animals that had the best chance of surviving turned out to be those with wings. But how did this incredible ability to lift off from the ground emerge among vertebrates? New finds are reshaping our understanding of how feathered dinosaurs evolved, to take the dazzling array of shapes and colours that adorn our skies today. Find a perch and read on
6 mins
February 01, 2026
Hindustan Times Pune
Shuttler Devika continues run to make Thailand Masters final
Upcoming Indian shuttler Devika Sihag made a brilliant comeback to beat Chinese Taipei's Huang Yu-Hsun and enter the women's singles final of the $250,000 Thailand Masters in Bangkok on Saturday.
1 min
February 01, 2026
Hindustan Times Pune
Venezuela okays energy cooperation with India
Interim president Delcy Rodriguez of oil-rich Venezuela said Friday she had agreed on energy cooperation with India, a day after Caracas opened its hydrocarbons sector to private companies.
1 min
February 01, 2026
Hindustan Times Pune
Navy, coast guard ALHs likely to fly again in April
Plane maker Hindustan Aeronautics Limited has fixed a nagging flaw afflicting a key component of the transmission system of the navy and coast guard’s Dhruv advanced light helicopters and they are likely to be cleared to fly again in April, ending the longest grounding of an aircraft in the Indian military, HAL chief DK Sunil said on Saturday.
1 mins
February 01, 2026
Hindustan Times Pune
Pavitra Punia's wedding pushed to six months later
Actor Pavitra Punia, who was all set to tie the knot in March with a US-based businessman, will no longer be getting married next month.
1 min
February 01, 2026
Hindustan Times Pune
Spring may be cut short as IMD forecasts warmer Feb
The India Meteorological Department (IMD) on Saturday predicted warm and dry weather in February, warning that above-normal temperatures are likely to accelerate crop growth and shorten the duration of Rabi crops, particularly in northwest and central regions.
1 min
February 01, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
