Raman was a professor of Physics at the Calcutta University for the next fifteen years. It was here that his work on optics got recognized.
Raman won the 1930Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on the scattering of light and for the discovery of the effect named after him. Raman spectroscopy is named after him for it uses this effect. It was the first time that an Indian scholar who studied wholly in India received the Nobel Prize. An interesting anecdote goes that he was offered a toast during the Nobel function. Being a strict teetotaller he responded, "Sir! You have seen the Raman effect on alcohol! Please do not try to see the alcohol effect on Raman."
Raman was born on 7 November 1888 in his maternal grandfather's house, in a small village of Thiruvanaikaval near Tiruchirapalli (Trichonopoly in those days), on the bank's of Kaveri in Tamil Nadu.
Raman was among the founders of the Indian Science Congress, which was established in 1914 and served as its Secretary for several years and also became its President.
Raman was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1924 in recognition of his outstanding researches in physical optics, molecular diffraction of light, X-ray scattering by liquids and a molecular anisotropy.