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Self-Study Report
Presidency University Self-Study RepoRt For Submission to the National Assessment and Accreditation Council Presidency University Kolkata 2016 (www.presiuniv.ac.in) Volume-3 Self-Study Report (Volume-3) Departmental Inputs 1 Faculty of Natural and Mathematical Sciences Self-Study RepoRt For Submission to the National Assessment and Accreditation Council Presidency University Kolkata 2016 (www.presiuniv.ac.in) Volume-3 Departmental Inputs Faculty of Natural and Mathematical Sciences Table of Contents Volume-3 Departmental Inputs Faculty of Natural and Mathematical Sciences 1. Biological Sciences 1 2. Chemistry 52 3. Economics 96 4. Geography 199 5. Geology 144 6. Mathematics 178 7. Physics 193 8. Statistics 218 Presidency University Evaluative Report of the Department : Biological Sciences 1. Name of the Department : Biological Sciences 2. Year of establishment : 2013 3. Is the Department part of a School/Faculty of the university? Faculty of Natural and Mathematical Sciences 4. Names of programmes offered (UG, PG, M.Phil., Ph.D., Integrated Masters; Integrated Ph.D., D.Sc., D.Litt., etc.) : B.Sc (Hons) in Biological Sciences, M.sc. in Biological Sciences, PhD. 5. Interdisciplinary programmes and de partments involved: ● The Biological Sciences Department is an interdisciplinary department created by merging the Botany, Zoology and Physiology of the erstwhile Presidency College. The newly introduced UG (Hons) and PG degree courses Biological Sciences cut across the disciplines of life science and also amalgamated the elements of Biochemistry, Statistics and Physics in the curricula. ● The UG elective General Education or ‘GenEd’ programmes, replace the earlier system of taking ‘pass course’ subjects and introduce students to a broad range of topics from across the disiplines. -
Annual Report 2016-17
Annual2016-17 Report SATYENDRA NATH BOSE NATIONAL CENTRE FOR BASIC SCIENCES Annual Report 2016-17 SATYENDRA NATH BOSE NATIONAL CENTRE FOR BASIC SCIENCES Annual Report 2016-17 Satyendra Nath Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences Publisher Satyendra Nath Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences Design & Print Cygnus Advertising India Pvt. Ltd. Acknowledgement Annual Report of the ‘Satyendra Nath Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences’ is a brief representation of its activities of a financial year. The report reflects research activities, administrative activities, academic progress and achievement of young research scholars, development of infrastructure and facilities, and establishment of network with advanced research groups around the world. It’s seventh time I have been assigned the job of compilation of Annual Report of the Centre. To prepare the Annual Report, all the faculty members and sections of the Centre spent their valuable time to provide respective data. It is a time bound work to be completed within a short span of time. This is the first time the Annual Report is translated and typed in Hindi within the Centre. The Hindi Officer, Sadhana Tiwari has given sincere fatigueless effort to translate the entire Annual Report in Hindi and library staff - Gurudas Ghosh and Ananya Sarkar typed the Annual Report in Hindi within a very limited time period. Words won’t be suffice to describe the painstaking labour of Hindi translation team. I would like to acknowledge the sincere efforts and labour of my Library staff - Gurudas Ghosh, Ananya Sarkar and Amit Roy without whom the work could not be completed within the stipulated time. -
Academic Report ( 2018–19 )
Academic Report ( 2018–19 ) Harish - Chandra Research Institute Chhatnag Road, Jhunsi Prayagraj (Allahabad), India 211019 Contents 1. About the Institute 2 2. Director’s Report 4 3. List of Governing Council Members 5 4. Staff list 6 5. Academic Report - Mathematics 15 6. Academic Report - Physics 100 7. HRI Colloquia 219 8. Mathematics Talks and Seminars 220 9. Physics Talks and Seminars 222 10. Recent Graduates 226 11. Publications 227 12. Preprints 236 13. About the Computer Section 242 14. Library 244 15. Construction Activity 247 1 About The Institute History: The Harish-Chandra Research Institute is one of the premier research in- stitutes in the country. It is an autonomous institution fully funded by the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE), Government of India. The Institute was founded as the Mehta Research Institute of Mathematics and Mathematical Physics (MRI). On 10th Oct 2000 the Institute was renamed as Harish-Chandra Research Institute (HRI) after the acclaimed mathematician, the late Prof Harish-Chandra. MRI started with the efforts of Dr. B. N. Prasad, a mathematician at the University of Allahabad, with initial support from the B. S. Mehta Trust, Kolkata. Dr. Prasad was succeeded in January 1966 by Dr. S. R. Sinha, also of Allahabad University. He was followed by Prof. P. L. Bhatnagar as the first formal Director. After an interim period, in January 1983 Prof. S. S. Shrikhande joined as the next Director of the Institute. During his tenure the dialogue with the DAE entered into decisive stage and a review committee was constituted by the DAE to examine the Institute’s future. -
Arxiv:2102.01527V5 [Physics.Soc-Ph] 8 Apr 2021
Limiting Value of the Kolkata Index for Social Inequality and a Possible Social Constant Asim Ghosh1, ∗ and Bikas K Chakrabarti2, 3, 4, † 1Raghunathpur College, Raghunathpur, Purulia 723133, India. 2Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, Kolkata 700064, India. 3Economic Research Unit, Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata 700108, India. 4S. N. Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences, Kolkata 700106, India Based on some analytic structural properties of the Gini and Kolkata indices for social inequality, as obtained from a generic form of the Lorenz function, we make a conjecture that the limiting (effective saturation) value of the above-mentioned indices is about 0.865. This, together with some more new observations on the citation statistics of individual authors (including Nobel laureates), suggests that about 14% of people or papers or social conflicts tend to earn or attract or cause about 86% of wealth or citations or deaths respectively in very competitive situations in markets, universities or wars. This is a modified form of the (more than a) century old 80 − 20 law of Pareto in economy (not visible today because of various welfare and other strategies) and gives an universal value (0.86) of social (inequality) constant or number. I. INTRODUCTION Unlike the universal constants in physical sciences, like the Gravitational Constant of Newton’s Gravity law, Boltzmann Constant of thermodynamics or Planck’s Constant of Quantum Mechanics, there is no established universal constant yet in social sciences. There have of course been suggestion of several possible candidates. Stanley Milgram’s experiment [1] to determine the social ‘contact-distance’ between any two per- sons of the society, by trying to deliver letters from and to random people through personal chains of friends or acquaintances, suggested ‘Six Degrees of Separation’. -
Jawharalal Nehru Annual Rep-2009-10.Pmd
ISSN.0973-9319 ANNUAL REPORT 2009-2010 JAWAHARLAL NEHRU CENTRE FOR ADVANCED SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH (A Deemed to be University) Jakkur, Bangalore – 560 064. Website: http://www.jncasr.ac.in CONTENTS Page No The Centre 1. Foreword ..................................................................................................................................................... 1 2. Introduction ................................................................................................................................................ 2 3. Objectives .................................................................................................................................................... 3 4. Progress ....................................................................................................................................................... 4 5. Highlights of research and other activities .............................................................................................. 6 6. Activities Chart ............................................................................................................................................ 10 7. Organisation Chart ..................................................................................................................................... 11 The Organisation 1. Council of Management ............................................................................................................................ 12 2. Finance Committee ................................................................................................................................... -
Download Conference Schedule
National Conference on RECENT TRENDS IN CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS October 31 – November 3, 2017 Conference Schedule Tuesday, 31st October 2017 Venue: Bose Institute (Unified Campus), College More, Plot No. 80, EN Block, Sector V, Salt Lake, Kolkata 700091 8.00 – 9.00 Breakfast / Registration RTCMP 2017 9.00 - 10.30 Inauguration RTCMP 2017 10.30 – 11.00 High Tea / Registration Session I Venue: Auditorium Session Chair : Prof. Indrani Bose, Bose Institute 11.00 – 11.30 IL 1 - Prof. S. N. Kaul, University of Hyderabad “Electrical- and magneto-transport in nanocrystalline band ferromagnets” 11.30 – 12.00 IL 2 - Dr. C. S. Sundar, IGCAR Kalpakkam “Magneto transport in Topological States of Matter” 12.00 – 12.30 IL 3 – Prof. B. N. Dev, IACS Kolkata “Loss of ferromagnetism and emergence of superconductivity in cobalt” 12.30 – 13.00 IL 4 – Prof. S. B. Ogale, IISER Pune “Synthetic manipulation of the dimensionality and properties of hybrid perovskite systems in search of novel functionalities and applications” 13.00 – 14.00 Lunch / Registration 14.00 – 15.00 Poster Session Venue : Dining Hall SSP001-0020 NTF001-026 SMP001-015 Session II Venue: Auditorium Session Chair: Prof. S. N. Kaul, University of Hyderabad 15.00 – 15.30 IL 5 – Prof. Bikash K. Chakraborty, SINP Kolkata “Quantum Tunnelling & Ergodicity in Quantum Spin Glasses” 15.30 – 16.00 IL 6 – Dr. Abhishek Singh, IISc Bangalore “Rational design of high-performance thermoelectric materials” 16.00 – 16.30 IL 7 – Prof. S. M. Yusuf, BARC Mumbai “Physics of Novel Magnetic States in Reduced Dimensions” 16.30 – 17.00 Tea Break / Registration Session III Venue: Lecture Hall 1 Session Chair: Prof. -
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research NAAC Self-Study Report, 2016 VOLUME 3 VOLUME 3 1 Departments, Schools, Research Centres and Campuses School of Technology and School of Mathematics Computer Science (STCS) School of Natural Sciences Chemical Sciences Astronomy and (DCS) Main Campus Astrophysics (DAA) Biological (Colaba) High Energy Physics Sciences (DBS) (DHEP) Nuclear and Atomic Condensed Matter Physics (DNAP) Physics & Materials Theoretical Physics (DTP) Science (DCMPMS) Mumbai Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education (HBCSE) Pune National Centre for Radio Astrophysics (NCRA) Bengaluru National Centre for Biological Sciences (NCBS) International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS) Centre for Applicable Mathematics (CAM) Hyderabad TIFR Centre for Interdisciplinary Sciences (TCIS) VOLUME 3 2 SECTION B3 Evaluative Report of Departments (Research Centres) VOLUME 3 3 Index VOLUME 1 A-Executive Summary B1-Profile of the TIFR Deemed University B1-1 B1-Annexures B1-A-Notification Annex B1-A B1-B-DAE National Centre Annex B1-B B1-C-Gazette 1957 Annex B1-C B1-D-Infrastructure Annex B1-D B1-E-Field Stations Annex B1-E B1-F-UGC Review Annex B1-F B1-G-Compliance Annex B1-G B2-Criteria-wise inputs B2-I-Curricular B2-I-1 B2-II-Teaching B2-II-1 B2-III-Research B2-III-1 B2-IV-Infrastructure B2-IV-1 B2-V-Student Support B2-V-1 B2-VI-Governance B2-VI-1 B2-VII-Innovations B2-VII-1 B2-Annexures B2-A-Patents Annex B2-A B2-B-Ethics Annex B2-B B2-C-IPR Annex B2-C B2-D-MOUs Annex B2-D B2-E-Council of Management Annex B2-E B2-F-Academic Council and Subject -
3Rd Annual Conference on Quantum Condensed Matter (QMAT 2020)
3rd Annual Conference on Quantum Condensed Matter (QMAT 2020) DAY-1 (D1) (7 September, 2020) Time 9.18- Welcome Address 9.28 Parallel-1 (P1) Parallel-2 (P2) Chairperson: Pinaki Majumdar Chairperson: Krishnendu Sengupta 9.30- T1 T. V. Ramakrishnan, IISC, Bangalore Amit Dutta, IIT Kanpur 10.00 (Large Linear Electrical Resistivity of Metals) (Unitary preparation of topological systems: Emergent Bulk boundary Correspondence) 10.02- T2 Anindya Das, IISC, Bangalore Arnab Sen, IACS, Kolkata 10.32 (Anomalous Coulomb Drag between InAs (Periodically driven Rydberg chains: Floquet Nanowire and Graphene Heterostructures ) quantum scars, dynamic freezing and prethermal phases) 10.34- T3 Anamitra Mukherjee, NISER, Bhubaneswar Arijit Saha, IOP, Bhubaneswar 11.04 (Interplay of frustration and interaction at finite (Metal-Insulator transition in a Periodically temperature in the Hubbard model) driven Interacting Triangular lattice) 11.06- T4 Priyanka Mohan, TIFR, Mumbai Roopayan Ghosh, IACS, Kolkata 11.21 (Topological Transitions in Twisted Double (A Floquet Perturbation Theory on periodically bilayer Graphene models) driven weakly interacting fermions) 11.21- T5 Debika Debnath, University of Hyderabad Sourav Bhattacharjee, IIT Kanpur 11.36 (Metallicity at the Cross-over Region of The Spin (Dynamical generation of Majorana edge Density Wave and Charge Density Wave) correlations in a ramped Kitaev chain coupled to nonthermal dissipative channels) BREAK Chairperson: Tanusri Saha Dasgupta Chairperson: Priya Mahadevan 11.51- T6 Mandar Deshmukh, TIFR, Mumbai -
B3-XIV International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS)
B3-XIV International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS) Evaluative Report of Departments (B3) XIV-ICTS-1 International Centre for Theoretical Sciences 1. Name of the Department : International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS) 2. Year of establishment : 2007 3. Is the Department part of a School/Faculty of the university? It is a TIFR Centre. 4. Names of programmes offered (UG, PG, M.Phil., Ph.D., Integrated Masters; Integrated Ph.D., D.Sc., D.Litt., etc.) 1. Ph.D. 2. Integrated M.Sc.-Ph.D. Students may avail of an M.Phil. degree as an early exit option provided they have finished a specified set of requirements. However, there is no separate M.Phil. programme. 5. Interdisciplinary programmes and departments involved There is a joint programme between ICTS and NCBS which involves active interaction between faculty members working in the areas of the interface between Physics and Biology. The programme also involves the participation of graduate students and postdocs and setting up of an experimental lab at ICTS. This programme is at an initial stage. 6. Courses in collaboration with other universities, industries, foreign institutions, etc. ICTS currently has a small faculty strength (16). In view of this we have an MOU with IISc Physics department, whereby students of ICTS can take courses offered at IISc. Faculty members at ICTS also participate in teaching courses at IISc. TIFR NAAC Self-Study Report 2016 XIV-ICTS-2 Evaluative Report of Departments (B3) 7. Details of programmes discontinued, if any, with reasons There are no such programmes. 8. Examination System: Annual/Semester/Trimester/Choice Based Credit System 100% Semester system Students at ICTS are offered a Course work programme based on a mixture of compulsory Core Courses, choice-based Elective Courses and compulsory Project Work, on topics of their choice. -
Annual Report 2011-2012
Annual Report 2011-2012 INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS BHUBANESWAR INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS Address P.O. Sainik School Bhubaneswar - 751 005 Odisha, India Phone: +91-674- 2306 400/444/555 Fax: +91-674- 2300142 URL: http://www.iopb.res.in Editor Suresh Kumar Patra Published by C. B. Mishra, Registrar Compilation Rajesh Mohapatra Contents About the Institute The Governing Council From the Director’s Desk 1. Facilities ...................................................................................01 2. Academic Programmes ......................................................17 3. Research ................................................................................23 4. Publications ............................................................................57 5. Seminars and Colloquia .......................................................67 6. Conferences & other events..............................................77 7. Outreach ...............................................................................89 8. Personnel................................................................................93 9. Audited Statement of Accounts .....................................101 About the Institute Institute of Physics, Bhubaneswar is an autonomous research institution within the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE), Government of India. The Institute was established in 1972 by the Government of Orissa and continues to receive financial assistance from them. The Institute has a vibrant research programme in the fields of theoretical and experimental -
23Sep 2014 Iasc AR.Pmd
AANNUALNNUAL RREPORTEPORT 2013–2014 INDIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES BANGALORE Address Indian Academy of Sciences C.V. Raman Avenue Post Box No. 8005 Sadashivanagar P.O. Bangalore 560 080 Telephone 91-80-2266-1200 (EPABX) Fax 91-80-2361-6094 Email [email protected] Website www.ias.ac.in Contents Introduction 4 Council 5 Fellowship 5 Associates 8 Publications 8 Repository of Scientific Publications 15 of Academy Fellows Discussion Meetings 15 Mid-Year Meeting 2013 17 Annual Meeting 2013 20 Raman Professor 24 Academy Public Lectures 25 Science Education Programmes 27 ‘Women in Science’ 45 Panel Programmes Hindi Workshops 46 National Science Day 47 Additional Hostel Facility at Jalahalli 48 Dainik Bhaskar National Education 48 Leadership Award 2013 Academy Finances 49 Acknowledgements 49 Tables 50 Annexures 52 Statement of Accounts 61 The Academy was founded in 1934 by Sir C V Raman with the main objective of promoting the progress and upholding the cause of science (both pure and applied). It was registered as a Society under the Societies Registration Act on 24 April 1934. The Academy commenced functioning with 65 Fellows and the formal inauguration took place on 31 July 1934 at the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore. On the Introduction afternoon of that day, its first general meeting of 1 Fellows was held, during which Sir C V Raman was elected its President and the draft constitution of the Academy was approved and adopted. The first issue of the Academy Proceedings was published in July 1934. The present report covering the period from April 2013 to March 2014 represents the eightieth year of the Academy. -
INSPIRE Internship Camp Pt. Ravishankar Shukla University, Raipur Sponsored by Department of Science & Technology “Golden Jubilee Year ”
INSPIRE Internship Camp Pt. Ravishankar Shukla University, Raipur Sponsored by Department of Science & Technology “Golden Jubilee Year ” INSPIRE (Innovation in Science Pursuit for Inspired Research) is an extremely use ful and unique mi ssion of Department of Science and Technology, New Delhi, Govt of India. The aim of this program is to attract talent to the excitement and study of basic science s at an early stage and to help nation build required critical resource pool for strengthing basic and natural sciences. INSPIRE Scheme has included following three components. (i) Scheme for Early Attraction of Talents for Science (SEATS) (ii) Scholarships for Higher Education (SHE) (iii) Assured Opportunity for Research Careers (AORC) A stri king feature of the programme is that it does not believe in conducting competitive examinations for identification of talent in any level. It believes in and relies on the efficacy of the existing edu cational structure for identification of talent. Pt. Ravishankar Shukla University has been organizing Summer and Winter camps on regular basis for toppers (top 1%) of Chhattisgarh St ate and CBSE from Board examinations in C lass – X. The university had so far organized nine internship camps in which about 1625 school students from all parts of Chhattisgarh participated (Table I) . TABLE - I S. CAMP Duration No. of Coordinator No. Students Participated 1. Summer Camp June 4-8, 2010 155 Prof. Atanu K. Pati 2. Summer Camp June 10-14, 2010 164 Prof. Atanu K. Pati 3. Winter Camp Dec. 2-6, 2010 152 Prof. Atanu K. Pati 4. Winter Camp Dec. 15-19, 2010 157 Prof.