Happy Holi! : The Village Tour

Holi, the festival of colors, was celebrated this year on 27th and 28th of March all over India. I decided to move to my own village, Kasturwa and then to Surya’s Village, Shiv Patti, on this occasion. Here are some images from the events  taken with my Nokia device, which I thought were worth sharing.

ENJOY READING! Err… Watching.

Continue reading

Analysis of Meteorological Data of Pantnagar Weather Station

About: This post is actually a summary of a research project I took under INSPIRE-SHE Scholarship Program by Dept. of Science and Technology, Govt. of India. My plan was to make the content open-source on the web that faults could be corrected by time. The language is simple and very easy to understand and the ease of understanding is focused to A-level (10+2) students and beyond.

Continue reading

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2011 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

The concert hall at the Syndey Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 53,000 times in 2011. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 20 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

Click here to see the complete report.

Welcome 2012 – The National Mathematical Year in India

Srinivasa Ramanujan

Srinivasa Ramanujan (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I was very pleased on reading this news that Government of India has decided to celebrate the upcoming year 2012 as the National Mathematical Year. This is 125th birth anniversary of math-wizard Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887-1920). He is one of the greatest mathematicians India ever produced. Well this is ‘not’ the main reason for appointing 2012 as National Mathematical Year as it is only a tribute to him. Main reason is the emptiness of mathematical awareness in Indian Students. First of all there are only a few graduating with Mathematics and second, many not choosing mathematics as a primary subject at primary levels. As mathematics is not a very earning stream, most students want to go for professional courses such as Engineering, Medicine, Business and Management. Remaining graduates who enjoy science, skip through either physical or chemical sciences. Engineering craze has developed the field of Computer Science but not so much in theoretical Computer Science, which is one of the most recommended branches in mathematics. Statistics and Combinatorics are almost ‘died’ in many of Indian Universities and Colleges. No one wants to deal with those brain cracking math-problems: neither students nor professors. Institutes where mathematics is being taught are struggling with the lack of talented lecturers. Talented mathematicians don’t want to teach here since they aren’t getting much money and ordinary lecturers can’t do much more. India is almost ‘zero’ in Mathematics and some people including critics still roar that we discovered ‘zero’, ‘pi’ and we had Ramanujan.

Continue reading

Interesting and Must Read Papers and Articles in Mathematics

Mathematics is beautiful and there is no place of ugly mathematics in this world. Mathematics is originated from creativity and it develops with research papers. Research Papers aren’t only very detailed and tough to understand for general student, but also interesting. Here, I have collected the list of some excellent articles and research papers (belong mainly to Math) which I have read and are easily available online. The main source of this list is ArXiv.org and you may find several research papers on ArXiv by visiting
http://arxiv.org/.

If you know any other paper/article which you find extremely interesting and that is not listed here, then please do comment mentioning the article name and URL. Papers/articles are cited as paper-title first, then http url and at last author-name.

[It is better adviced to open these links to a new tab/window for smooth reading. :) ]

Continue reading

Newton’s Trinity College Notebook is Online!

Cambridge Digital Library had made Newton’s exceptionally great works online.
Some times ago they added the Trinity College Notebook by Isaac Newton, which he used to teach in the college in 17th century.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

 

 

Read More About the Project Here.

List of other works of Newton can be found at www.newton.ac.uk/newton.html.