NAME | FATHER NAME | Alloted under category | RANK | |
MAYANK MAURYA | RAMA PATI MAURYA | BC | 906 | |
RAVI KUMAR | SURESH CHANDRA | BC | 1084 | |
DIVYA KUMAR | | BC | 1205 | |
SURAJ KUMAR YADAV | RAM KRIPAL YADAV | BC | 1243 | |
MAHESH KUMAR GUPTA | ASHOK KUMAR GUPTA | BC | 1309 | |
SHREYASH PAL | PUTTAN LAL PAL | BC | 1318 | |
DHARMENDRA YADAV | SHISHU PAL SINGH | BCAF | 2794 | |
KAVITA GUPTA | PYARE LAL GUPTA | BC | 3308 | |
HARISH CHANDRA SINGH | SUBHASH SINGH | BCPH | 23872 | |
SAUMYA SHUKLA | SHYAM SHANKAR SHUKLA | OP | 1002 | |
SHUBHAM SHUKLA | UPENDRANATH SHUKLA | OP | 257 | |
DHIRENDRA PRATAP SINGH CHAUHAN | BRIJPAL SINGH CHAUHAN | OP | 551 | |
RACHIT KHANNA | JITENDRA K KHANNA | OP | 202 | |
SHUBHAM KAPOOR | R | OP | 588 | |
ABHISHEK MISHRA | DIVYA PRAKASH MISHRA | OP | 612 | |
ARPIT GUPTA | R B GUPTA | OP | 685 | |
VARUN JAIN | SUBHASH CHAND JAIN | OP | 695 | |
PRABODH RAJPUT | RAJA RAM RAJPUT | OP | 701 | |
SHAILESH KHANDELWAL | RAJ KUMAR KHANDELWAL | OP | 710 | |
LOVE BANSAL | JITENDRA KUMAR BANSAL | OP | 711 | |
GAURAV AGARWAL | PRAKASH CHANDRA AGARWAL | OP | 718 | |
MOHIT GUPTA | BRAJESH KUMAR GUPTA | OP | 772 | |
MANVENDRA MISHRA | VINOD MISHRA | OP | 786 | |
TOYAJ BHUSHAN MISHRA | S B MISHRA | OPAF | 924 | |
VARTIKA TEWARI | | OP | 1216 | |
AKANKSHA SHUKLA | VIJAY KUMAR SHUKLA | OP | 1320 | |
VIGYA | VINOD KUMAR SAXENA | OP | 1429 | |
SONALI SAHU | SHYAM BIHARI SAHU | BCPH | 20383 | |
SHASHI KANT JATAV | RAM NATH JATAV | SC | 5060 | |
SHARDUL SINGH | KULDEEP SINGH | SC | 5601 | |
JITENDRA KUMAR | KRISHAN BIHARI | SC | 6317 | |
SHUBHAM SIDDHARTH | GYANENDER KUMAR | SC | 6484 | |
PAWAN KUMAR | RAM CHANDRA PRASAD | SC | 6590 | |
RENU RAVAT | TULSI RAM | SC | 2946 | |
SHIVAM NAYAK | RADHEY SHYAM NAYAK | ST | 17890 | |
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
ADMISSION DETAILS OF THE YEAR 2009-10
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
ELECTRICAL ENGG. DEPARTMENT AT HBTI KANPUR
Electrical Engineering Department
The Department of Electrical Engineering, established in the year 1965, is counted in the premier departments of the institute. The number of the students having completed their graduation program has reached the 1000 figure mark.
The pass out students have proved their mettle in various private, public sector and multinational companies both in India, and abroad. Electrical Engineers rolling out of the institute are well groomed in the core areas of Machine Design and Power Generation/Transmission/Distribution as well as Software Development/Handling and R&D work.
The continuous updating in the curriculum polishes the budding engineers, in a way, to meet the challenges posed by newer technologies and reach the ever-expanding horizons. The experience, expertise and enriched knowledge of the faculty members are the ‘distinguished features’ of our department. The department has an annual intake of 30 students in the undergraduate B.Tech program.
The department is continuously engaged in research and development activities; several National and State level seminars; Technical festivals are part of its annual program. National level technical festival called “RESONANCE” is organized every after four year, it being an event of a king, where in core expertise is sought, the speakers delivering lectures on the latest technology in the field of electrical engineering and related fields; it gets support from the distinguished alumni of the department, and is scheduled to be held this year.
The department has been accredited by National Board of Accreditation, (NAC).
With an eye towards growth and personality development of students, an association named AEE (Association of Electrical Engineers) has been formed which organizes different student activities round the year.
A workshop on emerging challenges in power system was organized in the department from October 29 th 2005 to October 31 st 2005. Speakers of high repute as Professor S.K. Srivastava ,Dean R & D IIT Kanpur , Engineer P.K. Asthana , Panki power plant, Professor B.K. Tyagi, IT BHU, Professor M.K. Verma , IT BHU, gave their views on the topic .The experts discussed on emerging challenges in power scenario and gave their theories on futuristic technology on restructuring of power systems and non conventional energy sources. For the hands on experience, lab sessions were held for the participants.
Thursday, June 3, 2010
BACKGROUND OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
1. Too much time and emphasis are placed on topics that are not widely used while topics that have widespread use often receive cursory treatment. One example is the excessive time and attention spent on various solution techniques for ordinary differential equations. Although understanding the structure of solutions for first- and second-order, constant coefficient differential equations is important for electrical engineering problems, more useful and widely used are Laplace transforms and related techniques.Yet these latter topics are often given cursory treatment in favor of more general structure theory.
2. There is often a disconnect between the knowledge that students gain in mathematics courses and their ability to apply such knowledge in engineering situations. Perhaps, the use of more engineering or real life examples will reduce this disconnect. Based on current learning theory, efforts to focus on underlying principles (not necessarily abstract statements of mathematical concepts) that are applicable in many different contexts are effective in helping students to transfer knowledge.
3. Current mathematics curricula for engineering are front-end loaded. Consequently, as a matter of timing, many topics are presented too early and cannot be reinforced soon enough through engineering applications before students forget the topics.
4. Too often, mathematics is taught as a list of procedures or as theorem-proof exercises without grounding the mathematics in reality. While we do not expect mathematics instructors to be well versed in all engineering applications, we would like examples of mathematical techniques explained in terms of the reality they represent. We strongly urge that team taught mathematics courses be considered. Teams would consist of mathematics and electrical engineering professors. We feel that team-teaching could better motivate and enthuse our students.
5. Failure to utilize appropriate technological tools while continuing to focus on mastery of symbolic manipulation often encourages memorization and rote algorithm practice at the expense of conceptual and graphical comprehension. Introducing symbolic manipulation programs, e.g., MathCAD, Mathematica, Maple, would be valuable to subsequent electrical engineering courses whose instructors choose to allow/encourage students to perform routine symbolic and numerical manipulations using such programs.
6. The first two years of mathematics that support instruction in electrical engineering should present students with conceptual understanding of mathematical disciplines other than just single variable calculus, multivariable calculus and ordinary differential equations. Other mathematical subjects that are important for electrical engineering students include linear algebra, probability and stochastic processes, statistics, and discrete mathematics.
Electrical engineering is an exciting and creative profession. Those engineers possessing an understanding and facility of mathematics have an opportunity to be among the most creative of designers. Students need to know and to feel how important, how useful, and how meaningful mathematics is. Many courses stress the drudgery, not the beauty. This needs to be changed.