logo
#

Latest news with #IndianInstituteofTechnologyGandhinagar

At its 14th convocation ceremony, IIT Gandhinagar awards degrees to 668 students – its largest graduating cohort so far
At its 14th convocation ceremony, IIT Gandhinagar awards degrees to 668 students – its largest graduating cohort so far

Indian Express

time17 hours ago

  • Business
  • Indian Express

At its 14th convocation ceremony, IIT Gandhinagar awards degrees to 668 students – its largest graduating cohort so far

As many as 668 students were awarded their degrees – the highest number in the history of the institution – as the Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar (IITGN) held the convocation ceremony of its 'largest graduating class' at Mahatma Mandir on Saturday. In another record, 111 Ph D degrees were awarded to students at the institute's 14th convocation ceremony. While reflecting on his professional journey and leadership experience, chief guest Aditya Ghosh, the co-founder of Akasa Air, highlighted India's economic growth and opportunities, emphasising the importance of pursuing passion, building trust, and lifelong learning. He stressed the need for 'a growth mindset, challenging status quo, and integrating sustainability into all endeavours while underscoring the importance of humility, continuous improvement, and choosing the right role models'. He encouraged the graduates to focus on 'internal risks like complacency and arrogance, to view setbacks as learning opportunities, and to strive for impactful success, measured by the lives they influence positively'. 'Our biggest auditor is the person staring back at us from the mirror,' he noted, emphasising the importance of self-reflection and inner accountability. He gave the graduating class a powerful call to lead lives full of purpose, integrity, and continuous self-improvement, urging them to measure success not by wealth or titles, but by the positive impact they make in the lives of others. This spirit of thoughtful leadership and service was also reflected in the address of Sanjiv Puri, the Chairman of IITGN's Board of Governors. Drawing on his experience as Chairman and Managing Director of ITC Limited, and as a national business leader, he urged students to take pride in their achievements and approach the next chapter of their lives with confidence and purpose. He motivated the graduates to lead with humility and contribute to building a more equitable and sustainable world. At the event, Director's Gold Medal and the President's Gold Medal, two of the Institute's highest recognitions for academic and leadership excellence, were also awarded. Falak Vats received the Director's Gold Medal for PhD, while Hemant Poonia was awarded the Director's Gold Medal for M Tech. Aayushi Jain and Adit Atul Rambhia were recognised with the award for M Sc and MA programmes, and B Tech programme, respectively. The President's Gold Medal was presented to Vala Kiritkumar Hemrajbhai (M Tech), Mohan Murlidhar Tiratkar (M Sc and MA), and Mithil Pechimuthu (B Tech) in recognition of their exceptional academic excellence, leadership qualities, and contributions to IITGN. The institute conferred the Gold Medal for Outstanding Research to four students, 20 Institute Gold Medals to academic toppers from each graduating batch, one award for Outstanding Leadership, and 14 Commendation Awards for exceptional performance in areas such as sports, entrepreneurship, student initiatives, arts and culture, and social service, reflecting IITGN's 'commitment to holistic development and excellence beyond the classroom'. Highlighting the academic and research progress of IITGN, Prof Rajat Moona, the institute's Director, said that a new B Tech programme in Integrated Circuit Design and Technology has been launched, alongside a major curriculum reform that enables B Tech students to pursue their 7th semester off-campus, engaging in internships, research projects, entrepreneurial ventures, or academic collaborations. He spoke of IITGN-X, the Institute's education outreach unit, which has conducted two e-Master's degree programmes in Energy Policy and Regulation and Data Science for Decision Making, and is scheduled to launch a new programme, Applications of Machine Learning in Engineering, in August this year. Two new academic programmes, Master of Design and the Professional Leader's PhD, were approved, alongside ongoing dual-degree collaborations with Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (Japan) and Asian Institute of Technology (Thailand). Beside 111 Ph D scholars, the graduating class of 2025 comprised 141 M Tech students, 135 M Sc students, 36 MA students, 12 PGDIIT students, seven B Tech Dual Major students, 5 B Sc Engineering students, and 221 B Tech students.

IIT Gandhinagar honours 45 students during pre-convocation awards ceremony
IIT Gandhinagar honours 45 students during pre-convocation awards ceremony

Indian Express

time2 days ago

  • Science
  • Indian Express

IIT Gandhinagar honours 45 students during pre-convocation awards ceremony

The Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar (IITGN), on the eve of its 14th convocation, hosted its second annual awards ceremony at Mahatma Mandir on Friday. This year IITGN recognised over 45 medallists, including recipients of the President's and Director's Gold Medals across MTech, MSc, MA, BTech, and PhD programmes. In addition, Institute Gold Medals were awarded to students who demonstrated exceptional academic performance within their respective disciplines, including biology, chemistry, civil, computer science, electrical, mechanical engineering, cognitive science, mathematics, and physics. Special commendations celebrated student leadership, entrepreneurship, research innovation, cultural contributions, sportsmanship, and social service. The commendations honoured students who led social initiatives, spearheaded campus festivals, designed solutions to real-world problems, and pursued creative passions with relentless dedication, according to an official statement. Addressing the awardees during the ceremony, Prof Sivapriya Kirubakaran, Dean, Student Affairs, remarked that the event reinforced IITGN's core philosophy that education goes beyond intellectual accomplishment; it is also about building character, creativity, and compassion. S P Shukla, Chairman, Aero, Defence, Agri Sectors at Mahindra Group, who presided over the ceremony, reflected on the evolving profiles and aspirations of students and the IIT system over the years. He emphasised the need to balance ambition with responsibility. 'Make sure that you allocate your time, energy, and resources to carry out your responsibility towards all three — yourself and your career, your family, and society,' he said.

Stories in Kutch shells: Hunter-gatherers who lived in Gujarat 5,000 years before the Harappans and their cities
Stories in Kutch shells: Hunter-gatherers who lived in Gujarat 5,000 years before the Harappans and their cities

Indian Express

time08-06-2025

  • Science
  • Indian Express

Stories in Kutch shells: Hunter-gatherers who lived in Gujarat 5,000 years before the Harappans and their cities

Researchers at Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar (IITGN) who worked with experts from IIT Kanpur (IITK), Inter University Accelerator Centre (IUAC) Delhi, and Physical Research Laboratory (PRL) Ahmedabad, have reported the presence of humans in the Great Rann of Kutch at least 5,000 years before the Harappans. The conclusion is based on the dating and analysis of remains of shells that were first discovered in the late 19th century. The Anglo-Irish geologist Arthur Beavor Wynne wrote in the Geological Survey of India (GSI) memoirs in 1872 about 'a patch of large broken univalve shells' found 'all over the northern side of Kutch'. The IITGN study suggests links between the Kutch midden site – archaeological sites where large quantities of marine shells, along with bones, tools, and pottery are typically found – and those in Oman and Pakistan along the coast of the northern Arabian Sea where these pre-Harappan communities likely lived. Preliminary results were published in 2023 in Man and Environment, the biannual journal of the Indian Society for Prehistoric and Quaternary Studies ('Evidence for the presence of prehistoric hunter-gatherer communities on Khadir island, Great Rann of Kutch, Gujarat'). A new set of archaeological remains was discovered about a kilometre from the Harappan site of Dholavira near Bambhanka, the southernmost village on Khadir Beyt (island), on the route connecting the island to the Kutch mainland. Khadir was one of the six islands in this region, where sea levels were higher until about 5,000-6,000 years ago, V N Prabhakar, associate professor at the Department of Earth Sciences and Humanities and Social Sciences at IITGN, said. During a visit to the site in 2016, study co-author Shikha Rai and Vikrant Jain, professor at IITGN's Department of Earth Sciences, discovered the 'remains of house complexes' on a hillock 2.5 km to the northwest of Bambhanka. 'The surface had broken potsherds, shell remains, and flakes of carnelian and agate, while on the surface were remnants of walls built with random rubble masonry,' Dr Rai told The Indian Express. On the western edge of this hillock, a trench dug to lay a pipeline exposed a 30-40-cm-thick deposit of shell remains. 'Most of the shell remains display breakage on the central part, presumably to extract meat from them. Similar findings from the Las Bela region of Pakistan are placed between the seventh and fifth millennium BCE, which suggests the possibility of hunter-gatherer communities depending on shell remains as a food source and participating in long distance trade within inland sites,' Dr Rai said. More similar sites were subsequently discovered in and around Khadir. Clues in the mangroves The study indicates the presence of coastal hunter-gatherer communities in the Great Rann of Kutch region who adapted to the mangrove environment to which the shell species identified so far – such as Terebralia palustris, or the giant mangrove whelk – belong. 'Most sites are on river banks, some 2-2.5 km from the coast, while some are deeper inside, which suggests the inhabitants carried the sea shells inland. We could not reach the northern coast, which is a forest area, but there may be more deposits there,' Prof Prabhakar said. Currently, the only remnants of mangroves are found in the Little Rann of Kutch to the southeast of Dholavira, near Lakhpat on the coast to the west, and at an inland location known as Shravan Kavadiya to the northeast of Bhuj, which may have been the ancient shoreline. 'These humans were collecting food wherever it was available in their mangrove environment. They broke the shells and extracted the meat, which they may have even cooked – because some shells are black or grey in colour, suggesting they were heated. The shells may have been discarded at the same place for perhaps 300-400 years,' Prof Prabhakar said. These communities of humans were hunter-gatherers, not farmers, he said. 'Apart from shells, they could have consumed plants, fruits, tubers, or nuts. But there isn't enough evidence yet… Maybe if we excavate one site, we can study the soil samples and try to understand the flora of that time.' Stone tools and trade The presence of flakes at several sites like Laungwali, Kunduwari, Ganeshpar, and Janan on Khadir island suggest the use of tools by these people. 'After the discovery at Bambhanka, local people led us to the site of Lungwali, about 1 km from Dholavira, where similar remains along with stone tools were discovered. A good number of chert, jasper, and chalcedony cores were found,' Prof Prabhakar said. According to Prof Prabhakar, these hunter-gatherer communities would have used tools made of basalt, limestone, and quartzite to hunt. Some smaller stones that have been found could have served as tips of arrows. 'They may have occupied a site maybe for one season, and moved on to another location, and then to another. Had there been permanent occupation, we could have found other remains as well,' he said. Barring agate, which was available near Amarapar village in Kutch, the other stones are not available locally, which suggests the possibility of trade, according to investigators. The finding from Kutch tallies with evidence from the Karachi coast, Prof Prabhakar said. 'We think that the Oman evidence is also coinciding. There was a wider area, and people definitely could have communicated with each other. Maybe in the future, if we have more evidence we can establish this,' he said. Before the Harappan people Fifteen samples from Khadir island have been carbon dated so far. The first three samples – all from Bambhanka – were dated at PRL Ahmedabad, and the remaining 12 at IUAC Delhi. Ravi Bhushan, a former professor at PRL who is now a consultant at the National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research (NCPOR), Goa, said: 'Radiocarbon dating, which is one of the most powerful tools scientists use to determine the age of ancient artifacts, fossils, and archaeological sites, was used. However, there is a time lag of 400-500 years as these shells feed on dead carbonates… this means they could be a little older.' Carbon dating pegs the antiquity of the Dholavira site at 3,300 BC to 1,400 BCE. The Harappan period is generally considered to extend from 2,600 to 1,900 BCE. 'Both before and after the Harappans, there were people living in smaller settlements in this area. But these remains are 5,500-5000 years before the time of the Harappans,' Dr Rai said. Ten more samples from four sites on Khadir, Bela, and the Kutch mainland will be dated at IUAC Delhi soon. Thereafter, more studies will be carried out with the collaboration of IIT Kanpur.

Kutch housed hunter-gatherer communities 5,000 years before Harappans arrived: Study
Kutch housed hunter-gatherer communities 5,000 years before Harappans arrived: Study

Indian Express

time04-06-2025

  • Science
  • Indian Express

Kutch housed hunter-gatherer communities 5,000 years before Harappans arrived: Study

Shell scatters, deposits, middens, stone tools. Researchers have found rare evidence of human settlement in Kutch. As they dug deeper, they found that Kutch was home to prehistoric hunter-gatherer communities way before the Harappan era. A recent study by researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar (IITGN) has offered new insights into Kutch's cultural evolution. The study by IITGN researchers, in collaboration with experts from IIT Kanpur (IITK), Inter University Accelerator Centre (IUAC) Delhi, and Physical Research Laboratory (PRL) Ahmedabad, has uncovered archaeological evidence that pushes back the human presence in this region by at least 5,000 years prior to the arrival of Harappans. These communities inhabited a mangrove-dominated landscape, relied on shell species (both bivalves like oysters and gastropods), and naturally adapted to such environments. 'While British surveyors had previously noted shell accumulations in the area, these were not recognised as shell-midden sites, the heaps of discarded shells from human consumption,' explained Prof V N Prabhakar, an Associate Professor at the Archaeological Science Centre in the department of Earth Sciences at IITGN and lead investigator of the study. 'Our study is the first to identify these sites, confirm their cultural significance, and establish a chronological context,' he added. These newly identified sites are the first of their kind to be documented in the Kutch region, with a defined cultural and chronological context. According to the researchers, the findings also show similarities with coastal archaeological sites in the Las Bela and Makran regions of Pakistan and the Oman Peninsula, suggesting that early coastal communities across this broader region may have developed comparable strategies for food collection and survival. 'The shell samples collected from Khadir and nearby islands were analysed at PRL Ahmedabad, with support from Prof Ravi Bhushan and J S Ray, and at IUAC, Delhi, with help from Dr Pankaj Kumar,' mentioned Prof Prabhakar. To determine the age of these sites, the researchers used Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS), a precise method for measuring the radioactive isotope values of Carbon-14 (C-14) from the shell remains, which is absorbed by all living organisms. After death, C-14 begins to decay and is reduced by half every 5,730 years. Measuring the remaining amount in the shell samples allows scientists to estimate how long ago the organism died. As atmospheric C-14 levels have varied over time, the results were calibrated using tree ring data. Trees form one ring per year, and these tree ring sequences can be matched and extended back over thousands of years, allowing scientists to construct an accurate reference timeline of atmospheric C-14. The team discovered a variety of stone tools used for cutting, scraping, and splitting. Used cores from which the tools were manufactured were also found. 'The presence of these tools and associated raw materials suggests that the communities engaged in the prolific manufacture of implements for daily tasks,' said Dr Shikha Rai, a postdoctoral researcher at IITGN and co-author of the study. The raw materials may have been sourced from Khadir Island, now known for housing the Harappan city of Dholavira. The study challenges the commonly held view that urbanism in Kutch developed primarily under the influence of the Sindh region. 'Instead of abrupt external influence, what we see here is a gradual, locally rooted process of adaptation and cultural development,' said Prof Prabhakar. 'This accumulated knowledge of local geology, water resources, and navigation may have later helped the Harappans plan their settlements more effectively and engage in long-distance trade.' The researchers also believe that the shell middens and scatters will be important in palaeoclimate studies. Since climate change unfolds gradually over millennia and cannot be directly observed in the short term, natural materials like shells preserve signals that help reconstruct past environments. Previous studies at IITGN have already mapped the palaeoclimate of Khadir Island over the past 11,500 years. Further analysis of the recently discovered shell middens may contribute critical new insights into the climate conditions in which early humans lived. 'Humans in the past adapted to different climatic zones and environmental challenges without the aid of modern technologies,' explained Dr Rai, adding: 'Their ability to observe, respond to, and live within their ecological limits is something worth learning from today, especially in the context of global climate change.' The team now aims at mapping cultural developments in Gujarat, from prehistoric to historical periods, to build a broader understanding of how human adaptation has evolved. The findings from this study were presented at the 17th Annual Workshop on South Asian Archaeology (Hartwick College and University of Chicago), the Seminar Series on the Archaeology of the Indo-Iranian Borderlands (Sorbonne University, Paris), and the 50th Annual Conference of the Indian Society for Prehistoric and Quaternary Studies (ISPQS), Raipur — all in 2025. The research team includes Prof Vikrant Jain of the Earth Sciences Department, IITGN; Prof Javed Malik and Debajyoti Paul of IITK; Pankaj Kumar of IUAC, Delhi and Mahendrasinh Gadhavi of LD College, Ahmedabad.

Want to do e-Masters in Applications of Machine Learning in Engineering at IT Gandhinagar? Check details & how to apply
Want to do e-Masters in Applications of Machine Learning in Engineering at IT Gandhinagar? Check details & how to apply

Hindustan Times

time23-05-2025

  • Science
  • Hindustan Times

Want to do e-Masters in Applications of Machine Learning in Engineering at IT Gandhinagar? Check details & how to apply

The Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar (IITGN) is starting a new e-Masters Degree Programme in 'Applications of Machine Learning in Engineering.' The programme intends to equip working professionals with cutting-edge skills to apply machine learning (ML) in core engineering domains. The 2-year postgraduate (PG) program is designed with flexibility in mind. It allows professionals to attend live online sessions during evenings and weekends, along with self-paced learning components. Unlike many other traditional PG courses, this e-Masters programme does not require a GATE (Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering) qualification for admission. Dreaming of JoSAA 2025? Check out IIT Madras' new programs in CEM & iBME The applicants must have at least 55% marks or a 5.5 CGPA in relevant degrees such as BTech/BS (4-year), Integrated MSc (5-year), MCA/MSc/BS-MS (5-year) or equivalent, with mathematics as a mandatory subject in Grade 12. The total fee for the program is ₹9,30,000, comprising an application fee of ₹1,000, a registration fee of ₹1,50,000, and a tuition fee of ₹7,80,000 (payable in six instalments). An early bird discount is available until 20 June 2025—organisation-sponsored candidates receive a ₹45,000 waiver on the registration fee, while self-sponsored candidates get a ₹30,000 waiver. 100% live interactive sessions Flexible learning format Small batch sizes for personalized attention Career development support and mentorship Six 12–14-week modules Total of 52 credits Exclusive IITGN alumni status On-campus residency component Interested candidates can apply through the official program website: The deadline for applications is 5 June 2025. Applicants must submit academic documents and proof of mathematics in Grade 12, along with the application form and fee.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store