Complet Syllabus of CEBS-2021
Complet Syllabus of CEBS-2021
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➢ Mathematics Syllabus revised in 2016 and approved by the Academic Board
➢ Chemistry, Physics and Biology Syllabi revised in 2018 and approved the Academic Board in its
18th Meeting held on 27th March 2018.
➢ Humanities syllabus was modified in December 2021 and was approved by the Academic Board in
its meeting No 25 held on 14th December 2021.
Mathematics Physics
Prof. M. S. Raghunathan, CEBS - Chair Prof Dr. Prof. Dipan Ghosh, IIT B – Chair
Narasimhan Chari, DJS College Prof. Vijay Singh, CEBS
Prof R. C. Cowsik, Ex-UM Prof. Arvind Kumar, CEBS
Prof. S. Kumaresan, Univ of Hyderabad Prof. Sudhir Jain, NPD - BARC
Prof. M. G. Nadkarni, UM Prof. Anuradha Misra, UoM
Prof. A. K. Pani, IITB Prof. Ameeya Bhagwat, CEBS
Dr. Shameek Paul, CEBS
Prof. C. S. Rajan, TIFR
Prof. Mythily Ramaswamy, TIFR-CAM
Dr. Swagata Sarkar, CEBS
Prof. Balwant Singh, CEBS
NOTE: This syllabus will be implemented from the batch admitted to CEBS from 2018-2019
Academic Year, while students admitted during Academic Years 2014-2015; 2015-2016;
2016-2017 and 2017-2018 will follow the syllabus provided at the time of their admission.
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Code No Syllabus
B-101 Biology-I (Introductory Biology)
1. Life: History and origin of life, Concepts of biological evolution, Darwinism,
Lamarckism, Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, natural selection, speciation.
2. Classification of living things: Classification and domains of life, Prokaryotes and
Eukaryotes, Taxonomy of plants, animals and microorganisms.
3. Ecology and Ecosystem: Concept of ecology and ecosystem, ecological
succession, ecosystem dynamics, flow of ecology and matter, biogeochemical
cycling, ecosystem changes, biotic and biotic factors and stresses, food web,
adaptation of individual organism to the environment through genetic changes.
4. Cell Biology: Discovery of cell, cell theory, classification of cell types, cell
membrane, cell-cell interactions, energy and metabolism, respiration,
photosynthesis, sexual reproduction.
5. Cell Division and System Development: cell cycle, mitosis, meiosis, mechanism of
development (stem cells), formation of tissues.
References
1. Biology with mastering Biology (8th Edition) by Neil A. Campbell and Jane B. Reece
(Hardcover - Dec. 7, 2007).
2. Biology: Concepts and Connections with my biology" (6th Edition) by Neil A. Campbell, Jane
B. Reece, Martha R. Taylor, and Eric J. Simon (Hardcover - Feb. 28, 2008).
3. On the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin (Kindle Edition - Mar. 3, 2008) - Kindle Book.
4. Essential Cell Biology by Bruce Alberts, Dennis Bray, Karen Hopkin, and Alexander D
Johnson (Hardcover - Mar. 27, 2009).
5. Molecular and Cell Biology for Dummies by René Fester Kratz (Paperback - June 2, 2009).
6. Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution by Michael J. Behe (Paperback
- Mar. 7, 2006).
7. Biology: A Self-Teaching Guide, 2nd edition by Steven D. Garber (Paperback - Aug. 15,
2002).
References
1. Molecular Biology of the Cell by Bruce Alberts, Alexander Johnson, Julian Lewis, and Martin
Raff.
2. Molecular Biology of the Gene (6th Edition) by James D. Watson, Tania A. Baker, Stephen P.
Bell, and Alexander Gann.
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3. Molecular Biology of the Cell, Fifth Edition: The Problems Book by John Wilson and Tim Hunt
(Paperback - Nov 28, 2007).
4. Genes IX (Lewin, Genes XI) by Benjamin Lewin (Hardcover - Mar 5, 2007).
B-301 Biochemistry-I
1. General biochemistry concepts: Concept of pH, dissociation and ionization of acids
and bases, pKa, buffers and buffering mechanism, Henderson Hasselbalch
equation, dissociation of amino acids and determination of pKa. Basic
thermodynamics
2. Protein structure and functions: Chemical and physical properties of amino acids,
primary, secondary, tertiary structure and quaternary structures of protein,
Classification of proteins: globular and fibrous, Protein folding and modification.
3. Enzymes and enzyme activity: Enzymes Mechanism, Classification, Enzyme
kinetics, enzyme regulation and inhibition
4. Structure and Functions of Carbohydrates: Classification of Carbohydrates,
monosaccharides, di-, oligo- and Polysaccharides, cellulose, lignin, cell wall, Sugar
derivatives, Glycosidic Bonds, Lectins, Selectins
5. Structure and Functions of Lipid: Sources in human body; General properties;
Classifications: fatty acid, fats, essential oils, oils, waxes, cholesterol, phospholipids,
glycolipid, glycocalyx, antigen, isoprene, Vitamins and Hormones; Membranes: fluid
mosaic model, properties of membrane: diffusion and osmosis, ion channel, proton
pump, electron transport, ion gradient, antiporter, symporter, quinine, riboflavin
6. Structure and Functions of Nucleic acid: Nucleic acid structure: DNA and RNA,
Nucleotides: building blocks of nucleic acids: structure, nomenclature and function;
types of RNA: mRNA, tRNA and rRNA, Chemistry of nucleic acids: Nucleic acid
melting, non-enzymatic transformations, methylation.
References
1. Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry, Fourth Edition by David L. Nelson & Michael M. Cox.
2. Stryer L (1995) Biochemistry, 4th edition, W. H. Freeman & company, New York.
3. Energy and Entropy equilibrium to stationary states, Starzak, Michael E. 2010, XI, 303 p.
4. Fundamentals of General Organic and Biological Chemistry (Study Guide) by John McMurry
(Paperback - Jan. 1999).
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The cell membrane and its structure: Models of the bio-membrane: Charles
Overton’s “Lipid Membrane” model. Lipid monolayer model of Irving Langmuir, Lipid
bilayer model by Gorter and Grendel, Protein-containing lipid bilayer model of
Davison and Danielly, David Robertson’s direct observation of the membrane, Fluid
Mosaic model of Singer and Nicholson. Constituents and fluidity of plasma
membrane: structure, classification and functions of membrane lipids. Types and
functions of membrane proteins. Use of FRET and FRAP in studying the membrane.
8. Cilia and Flagella: Structure of cilia, major functions of cilia and mechanism of
ciliary movement. Flagella: structural organization and mechanism of movements.
Eukaryotic vs prokaryotic flagella.
References
1. Molecular Biology of the Cell (Sixth Edition) by Bruce Alberts, Alexander D. Johnson, Julian
Lewis, David Morgan, Martin Raff, Keith Roberts, Peter Walter.
2. Cell Biology (Third Edition) by Thomas D. Pollard MD and William C. Earnshaw
B-401 Biochemistry-II
1. Fundamentals of metabolism, Nature of anabolic and catabolic pathways
2. Concept of free energy, standard free energy, redox reactions and standard
reduction potential, Substrate level phosphorylation
3. Metabolism of carbohydrates
4. Glycolysis and regulation, Feeder pathways of glycolysis, cori cycle, oxygen debt,
Pasteur effect, Fates of pyruvate
5. TCA, regulation., Amphibolic nature, Glyoxylate pathway, Malate Aspartate shuttle
6. Pentose phosphate pathway
7. Oxidative phosphorylation and Electron transport chain, mitochondrial structure,
inhibitors of ETC
8. Chemiosmotic theory and competing theories, Structure of FoF1 ATPase
9. Photophosphorylation, Photosynthesis, Structure of chloroplasts, Antennae
Pigments, Light Harvesting complex, Photochemical reaction center
10. Cyclic and Non-cyclic photophosphorylation
11. Green and Purple bacteria and plant photosynthesis, Light and Dark reactions, C4
and C3 pathways
12. Gluconeogensis, futile cycle, Glycogen synthesis and degradation
13. Fatty acid catabolism, carnitine mediated transfer, beta oxidation, beta oxidation of
odd number fatty acids, beta oxidation of mono and poly-unsaturated fatty acids,
Absorption and transport of fats.
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References
1. Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry, Fourth Edition by David L. Nelson & Michael M. Cox.
2. Stryer L (1995) Biochemistry, 4th edition, W. H. Freeman & company, New York.
3. Energy and Entropy equilibrium to stationary states, Starzak, Michael E. 2010, XI, 303 p.
4. Fundamentals of General Organic and Biological Chemistry (Study Guide) by John McMurry
(Paperback - Jan. 1999).
References
1. Stryer L (1995) Biochemistry, 4th edition, W. H. Freeman & company, New York.
2. Watson J. D., Hopkins, N. H., Roberts, J. W., Steitz, J. A. and Weiner, A. M. (1988) Molecular
biology of the gene, 4th edition, The Benjamin/Cummings publishing companies, inc,
California.
3. Benjamin Lewin (1999) Genes VII, oxford University Press, Oxford.
4. Weaver R. F. (1999) Molecular biology, WCB McGraw-Hill companies, Inc, New York.
5. Brown T A (1995) Essential molecular biology, vol. I, A practical approach, IRL press, Oxford.
6. Molecular Themes in DNA Replication, by Cox Lynne S (Ed.) 2009 443 p.
7. Cantor, C. R., and Schimmel, P. R. Biophysical Chemistry. San Francisco:
8. W.H. Freeman and Company, 1980. 3 Volumes.
B-403 Biostatistics
1. Meaning and scope of Bio – Statistics
2. Basic Concepts: Parameters, statistics, sample, census, Random variable
(Discrete and Continuous)
3. Collection of Data, sources and methods
4. Sampling Methods: Simple random sampling, stratified random sampling,
systematic sampling
5. Graphs and Diagrams
6. Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median & Mode
7. Measures of Dispersion: Variance / Standard Deviation and co – efficient of
variance, Standard Error, confidence limits for mean and proportion
8. Co – relation, regression and multiple regression
9. Probability: Basic concepts, Binomial and Normal distribution
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10. Test of Hypothesis: Null Hypothesis, Alternate Hypothesis
11. Test Statistics, Type I & Type II errors, level of significance and critical region
12. Z – Test, t – test, chi-squared test (χ2) and F – test
13. One way and two-way classification of ANOVA
14. Designs of Experiments: Basic concepts, completely randomized block design,
randomized block design, Latin square design
15. Non – Parametric Tests: Sign Test, Run – Test, Wilcoxon test
References
1. Statistics: A Guide to the Use of Statistical Methods in the Physical Sciences, R.J. Barlow,
John Wiley 1989
2. The Statistical Analysis of Experimental Data, John Mandel, Dover Publications 1984
3. Data Reduction and Error Analysis for the Physical Sciences, 3rd Edition, Philip Bevington
and Keith Robinson, McGraw Hill 2003
B-501 Genetics
1. Overview and Introduction of Genetics: Central Dogma, Genotype and Phenotype,
Eukaryotic and Prokaryotic Genes, Forward and Reverse Genetics
2. Mendelian Inheritance: Law of Dominance, Law of Segregation, Law of Independent
Assortment, Deviation from Mendelism: Incomplete dominance, Co-dominance,
Multiple alleles, Epistasis Polygeneic Inheritance, Cytoplasmic Inheritance
3. Linkage and Recombination
4. Sex Linkage and Sex-Linked Inheritance
5. Pedigree Analysis
6. Bacterial Genetics: Transformation, Conjugation, Transduction (Lambda Phage)
7. Human Genetics and Model Organisms: Drosophila, Yeast, Maize, Mouse
8. Immunogenetics (Generation of Antibody Diversity – VDJ Recombination)
9. Genomes and Genomics: Nature of genomics, Sequence map of a genome,
Creating Sequence maps
10. Molecular basis of: Spontaneous Mutations, Induced Mutations and their role in
evolution; Environmental mutagenesis and toxicity testing (Ames Test).
11. The law of DNA constancy and C-value paradox.
12. Population genetics (Hardy-Weinberg Law)
References
1. Principles of Genetics, by Eldon J. Gardner (Author), D. Peter Snustad (Editor), Michael J.
Simmons (Editor)
2. Genetics: From genes to genomes, by: Leland Hartwell, Leroy Hood, Michael Goldberg, Ann
Reynolds, Lee Silver, Ruth Veres. Publisher: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math,
published: 2006-10-09.
3. Introduction to genetic analysis: by: Anthony J. F. Griffiths. Publisher: W.H. Freeman &
Company, published: 2010-01-30.
4. Intuitive Biostatistics: A Nonmathematical Guide to Statistical Thinking. by: Harvey Motulsky,
publisher: Oxford University Press, USA, published: 2010-01-20.
5. Principles of Biostatistics (with CD-ROM) by: Marcello Pagano, Publisher: Duxbury Press,
published: 2000-03-09.
6. Genetics for Dummies by T. R. Robinson (Paperback - Sept. 2, 2005).
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2. Cell Division and Cancer: Characteristic features of cancer cells. Compromised cell
cycle checkpoints, mutations leading to uncontrolled cell division. Roles of
Retinoblastoma protein, p 53, and APC in cancer induction and progression.
Monoclonal and polyclonal expansion of cancer. Deregulation of cell cycle
machinery by viruses. Epithelial to mesenchymal transformation and metastasis.
3. Cell Death: Overview of cell death: Apoptosis: Molecular mechanisms of apoptosis;
Key proteins involved in apoptosis: Pro- and anti-apoptotic proteins. Apoptosis and
cancer. Extrinsic and intrinsic mechanisms of apoptosis induction. Other forms of
cell death: General features of necrosis: Causes and factors involved in necrotic cell
death. Molecular mechanism and general features of anoikis.
4. Cell Junctions, Cell Adhesion, and the Extracellular Matrix: Overview of cell
junctions, Cell-cell adhesion and the extracellular matrix, Extracellular Matrix
Receptors on Animal Cells. Integrins, Selectins, and other proteins involved in
intercellular contacts
5. Cell Signalling: Overview of cell signalling; Components involved in signalling, Types
of signalling, Three major classes of signalling receptors: Ion channel-linked, G
protein-coupled (GPRs), and enzyme-linked receptors: Tyrosine-Kinase Receptors,
other enzyme-linked receptors. Second Messengers: cAMP, cGMP, IP3 and DAG,
Ca+2, PIP3. Signalling Cascades
6. Cell Signalling and Cancer: Deregulation of cell signalling in cancer. Oncogenes and
cell signalling; involvement of tyrosine kinase receptors, and calcium signalling in
cancer. Involvement of other signalling mechanisms in cancer
References
1. Molecular Biology of the Cell (Sixth Edition) by Bruce Alberts, Alexander D. Johnson, Julian
Lewis, David Morgan, Martin Raff, Keith Roberts, Peter Walter.
2. Cell Biology (Third Edition) by Thomas D. Pollard MD and William C. Earnshaw
3. The Cell: A Molecular Approach (7th Edition) by Geoffrey M. Cooper, Robert E. Hausman
B-503 Biodiversity
1. Principles of taxonomy: Concept of species and hierarchical taxa, Biological
nomenclature, Taxonomical structure, Outline classification of animals, important
criteria used for classification in each taxon, Classification of animals
2. Levels of Structural organizations: Larval forms and their evolutionary significance,
Unicellular, colonial, and multicellular forms, Levels of organization of tissues,
organs, and systems, Comparative anatomy
3. Classical and quantitative methods in taxonomy: Biosystematics, Interrelationship
among major invertebrate phyla and minor invertebrate phyla; Evolutionary
relationship among taxa, Natural History of Indian subcontinent: Major habitat types,
Geographical origin and migration of species, Common Indian mammals and birds,
Seasonality and Phenology of Indian subcontinent
4. Concepts and characteristics of biodiversity: The concepts of biodiversity,
Comparison of historical and current rate of species extinction, how genetic diversity
may change between generations and within population of species, Complexity and
functions of ecosystems; predictable and non-predictable features of ecosystem,
Importance of preserving biodiversity, Genetic diversity
References
1. Biology: The Unity and Diversity of Life by Cecie Starr, Ralph Taggart, Christine Evers, and
Lisa Starr (Hardcover – Aug 5, 2008).
2. Plant Conservation and Biodiversity. Series: Topics in Biodiversity and Conservation, Vol. 6
Hawksworth, David L.; Bull, Alan T. (Eds.) Reprinted from Biodiversity and Conservation,
16:6, 2007, VIII, 424 p.
3. Plant Biodiversity & Taxonomy by M P Singh.
4. Biodiversity, E.O. Wilson, Editor. Frances M. Peter, Associate Editor. National Academy
Press, Washington, D.C. 1988.
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5. Biology of Plants by Peter H. Raven, Ray F. Evert, and Susan E. Eichhorn (Hardcover - Dec.
17, 2004).
B-601 Immunology – I
1. Overview of the Immune system: Historical perspective and ethics, types of
immunity, innate, acquired, passive and active, self vs nonself discrimination,
Adaptive immune response, Autoimmunity
2. Cells and organs of the immune system: T cell receptors, T cell receptor genes &
gene rearrangements, T cell maturation, activation & differentiation, B cell
generation, activation & development, the role for microbiota
3. Antigens and Antibodies: Immunoglobulins- structure and function, Immunoglobulin
Genes-Organization and rearrangement, Antibody diversity, Antigen antibody
reactions, MHC (antigens and genes), Antigen processing & presentation
4. Immune response: Self Non-self-discrimination (mechanism), Clonal selection
theory & idiotypic network hypothesis, Cytokines, the complement system, Cell
mediated effector response, Leukocyte migration and inflammation, Hypersensitive
reactions, Immune regulation, Immune response to infectious organisms, Vaccines,
Immunodeficiency diseases (AIDS)
5. Immuno-technology: Monoclonal Abs and their applications, diagnostic techniques,
CD markers and flow cytometry
References
1. Essential Immunology – Roitt
2. Immunology by Janice Kuby
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and conduction, signal transduction in the visual, auditory, vestibular and olfactory
system. Somatosensation.
8. The Endocrine System: Overview of the endocrine system, endocrine glands:
Structure, location, and functions; hypothalamus, pituitary gland, pineal gland,
thyroid and parathyroid glands, adrenal glands, pancreas, testes, and ovaries.
Long-term and short-term stress responses. Homeostasis: Mechanisms of
homeostasis. Positive and negative feedbacks.
9. The Reproductive System: Structure and functions of testes and ovaries.
Spermatogenesis and spermiogenesis, acrosome reaction, oogenesis and the
ovarian cycle, accessory reproductive glands, and their functions. Hormonal control
of reproduction; Hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis; physiology of fertilization and
prevention of polyspermy.
References
1. Animal Physiology: Adaptation and Environment by Knut Schmidt-Nielsen
2. Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 13th Edition by John E. Hall
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effects of cytokinins, Commercial uses of cytokinins, Cytokinin receptors and
signal transduction
8. Ethylene: The Gaseous Hormone: Discovery of ethylene as a plant growth
regulating hormone, Ethylene measurement by Gas Chromatography, Ethylene
biosynthesis and Yang’s cycle, Inhibitors of ethylene biosynthesis, Ethylene
oxidation, Physiological effects of ethylene, Commercial uses of ethylene,
Ethylene receptors and signal transduction
9. Auxin: The Growth Hormone: Auxin discovery and definition, Structures of
naturally occurring and synthetic auxins, Identification and the measurement of
auxins – auxin bioassays, Auxin biosynthesis – tryptophan dependant and
independent pathways – IPA, TAM, IAN, IAM etc., Conjugated and bound auxins,
Degradation of auxins, Distribution of auxins in cell, Auxin transport –
Chemiosmotic model explaining auxin transport, Physiological effects – auxin
induced cell elongation – Current model for IAA-induced H+ extrusion,
Developmental effects of auxins, Auxin induced genes – early response genes
and late response genes, Auxin responsive domains, A model for regulation of
transcriptional activation of early response genes by auxin
10. Abscisic Acid: A Seed Maturation and Stress-Response Hormone: ABA May Be
an Ancient Stress Signal, Lunularic Acid in Liverworts, The bioassay of ABA,
Yellow Cameleon: A Noninvasive Tool for Measuring Intracellular Calcium,
Phosphatidic Acid May Stimulate Sphingosine-1-Phosphate Production,
Extracellular and intracellular ABA Receptors and signal transduction,
Physiological effects of ABA, role in plant pathogen responses, Desiccation
tolerance, Seed dormancy, types and the roles of environmental factors, ABA-
Induced senescence and ethylene
11. Responses and Adaptations to Abiotic Stress: Water deficit and response of
plants to water stress, water-deficit-regulated ABA signalling and stomatal
closure, High temperature and plant responses, Heat shock proteins (HSPs) and
their functions in plants, Chilling and freezing injury, Plant responses to salinity
stress
12. Solute Transport: Membrane potential and distribution of ions across the
membrane, The Goldman Equation, Patch Clamp Studies in Plant Cells,
Chemiosmosis in action, Multiple Transporter Systems, ABC transporters in
plants
13. Water Balance of Plants: Irrigation, physical properties of soils, Leaf transpiration
and water vapor gradients, Calculating velocities of water movement in the xylem
and in living cells
14. Photosynthesis: The Light Reactions: Principles of Spectrophotometry, Quantum
Yield, The Distribution of Chlorophylls and Other Photosynthetic Pigments,
Antagonistic Effects of Light on Cytochrome Oxidation, Structures of Two
Bacterial Reaction Centers, Midpoint Potentials and Redox Reactions, Oxygen
Evolution, Photosystem I, ATP Synthase, Mode of Action of Some Herbicides,
Chlorophyll Biosynthesis
15. Photosynthesis: The Carbon Reactions: Inorganic Carbon-Concentrating
Mechanisms: CO2 and HCO3 – Pumps, How the Calvin–Benson Cycle Was
Elucidated, Rubisco: A Model Enzyme for Studying Structure and Function,
Energy Demands for Photosynthesis in Land Plants, Rubisco Activase,
Thioredoxins, Operation of the C2 Oxidative Photosynthetic Carbon Cycle,
Carbon Dioxide: Some Important Physicochemical Properties, Three Variations
of C4 Metabolism, Single-Cell C4 Photosynthesis, Photorespiration in CAM
plants, Glossary of Carbohydrate Biochemistry, Starch Architecture, Fructans,
Chloroplast Phosphate Translocator
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Exchange, Prehistoric Changes in Atmospheric CO2, Projected Future Increases
in Atmospheric CO2, Using Carbon Isotopes to Detect Adulteration in Foods,
Reconstruction of the Expansion of C4 Taxa
17. Phytochrome and Light Control of Plant Development: Phytochrome and High-
Irradiance Responses, The Origins of Phytochrome as a Bacterial Two-
Component Receptor, Profiling Gene Expression in Plants, Two-Hybrid Screens
and Co-immunoprecipitation, Phytochrome Effects on Ion Fluxes.
References
1. Plant Physiology by Hans Mohr, Peter Schopfer, Springer 1995, 629 pages
2. Taiz & Zeiger (2006) Plant Physiology.4th Edition. Sinauer
3. Hopkins WG (1998 or 2004 ed). Introduction to Plant Physiology. 2nd or 3rd Ed. Wiley.
Used previously for course. This is a good introductory text, but it is not a substitute for Taiz.
4. Stern KR (1997) Introductory Plant Biology. 7th Ed. Wm C Brown Publishers
5. Fosket (1994) Plant Growth and Development: A molecular approach. Acad. Press. More
details on how plants grow and develop.
6. Buchanan R., Gruissem W. and Jones R. (eds) 2000. Biochemistry and Molecular Biology of
Plants. An excellent new text by leading plant biologists in the world. The book provides a
contemporary view of molecular biology, cell biology and plant physiology. Valuable reference
for teaching and research.
7. Chrispeels MJ and DE Sadava (2002) Plants, Genes and Crop Biotechnology.2nd Ed. Jones
and Bartlett. Understanding plant biology and the potential of agricultural biotechnology.
Highly recommended.
B-604 Microbiology
1. General Microbiology
a) Prokaryotic Structure & Function
b) Microbial Nutrition,
c) Microbial Growth,
d) Control of Microbes,
e) Gram Negative Bacteria, Gram Positive Bacteria, & Archaea
2. Fundamentals of General Microbiology –
a) Isolation of a broad range of non-pathogenic bacteria from natural sources,
b) Selective and Enrichment techniques,
c) Microscopic, biochemical, and molecular identification.
d) Growth Energetics (Genetics, physiology, quantitation)
3. Microbes and Society.
Microbe-related topics include: Disease, bioterrorism, Food, Biotechnology, and
Ecology. (Focuses on activities of bacteria, viruses, and other microorganisms, and
their influence on humans.)
4. Prokaryotic Diversity - Structure, biochemical properties, and genetics of the major
groups of prokaryotes.
5. Microbial Ecology
a) Microbial Interactions
b) Microbial ecology; food, industrial and medical microbiology
c) Aquatic Ecology
d) Terrestrial Ecology
e) Metagenomics
6. Medical Bacteriology – (Medically important bacterial pathogens in terms of the
clinical, therapeutic, and epidemiological aspects of diseases caused by them,
molecular mechanisms of pathogenesis and their identification in the clinical
laboratory, procedures for isolation and identification of pathogenic bacteria, testing
their susceptibility to antibiotics. Bacterial Pathogenesis: Introduction, Genetic tools
used for bacterial pathogenesis study; Bacterial cell-cell communications and
biofilm formation, Bacterial genomics, lateral transfer, phage, Vertebrate microbial
communities in health and disease, Strategies for bacterial adhesion and invasion)
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a) Skin Infection
b) Respiratory Tract Infections
c) Urinary Tract Infections
d) Gastro-Intestinal Tract Infections
7. Medical Mycology and Parasitology - Consideration of medically important fungi
and parasites, with emphasis on their biology in relation to disease and its
laboratory diagnosis.
8. Aquatic Microbiology - Basic principles of aquatic microbiology and aquatic
microbial ecology: role and identity of aquatic microorganisms; introduction to
modern methodologies for research. Laboratory work with local freshwater and
marine samples for those enrolled in the five-credit section.
9. Evolution of Prokaryotic Diversity - Evolution, diversity, and genomics of prokaryotic
microorganisms, Enrichment, isolation, and molecular phylogenetic
characterization of selected prokaryotic organisms.
10. Methanogenesis genetics and biochemistry of selected bacteria.
11. Molecular Mechanisms of Bacterial Pathogenesis Mechanisms of bacterial
pathogenesis explored at the molecular, genetic, and cellular levels through
selected models as presented in the current scientific literature. Molecular and
Medical Microbiology recent advances in molecular biology of microbial
pathogenesis or the current research of the participants is presented and discussed
critically.
12. Signal transduction in bacteria (Quorum Sensing in Gram positive & Gram-
Negative Bacteria)
13. Protozoan infections: Introduction to protozoa, a survey of the major protozoan
infections of humans including a brief description of the parasite life cycles and a
brief discussion of the clinical diseases seen during these infections.
14. Biology and pathogenesis of Plasmodium. Life cycle Plasmodium parasites and
pathology of human malaria, biochemical and cell biological similarities and
differences with other apicomplexa (Babesia, Cryptosporidium, Toxoplasma, etc.),
and implications for therapeutic development. Biology and pathogenesis of
Toxoplasma, Leishmania, Trypanosoma.
References
1. Brock's Biology of Microorganisms (Hardcover) by Thomas D. Brock
2. Medical Microbiology: with STUDENT CONSULT Access (Paperback) by Patrick R. Murray
3. The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History (Paperback) by John
M. Barry
4. Benson's Microbiological Applications: Laboratory Manual in General Microbiology (Spiral-
bound) by Alfred E. Brown
5. Textbook of Microbiology, Ananthanarayan and Paniker Orient Blackswan, 2005 - Medical
microbiology - 665 pages
B-701 Biotechnology – I
1. Basic principles of genetic engineering:
a) Methods of creating recombinant DNA molecule, splicing, properties of
restriction endonucleases and their mode of action
b) Cloning vectors (lambda phage plasmid, M-13 phage, cosmid, shuttle vectors,
yeast and viral vectors, expression vectors), construction of DNA library,
Subtraction cDNA cloning, genomic vs cDNA library - Expression libraries and
vectors for protein synthesis, protein purification, protein solubilization, protein
export, RNA probes, BACs, PACs and cosmid vectors, Yeast vectors and YACs
c) Chemical synthesis of gene and engineering artificial life
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2. Selection/screening: Analysis of genomic DNA by Southern hybridization, Northern
and Western blotting techniques, Restriction mapping: Restriction fragment length
polymorphism (RFLP).
3. DNA sequencing and analyses techniques: plus, and minus, dideoxynucleoside,
Maxam and Gilbert, deep sequencing and next gen sequencing, microarray
technology and hybridizations.
4. DNA manipulation techniques:
a) Preparation of radiolabelled and synthetic probes, Amplification of DNA by
polymerase chain reaction (PCR), Site directed mutagenesis, Gene transfer
methods for animals and plants; Agrobacterium mediated gene transfer,
electroporation and particle gun
b) Transgenic plants [Agrobacterium mediated transformation, Ti plamid,
Transgenic tobacco expressing luciferase gene, Bt Cotton, Herbicide-resistant
plants, Plant viruses as vectors (e.g., CaMV virus)]
c) Application of genetic engineering in medicine and agriculture, vaccine
production.
5. Cell and tissue culture in plants and animals: Primary culture; Cell line; Cell clones;
Callus cultures; Somaclonal variation; Micropropagation; Somatic embryogenesis;
Haploidy; Protoplast fusion and somatic hybridization; Cybrides; Gene transfer
methods in plants and in animals; Transgenic biology; Allopheny; Artificial seeds;
Hybridoma technology.
References
1. Principles of Gene Manipulation and Genomics, 7th Edition, Sandy B. Primrose and Richard
Twyman Blackwell Publishing, 2006
2. Gene Cloning and DNA Analysis: An Introduction, Brown T. A, Wiley-Blackwell, 2010, Genes
IX Benjamin Lewin Oxford Publishers
3. Bernard Glick, Jack Pasternak and Cheryl Patten, Molecular Biotechnology- principles and
applications of Recombinant DNA, 4th
4. Principles of gene manipulation by S.B. Primrose and Twyman, 7
5. Molecular Biology of the Gene by Watson fifth edition Pearson Education India, 2004
B-702 Immunology – II
1. Host-Pathogen relationship –Equilibrium
2. Diseases caused by Viruses and the immune response to them- HIV and AIDS-
immune responses
3. Bacterial diseases – and the immune response to bacteria-tuberculosis and leprosy
4. Vaccines- mechanisms, types of vaccines
5. Parasites – protozoan parasites, parasitic worms and the immune response to
them- malaria, leishmaniasis, worm infestations
6. Autoimmune diseases- generalized- SLE, Rheumatoid arthritis; localized- multiple
sclerosis
7. Diseases due to immune cross reactivity- Rh incompatibility, transfusion,
transplantation
8. Inherited immune diseases
9. Cancer immunology
References
1. Immunobiology, 5th edition,
2. The Immune System in Health and Disease, by Charles A. Janeway, Jr, Paul Travers, Mark
Walport, and Mark J Shlomchik
3. Immunology by Janice Kuby
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B-703 Developmental Biology
1. Basic concepts of molecular regulation of development: Transcription factors in
differential gene expression; morphogens and axis formation; autocrine and
paracrine regulation. How cell proliferation, apoptosis, and fate specification
determine developmental processes.
2. Fertilization: Structure of oocytes and spermatocytes. The process of fertilization.
3. Comparative study of early embryonic development: (Caenorhabditis elegans,
amphibians, birds, and mammals)
a) Cleavage formation
b) Gastrulation
c) Axis formation: Signalling cascades and molecular understanding of
anteroposterior, mediolateral, and dorsoventral axes development.
4. Organogenesis in vertebrates: Germ layer formation. Regulation of formation of the
somite’s, heart, kidney, blood vessels, and limb. Changes in circulation pattern
between fetus and newborn.
5. Metamorphosis and regeneration process: Hormonal control of metamorphosis in
amphibians and insects; wing imaginal disc formation in drosophila. Regeneration
in planaria and that of vertebrate limb.
6. Stem cells: Concepts of totipotent, pluripotent, and multipotent cells. Factors
regulating “stemness” of a cell. Embryonic vs. adult stem cells. Sources of stem
cells in vertebrates and their applications.
7. Developmental disorders and aging: Regulatory role of genetic and environmental
factors. Role of carcinogens and teratogens.
8. Development processes in plants: How are the mechanisms different from that of
animal development? Gametogenesis, pollination, and fertilization processes in
angiosperms. Hormonal regulation of seed dormancy and the process of
germination. Root and shoot development mechanisms. Reproductive phase:
photoperiod sensitivity and molecular regulation of flowering process.
9. Epigenetic and environmental control of development: Sexual dimorphism, sex
determination, X inactivation. Environ-elicited phenotypic changes. Defense
mechanism-related changes.
14
6. Bright field: principle, adv, disadv, sample prep, data interpretation
7. Dark field: principle, significance, adv, diasdv, sample prep
8. Phase contrast: how to establish contrast, what is contrast, phase rings, ray
diagrams associated with phase contrast microscope, adv, disadv, sample prep,
Optical path distance etc.
9. DIC microscopy: principle, ray diagrams, adv, diasdv, significance
10. Fluorescence microscopy:
a) Phenomenon, fluorophore compounds – structure, modes of action; GFP,
EGFP, mcherry, engineering of proteins to yield fluorophore proteins: YFPs, etc.
b) phosphorescence, autofluorescence, photobleaching, phototoxicity
(mechanisms of all)
c) Fluorescence microscope: epi-fluorescence working principle,
Immunocytochemistry: principle, methods, choices of fixatives and their modes
of action, how to use immune-stained slides for image acquisition, data analyses
etc.
d) Confocal microscope: principle, ray diagrams, spinning disc, light sources, uses
of lasers, how to set up a confocal microscope?, rastor scanning, pinhole, z-
sections, 3D image, advantages and disadvantages
e) Total internal fluorescence microscope: principle, use
f) SRFM, nanoscopy, Fluorescence speckle microscope
11. Atomic force microscope: principle, use
12. Electron microscope: principle, types, tour to TIFR
13. Laser dissection microscopy, Optical tweezers, Traction force microscope:
principle, use
14. Numericals/Data analysis using ImageJ on: Images are provided and students are
taught how to process the images using ImageJ.
a) counting particles
b) measuring intensity of signals/vesicle trafficking, etc
c) co-localisation index using Pearson’s coefficient
d) migration assay: wound healing assay
15. Experiment designs: learning how to design experiments using microscopy as a
tool, followed by data acquisition, conditions, image analysis etc.
a) New techniques/topics/pathways are always updated in both the courses as and
when required.
b) Resources are mostly slides, handouts of books, papers, research articles and
class notes that are provided to students from time to time.
References
1. Light microscopy: Keller, Goldman (handout)
2. Light microscopy: Murphy (this book I had requested earlier to have in the library) --> I give
the pdf to students of this book
3. Fluorescence microscopy: Goldman Spector (Live cell imaging, this book I had requested
earlier to have in the library)
4. Cold spring harbour: physics of light, microscopy basics
5. Recent Research Papers
B-801 Virology
1. Principles of Universal Biosafety Occupational health and safety, Biological risk
groups, Levels of biosafety, Biosafety cabinets—types and classes, Personal
Protective Equipment, Sterilization, disinfection, sanitization and cleaning
2. History of Virology
3. Taxonomy of Viruses, Binomial classification, LHT classification, ICTV/Baltimore
classification
4. Cultivation of Viruses, Animal viruses (in vitro, in vivo, in ovo), Plant viruses,
Bacteriophages
15
5. Diagnosis of Viruses, Collection of appropriate samples, Platforms of detection
(Microscopic, Serological/immunological, molecular)
6. Viral Architecture, Organization of virus structure, Helical symmetry, Icosahedral
symmetry, Binary symmetry, Viral envelope
7. Transmission of Viruses, Horizontal transmission (Air, Food and water, body
fluids, sexual and mechanical), Vertical transmission, Zoonoses
8. Viral Epidemiology, Concept of sporadic, endemic, epidemic and pandemic,
Evolution and adaptation (Change of virulence & transmission dynamics, Crossing
inter-specific barrier)
9. Viral Pathogenesis, Sub-clinical and acute infections, Persistent and latent
infections, Transforming infections, Abortive infections and null infections,
Cytopathology
10. Viral Immunology, Intrinsic mechanisms (RNAi, CRISPER, APOBEC3, IFITM,
tetherin, cGAS), Innate mechanisms (IFN, Complements, RLR, TLR), Adaptive
mechanisms (CMI, Humoral immunity)
11. Viral Vaccines, History and important milestones in vaccine development, Types
(Live, Killed/ inactivated, VLPs, peptide vaccines, DNA vaccines, genetically
engineered using other viral vectors), Immunization Programme, India
12. Antiviral Agents, Targets of antiviral agents, Current strategies (Antivirals against
HSV, HIV, HBV, HCV), Experimental strategies
13. Viral Hepatitis (HBV, HCV), Genome, Entry and Replication, Pathophysiology,
Natural immunity, Diagnosis, Therapy & Management
14. Viral Encephalitis Concept of AES, myelitis, encephalomyelitis, encephalopathy,
meningoencephalitis, ADEM, Encephalitic viruses, Pathogenesis, Diagnosis and
differential diagnosis
15. Viral Infections of Respiratory Systems, Viruses affecting respiratory systems,
Special Emphasis on Influenza (Genome, Entry and Replication, Pathophysiology,
Natural immunity, Diagnosis), Therapy and Management
16. Retroviral Infections—HIV/AIDS Genome, Entry and Replication,
Pathophysiology, Natural immunity, Diagnosis, Therapy and Management
17. Emerging and Re-Emerging, Viral Infections Concept of emerging diseases, re-
emerging diseases, Factors contributing to emergence, Recent emerging and re-
emerging infections, India, Strategic goals for combating EIDs
References
1. Introduction to Modern Virology - N. J. Dimmock. A. J. Easton. K. N. Leppard, Seventh
Edition Publisher Wiley- Blackwell
2. Principles of Molecular Virology A. Cann, Sixth Edition Publisher: Academic Press
3. Principles of Virology S. Jane Flint. Lynn W. Enquist. Vincent R. Racaniello. Glenn F. Rall.
Anna Marie Skalka, Fourth Edition (2 Vol Set) Publisher: American Society for Microbiology
4. Fields Virology D. Knipe, P. Howley, Sixth Edition (2 Vol Set) Publisher: Lippincott Williams
& Wilkins
B-802 Neurobiology
1. The glial system
Generation of Astrocytes, Oligodendrocytes, and Schwan cells. Function of glia in
normal brain and in neuroprotection.
2. Chemical composition of the brain
Metabolism (utilization and uptake of glucose and amino acids). Blood-Brain
barrier.
3. Neurotransmitters
Synthesis, storage, release, uptake, degradation and action of neurotransmitters,
Acetyl choline, GABA, Serotonin, Dopamine, Glutamate, Nitrous oxide, etc.
Receptors: different subtypes (cholinergic, dopaminergic, adrenergic, and
glutamatergic), mechanism of action, Agonists and Antagonists – their mode of
16
action and effects. Exocytosis of neurotransmitter – Role of synapsis,
synaptogamins, SNAP, SNARE and other proteins in docking, exocytosis and
recycling of vesicles.
4. Sleep and Learning and memory
Mechanism of short-term memory and Long-term memory (long-term
potentiation). Role of sleep in memory consolidation. Electroencephalogram. Role
of second messenger pathways in learning and memory process. Role of synaptic
plasticity.
5. Sensory organs:
a) Vision: Biochemistry of vision: Rod and cone cells, mechanism and regulation
of vision, colour vision, visual field, visual acuity. Visual pathway and
topographic mapping.
b) Audition: functional anatomy of the middle and inner ear. Amplification of
sound. Functional anatomy and mechanism of detection of specific sound
frequency in the inner ear. Mechanism of action of the mechanosensory
receptors in the inner ear.
c) Chemical senses
d) Olfaction: The olfactory pathway, mechanism and the combinatorial code of
detecting a smell.
e) Taste: Mechanism of taste perception.
f) Touch/pain: The touch/pain/temperature pathway (ascending and descending).
Higher order integration in the brain.
6. Pathologies of the nervous system: Molecular basis of Parkinson’s disease,
Alzheimer’s disease, Schizophrenia, Myasthenia gravis and Multiple sclerosis,
stress and antidepressants.
References
1. Neurochemistry by Ferdinand Hucho, VCH Publication, 1986.
2. Basic Neurochemistry by M. P. Spiegel.
3. Cell Biology of the Axon, Series: Results and Problems in Cell Differentiation, Vol. 48.
Koenig, Edward (Ed.) 2009, 350 p.
4. Principles of neural Sciences. Eric Kendel, J. H. Schwartz, T. Jessel. 5th
5. Textbook of medical physiology. A Guyton and J Hall
B-803 Bioinformatics
1. Overview of Bioinformatics
General overview of Bioinformatics
2. Bioinformatics resources
Nature of biological data, Major Bioinformatics resources, Biological databases:
Nucleic acid databases (Genbank, EMBL, DDBJ), protein sequence (PIR-PSD,
Swiss Prot TrEMBL/GenPept). Primary and derived databases. Querying in the
databases. Entrez/SRS query engines.
3. Sequence Analysis/Alignment techniques
Sequence comparison and alignment concepts. Pair wise sequence alignment: local
and global alignment, consensus sequence (sequence logo), frequency matrices
(PAM, BLOSUM), log odds score, penalty, introduction to graphical, dynamic
programming and heuristic methods, database similarity searches-BLAST/FASTA
algorithms, Multiple sequence alignment: clustering, dendogram/tree construction,
molecular phylogeny. Consensus, patterns, motifs, blocks.
4. Genomics and Functional Analysis
Methodologies for high throughput analysis including NGS, application of
bioinformatics in genomics. Comparative genomics.
5. Structural Bioinformatics
Introduction to the protein structural databases (PDB, CATH, SCOP etc.),
Instrumentation: structural/functional genomics initiatives, evolution of structural
17
motifs and molecular evolution (convergent/divergent evolution), structure prediction
methods with particular focus on homology/comparative modelling, structural
validation approaches, protein structures in biotechnology (drug design/Docking).
References
1. Biostatistics: A foundation for Analysis in the Health Sciences 7/E Wayne W. Daniel, Wiley
Series in Probability and Statistics.
2. Introductory Statistics. Fifth Edition (2004) Prem S. Mann. John Wiley and Sons (ASIA) Pvt.
Ltd.
3. Basic Statistics-A primer for Biomedical Sciences- (Olive Jean Dunn).
4. Biostatistics-An introductory text - (Auram Gold Stein).
5. Statistics: An Introductory Analysis (Taro Yamane) Harper and Row Publisher 1964,67,73
6. Computational Biochemistry, By: C. Stan Tsai, A John Wiley & Sons, Inc., publication.
B-804 Biotechnology-II
1. Industrial Biotechnology
a) Bioprocess Technology [basics of bioreactor kinetics and mathematical
equations regarding bioreactors, scale-up and aeration of bioreactors in detail,
Kinetics of microbial growth, substrate utilization and product formation: Batch,
Fed- Batch and continuous processes, scale up concepts with respect to
fermenter design and product formation, Gas exchange and mass transfer: O2
transfer, critical oxygen concentration, determining the oxygen uptake rate, Solid
state fermentation. Common examples: Biopolymers: Xanthan, melanin,
adhesive proteins, rubber, poly hydroxyl alkaloids
b) Downstream Processing - Flocculation and floatation, Filtration, Centrifugation,
Cell disruption, Liquid extraction, Precipitation, Adsorption, Dialysis, Reverse
osmosis, Chromatography, Crystallization and drying, Biodegradation of
xenobiotic compounds
c) Remediation and Biotechnology - Priority pollutants and their health effects,
Microbial basis of biodegradation, Bioremediation (phyto and metal),
Environmental and industrial pollution control, Biopesticides, Microbial plastics,
Solid waste management
2. Medical Biotechnology
a) Small Biological Molecules: - ascorbic acid, indigo, amino acids, lycopene,
succinic acid production, Antibiotics, Tissue Engineering - Growth Factors and
morphogens: signals for tissue engineering and whole organ development,
extracellular Matrix: structure, function and applications to tissue engineering,
Cell adhesion and migration, Inflammatory and Immune responses to tissue
engineered devices
b) Biomaterials - Polymeric scaffolds, Calcium Phosphate Ceramics for bone tissue
engineering, Bio mimetic materials, Nanocomposite scaffolds
3. Nanotechnology (Norine)
a) Introduction to nanotechnology and nano-biotechnology, Nanomaterials and
their uses.
b) Nanoparticles derived from biological molecules, Synthesis of nanoparticles:
strategies, biological methods, general properties and characterization methods
c) Applications of nanotechnology: Nano-sensors, Carbon nanotubes and their
applications in biology
d) Environmental and safety issues with nanoparticles.
4. Principles of plant breeding: Important conventional methods of breeding self and
cross pollinated and vegetatively propagated crops; Non-conventional methods;
Polyploidy: Genetic variability; Plant diseases and defensive mechanisms.
5. Ethics of GM crops and animal cloning
6. Model organisms - S. cerevisiae, Dictyostelium, Caenorhabditis elegans,
Arabidopsis, Zebra Fish, Mouse and Drosophila.
18
References
1. Principles of Gene Manipulation and Genomics, 7th Edition, Sandy B. Primrose and Richard
Twyman Blackwell Publishing, 2006
2. Gene Cloning and DNA Analysis: An Introduction, Brown T. A, Wiley-Blackwell, 2010
3. Genes IX Benjamin Lewin Oxford Publishers
4. Bernard Glick, Jack Pasternak and Cheryl Patten, Molecular Biotechnology- principles and
applications of Recombinant DNA, 4th
5. Principles of gene manipulation by S.B. Primrose and Twyman, 7
6. Molecular Biology of the Gene by Watson fifth edition Pearson Education India, 2004
19
Class 3- 1) Neural control and Coordination 2) Chemical coordination and Integration 3)
Reproduction [5th unit chapter 21, 22 of NCERT Book Class-XI]
4. Plant anatomy: Morphology of Flowering plant, Anatomy of Flowering plant, Structural
organization in animals. [2nd unit chapter 5, 6, 7 of NCERT Book Class-XI]
5. Physiology of Plants: Transport in Plant, Photosynthesis in Higher Plants, Respiration in
Plants, Sexual Reproduction in Flowering plants. [4t h unit chapter 11, 13, 14 of NCERT book
Class-XI and 6th unit chapter- 2 of NCERT book Class-XII]
6. Genetics and Evolution: Principles of Inheritance and Variation, Molecular basis of
Inheritance, Evolution. Plant, Animal and Microorganism- classification. [7th unit chapter 5, 6,
7 of NCERT book Class-XII]
7. Ecology: Organisms and Populations, Ecosystem, Biodiversity and Conservation. [10th unit
chapter 13, 14, 15 of NCERT book Class-XII]
20
10. Membranes: Osmosis-Osmotic fragility test & Osmosis in leaves
11. Lipid Solubility of Membrane
12. Cell Motility
13. Paramoecium Morphology
14. Biochemical Calculations
15. Carbohydrate Identification using Dichotomous Key
16. Carbohydrate Estimation using Anthrone Method
17. Amino Acid Titration
18. Isolation of Starch from Potato
19. Enzyme Kinetics
a) Km and Vmax
b) Optimum pH and Temperature
c) Inhibitor Profile
20. Testing the α-Amylase Inhibitor of the Common Bean
21. Photosynthesis: Isolation of chloroplast and Hill Reaction
22. Identification of unknown protein solution and Sugar Crystal Formation
23. Urine Analysis: Normal and Abnormal Constituents of Urine
21
22. Estimation III:
a) Total Alkalinity of Water Effluent
b) COD of Wastewater
c) Total Hardness of Well Water
23. Enzymes: Extraction, Partial Purification of the following enzymes and determination
of their Km values
a) GPT from Germinating Moong Seeds
b) Alkaline Phosphatase from Germinating Moong Seeds
2. Immunology
a) Antibody detection - Indirect Elisa Method
b) Antigen detection - Direct Elisa Method
c) Ouchterlony- Double diffusion (Antibody Titration)
d) Ouchterlony Double Diffusion (Antigen-Antibody Pattern)
e) Single Radial Immunodiffusion - Mancini technique
f) Immunoelectrophoresis
g) Rocket Electrophoresis
h) WBC & RBC count
i) Serum Protein Electrophoresis
22
3. Plant Physiology
a) M.S. Media Preparation, Callus formation and sub culturing
b) Leaf Pigment Extraction & separation using column chromatography &
Analysis by spectrophotometry
c) Antagonistic action of Gibberellic acid and abscisic acid on germination
using Zea mays seeds
2. Immunology
a) Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) test
b) Widal Test
3. Biotechnology
a) Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP)
b) Random Amplification of Polymorphic DNA (RAPD)
c) Colony PCR
d) Southern Blotting
e) RNA extraction, cDNA preparation, qPCR
f) Protein Purification
4. Electron Microscopy
1. Neurobiology
a) Anatomy using Virtual Anatomy Software
b) Chicken Brain Anatomy
c) Goat Brain – Mulligan Staining
d) Protein Content & Estimation of Acetylcholinesterase Activity
e) Biochemical Estimation of Na+ / K+ - ATPase from brain
f) Estimation of Nitric Oxide
g) Display of Invertebrate Nervous System – Cockroach
h) Display of Invertebrate Nervous System – Earthworm
i) Strops Test
j) C. elegans behavioural assay – Chemotaxis
k) Biopic: EEG, ECG, EOG, EMG
l) Olfactory behaviour of Drosophila larvae
m) Drosophila - Brain Dissection and mounting of Imaginal Discs
23
n) Silver Staining of Neuronal Cells
o) Cog lab: Memory Span & Attention Blink
2. Plant & Industrial Biotechnology
a) Agrobacterium-mediated genetic transformation of tobacco leaf discs
b) Evaluation of Soil Fertility Parameters
c) Protoplast Isolation
d) Isolation of Cellulose Degrading Bacteria from Soil Sample
e) Isolation and characterization of Azotobacter from rhizosphere
f) Isolation and Characterization of Rhizobium strain from the roots of
Trigonellafoenumgraecum
g) In vitro evaluation of antifungal activity of plant extracts
h) Qualitative Test for Plant Metabolites
i) Lipid Accumulation
j) Lactic Acid Fermenter
k) Penicillin Production
l) Glutamic Acid Production
Molecules: Concept of chemical bond between atoms: Types of bonds: Ionic, covalent,
and coordinate bond. The quantum chemical picture: Concept of atomic orbitals,
Concept of hybridization. Molecular geometry: Bond length, bond angle & dihedral angle,
d-orbital participation in molecular bonding, sigma and pi bonding. Shapes of the
molecules: Valence shell electron pair repulsion (VSEPR) theory, effect of lone pair and
electronegativity, isoelectronic principle, examples. Theory of bonding: Valence bond
theory and molecular orbital theory. Molecular orbitals (MO) as linear combination of
atomic orbitals (LCAO), MO treatment for di- and tri-atomic molecules and molecules
involving delocalized pi-electron bonding. Basic concepts of resonance, conjugation,
aromaticity, and hyperconjugation.
Bulk phase: Physical properties and molecular structures: Polarizability and dipole
moment, melting and boiling points, solubility and acid-base properties, Intermolecular
forces (dipole-dipole interaction), Hydrogen bonding and van der Waals forces.
24
theory, Benzenoid and non-benzenoid compounds, anti-aromaticity, homo-aromaticity.
Acidity and basicity: Different concepts, hard and soft acid base. Hydrogen bonding and
its effect on properties of molecular systems and chemical reactions.
References
1. J.D. Lee, Concise Inorganic Chemistry, 4th Edition, ELBS, 1991.
2. P.W. Atkins, Physical Chemistry, 7th Edition, Oxford University Press, 2006.
3. G.M. Barrow, Physical Chemistry, 5th Edition, Tata McGraw-Hill, New Delhi, 1992.
4. R.T. Morrison and R.N. Boyd, Organic Chemistry, 7th Ed, Prentice Hall of India, 2010
5. G.W. Castellan, Physical Chemistry, 3rd Ed. Addison-Wesley / Narosa Pub. House, 1993.
References
1. P.W. Atkins, Physical Chemistry, 7th Ed, Oxford University Press, 2006.
2. G.W. Castellan, Physical Chemistry, 3rd Ed. Wesley/Narosa Publishing House, 1993.
25
3. G.N. Lewis and M. Randall, Thermodynamics, (Revised by K.S. Pitzer and L. Brewer),
International Students Edition, McGraw Hill, 1961.
4. K.G. Denbigh, The principles of Chemical Equilibrium: With Applications in Chemistry and
Chemical Engineering, 4th Ed., Cambridge University Press, 1981
Integral Transforms: Fourier series and Fourier transform, Laplace transform and
applications, convolution and applications.
Vectors and Matrices: Vector calculus: Concept of gradient, divergence and curl,
determinant and inversion of a matrix, Eigen value problems, Secular determinants,
Characteristics polynomials, Eigen values of real symmetric matrices; Eigen values and
Eigen functions, important properties and examples.
References
1. M.R. Spiegel, Schaum's Outline of Advanced Mathematics for Engineers and Scientists,
McGraw-Hill, 2009.
2. E. Kreyszig, Advanced Engineering Mathematics, 10 th Ed., John Wiley & Sons, 2010.
26
Alcohols and thiols: Acidity, H-Bonding, polyhydric alcohols, preparation and
properties of thiols.
Ethers and thioethers: Methods of preparation, reactions, applications.
Aliphatic and aromatic Aldehydes and ketones: Methods of preparations,
carbonylation, Tetrahedral mechanism of nucleophilic addition, aldol and related
reactions; Cannizzaro’s reaction, Reductions, Oximes and their reactions, Baeyer
Villiger and Wittig reaction, conjugate addition, acetals and ketals, α-halogenation,
reductive amination.
Aliphatic and aromatic carboxylic acids and their derivatives: Mono- and poly-
carboxylic acids, acidity, salt formation. Preparations and reactions of esters, amides,
imides, anhydrides. Hoffmann rearrangement, oils, fats and waxes
Aliphatic and aromatic amines: Nitroalkanes and nitroaromatics, Methods of
preparation of ammines, Basicity, Alkylation, Reaction with aldehydes and ketones,
Chemistry of aromatic diazonium salts.
Aliphatic and aromatic sulfonic acids: Methods of preparation, acidity and
applications.
References
1. I. L. Finar, Organic Chemistry, Vol. 1 & 2, Pearson., 2012,
2. R.T. Morrison and R. N. Boyd, Organic Chemistry, Prentice Hall of India, 2010.
3. L.G. Wade, Organic Chemistry, Pearson Education, 2012.
4. G. Solomons and C. Fryhle, Organic Chemistry, 10 th Ed., John Wiley & Sons (Asia) Pte Ltd.,
2009.
5. P. Bruce. Organic chemistry; 8th Ed., Pearson, 2016.
27
iv) Group VIA elements: oxygen, sulphur, selenium, tellurium and polonium –
general properties, structure and allotropy of the elements, chemistry of ozone,
oxides, oxy-acids, oxo-halides, hydrides and halides, organo- derivatives. e)
Group VIIA elements: Fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine and Astatine- general
properties, oxidizing power, hydrogen halides, ionic and molecular halides,
bridging halides, halogen oxides, oxoacids, interhalogen compounds, poly-
halides, pseudo-halogens and pseudo-halides.
References
1. J.E. Huheey, ‘Inorganic Chemistry - Principles of Structure and Reactivity’, 4th Ed. Dorling
Kindersley Pvt. Ltd., 2008.
2. D.F. Shriver, P.W. Atkins and C.H. Langford, ‘Inorganic Chemistry’, Oxford University Press,
1991.
3. F.A. Cotton and G. Wilkinson, ‘Basic Inorganic Chemistry’, Wiley Easter, 1978.
4. J.D. Lee, ‘Concise Inorganic Chemistry’, 5th Ed. Wiley-Blackwell, 1999.
C-401 Spectroscopy-I
Electronic spectroscopy of atoms and molecules: Electronic orbital (i) and spin
(s) angular momenta, l-s coupling and total angular momenta (j). Fine structure of
hydrogen atom spectrum, Spectrum of Li and other H-like atoms, Na-D lines. Spectrum
of He and the alkaline earth atoms. Atomic energy levels of atoms in the ground and
excited states with equivalent and non-equivalent electrons and term symbols. Zeeman
effect and determination of L, S and J values. Vibrational coarse structure of
electronic spectrum of diatomic molecules, Franck–Condon Principle and intensities of
vibrionic lines. Dissociation of diatomic molecules, determination of dissociation energy,
28
Berge-Sponer extrapolation method. Rotational fine structure of electronic and vibration
transitions and pre-dissociation. MO diagram of hydrogen and other diatomic molecules
and their electronic properties. MO diagram of formaldehyde molecule and n-π* and π -
π* transitions. Techniques and instrumentation. Molecular photoelectron spectroscopy.
References
1. G.M. Barrow, Introduction to Molecular spectroscopy, McGraw-Hill, 1962
2. C. N. Banwell and E. M. McCash, Fundamentals of Molecular spectroscopy, Tata McGraw
Hill Pub. Co., New Delhi, 2017.
3. J. D. Graybeal, Molecular Spectroscopy, McGraw Hill International Book Co. N.Y., 1988.
4. Peter F. Bernath, Spectra of atoms and molecules, 3rd Ed., Oxford University Press, 2016.
5. J. Michael Hollas, Modern Spectroscopy, 4th Ed. Wiley, 2004
6.. Andrew E. Derome, Editor, Modern NMR Techniques for Chemistry Research, Pergamon
press, 1997.
Catalysis: Homogeneous catalysis, acid base catalysis, Bronsted catalysis law, general
and specific catalysis, heterogeneous catalysis: adsorption on surfaces, different
isotherms for gas adsorption, negative catalysis and inhibition, surface reactions, effect
of temperature and nature of surface, industrial catalysis. Oscillating chemical reactions.
Real gases: Deviations of behaviour of real gases from ideal gas laws, collision
diameter, equation of state, van der Waals equation, reduced equation of state, Dieterici
29
equation, Berthelot’s equation, equation of Kammerling-Onnes, Virial Theorem and
equation of state, compressibility factors, continuity of state and critical phenomena,
derivation of critical constants for van der Waals equation of state.
Soft mater and colloids: Concept of soft matter, examples, colloidal system:
preparation, classification, optical and electrical properties, effect of electrolytes, zeta
potential, electrophoresis, electro-osmosis. Origin of charge and the mechanism of
flocculation, stability and kinetic properties of sols. Brownian motion, Tyndall effect,
determination of Avogadro’s number. Macromolecules: viscosity and molecular weight
of polymers, osmotic pressure.
Solid State: Introduction to solids, crystalline and amorphous solids, glass transition
References
1. P. L. Houston, Chemical Kinetics and reaction dynamics., Dover Publ., 2001.
2. K. J. Laidler, Chemical Kinetics, 3rd ed. Harper and Row, 1987.
3. P. W. Atkins, Physical Chemistry, 7th Ed., Oxford University Press, 2006.
4. G. M. Barrow, Physical Chemistry, 5th Edition, Tata McGraw-Hill, New Delhi, 1992.
References
1. I.N. Levine, Quantum Chemistry, 5th Ed., Prentice Hall, India, 2012.
30
2. P.W. Atkins, R. Friedman, Molecular Quantum Mechanics, 4th Ed., Oxford
University Press, 2005.
3. A.K. Chandra, Introductory Quantum Chemistry, 4th Ed., Tata McGraw-Hill Publishing, 2001.
Part I: Stereochemistry
Stereochemistry of Organic compounds: Chirality, stereogenic elements, elements
of symmetry, Stereochemistry of compounds with two or more chiral centres.
Stereochemistry of 3,4,5, 6 membered ring compounds; mono and di substituted
cyclohexanes; strains in cycloalkanes, fused ring compounds – decalins.
Stereochemistry of N, S, Si, P, As compounds. Stereochemistry of allenes, spiranes,
biphenyls, ansa compounds, paracyclophanes, alkylidene cycloalkanes Racemates:
types, resolution of racemates. Conformations and conformational analysis, trans
annular effects
Topocity and prostereoisomerism: Homotopic ligands and faces, enantiotropic
ligands and faces, diastereotopic ligands and faces.
Stereoselective synthesis: Additions, elimination, dihydroxylation, addition to carbonyl
group Felkin-Anh model.
Chiral synthesis: Different approaches. Chiral reagents and Chiral auxiliaries.
Diastereoselective synthesis of alkenes, stereoselective alkylation of enolates.
Asymmetric reactions: aldol reaction, Michael reaction, Sharpless epoxidation,
dihydroxylation, oxidations and reductions aminohydroxylation; Jakobson epoxidation,
Hydrogenation, Diels-Alder reaction. Chiral borane reagents. Asymmetric catalysis-
Grubb’s catalyst, Wilkinson’s catalyst. Cram and Felkin models
References
1. I. L. Finar, Organic Chemistry, Vol. 1 & 2, Pearson., 2012.
2. R. T. Morrison and R. N. Boyd, Organic Chemistry, 7 th Ed, Prentice Hall of India, 2010
3. Emest Eliel, Stereochemistry of Carbon Compounds, Tata-McGraw Hill Edition, 2001.
4. P.S. Kalsi, Stereochemistry Conformation and Mechanism, New Age International, 2005.
31
5. F. A. Carey and R. J. Sundberg, Advanced Organic Chemistry, Part A and B, Springer
International Edition, 2007.
6. J. Clayden, N. Greeves, S. Warren, Organic Chemistry, Oxford Edition, 2014.
7. V. K. Ahluwalia, R.K. Parasher, Organic Reaction Mechanisms, Narosa Publishing House,
2011.
References
1. D. A. Skoog, D. M. West, F. J. Holler, S. R. Crouch, Fundamentals of Analytical Chemistry,
8th Ed. Thomson, 2004.
2. A. I. Vogel, A text book of Quantitative Analysis, 5th Ed. Revised by G. H. Jeffery, J. Bassett,
J. Mendham and R. C. Denney, ELBS, 1989.
3. A. K. De, S. M. Khopkar and R.A. Chalmers, Solvent Extraction of Metals, Van Nostrand,
Reinhold, 1970.
4. L. R. Snyder and J. J. Kirkland, Introduction to Modern Liquid Chromatography, 2nd Ed.,
Wiley, 1979.
32
5. J. A. C. Broekaert, Analytical Atomic Spectrometry with flames and Plasmas, Wiley-VCH,
2002.
6. S.K. Aggarwal and H.C. Jain, Editors, Introduction to Mass Spectrometry.
Semiempirical methods: Huckel theory for conjugated systems, Parisar Parr Pople
approximation and several approximate semiempirical methods of electronic structure
calculations.
Miscellaneous topics: Concept of basis sets and Slater and Gaussian type orbitals,
virial theorem and Hellmann Feynman theorem, introduction to density functional
methods, Molecules to solids and bonds to bands for extended systems.
References
1. I. N. Levine, Quantum Chemistry, 6th Ed., Prentice Hall, India, 2012.
2. P. W. Atkins, R. Friedman, Molecular Quantum Mechanics, 4th Ed., Oxford University Press,
2005.
3. A. K. Chandra, Introductory Quantum Chemistry, 4th Ed., Tata McGraw-Hill Publishing, 2001.
4. A. Szabo and N.S. Ostlund, Modern Quantum Chemistry, Dover, 1996
5. F. L. Pilar, Elementary Quantum Chemistry, McGraw Hill, 1968.
Crystal Field theory: Crystal field splitting and elementary treatment of the electronic
spectra, Jahn-Teller distortion of octahedral complexes, square planar complexes,
tetrahedral complexes, magnetic properties of 3d compounds.
33
Molecular Orbital theory: Nomenclature of coordination compounds, d-orbital splitting
in various fields - Spectroscopic states - Tanabe-Sugano and Orgel diagrams -
Derivation of Ligand field parameters (Dq. B) from electronic spectra - Magnetic
moments - Orbital contribution, spin-orbit coupling and covalency - Molecular orbitals
and energy level diagrams for common symmetries.
Bonding involving-donor ligands: Back-bonding - f-orbital splitting - Spectral and
magnetic properties of f-block elements.
References
1. F. A. Cotton, G. Wilkinson, C. A. Murillo and M. Bochmann, Advanced Inorganic Chemistry,
6th Ed., Wiley Eastern, John Wiley, 1999.
2. J. E. Huheey, E. Keiter and R. Keiter, Inorganic Chemistry, 4 th Ed., Harper Collins College
Publisher, 1993.
3. D. Banerjea, Inorganic Chemistry Principles, Books Syndicate Pvt. Ltd., 2000.
4. N. N. Greenwood and E. A. Earnshaw, Chemistry of Elements, Pergamon Press, 1989.
C-504 Spectroscopy-II
References
1. L. D. Field, S. Sternhell and J. R. Kalman. Organic Structures from Spectra, 5 th Ed., John
Wiley and Sons, 2013
2. R. M. Silverstein, F. X. Webster, Spectrometric Identification of Organic Compounds, 6th Ed.,
Wiley, 2006.
3. P.S. Kalsi, Spectroscopy of organic compounds, 6th Ed., New Age International, 2006.
4. J. E. Wertz and J. R. Bolton, Electron spin resonance: Elementary theory and practical
applications, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1972.
5. C. P. Poole, Jr., Electron Spin Resonance: A Comprehensive Treatise on Experimental
Techniques, 2nd Ed., John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1983.
34
Nucleic Acid, Protein - Polymer Description of Macromolecular Structure, Intermolecular
and Intramolecular forces, Non-Covalent Interaction.
References
1. Tinoco, Sauer, Wang, and Puglisi, Physical Chemistry: Principles and Applications in the
Biological Sciences, Prentice Hall, Inc., 2003.
2. Peter Atkins and Julio de Paula, Physical Chemistry for the Life Sciences,
3. Dobson CM. General review papers: Principles of protein folding, misfolding and aggregation.
Semin Cell Dev Biol. 2004 Feb;15(1):3-16.
35
LCAO approach to the construction of molecular orbitals, vanishing of matrix elements
and simplifications thereby, Application to coordination chemistry, crystal field splitting
and the resulting spectral properties.
References
1. F.A. Cotton, Chemical Applications of Group Theory, 3 rd Ed., John Wiley, 2003
2. D.M Bishop, Group Theory and Chemistry, Dover Publication, 1993.
3. C.N. Banwell and E.M. McCash, Fundamentals of Molecular spectroscopy, Tata McGraw Hill,
1995.
Chemistry of the elements of the second and third transition elements: Hafnium
group (Group IVB), Niobium and Tantalum (Group VB), Molybdenum and Tungsten
(Group VIB); Technetium and Rhenium (Group VIIB), The Platinum group Metals,
Ruthenium and Osmium (Group VIII(8)); Rhodium and Iridium (Group VIII(9)), Palladium
and Platinum (Group VIII(10), Silver and gold Group (1B(11)).
Reference
1. F. Albert Cotton and G. Wilkinson, Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, John Wiley & Sons, 1988.
36
Nomenclature: Nomenclature of heterocyclic compounds- Trivial, Hantzch-Widman,
Replacement. Nomenclature of mono and polycyclic compounds. Polarity, tautomerism,
aromaticity, electrophilic substitution.
Reactivity, preparation and reactions of the following:
Small rings: Aziridines, thiirane, azetidine, oxetane, thietanes
Five membered: Diazoles, oxazoles and thiazoles.
Six membered: Diazines, triazenes, pyranes and pyrones
Seven membered: Diazepines
Fused ring: Benzofurans, benzopyrones, benzodiazepines, indole, quinolines and
isoquinolines, purines
References
1. I. L. Finar, Organic Chemistry, Vol. 1 & 2, Pearson., 2012.
2. R. K. Bansal, Heterocyclic Chemistry, New Age International Publisher, 2014.
3. J. A. Joule, K. Mills and G. F. Smith, Heterocyclic Chemistry, 3rd Ed., Springer, 1995.
4. L. A. Paquette, Principles of Modern Heterocyclic Chemistry, W.B. Benjamin, Inc., 1978.
5. R. T. Morrison and R. N. Boyd, Organic Chemistry, 7 th Ed, Prentice Hall of India, 2010.
References
1. G. Friedlander, J. Kennedy, Nuclear and Radiochemistry –J. M. Miller and J. W. Macias,
1981.
2. R.D. Evans, Atomic Nucleus, 1955.
3. S. Glasstone, Source book of Atomic Energy, 1969.
4. G.T. Seaborg, Manmade elements, 1963.
5. H. J. Arnikar, Essentials of Nuclear Chemistry, 1982.
6. C. Keller, The Chemistry of Trans-uranium Elements, 1971.
37
7. J. C. Bailar, H. J. Emelius, R. S. Nyholm and A. F. Trotman-Dickenson; Comprehensive
Inorganic Chemistry, Vol. 5, Pergamon Press, Oxford, 1973.
C-701 Photochemistry
Part 1: Basic Principles of photochemistry
Photophysical processes: Properties of the excited states: Einstein theory of
induced absorption and emission processes, laws of photochemistry, Lambert – Beer’s
law, absorption coefficient and transition moment integral, Jablonski diagram, De-
excitation processes of the excited molecules (radiative and non-radiative processes,
radiative lifetime, delayed emission, nonradiative relaxation, excimer and exciplex
formation, heavy atom effect, etc.). Kinetics of excited state processes and quantum
yields of different processes. Acid-base properties, redox potential, geometry, dipole
moment, dynamic properties of the excited states.
Photoinduced chemical processes: Photo-dissociation, photo-ionization,
intramolecular charge and proton transfer processes, intermolecular electron and proton
transfer reactions, conformational relaxations, intra and intermolecular energy transfer
processes and other important photochemical reactions. Kinetics and mechanism of
photochemical reactions.
Applications of photochemistry: Photosynthesis, vision, solar energy conversion,
atmospheric photochemistry, single molecule spectroscopy, Photon-up-conversion
process, absorption properties of nanoparticles and nanoaggregates.
Techniques and Studies on ultrafast processes: Nanosecond laser flash photolysis,
Single photon counting technique, picosecond and femtosecond Pump- probe transient
absorption and fluorescence up conversion techniques. Singlet and triplet state
properties, solvation dynamics and studies on other excited state properties.
References
1. K. K.Rohatagi-Mukherjee, Fundamentals of Photochemistry, Wiley Eastern, 1978.
2. M. S.Wrighton, Inorganic and Organometallic photochemistry, ACS Pub.,1978.
3. V. Balzani and V. Carasiti, Photochemistry of Co-ordination compounds, Academic
Press,1970.
4. J. D. Coyle, Introduction to Organic Photochemistry.
38
C-702 Molecular Thermodynamics
Introduction: Review of Basics of Thermodynamics and scope of Statistical Mechanics
as a route for bridging the microscopic and macroscopic description. Concept of
probability distribution, correlation functions and their application in determining the
structure and dynamics in chemistry.
References
1. D.A. Mcquarrie, Molecular Thermodynamics, Viva Books, 2010
2. D.A. Mcquarrie, Statistical Mechanics, Viva Books, 2011.
3. H.B. Callen, Thermodynamics and an Introduction to Thermostatics, 2 nd Ed., John Wiley, 1985.
4. R K Pathria and Paul D. Beale, Statistical Mechanics, 3rd Ed., Elsevier, 2011.
5. M.P. Allen and D.J.Tildesley, Computer Simulation in Liquids, Oxford University Press, 1987.
Overview: 18-electron rule, square planar complex. Carbonyl ligand – bonding, binary
carbonyl complexes, oxygen-bonded carbonyls, other ligands similar to CO, IR
spectrum, main group parallels with binary carbonyl. Pi-ligands – linear and cyclic pi
systems, NMR spectra of organometallic complexes. Comparative survey of structure
and bonding of metal alkyls and aryls, complexes with acids, CO and related ligands,
complexes with olefins, acetylenes and related unsaturated molecules, catalytic
properties of mononuclear compounds, stereochemical non-rigidity in organometallic
compounds, boranes, carboranes and metallocarboranes, bimetallic and cluster
complexes, structure and applications in catalysis, applications of organometallic
compounds in organic synthesis, enantioselective synthesis via organometallic
compounds, importance of organometallic compounds in certain biological systems.
Other important ligands – complexes containing M – C, M= C, M ≡ C bonds, hydride and
dihydrogen complexes, phosphines and related ligands.
39
transition metal complexes, hydroformylation reaction, Walker-Smidt synthesis of
acetaldehyde, hydrogenation, Monsanto acetic acid process. Transition metal carbine
complexes – structure, preparation and chemistry, metathesis and polymerization
reactions. Applications of organometallics to organic synthesis and other applications.
Metal cluster compounds - metal-metal bond, carbonyl and non-carbonyl clusters,
structure and bonding low dimensional solids, clusters in catalysis.
References
1. ‘The organometallic chemistry of the transition metals’, sixth edition, R. H. Crabtree, John
Wiley & Sons, 2014.
2. ‘Basic Organometallic chemistry: Concepts, synthesis and applications’, second Edition, B.
D. Gupta and A. J. Alias, University Press (India) Pvt. Ltd. 2013.
3. ‘Organometallic chemistry: A Unified Approach’, R. C. Mehrotra and A. Singh, Wiley
Interscience, 1991.
4. F. A. Cotton, G. Wilkinson, C.A. Murillo and M. Bochmann, Advanced Inorganic Chemistry,
6th Edn., Wiley, 1999.
5. N. N. Greenwood and A. Earnshaw, Chemistry of the Elements, lst Ed., Pergamon, 1985.
6. S. J. Lippard & J. M. Berg, Principles of bioinorganic chemistry, University Science Books,
Mill Valley, 1994.
Acidity Basicity: Aqueous and non-aqueous solution, Hammett acidity function, super
acid and super bases
Solvatochromism
40
C-801 Materials Chemistry
Introduction to Hard and Soft Matter
Basic Aspects of the Solid State (Hard Matter): Types of solids, crystalline and
amorphous structures.
Solid State Crystalline Structure: Primitive lattice vectors - reciprocal lattice - crystal
systems and desymmetrization schemes. Bravais lattices; closed packed structures,
octahedral and tetrahedral holes, crystallographic point groups and space groups -
organic and in organic crystal structure motifs - polytypes and polymorphs. perovskites
and related structures, normal and inverse spinels.
Defects and Non-stoichiometry: Intrinsic and extrinsic defects - point, line and plane
defects; vacancies, Schottky defects, Frenkel defects - Charge compensation in
defective solids - non-stoichiometry, thermodynamic aspects and structural aspects.
Thermal and electrical Properties: Specific heat of solids, thermal conductivity, Free
electron theory, electrical conductivity, Hall effect - band theory, band gap, metals and
semiconductors -intrinsic and extrinsic semiconductors, hopping semiconductors - semi-
conductor/metal transition - p-n junctions – super conduction, Meissner effects, type I
and II superconductors, isotope effect, basic concepts of BCS theory, manifestations of
the energy gap, Josephson devices.
41
temperature - homeotropic, planar and twisted nematics - chiral nematics - smectic A
and smectic C phases - cholesteric-nematic transition - optical properties of liquid
crystals - effect of external field.
Materials for Solid State Devices: Rectifiers, transistors, capacitors - IV-V compounds
- low-dimensional quantum structures, optical properties.
Organic materials: Organic Solids, Fullerenes, Conducting organics – organic
superconductors - magnetism in organic materials, Fullerenes - doped fullerenes as
superconductors
Nonlinear Optical Materials: Nonlinear optical effects, second and third order –
molecular hyperpolarisability and second order electric susceptibility - materials for
second and third harmonic generation.
References
1. H. V. Keer, Principles of the Solid State, Wiley Eastern, 1993.
2. N. W. Ashcroft, N. W. Mermin, Solid State Physics, Saunders College, Philadelphia, 1976.
3. W. D. Callister, Material Science and Engineering. An Introduction, Wiley, NY, 1985.
4. C. Kittel, Introduction to solid state physics, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1968.
5. A. R. West, Solid State Chemistry and its Applications, John Wiley & Sons, NY, 2005.
6. N. N. Greenwood, Ionic crystals, Lattice defects and non-stoichiometry, Butterworths,
London 1970
42
ethers, nomenclature, the structure of inclusion complexes, dynamic character of
inclusion complexes, the complexes involving induced fit and without it, endo-hedral
fullerene, hemicarcerand and soft rebek's tennis ball-like hosts.
Most Interesting Macrocyclic Ligands: Hosts for Inclusion Complexes, Crown ethers
and coronands, cryptates and cryptands, calixarenes, hemispherands, and spherands,
carcerands, hemicarcerands and novel `molecular flasks' enabling preparation and
stabilization of short-lived species, cyclodextrins, and their Complexes, endohedral
fullerene complexes, nanotubes and other fullerene-based supramolecular systems,
dendrimers, cyclophanes and steroids forming inclusion complexes, anion binding
receptors and receptors with multiple binding Sites.
References
1. H. R. Allcock, F. W. Lampe and J. Mark, Contemporary Polymer Chemistry, Prentice Hall,
Inc., 1990.
2. M. P. Stevens, Polymer Chemistry: An Introduction, 2nd Ed, Oxford University Press, 1990.
3. F. W. Billmeyer, Jr., Textbook of Polymer Science (3rd Edition) Wiley-Inter Science, 1984.
4. A. Ravve, Principles of Polymer Chemistry.
5. F. Vogtle, Supramolecular Chemistry, John Wiley, 1991.
7. G. R. Desiraju, Crystal Engineering. The Design of Organic Solids, Elsevier, 1989.
8. Helena Dodziuk, Introduction to Supramolecular Chemistry, Kluwer Academic Press, 2002.
43
chemistry, crystal and ligand field calculations, computation of potential energy surfaces,
etc.
Atomistic and continuum length scales: Outline of Monte Carlo and Molecular
dynamics simulation, Implementation of these methods, using standard or own
developed software, for equilibrium and dynamical properties of simple liquids.
Calculation of radial distribution function, time correlation functions, transport
coefficients and other thermodynamic properties.
References
1. C. J. Cramer, Essentials of Computational Chemistry: Theories and Models, John Wiley &
Sons, 2002.
2. David Young, Computational Chemistry: A practical Guide for applying Techniques to Real
World Problems, Wiley Interscience, 2001.
3. A. R. Leach, Molecular Modelling: Principles and Applications, Pearson Education, 2001.
4. E. G. Lewars, Computational Chemistry, 2nd Ed., Springer, 2011.
5. J. B. Foresman, A. Frisch, Exploring Chemistry with Electronic Structure Methods. Gaussian
Inc., 1996.
6. M. P. Allen and D. J. Tildesley, Computer Simulations of Liquids, Oxford, 1987.
Different kinds of lasers: (a) gas lasers: excitation mechanisms, He-Ne laser, Argon
ion laser, Cu-vapor laser, nitrogen laser, excimer laser CO2 laser, Chemical laser. (b)
Liquid state laser: Dye laser. (c) Solid state laser: Doped insulator lasers- Nd:YAG,
Nd:Glass, Ti: Sapphire and Ruby lasers, semiconductor laser. (d) Other lasers: Free
electron laser.
Pulsed lasers: (a) Q-switching: Principle, rotating mirror, electro-optic Q-switch – half
wave and quarter wave configurations, Passive or saturable absorber. (b) Mode-locking:
Principle, Differences in the output of non-mode-locked and mode-locked lasers, Time
– bandwidth product, condition for obtaining ultrashort pulses, peak power. Methods of
mode-locking: Active mode-locking – Accousto-optic method, passive saturable
absorber – CPM dye laser and Kerr lens mode-locking – Ti:Sapphire laser. Chirped
pulse amplification, Frequency conversion techniques.
44
References
1. J. Wilson and F. B. Hawkes, Optoelectronics,
2. A. Ghatak and Thyagarajan, Optical Electronics,
3. W. Demtroder, Laser Spectroscopy – Basic concepts and Instrumentation,
4. William T. Silfvast, Laser Fundamental,
Reference
1. Andrew E. Derome, Editor, Modern NMR Techniques for Chemistry Research, Pergamon
press, 1997.
Topics to be covered: Calibrations of pipette, burette, standard flasks etc., acid base
titrations, recrystallization, thin layer chromatography, identification of organic functional
groups, complexometric titrations based on EDTA complexation with metal ions,
Synthesis of benzoic acid, diazotization etc.
References
1. Vogel's Textbook of Quantitative Chemical Analysis (5th Edition; Longman)
2. Vogel's Qualitative Inorganic Analysis (7th Edition)
3. Various relevant articles in Journal of Chemical Education, American Chemical Society
References
1. Vogel's Textbook of Quantitative Chemical Analysis, 5th Edition
2. Vogel's Qualitative Inorganic Analysis, 7th Edition,
3. Various relevant articles in Journal of Chemical Education, American Chemical Society
45
CL-301 Chemistry Laboratory
Inorganic Chemistry
Physical chemistry
Physical Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
1. Estimation of Ascorbic acid by differential pulse polarography
46
2. Cyclic voltammetry of K3Fe(CN)6 + K4Fe(CN)6
3. Estimation of copper by Normal pulse polarography and differential pulse
polarography
4. Cyclic voltammetry of redox system
5. Electrochemical deposition of metals
6. Estimation of silver by differential pulse polarography
7. Making an alloy (solder)
8. Thermal decomposition of calcium carbonate
9. Microscale reactions of positive ions with sodium hydroxides
10. Making of a photographic print.
Organic Chemistry
1. Preparation of 2,5-dimethyl-1-phenylpyrrole
2. Preparation of 1,2,3,4-tetmhydrocarbozole
3. Preparation of benzimidazole
4. Preparation of benzofurazan-l-oxide
5. Preparation of ethyl 2-oxo-2H-1-benzopyran-3-carboxylate
6. Preparation of 4-methyl-2(1H)-quinoline
7. Preparation of pyrimidone
Bio-Physical Chemistry
1. Determination of fluorescence quenching rate constant (kq) using Stern-Volmer
plot: Elucidation of mechanism of collisional and static quenching
2. Characterization of intermediate states of protein using fluorescence
spectroscopy
3. Determination of association constant (Ka) and binding capacity (n) of drug-
protein interaction using difference spectroscopy.
4. Determination of Tm of protein unfolding
5. Determination of protein aggregation kinetics parameters, kapp, Vmax, Vi,
amplitude and lag time
6. To estimate the melting temperature of DNA by spectroscopic methods.
7. Protein labelling with fluorescent dye FITC
8. Crystallization of commercial HEW-Lysozyme and draw the phase diagram to
identify the nucleation zone for the protein
9. Determination of Helix –coil transitions in polypeptides: Conformational changes
in poly-γ-benzyl-l-glutamate (PBG) in mixed solvent of dichloro acetic acid (DCA)
and ethylene dichloride using polarimeter
10. Conformational characterization of proteins and nucleic acids using circular
dichroism spectropolarimeter.
11. Secondary structure prediction of proteins from CD data using different structure
prediction software
12. Quantitative determination of DNA-ligand binding using fluorescence
13. Assessment of the purification of a protein by ion exchange and GFC
14. Evaluation of the Hill coefficient from Scatchard and Klotz plots
15. Determination of equilibrium constant (K) and vant Hoff’s enthalpy (ΔHVH) N-
acetylglycosamine (NAG) and lysozyme interaction using fluorescence
spectrophotometer
16. Determination of melting temperature (Tm), calorimetric enthalpy (ΔHcal), vant
Hoff’s enthalpy (ΔHVH) and heat capacity (ΔCp) of lysozyme unfolding using
Differential scanning calorimeter
17. Determination of binding constant (Ka), enthalpy (ΔH), entropy (ΔS) and reaction
stoichiometry of drug-serum albumin association
47
18. Thermodynamics characterization of intermediate states of protein using
isothermal titration calorimetry
Organic Chemistry
1. Experiment on solvent extraction
2. Isolation of caffeine from tea/coffee
3. Isolation of lycopene from tomato
4. Synthesis of heterobiaryl compound and synthesis of drug (dentrolene)
5. An operationally simple aqueous Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling reaction
6. Preparation and use of Wilkinson’s catalyst
48
G-501 Environmental Science
References
1. Energy in Perspective, J. B. Marion, University of Maryland, Academic Press, (1974)
2. Energy and Environment, Robert A. Ristinen and Jack J. Kraushaar, 2 nd Edn., John Wiley and
Sons, Inc. (2006).
3. Renewable Energy, Boyle Godfrey, Oxford University Press (2004)
4. Environment, Problems and Solutions, D.K. Asthana and Meera Asthana, S.Chand and
Co.(2006)
5.Text Book on Environmental Chemistry, Balaram Pani, I.K.International Publishing
House(2007).
49
Current Trends in Computation Industry: General introduction of the current
computer hardware and software. The basic building blocks of a modern hardware, viz.
1) processing unit, 2) graphical processing unit, 3) memory and storage, 4) input and
output devices and their ports. The basic building blocks of software, viz. 1) the concept
of Operating System and their different types, 2) the file system for different operating
systems, 3) concept of programs and scripts. Trends in current computing industry: viz.
parallel processing, virtualization, cloud computing, etc.
Binary Logic and Logic Gates Introduction to binary arithmetic. Introduction to logic gates
and logic operations.
Introduction to Linux Operating System: The structure of the OS. The file system.
Introduction to the shell (BASH) and the GUI. Introduction to Office applications (word
processor, spreadsheet, etc.). Basic commands of the shell. Some aspects of system
administration. Usage of plotting software to plot graphs, viz. GNUPLOT.
The Novice's Programming Techniques in Fortran: The data types. Reading and writing
of data (input and output). Basic arithmetic operations. Formatting of input and output.
Conditional statements.
50
GL-201 Electronics Laboratory
Analogue electronics: Introduction to passive electronic components -resistance,
capacitance, inductance; Circuit theorems: Thevenin’s theorem, Norton’s theorem and
Maximum power transfer theorem; basic concepts of semiconductor diode and
transistor; Principle of DC power supply; half and full wave bridge rectifier, capacitor filter
– ripple factor, concept of load and line regulation, concept of constant voltage source
and constant current source; concept of short circuit protection and current limit
protection; Zener regulator; concept of Switch Mode Power Supply (SMPS), power
supply ICs, charge pump ICs for stepping up voltage and for bipolar supply; application
of Bipolar Junction Transistor (BJT) - biasing circuits: The CE configuration, fixed base
bias, emitter bias, and potential-divider or voltage divider bias; CE amplifier, amplifier as
a switch, concept of negative feedback, differential amplifier; Operational Amplifier
(OPAMP): principle, basic characteristics and parameters relevant for general use; non-
inverting and inverting amplifier, voltage follower, difference amplifier, summing
amplifier, voltage controlled current source; OPAMP comparator, Schmidt trigger; Digital
to Analogue Converter (DAC) with weighted resistance and R-2R ladder network;
Analogue to Digital Converter (ADC); filters: low pass, high pass; band pass; Butterworth
filter. Digital electronics: Review of basic logic gates; DeMorgan’s theorem, Use of
NAND / NOR as universal building blocks; arithmetic circuits; binary addition, half adder,
full adder, binary subtraction - 1s and 2s complement, controlled inverter, adder /
subtracter, parity checker; Flip-Flops (FF): RS-FF, D-FF, JK-FF; counters and shift
registers: binary counter, ripple counter.
References
1. Electronic Principles, 7th Edition, A. Malvino and D.J. Bates, Tata McGraw–Hill Education 2006.
2. Electronic Devices and Circuits, 5th Edition, David A. Bell, Oxford University Press 2008.
3. Digital Principles and Applications, 7th Edition, D. Leach, A. Malvino and G. Saha, McGraw-Hill
Education (India), 2010.
2. Reading Skills: Focus will be on different kinds of reading skills such as skimming,
scanning and detailed reading. The passages selected would be graded for linguistic
competence. The teacher would also use the passages to show students how
language is structured in different rhetorical patterns such as narrative, analytical,
argumentative and interpretative.
51
3. Speaking Skills: Focus will be first on conversational practice in small groups, at
the one-to-one as well as one-to-many level. It will be followed by scientific
presentations, participation in debates and group discussions (in small groups).
4. Writing Skills (mainly scientific writing): The focus will be on teaching students
how to write scientific material in a coherent and readable style. Discussion will
involve style (descriptive, explanatory, argumentative, analytical and interpretative),
complexity of sentences, specialist vocabulary, proper usage of nouns and verbs
and also different kinds of writing (reports, papers, summaries, synopses, etc
5. Remedial Grammar: Additionally, some sessions can be reserved for remedial
English grammar exercises based on the need of the students.
References
1. Vernon Booth, ‘Communicating in Science: Writing a Scientific Paper and Speaking at
Scientific Meetings’, Cambridge University Press, 1993.
2. Robert Barras, ‘Scientists Must Write: A Guide to Better Writing for Scientists, Engineers and
Students’, Routledge, London, 2002.
3. Martin Heidegger, ‘The question concerning technology, basic writings’, Harper Collins, New
York, 2008.
4. Jean Baudrillard, ‘The Ecstasy of Communication’, Cambridge: MIT Press, 2012.
References
1. R. A. Baron, ‘Psychology (5th ed), PHI New Delhi, 2018.
2. R. S. Feldman, ‘Introduction to Psychology’ (6th ed) Tata McGraw-Hill,
2004
3. C. T. Morgan, R. A. King, J. R. Weisz and J. Scopler, ‘Introduction to
Psychology’ (7th ed), Tata McGraw-Hill, 1993.
52
H-301 Communication Skills - II and Introduction to Literature
(3 Credits, 45 Lectures)
(a) Communication Skills (22 Lectures): Advanced topics on scientific writing and
lecturing skills. Development of skills which are multifaceted and which lead to
overall holistic development of personality. Techniques to master group discussion
and succeed in interviews. Enhancement of public speaking and presentation skills.
History of Ancient Indian Science: Indian civilization from pre-historic times to the
Indus Valley Civilization. Ancient Indian mathematics and astronomy. Ancient 53 Indian
medicine and biology. Chemistry, metallurgy and technology in general in ancient India.
Strengths, weaknesses and potentialities of ancient Indian science.
Introduction to Philosophy of Science: What is science? Scientific reasoning;
Explanation in science; Realism and instrumentalism; Scientific change and scientific
revolutions.
References
1. Stephen F. Mason, ‘A History of the Sciences’, Collier Books, Macmillan Pub. Co. (1962)
2. D. M. Bose, S. N. Sen and B. V. Subbarayappa, ‘A Concise History of Science in India’,
INSA, 1971.
3. Samir Okasha, ‘Philosophy of Science – A Very Short Introduction’, Oxford University Press,
2002.
4. Ron Harre, ‘Great Scientific Experiments’, Oxford University Press, 1983.
5. Lloyd Motz and Jefferson Hane Weaver, ‘The Story of Physics’, Avon Books, 1992.
6. Colin A. Ronan, ‘The Cambridge Illustrated History of World Science’, Cambridge University
Press, 1983.
7. Helaine Selin and Roddam Narasimha, Eds, ‘Encyclopaedia of Classical Indian Sciences’,
University Press, 2007
8. Thomas S. Kuhn, ‘The Structure of Scientific Revolutions: 50th Anniversary Edition’,
University of Chicago Press, 2012.
53
H-501 (a) Ethics of Science, and (b) Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)
(3 Credits, 45 lectures)
References
1. David B. Resnik, ‘The Ethics of Science: An Introduction’, Routledge, New York, 1998
2. V. K. Ahuja, (a) ‘Intellectual Property Rights in India’, 2015 (b) ‘Law Relating to
Intellectual Property Rights’, 2017.
Introduction to Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) and National Stock Exchange (NSE),
Sensex, trading in stock market, etc.
Foreign exchange rates, Banking sector and interest rates, Sources of revenues and
expenditure at the government level, Economic policies of Government of India, etc.
The objective of this course is to introduce the students to the world of Innovation and
Entrepreneurship, helping them with identification of the opportunities, generation of
ideas, customer acquisition, and Technology evolution/disruption and business life-
cycles.
54
technology-based), Service provider/consultancy firm (knowledge-based), etc.
Understanding legal framework and compliances involved.
The Start-up process/New venture creation: Leadership & team building, Technology
evolution and business life cycles, pitching: Satisfying experience of seeing the acquired
knowledge bearing its fruit.
References
1. P. A. Samuelson & W. D. Nordhaus, Economics, McGraw Hill, New York, 1995.
2. K. E. Case, R. C. Fair and S. M. Oster, Principles of Economics, 10 th Edition, Pearson
Education Inc, 2012
3. P. Drucker, Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Harper Collins Publishers, New York, 1993.
4. Charles Hampden-Turner, Teaching Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Cambridge University
Press, New York, 2009
5. H. J. Harrington, Creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship, CRC Press, Taylor & Francis
Group, USA, 2019.
6. Anil Lamba, Romancing the Balance Sheet, 2nd Edition, 2016.
7. John Adair, Decision making & problem solving, Kogan page, London, 2013
Series: AP, GP and HP and inequalities of the mean, Sum of a series, Sigma notation,
Convergence, Limit Theorems, Divergence Tests for Convergence (Absolute
Convergence and Non-absolute Convergence), Series of Functions, Taylor's Series,
Power Series. (2 weeks)
55
Higher Derivatives. Derivatives of 𝑒 𝑥 , log 𝑥, Trigonometric and Inverse Trigonometric
Functions, derivatives of inverse functions, Derivatives of Power Series. Mean Value
Theorem, Derivatives and Extrema, L'Hospital's Rule. (3 weeks)
References
1. R. G. Bartle and D. R. Sherbert, Introduction to Real Analysis, John Wiley and Sons Inc., 1994.
2. T. M. Apostol, Mathematical Analysis, Pearson Education, 2004.
3. G. S. Strang, Calculus, Wellesley-Cambridge Press, 1991.
4. D. M. Burton, Elementary Number Theory, McGraw-Hill Education, 2010
M-101 Mathematics-I
Introduction (1 week)
Infinite Series: Convergence and Divergence of Series, Geometric Series, Tests for
Convergence. (1 week)
References
1. R. G. Bartle and D. R. Sherbert, Introduction to Real Analysis, John Wiley and Sons Inc., 1994.
2. P. D. Lax and M. S. Terell, Calculus with Applications, Springer, 2014.
3. K. A. Ross, Elementary Analysis, UTM, Springer, 2013.
4. G. S. Strang, Calculus, Wellesley-Cambridge Press, 1991.
5. T. M. Apostol, Mathematical Analysis, Pearson Education, 2004.
6. J. P. D’Angelo and D. B. West, Mathematical Thinking - Problem Solving and Proofs, Second
Edition, Prentice Hall, 2000.
Complex Numbers: real and imaginary parts, the complex plane, complex algebra
(complex conjugate, absolute value, complex equations, graphs, physical applications).
Consequences of Euler’s formula. (2 weeks)
56
determinant. Row and Column Operations, Gauss Elimination, Simple properties of
matrices and their inverses. (2 weeks)
Basic Statistics: frequency tables, mean, median, mode, standard deviation. (1 week)
References
1. R. G. Bartle and D. R. Sherbert, Introduction to Real Analysis, John Wiley and Sons Inc., 1994.
2. T. M. Apostol, Mathematical Analysis, Pearson Education, 2004.
3. G. S. Strang, Calculus, Wellesley-Cambridge Press, 1991.
M-201 Mathematics-II
Continuity: Continuous Functions, Graphical Representation, Composition and Inverse
of Continuous Functions, Continuous Functions on Intervals. (2 weeks)
Vector Spaces: Vector Spaces (finite dimensional, over ℝ or ℂ. Illustrate concepts with
2- or 3- dimensional examples), Linear Independence, Basis, Dimension, Rank of a
Matrix, Span. Linear Transformations, Matrix Representation of a Linear Transformation,
Kernel and Image, Change of Bases, Invertibility and Rank. (4 weeks)
References
1. M. Artin, Algebra, Prentice Hall, 1991.
2. R. G. Bartle and D. R. Sherbert, Introduction to Real Analysis, John Wiley and Sons Inc., 1994.
3. P. D. Lax and M. S. Terell, Calculus with Applications, Springer, 2014.
4. K. A. Ross, Elementary Analysis, UTM, Springer, 2013.
5. T. M. Apostol, Mathematical Analysis, Pearson Education, 2004.
6. G. S. Strang, Calculus, Wellesley-Cambridge Press, 1991.
57
M-301 Foundations
1. Logic: Quantifiers and negations, illustrated by examples of mathematical and non-
mathematical statements.
2. Set Theory: Unions and intersections of arbitrary families, illustrated by examples.
Complements. De Morgan’s laws for arbitrary collection of sets. Symmetric
difference. Power set of a set. Cartesian product of two sets.
4. Cardinality:
(a) Finite and infinite sets.
(b) Bijection relates to same cardinality.
(c) Countable sets. Countably infinite and uncountable sets. Examples.
(d) Every infinite set has a proper, countably infinite subset.
(e) Uncountability of R and P(N). Algebraic numbers are countable. This yields
existence of transcendental numbers.
(f) Schroeder-Bernstein theorem.
References
[1] Naive Set Theory, P. Halmos.
[2] Set Theory and Logic, R. Stoll.
[3] Topology, J. Munkres.
[4] Real Analysis, Bartle and Sherbert.
58
M-302 Analysis-I (Single Variable Analysis)
1. Real number system: Construction via Cauchy sequences. (Note: Dedekind cuts
is an optional topic in M301.)
2. Concept of a field, ordered field, examples of ordered fields, supremum, infimum.
Order completeness of R, Q is not order complete. Absolute values, Archimedean
property of R. The fact that C is a field that cannot be made into an ordered field.
Denseness of Q in R. Every positive real number has a unique positive n-th root.
8. Riemann Integration: Upper and lower Riemann sums, basic properties. Riemann
integrability, f : [a,b] −→ R continuous implies f is Riemann integrable, examples
of Riemann integrable functions which are not continuous on [a,b]. If f : [a,b] −→
R is Riemann integrable then so is
59
References
[1] Introduction to Real Analysis: Robert G. Bartle and Donald R. Sherbert, 4th ed., Wiley Publications,
2011
[2] A First Course in Analysis: George Pedrick, Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics, SpringerScience and
Business Media, 2012. ISBN: 1441985549, 9781441985545
[3] Principles of Mathematical Analysis, Walter Rudin, (Indian Edition), 3rd ed,. McGraw-Hill, 1976. ISBN:
9780070542358.
[4] Tom M. Apostol, Mathematical Analysis, 2nd ed., Pearson Education, 1974. ISBN: 9780201002881.
[5] Michael Spivak, Calculus, 4th ed., Publish or Perish, 2008. ISBN: 9780914098911.
References
[1] M. Artin, Algebra, Prentice Hall of India, 1994.
[2] D.S. Dummit and R.M. Foote, Abstract Algebra, 2nd Ed., John Wiley, 2002.
[3] Joseph Gallion, Contemporary Abstract Algebra, Narosa.
[4] N. Jacobson, Basic Algebra (volumes I and II), Hindustan Publishing Corporation, 1983.
60
11. Quadratic reciprocity and applications.
12. Applications of quadratic reciprocity to calculation of symbols.
13. Legendre symbol: Definition and basic properties.
14. Fermat’s two square theorem, Lagrange’s four-square theorem.
15. Pythagorean triples.
16. Diophantine equations and Bachet’s equation. The duplication formula.
References
[1] D. Burton, Elementary Number Theory.
[2] Kenneth H. Rosen, Elementary number theory and its applications.
[3] Niven, Ivan M.; Zuckerman, Herbert S.; Montgomery, Hugh L, An Introduction to the Theory
of Numbers.
1. Linear maps from Rn to Rm, partial derivatives. Tangent plane and normal line to a
surface at a point. Directional derivative. Jacobian, polar and spherical polar
coordinates. Chain rule. Mean value property and Taylor’s theorem for several
variables.
2. Parametrized surfaces, coordinate transformations, Inverse function theorem,
Implicit function theorem, Rank theorem.
3. Critical points, maxima and minima, saddle points, examples of quadric surfaces in
3-space. Lagrange multiplier method.
4. Multiple integrals, Riemann and Darboux integrals, Iterated integrals. Area and
volume. Improper-integrals.
5. Integration on curves and surfaces: Green’s theorem, Differential forms, Gauss’
Divergence theorem, Stokes’ theorem.
6. (Optional, if time permits): Beta and gamma functions; Γ(
References
[1] Michael Spivak, Calculus on Manifolds, A Modern Approach to Classical Theorems of
Advanced Calculus, Westview Press, 1965. ISBN: 0805390219.
[2] James Munkres, Analysis on Manifolda, Westiew Press, 2nd ed.,1997. ISBN: 0201315963.
[3] Wendell H. Fleming, Functions of Several Variables, Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics,
2nd Ed., Springer-Verlag, 1977.
[4] Jerrold E. Marsden, Anthony J. Tromba and Alan Weinstein, Basic Multivariable Calculus,
W. H. Freeman and Co. Ltd., 2001. ISBN: 9780716724438
[5] Principles of Mathematical Analysis, Walter Rudin, (Indian Edition), 3rd ed,. McGraw-Hill,
1976. ISBN: 9780070542358.
61
4. Linear maps and their correspondence with matrices with respect to given bases,
change of bases.
5. Eigenvalues, eigenvectors, eigenspaces, characteristic polynomial, Cayley-
Hamilton.
6. Bilinear forms, inner product spaces, Gram-Schmidt process, diagonalization,
spectral theorem.
7. (Optional) Classical groups.
References
[1] M. Artin, Algebra, Prentice Hall of India, 1994.
[2] D.S. Dummit and R. M. Foote, Abstract Algebra, 2nd Ed., John Wiley, 2002.
[3] K. Hoffman and R. Kunze, Linear Algebra, Prentice Hall, 1992.
[4] N. Jacobson, Basic Algebra II, Hindustan Publishing Corporation, 1983.
[5] S. Lang, Algebra, 3rd ed. Springer (India) 2004.
M-403 Topology-I
62
11. Connectedness: definition, continuous image of a connected set is connected,
characterization in terms of continuous maps into the discrete space N, connected
subsets of R, intermediate value theorem as a corollary, countable (arbitrary) union
of connected sets, connected components.
References
[1] E. T. Copson, Metric spaces.
[2] M. Eisenberg, Topology.
[3] R.H. Kasriel, Undergraduate topology.
[4] W. Rudin, Principles of mathematical analysis.
[5] G. F. Simmons, Topology and modern analysis.
[6] W. A. Sutherland, Introduction to metric and topological spaces.
References
[1] Martin Aigner - A Course in Enumeration.
[2] W. Fulton - Young Tableaux.
[3] Ronald Graham, Donald Knuth, Oren Patashnik - Concrete Mathematics.
[4] Richard Stanley - Enumerative Combinatorics.
[5] Ioan Tomescu, Robert Melter - Problems in Combinatorics and Graph Theory.
References
[1] L. Ahlfors, Complex Analysis.
[2] R.V. Churchill and J. W. Brown, Complex Variables and Applications, International Student
Edition, Mc-Graw Hill, 4th ed., 1984.
[3] B. R. Palka, An Introduction to Complex Function Theory, UTM Springer-Verlag, 1991.
63
[4] Donald Sarason, Notes on Complex Function Theory, HBA.
1. Sigma algebra of sets, measure spaces. Lebesgues outer measure on the Real
line. Measurable set in the sense of Caratheodory. Translation invariance of
Lebesgue measure. Existence of a non-Lebesgue measurable set. Cantor set-
uncountable set with measure zero.
2. Measurable functions, types of convergence of measurable functions. The
Lebesgue integral for simple functions, nonnegative measurable functions and
Lebesgue integrable function, in general.
3. Convergence theorems- monotone and dominated convergence theorems.
4. Comparison of Riemann and Lebesgue integrals. Riemanns theorem on functions
which are continuous almost everywhere.
5. The product measure and Fubinis theorem.
6. The Lp spaces and the norm topology. Inequalities of H¨older and Minkowski.
Completeness of Lp and L∞ spaces.
References
[1] H.L. Royden, Real Analysis, Pearson Education.
[2] G. DeBarra, Introduction to Measure Theory, Van Nostrand Reinhold.
[3] I. K. Rana, An Introduction to Measure and Integration, Narosa.
[4] H.S. Bear, A Primer on Lebesgue Integration, Academic press.
1. Prime and maximal ideals in a commutative ring and their elementary properties.
2. Field extensions, prime fields, characteristic of a field, algebraic field extensions,
finite field extensions, splitting fields, algebraic closure, separable extensions,
normal extensions,
3. Finite Galois extensions, Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory.
4. Solvability by radicals.
5. Extensions of finite fields.
References
[1] M. Artin, Algebra, Prentice Hall of India, 1994.
[2] D. S. Dummit and R. M. Foote, Abstract Algebra, 2nd Ed., John Wiley, 2002.
[3] N. Jacobson, Basic Algebra I & II, Hindustan Publishing Corporation, 1983.
[4] R. Lidl and H. Niederreiter, Introduction to Finite Fields and Their Applications, Cambridge
University Press, 1986.
[5] TIFR pamphlet on Galois Theory.
M-503 Topology-II
64
5. Locally finite families of sets and Partitions of unity. Baire Category theorem for
locally compact Hausdorff spaces.
6. Paths, homotopy of paths. The fundamental group and its basic properties. The
fundamental group of a topological group is abelian. Homotopy of maps, retraction,
deformation retraction, contractibility. Homotopy type and homotopy equivalence.
Covering projections, path-lifting. The fundamental group of a product space. The
fundamental group of the circle, torus, n-sphere, lens spaces.
7. Covering spaces, equivalence of covering spaces, deck transformation group and
its action, regular covering spaces, homotopy lifting property, universal covering
space, fundamental group of orbit space.
References
[1] G. F. Simmons, Topology and modern analysis
[2] W. A. Sutherland, Introduction to metric and topological spaces.
[3] S. Willard, General Topology, Dover, New York.
1. Basics: Vertices and edges, Vertex degree and counting, Matrices and
Isomorphisms, Decomposition and Special Graphs, Extremal Problems, Graphic
Sequences, Travelling Salesman Problem, Koenisburg Seven-Bridges problem.
2. Paths, Cycles and Trails: Walks, Paths, Circuits, Bipartite Graphs, Eulerian Graphs,
Directed Graphs, Hamiltonian Paths and circuits.
3. Trees: Basic Properties, Spanning Trees, Enumeration, Optimization and Trees.
4. Matchings and Factors: Halls Condition, Matchings in Bipartite Graphs,
Applications and Algorithms, Matchings in General, Stable Matchings.
5. Connectivity and Paths: Connectivity, Edge Connectivity, Structure of 2-connected
and 3connected graphs, k-connected and k-edge connected graphs, Mengers
Theorem, Maders Theorem, Edge-disjoint Spanning Trees, Paths between given
pair of vertices, Network Flow Problems.
6. Colouring: Vertex colourings, Structure of k-chromatic graphs, Chordal graphs,
Perfect graphs, List of colourings, Counting proper colourings.
7. Planar Graphs: Plane graphs, Embeddings, Drawings, Kuratowski’s Theorem,
Algebraic Planarity Criteria, Plane duality.
8. Edges and Cycles: Line Graphs and Edge Colourings, Hamiltonian Cycles,
Planarity, Colouring and Cycles.
9. Additional Topics: Ramsey Theory, Random Graphs, Extremal Problems.
References
[1] Douglas West - Introduction to Graph Theory.
[2] Reinhard Diestel - Graph Theory.
[3] J.A. Bondy and U.S.R. Murty - Graph Theory with Applications.
[4] D.A. Marcus - Graph Theory - A Problem Oriented Approach.
[5] Ioan Tomescu, Robert A. Melter - Problems in Graph Theory and Combinatorics.
65
4. Schwartz class of rapidly decreasing functions, Fourier transforms of rapidly
decreasing functions, Riemann Lebesgue lemma, Fourier Inversion Theorem,
Fourier transforms of Gaussians, Plancheral theorem, Paley-Weiner theorem.
5. Distributions and Fourier Transforms: Calculus of Distributions, Tempered
Distributions: Fourier transforms of tempered distributions, Convolutions,
Applications to PDEs.
References
[1] Y. Katznelson, Introduction to Harmonic Analysis, Dover.
[2] R. E. Edwards, Fourier Series, Academic Press.
[3] E. M. Stein and R. Shakarchi, Fourier Analysis: An Introduction, Princeton University Press,
Princeton 2003.
[4] W. Rudin, Fourier Analysis on groups, Interscience.
References
[1] M. Artin, Algebra, Prentice Hall of India, 1994.
[2] D.S. Dummit and R. M. Foote, Abstract Algebra, 2nd Ed., John Wiley, 2002.
[3] N. Jacobson, Basic Algebra I & II, Hindustan Publishing Corporation, 1983.
[4] S. Lang, Algebra, 3rd ed. Springer (India) 2004.
2. Linear systems and fundamental systems of solutions. Wronskians and its basic
properties. The Abel Liouville formula. The dimensionality of the space of solutions.
Fundamental matrix. The method of variation of parameters.
3. Linear systems with constant coefficients and the structure of the solutions. Matrix
exponentials and methods for computing them. Solving the in-homogeneous
system. The Laplace transform and its applications.
66
4. Second order scalar linear differential equations.
References
1. G. F. Simmons, Differential equations with applications and historical notes, McGraw Hill.
2. George Andrews, Richard Askey, Ranjan Roy, Special Functions (EMSAA- 71), Cambridge
University Press.
3. Ernst Hairer, Gerhard Wanner, S.P. Norsett, Solving Ordinary Differential Equations I –
Nonstiff Problems, Springer-Verlag.
4. V. I. Arnold, Ordinary Differential Equations, Springer.
5. R. Courant and D. Hilbert, Methods of Mathematical Physics, Volume – I, Wiley Classics
Library.
6. W. Hurewicz, Lectures on ordinary differential equations, Dover, New York.
References
[1] Marek Capinski and Tomasz Zastawniak, Probability through Problems, Springer, Indian
Reprint 2008.
[2] P. Billingsley, Probability and Measure, 3rd ed., John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1995.
[3] J. Rosenthal, A First Look at Rigorous Probability, World Scientific, Singapore, 2000.
[4] A.N. Shiryayev, Probability, 2nd ed., Springer, New York, 1995.
[5] K.L. Chung, A Course in Probability Theory, Academic Press, New York, 1974.
67
8. In the framework of a Hilbert space: Projection theorem. Riesz representation
theorem. Uniquenessof Hahn-Banach extension.
9. Sobolev spaces.
References
[1] J.B. Conway, A course in Functional Analysis, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1985.
[2] G. Goffman and G. Pedrick, First course in functional analysis, Prentice-Hall, 1974.
[3] E. Kreyszig, Introductory Functional Analysis with applications, John Wiley & Sons, NY, 1978.
[4] B.V. Limaye, Functional Analysis, 3rd ed., New Age International, New Delhi, 2014.
[5] A. Taylor and D. Lay, Introduction to functional analysis, Wiley, New York, 1980.
1. Prime and maximal ideals in a commutative ring, nil and Jacobson radicals,
Nakayamas lemma, local rings.
2. Rings and modules of fractions, correspondence between prime ideals, localization.
3. Modules of finite length, Noetherian and Artinian modules.
4. Primary decomposition in a Noetherian module, associated primes, support of a
module.
5. Graded rings and modules, Artin-Rees, Krull-intersection,
6. Hilbert-Samuel function of a local ring, dimension theory, principal ideal theorem.
7. Integral extensions, Noether’s normalization lemma, Hilberts Nullstellensatz
(algebraic and geometric versions).
References
[1] M.F Atiyah and I.G MacDonald, Introduction to Commutative Algebra, Addison-Wesley,
1969.
[2] D. Eisenbud, Commutative Algebra with a view toward algebraic geometry, Springer-Verlag,
Berlin, 2003.
[3] H. Matsumura, Commutative ring theory, Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics No.
8, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1980.
[4] S. Raghavan, B. Singh and R. Sridharan, Homological methods in commutative algebra,
TIFR Math. Pamphlet No.5, Oxford, 1975.
[5] B. Singh, Basic Commutative Algebra, World Scientific, 2011.
68
Theorem. Relative homology groups. Identification of simplicial and singular
homology.
References
[1] F.H. Croom, Basic Concepts of Algebraic Topology, UTM, Springer-Verlag, 1978.
[2] A. Hatcher, Algebraic Topology, Cambridge, 2001.
[3] C. Kosniowski, A First Course in Algebraic Topology, Cambridge University Press, 1980.
[4] L. Lima, Fundamental Groups and Covering Spaces, A. K. Peters, 2003.
[5] W.S. Massey, A Basic Course in Algebraic Topology., GTM-127, Springer-Verlag, 1991.
[6] J.R. Munkres, Topology (Second Edition), Prentice Hall, 2000.
References
[1] Elementary Differential Geometry: Andrew Pressley, Springer Undergraduate Mathematics
Series.
[2] Elementary Differential Geometry: J. Thorpe, Elsevier.
[3] Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces: M. do Carmo.
[4] Elements of Differential Geometry: R. Millman & G. Parker.
69
3. Detailed analysis of the Laplace and Poisson’s equations. Green’s function for the
Laplacian and its basic properties. Integral representation of solutions and its
consequences such as the analyticity of solutions. The mean value property for
harmonic functions and maximum principles. Harnack inequality.
4. The wave equation and the Cauchy problem for the wave equation. The Euler-
Poisson-Darboux equation and integral representation for the wave equation in
dimensions two and three. Properties of solutions such as finite speed of
propagation. Domain of dependence and domain of influence.
5. The Cauchy problem for the heat equation and the integral representation for the
solutions of the Cauchy problem for Cauchy data satisfying suitable growth
restrictions. Infinite speed of propagation of signals. Example of non-uniqueness.
6. Fourier methods for solving initial boundary value problems.
References
[1] G.J. Janusz, Algebraic Number Fields, Second Edition, AMS, 1996.
[2] J. Neukirch, Algebraic Number Theory, Springer, 2013.
[3] D.A. Marcus, Number Fields, Springer, 2013.
[4] P. Samuel, Algebraic Theory of Numbers, Dover, 2008.
[5] TIFR pamphlet on Algebraic Number Theory, 1966.
70
3. Differentiable functions on Manifolds: Differentiable functions f : M → N, critical
points, Sard’s theorem, non-degenerate critical points, Morse Lemma, Manifolds
with boundary, Brouwer fixed point theorem, mod 2 degree of a mapping.
4. Transversality: Orientation of Manifolds, oriented intersection number, Brouwer
degree, transverse intersections.
5. Integration on Manifolds: Vector field and Differential forms, integration of forms,
Stokes’ theorem, exact and closed forms, Poincar Lemma, Introduction to de Rham
theory.
References
[1] Topology from a Differentiable Viewpoint: J. Milnor.
[2] Differential Topology: V. Guellemin & A. Pollack.
[3] Differential Topology: M. Hirsch.
Objective: Learning basics of python programming language and using it to learn the
open-source computer algebra system SAGE. Furthermore, using SAGE to explore
symbolic and numerical computations in toics such as calculus, Linear Algebra, Group-
Theory and Number-Theory, etc.
References
[1] Learning Python, Mark Lutz, Orielly Publication
[2] A Premier on Scientific Programming with Python, Hand Peter langtangen, Springer
[3] Numerical Methods in Engineering with Python, Jaan Kiusalaas, Cambridge
[4] Calculus with Sage, Sang-Gu Lee, Ajit Kumar and other, Kyongmoon Publication
[5] A First Course in Linear Algebra, Robert Beezer, a free online
textbook available on http://linear.ups.edu/
[6] Linear Algebra with Sage, Sang-Gu Lee, Ajit Kumar and other, a free online available at
http://matrix.skku.ac.kr/2015-Album/Big-Book-LinearAlgebra-Eng-2015.pdf
[7] Numerical Analysis Using Sage, Anastassiou, George A., Mezei, Razvan, Springer
[8] Richard Stanley, Enumerative Combinatorics, Vol 2, Cambridge, 2001.
71
MPr-701 To be assigned by the Supervisor
MPr-801 To be assigned by the Supervisor
MPr-901 To be assigned by the Supervisor
MPr-1001 To be assigned by the Supervisor
References
1. The Feynman Lectures on Physics, vol. I, R. P. Feynman, R. B. Leighton, and Matthew Sands
(Pearson, 2012).
2. Electricity and Magnetism (Berkeley Physics Course volume 2), E. M. Purcell (McGraw Hill,
2017).
3. Mechanics, waves, and thermodynamics: an example-based approach, Sudhir R. Jain
(Cambridge Univ. Press, 2016).
4. Physics – Structure and Meaning, Leon N. Cooper (Brown Univ. Press, 1992).
5. Principles and Practice of Physics, Eric Mazur (Pearson, 2015).
Review of classical physics and its limits: the equipartition theorem, degrees of
freedom, specific heat, Blackbody radiation, Photoelectric effect, Compton effect,
Electron interference and diffraction (double slit experiment with electrons and Davisson-
Germier experiment). Wavelike properties of particles, de Broglie hypothesis, wave
packets, uncertainty relation, bedarken experiment with Heisenberg microscope for
measurement of electron position (5 hours)
72
Franck-Hertz experiment, energy levels and spectroscopic notation, hydrogen fine
structure and Zeeman effect (no detailed derivation) (10 hours)
Nuclear Physics: Structure of nuclei and their stability, Binding energy curve, Shell
model, nuclear transformations (alpha, beta and gamma decay, nuclear reactions, cross
sections, Fusion and Fission, Energy of stars. (4 hours)
References
1. H. S. Mani and G. K. Mehta, Introduction to Modern Physics, Affiliated East-West Press (2000).
2. R. Eisberg and R. Resnick, “Quantum Physics of Atoms, Molecules, Solids, Nuclei and
Particles”, Wiley (2nd Edition, 2006).
3. Arthur Beiser, Shobit Mahajan and S. Rai Chaudhury, “Concepts in Modern Physics”, McGraw
Hill Education (7th Edition, 2017).
4. P. A Tipler and R. Liewellyn, “Modern Physics”, W. H. Freeman & Co. (6 th Edition 2012).
5. K. S. Krane, “Introductory Modern Physics”, Wiley (2008).
References
[1] An Introduction to Mechanics, 1st Edition, D. Kleppner and R. J. Kolenkow, Tata McGraw -
Hill Education, 2007
[2] Classical Mechanics, 5th Edition, T. W. B. Kibble, F. Berkshire, World Scientific 2004.
[3] Introduction to Special Relativity, R. Resnik, Wiley (India), 2012
[4] Spacetime Physics, 2nd Edition, E. F. Taylor, J. A. Wheeler, W. H. Freeman and Co. 1992.
Classical mechanics, N. C. Rana, P. S. Joag, Tata McGraw-Hill Education, 2001.
P-302 Mathematical Physics-I
Vector Analysis: Vector algebra, Basis vectors, Linear independence, Scalar product,
Cross product, Triple products
73
Partial derivatives, Curvilinear coordinates (cylindrical and spherical polar), Vectors as
derivatives, Gradient, Divergence, Curl, Laplacian – all in Cartesian, cylindrical and
spherical polar coordinates
Vector integration, line, surface, volume integrals, Green’s theorem, Stokes’ theorem,
Gauss divergence theorem
References
1. “About vectors”, Banesh Hoffmann (Dover, London, 1975)
2. “Vector analysis”, Second Edition, M. R. Spiegel, S. Lipschutz, D. Spellman (Tata McGraw-Hill,
New Delhi, 2010).
3. “A Student’s Guide to Vectors and Tensors”, D. Fleisch (Cambridge Univ. Press, New Delhi,
2013).
4. “Differential equations with applications and historical notes”, G. F. Simmons (McGraw-Hill, New
Delhi, 1980).
P-303 Electromagnetism-I
Magnetostatics: Lorentz force, Ampere’s and Biot-Savart’s law, divergence and curl
of B, vector potential and concept of gauge, charged particle in electromagnetic field;
magnetism in matter, volume and surface currents, magnetization vector M and vector
H.
Faraday’s law in integral and differential forms; displacement current, Maxwell’s
equations.
Electromagnetic waves, Poynting vector, radiation pressure.
References
1. “Introduction to Electrodynamics”, D. J. Griffiths, 4th Edition, Pearson India (2017).
2. “Foundations of Electromagnetic Theory”, J. Reitz, F. J. Milford and R. W. Christie, 4th Edition,
Addison Wesley (2008).
3. “Electricity and Magnetism: Berkeley Physics Course, Vol. II”, Edward Purcell, McGraw Hill
(2011).
P-304 Waves, Oscillations and Optics
Free oscillations, Simple harmonic motion, damped and forced oscillations;
Coupled oscillators, normal modes, beats, infinite coupled oscillators and dispersion
relation of sound; vibrating string; travelling and stationary waves; Amplitude, phase and
energy. Derivation of wave equation for a string; Longitudinal and transverse waves.
74
Waves in two and three dimensions, the wave vector, wave equation, linearity,
superposition, Fourier decomposition of a wave, notion of wave packets, phase and
group velocity. Example of mechanical waves (sound waves), speed of sound in air,
effect of bubbles, natural observations and qualitative explanations, string and wind
instruments. Chaldni plates. Propagation in changing media, continuity conditions,
characteristic impedance. Snell's laws and translation invariant boundary, prism, total
internal reflection, evanescent waves. Water waves, ocean waves, Tsunami.
Electromagnetic waves, polarisation, interference, Fraunhofer diffraction. Shocks
waves, boat wakes, linear analysis of the Kelvin wake. Alfven waves (qualitative).
References
1. Waves, Berkeley Physics Course Vol. 3, Frank S. Crawford, Tata McGraw – Hill Education,
2011
2. Introduction to the Physics of Waves, Tim Freegarde, Cambridge Univ. Press 2012
3. The Physics of Waves, Howard Georgi
(http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~hgeorgi/new.htm)
Linear vector space: Definition, Scalar product, Dual vectors and Cauchy - Schwarz
inequality, Real and complex vector spaces, Metric spaces, linear operators, Algebra of
linear operators, Some special operators (adjoint, Hermitian, unitary etc.), Eigenvalues
and eigenvectors, Orthogonalization theorem, N-dimensional vector space, Matrix
algebra, Inverse of a matrix, Change of basis in N-dimensional vector space, Orthogonal
bases and some special matrices, Introduction to tensor calculus, Invariant subspaces,
The characteristic equation and Hamilton-Cayley theorem, The decomposition of an N-
dimensional space, The canonical form of a matrix, Hermitian matrices and quadratic
forms
References
1. “Advanced mathematical methods for scientists and engineers”, C. M. Bender and S. A. Orszag
(Springer, Heidelberg, 1978).
2. “Mathematical methods for physicists”, G. B. Arfken, H. J. Weber, F. E. Harris (Academic Press,
New Delhi, 2013).
3. “Special functions”, G. E. Andrews, R. Askey, R. Roy (Cambridge Univ. Press, New Delhi,
2000).
4. “Mathematics for Physicists”, Philippe Dennery and Andre Krzywicki (Dover, London, 1996).
5. “Mathematics for Quantum Mechanics: An introductory Survey of Operators, Eigenvalues and
Linear Vector Spaces”, J. D. Jackson (Dover, London, 1990).
6. “Methods in Theoretical Physics”, vols 1 and 2, P. M. Morse and H. Feshbach (McGraw-Hill,
New York, 1953).
7. “Introduction to Matrices and Linear Transformations”, D. T. Finkbeiner (W. H. Freeman, 1978).
75
P-402 Quantum Mechanics-I
Review of introductory wave mechanical formalism, simple one-dimensional potential
problems: particle in an infinite potential well, delta function potential, a finite potential
well, potential barrier and tunneling, motion of a wave packet.
Central force, orbital angular momentum, intrinsic spin angular momentum, angular
momentum algebra, raising and lowering operators. Hydrogen atom, reduction to one
body problem, reduced mass, energy spectrum and wavefunctions.
References
1. “Introduction to Quantum Mechanics” D. J. Griffiths, 2nd Edition, Pearson Education (2005).
2. “Principles of Quantum Mechanics”, R. Shankar, 2 nd Edition, Springer (2010).
Electromagnetic Lagrangian.
Small oscillations and normal modes, matrix formulation of coupled oscillator problems,
damped and forced oscillations, Rayleigh’s dissipation function.
Phase space flow in second order autonomous systems, special case of Hamiltonian
systems, comparison to incompressible fluids, examples of Hamiltonian phase space
flows, elliptic and hyperbolic fixed points.
References
1. “A course in Theoretical Physics, Vol. 1, Mechanics”, L. D. Landau and E. M. Lifshitz, Elsevier
(Indian Reprint, 2010)
76
2. “Classical Mechanics”, H. Goldstein, C. Poole and J. Safco, 3 rd Edition, Addition Wesley
(Pearson Edition, 2011).
3. “Classical Mechanics”, N. C. Rana and P. S. Jog, Tata McGraw Hill (1991).
P-501 Electromagnetism-II
Topics in Electrostatics: Solutions of Poisson and Laplace’s equations, Uniqueness
theorem, formal solution of boundary value problems with Green’s function, method of
images with conducting sphere, solution of Laplace’s equation in Cartesian, spherical
and cylindrical coordinates using separation of variables, Multipole expansion of
potential due to a charge distribution, boundary value problems with dielectrics,
molecular polarizability, Clausius-Mossotti relation.
Maxwell’s equations, scalar and vector potentials, gauge transformations, Lorentz and
Coulomb gauge, Stress tensor and conservation laws, Electromagnetic waves,
reflection and refraction of electromagnetic waves at interface between dielectrics,
Fresnel equations; electromagnetic waves in conductors, skin depth.
Radiation theory: electric and magnetic dipole radiation, power radiated by a point
charge, radiation reaction.
References
1. “Introduction to Electrodynamics”, D. J. Griffiths, 4th Edition, Pearson India (2017).
2. “Classical Electrodynamics”, J. D. Jackson, 3rd Edition, Wiley (2016).
3. “Classical Electricity and Magnetism”, W. K. H. Panofsky and M. Phillips, 2 nd Edition, Sarat Book
House (2006).
Identical Particles, classical case, symmetric and antisymmetric states, bosons and
fermions.
Scattering theory, Green’s function, Born approximation.
Dirac equation: free particle Dirac equation, negative energy solutions, antiparticles,
Dirac equation for hydrogen atom, hydrogen fine structure (qualitative).
References
1. “Introduction to Quantum Mechanics”, D. J. Griffiths, 2nd Edition, Pearson Education (2005).
2. “Principles of Quantum Mechanics”, R. Shankar, 2 nd Edition, Springer (2010).
3. “Quantum Mechanics”, E. Merzbacher, 3rd Edition, John Wiley (2003).
77
P-503 Statistical Physics-I
Elementary probability theory; random walk; binomial, Poisson, log-normal distributions;
the Gaussian. Brief Review of the Laws of Thermodynamics. Kinetic theory of dilute
gases in equilibrium.
Interacting systems: Equation of State of the non-ideal gas and virial coefficients; Weiss
molecular field approximation. Black body radiation and the Planck radiation law
References
1. “Fundamentals of Statistical and Thermal Physics”, F. Reif, Sarat Book Distributors (2010)
2. “Statistical Mechanics”, 3rd Edition, by R. K. Pathria and Paul D. Beale, Elsevier (2011)
3. “Elementary Statistical Physics”, C. Kittel, Dover publications (2004)
4. “Thermodynamics and an Introduction to Thermo-statistics”, 2nd Edition, H. B. Callen, Wiley
(2006)
Nuclear Structure: Magic numbers, shell model, spin orbit interaction, deformed shell
model. Nuclear excited states vibration, rotation, Collective model. Electromagnetic
interactions in nuclei: multipole transitions, selection rules, life times, electron capture,
internal conversion, isomers, Coulomb excitation.
References
1. Introductory Nuclear Physics, K.S. Krane, Wiley 2008.
2. Concepts of Nuclear Physics, B. L. Cohen, McGraw Hill 1971.
3. Introductory Nuclear Physics, S. S. M. Wong, Prentice – Hall 2010.
4. Introduction to Nuclear and Particle Physics, 2nd Edition, A. Das and T. Ferbel, World Scientific
2004.
78
P-602 Condensed Matter Physics-I
Crystal Structure and X-ray diffraction: Bravais lattices, space groups, reciprocal
space, Brillouin zones, X-ray diffraction, structure factor, Diffraction of waves in periodic
structures.
The Free Electron Theory: Drude Model: Electron conductivity, Heat capacity,
Somerfield model: Thermal conductivity, AC conductivity and optical properties.
Band theory of solids: Bloch theorem, Kronig-Penny model, Nearly Free electron
model, effective mass, Tight binding model, Density of states, Fermi surface; Metals,
insulators and semiconductors, Intrinsic and extrinsic semiconductors, energy gap,
mobility, electrons and holes, Hall effect and cyclotron resonance, carrier lifetime,
semiconductor devices.
Magnetic properties of materials: dia, para and ferromagnetism. Quantum theory
of paramagnetism, Curie’s law. Ferromagnetism, exchange interactions, Heisenberg
and Ising models, magnetic ordering and spin waves, anti-ferromagnets.
References
1. Introduction to Solid State Physics, 8th edition, C. Kittel, Wiley (2012).
2. Solid State Physics, N. W. Ashcroft and N. D. Mermin, Cengage (2003).
Atoms in External Fields: Quantum theory of normal and anomalous Zeeman effect,
Linear and quadratic Start effect; Semi – classical theory of radiation; Absorption and
induced emission; Einstein's A and B coefficients, dipole approximation, intensity of
radiation, selection rules. Two level atoms in a coherent radiation field, Rabi frequency,
radiative damping, optical Bloch equation, Broadening of spectral lines (Doppler,
pressure and power broadening).
Lasers: Basic concepts, rate equation and lasing conditions, working of some common
lasers. Doppler free laser spectroscopy; Crossed – beam method, saturated absorption
spectroscopy, two photon spectroscopy, Laser cooling and trapping (descriptive); Atom
interferometry (descriptive).
Molecules: Ionic and covalent bonding, Hydrogen molecular ion (H2+), Born –
Oppenheimer approximation; Bonding and anti – bonding orbitals, Hydrogen molecule;
Heitler – London method, Molecular orbital method, hybridisation, quantum mechanical
79
treatment of rotational and vibrational spectra (diatomic and polyatomic molecules);
Electronic spectra, Raman effect (classical and quantum theory); Vibrational and
rotational Raman spectra; Electron spin resonance.
References
1. Atomic Physics, Christopher Foot, Oxford University Press, 2005.
2. Intermediate Quantum Mechanics, 3rd Edition, H. A. Bethe and R. W. Jackiew, Persius 1997
3. The Physics of Atoms and Quanta: Introduction to Experiments and Theory, H. Haken, H. C.
Wolf and W. D. Brewer, Springer 2005
4. Molecular Physics and Elements of Quantum Chemistry: Introduction to Experiments and
Theory, H. Haken, H. C. Wolf and W. D. Brewer, Springer 2010.
References
1. “Complex variables: Introduction and applications”, M. J. Ablowitz and A. S. Fokas (Cambridge
University Press, New Delhi, 1997).
2. “Complex analysis”, L. V. Ahlfors (McGraw-Hill, New Delhi, 2013).
3. “Integral transforms in mathematical physics”, C. J. Tranter (Metheun, London, 1966).
4. “An elementary treatise on Fourier series”, W. E. Byerley (Ginn and company, Boston, 1893).
5. “Calculus of variations”, G. A. Bliss (Carus monographs, Mathematical Association of America,
1978).
6. “Mathematical methods of Physics”, J. Mathew and R. L. Walker (Benjamin Cummings,
Mumbai, 1979).
80
References
1. Hydrodynamics, 6th Edition, H. Lamb, Dover 1945.
2. An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics, G.K. Batchelor, Cambridge University Press, 2000.
3. Fluid Mechanics, 2nd Edition, L.D. Landau and E.M. Lifshitz, Elsevier 1987.
4. Magnetohydrodynamics, 2nd Edition, T.G. Cowling, Hilger 1976.
5. Introduction to Physics of Fluids and Solids, J. Trefil, Dover 1975.
Critical Phenomena: Phase transitions in different systems, First and second order
transitions, Lattice models to describe phase transitions such as Ising Models, X-Y and
Heisenberg models, critical exponents.
Techniques: 1) Mean Field Theory: Mean Field Theory for Ising model, Landau theory
of second order phase transitions, Correlation functionsp; 2) Transfer matrix: Setting up
the transfer matrix, Calculation of free energy and correlation functions
Semiconductor Statistics
References
1. “Fundamentals of Statistical and Thermal Physics”, F. Reif, Sarat Book Distributors (2010).
2. “Statistical Physics part 1”, 3rd Edition, L. D. Landau and E. M. Lifshitz, Elsevier (2008).
3. “Statistical Mechanics”, K. Huang, John Wiley & Sons (1987).
4. “A Modern Course in Statistical Physics”, L. E. Reichl, Wiley (2009).
Correlated systems and interactions: The electron gas: Hartree-Fock and Random
phase approximation, Hubbard model: basic features, The Mott transition.
Integer and Fractional Quantum Hall effect: Landau levels, Disorder, localized and
extended states, Edge states, introduction to FQHE
81
Kondo Physics: Magnetic impurities and their interactions, Anderson model, s-d
exchange model, Kondo effect and RKKY Interactions, spin glasses.
References
1. Many-Particle Physics, by Gerald D. Mahan, Springer Verlag, 3rd edition 2000.
2. The Physics of Solids by J. B. Ketterson.
3. Principles of Condensed Matter Physics by P. M. Chaikin & T. C. Lubensky.
4. Introduction to Superconductivity by M. Tinkham.
5. Quantum theory of Magnetism by R. M. White.
6. Plasmonics: Fundamentals and Applications by S. A. Maier.
Stellar Physics: Equations governing the structure of stars: Mechanical & Thermal
equilibrium. Virial theorem. Modes of energy transfer in stars: radiative & convective
transport of energy. Auxiliary input: equation of state, opacity and energy generation by
thermonuclear processes. Boundary conditions at the stellar surface & at the centre.
Models with linear & quadratic density profiles. Polytropic models. Mass-luminosity-
radius relations for low, intermediate & high mass stars. Sources of opacity and
nucleosynthesis in stars. Manufacturing of iron-peak and heavier elements by rapid
neutron capture processes. Mixing length theory of convective transport of hear.
Completely convective stars. Hertzsprung-Russel diagram. Pre-main sequence
contraction and the Hayashi phase. Zero-age main sequence. Stellar evolution: main
sequence, red giant and asymptotic giant branch. Advanced stages of stellar evolution:
white dwarfs, neutron stars & black holes. Physics and astrophysics of collapsed objects:
pulsars, X-ray &gamma ray sources. Spherical accretion and Bondi solution. Physics of
accretion discs. Stellar rotation and magnetism.
References
1. The Internal Constitution of Stars, A. S. Eddington, Cambridge University Press, 1988.
2. An Introduction to the Study of Stellar Structure, S. Chandrasekhar, Dover Publications, 2003.
3. The structure & Evolution of the Stars, M. Schwarzschild, Dover Publications, 1962.
4. Cox and Giuli's Principles of Stellar Structure, 2nd Ed., A. Weiss et al., Cambridge, 2003.
5. The Physical Universe: An Introducing to Astronomy, F. H. Shu, University Science Books,
1982.
6. Galactic Astronomy, James Binny and Michael Merrifield, Princeton University Press, 1998.
7. An Introduction to Active Galactic Nuclei, B. M. Peterson, Cambridge University Press, 1997.
8. Extragalactic Astronomy and Cosmology: An Introduction, Peter Schneider, Springer, 2006.
82
9. Physics of the Interstellar & Intergalactic Medium, Bruce T. Draine, Princeton Univ. Press, 2011.
References
1. Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos: With Applications to Physics, Biology, Chemistry and
Engineering, S. Strogatz, Addison-Wesley 2001
2. Chaos: An Introduction to Dynamical Systems, K.T. Aligood, T.D. Sauer, J.A. Yorke, Springer,
2000.
3. Differential Equations, Dynamical Systems and an Introduction to Chaos, M. Hirsh, S. Smale
and R. Devaney, Elsevier Academic Press, 2012
4. Chaos and Integrability in Nonlinear Dynamics: An Introduction, M. Tabor, John Wiley & Sons,
1989.
5. Classical and Quantum, P. Cvitanovic et al., ChaosBook.org, Neils Bohr Institute, Copenhagen
2016
Root finding: Brief review of methods covered, System involving many variables,
Brayden and the complementary Brayden method.
Fourier Analysis: Discrete and Fast Fourier Transform, Spectrum Analysis, Chaos in
non-linear differential equations, Computerized Tomography
Partial Differential Equations: the vibrating string, the steady state heat equation, the
pseudo spectral method, the potential step problem, wave packets in two dimensions.
References
1. Computational Physics, P. L. DeVries and J. E. Hasbun, Jones and Bartlett, Sudbury,
Massachusetts, 2011.
83
2. Numerical Methods that Work, F. Acton, F. S. Acton, Harper and Row, New York, 1970.
3. Introduction to Non-Linear Optimization, D. A. Wismer and R. Chatterggy, North Holland, N.
Y. 1978.
4. Numerical Recipes in Fortran, 2nd Edition, W. H. Press et al., Cambridge University Press
2000.
5. Number Crunching, P. Nahin, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2011.
6. For Brayden method: “New Method for Self-Consistency in Disordered Systems”, Vijay A.
Singh and Paul Bendt, Phys. Rev., B 27 (1983) 6464-6468.
7. For nearly singular integrals: “A Simple Scheme for the Numerical Evaluation of Nearly
Singular Integrals”, G. C. John, J. E. Hasbun, and Vijay A. Singh, Computers in Physics,
11 (1997) 293-298.
References
1. Advanced Practical Physics for Students, B. L. Worsnop and H. T. Flint, Methuen and Co.
Ltd., London
84
and interference in wedge shaped films; study of double refraction in calcite / quartz
prisms, polarisation of the refracted light rays, optical activity in dextrose and fructose;
soldering experience – make a gated timer with indicator; measurement of heat capacity
of air; Use of thermocouple / platinum resistance thermometer, use of instrumentation
amplifier in amplifying signal from thermocouple; study of the laws of a gyroscope;
determination of the charge of an electron by Millikan's oil drop experiment.
Reference
1. Advanced Practical Physics for Students, B. L. Worsnop and H. T. Flint, Methuen and Co.
Ltd., London
References
1. Phoenix: Computer Interfaced Science Experiments – http://www.iuac.res.in/~elab/phoenix/
2. The Art of Experimental Physics, D. W. Preston and D. R. Dietz, Wiley 1991
3. Manual of Experimental Physics with Indian Academy of Sciences, Bangalore kit, R. Srinivasan
and K.R.S. Priolkar
References
1. Gillespie, Daniel T. (1977). "Exact Stochastic Simulation of Coupled Chemical Reactions". The
Journal of Physical Chemistry. 81 (25): 2340–2361.
2. W. H. Press et al., Numerical recipes in FORTRAN (2nd ed.): the art of scientific computing
85
matrix by Householder's method of tridiagonalization followed by QR factorization of the
tridiagonalized matrix.
References
1. Statistics: A Guide to the Use of Statistical Methods in the Physical Sciences, R.J. Barlow, John
Wiley 1989
2. The Statistical Analysis of Experimental Data, John Mandel, Dover Publications 1984
3. Data Reduction and Error Analysis for the Physical Sciences, 3 rd Edition, Philip Bevington and
Keith Robinson, McGraw Hill 2003
Reference
1. The Art of Experimental Physics, D. W. Preston and D. R. Dietz, Wiley 1991.
86
References
1. An introduction to Numerical Analysis, 2nd Edition, Kendall Atkinson, Wiley 2012
2. Numerical Methods for Scientists and Engineers, H. M. Antia, Hindustan Book Agency 2012.
3. Numerical Recipes in Fortran, 2nd Edition, W. H. Press et al., Cambridge University Press 2000
References
1. The Art of Experimental Physics, D. W. Preston and D. R. Dietz, Wiley 1991.
(Selected experiments from the above list are performed based on number of contact
hours prescribed)
87
Introduction to low temperature measurements: operation of a closed cycle cryostat, low
temperature thermometers, controlling temperatures using PID feedback using
temperature controllers, making electrical contacts on thin films and measuring DC
resistance with sourcemeter using four probe method-advantages and disadvantages of
the technique, temperature dependent (300-20K) measurement of electrical resistivity
of metallic thin films and comparing the room temperature value with the standard.
Determination of superconducting transition temperature of a high temperature
superconductor using electrical transport measurements. Determination of band gap of
a semiconductor: highly doped Si by fitting the temperature dependent resistance to the
standard variation in semiconductors. Concepts of measuring electrical resistance in
labs: from metals to dielectrics. Introducing GPIB interfacing of electronic instruments
with the computer and writing LABVIEW programs to interface temperature controller
and sourcemeter.
References
1. Radiation Detection and Measurement, Glenn F. Knoll, John Wiley 2010.
2. Techniques for Nuclear and Particle Physics Experiments: William R. Leo, Springer 1995.
3. Basic Vacuum technology, 2nd Edition, A. Chambers, R. K. Fitch and B. S. Halliday, IOP 1998.
4. Physical Vapor Deposition, R. J. Hill, McGraw-Hill 2005.
5. Elements of X-ray Diffraction, 3rd Edition, B. D. Cullity and S. R. Stock, Prentice Hall 2001.
6. Introduction to Solid State Physics, 8th Edition, C. Kittel, Wiley 2012.
88
Importance of spectroscopy, Design and description of Low and High-resolution
Spectrometers and their applications, Polarimeters and their applications.
Interaction of radiation with matter: (a) Passage of charged and neutral particles
through matter, Ionization loss formulae and dependence on different parameters,
relativistic rise in ionization loss, detection of neutrons, Bremsstrahlung process,
Cerenkov radiation and its application (b) Interaction of photons with matter:
Photoelectric interaction, mass absorption formula and dependence on energy, atomic
number etc., Thompson scattering, Compton scattering, Pair production process,
formula and dependence on energy, atomic number, radiation length, critical energy
X-ray Radiation Processes: (a) Thermal Emission, Black Body emission, Thermal
Bremstrahlung (free-free emission),spectral line formation in thermal plasma, examples
of thermal spectra, measurement of temperature and elemental abundances from
spectral data (b) Non-thermal Emission: Synchrotron mechanism (magnetic
bremstrahlung), spectral shape, polarized emission, Inverse Compton Scattering,
spectrum of radiation, examples of non-thermal spectra, Cyclotron process in strongly
magnetized stars and formation of cyclotron lines, determination of magnetic field of the
stars
89
Experiments to be performed:
1. Measuring energy resolution (R) of a Cadmium Telluride Detector using X-rays of
different energies (E) from radioactive sources and deriving expression for variation
of R with E.
2. Solar Constant measurement.
3. Measurement of Solar Limb Darkening.
4. Observing an Optical Binary Star and deriving its light curve.
5. Determine Pulsation period and binary light curve of an accreting Neutron star from
X-ray data.
6. Measuring X-ray Energy Spectrum of a Black Hole Binary and fit it with different
spectral models.
7. Characteristics of a Proportional Counter and dependence of its energy resolution on
different parameters of the PC.
90
17. Physical biology / of Group Theory 14. Advanced Algebraic 16. Advanced Nuclear
Biophysics 12. Environmental Topology & Physics
18. Astrobiology chemistry Applications 17. Accelerator Physics
13. Advanced topics in 15. Advanced Complex 18. Radiation Physics
inorganic chemistry Analysis 19. Reactor Physics
16. Advanced Differential 20. Dynamical Systems
Geometry & and Nonequilibrium
Applications Statistical Mechanics
17. Algebraic curves 21. Postmodern Quantum
18. Class field theory Mechanics
19. Combinatorial Design 22. Soft Condensed
Theory Matter
20. Econometrics 23. Statistical Field
21. Elliptic curves Theory
22. Finite Fields & 24. Many Body Theory
Applications 25. Biophysics
23. Fluid Mechanics 26. Few Body Systems
24. Geometric algebra
25. Homological Algebra
& Applications
26. Industrial Mathematics
27. Introduction to
Algebraic Groups.
28. Mathematical
Applications to
Engineering
29. Mathematics & Nano
Technology.
30. Modular forms.
31. Operator Theory.
32. Perturbation Theory
33. Wavelet Analysis &
Applications.
34. Representation
Theory of Finite
Groups.
35. Stochastic Analysis.
91