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UGC-CAS PROGRAM Dept. of Physics, Panjab University Midterm Report (2008-2012) Submitted for Review by CAS advisory committee 23.2.2012 CONTENTS 1. Overview of Physics Dept., Panjab University, Chandigarh 2 2. Group Reports : 5 A1) Exptl. HEP 6 A2) Theoretical HEP 11 A3) Theoretical Astrophysics 14 B) Nuclear Physics 15 C) Condensed Matter Physics 25 D) Molecular Spectroscopy 31 E) Mass Spectrometry 33 3. List of Publications 35 4. Summary of graduates From Teaching Programs 101 5. List of Seminars/Extension Lectures by Faculty 102 6. List of Seminars 107 7. List of Meetings held 114 8. Utilization of Funds 116 9. Additional funding requests 123 1 1. DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS PANJAB UNIVERSITY, CHANDIGARH The Physics Department at Panjab University, Chandigarh, is one of the most prominent Physics Department among Universities in India. Since it’s re-establishment in Chandigarh in the 1950’s, it has launched nationally pre-eminent and Internationally significant Research programs in the chosen areas of High Energy Physics, Nuclear Physics and Condensed Matter Physics. These programs are in addition to the Undergraduate and Post-Graduate (Honours School) programs in Physics, and Physics and Electronics which have augmented the maximum sanctioned strength of B.Sc (Hons. School) students from some 90 students in the mid-1990’s to over 200 students today, and that of M.Sc. (Hons. School) students from 100 to over 270 today. On top of these, there are 120 Ph.D. Research Scholars. There is also an M. Phil course with 15 students. An underlying service commitment to teach subsidiary courses in Physics to about 200 Undergraduate students from other Science Departments takes the numbers of students using the Physics Department facilities each day to some 800 students and research scholars. Department of Physics is already a significant present or proposed locus of National investment in advanced research facilities in High Energy Physics, Nuclear Physics and Condensed Matter Physics running in the Department for the last half century and ever increasing levels. A balance between the teaching and research performance has been maintained by the faculty members with proven academic and research credentials in Theoretical and/or Experimental Physics. In view of the burgeoning size and activities of the Department, as a part of the request for XII plan proposal, the Dept. has submitted a request for formation of a linked University Institute of Physics. It may be noted that this proposal is very much in tune with the call of the Hon’ble Prime Minister to double investment in Science and Technology and the acute difficulty in doing soon the basis of green field facilities while ignoring the languishing and increasingly moribund Universities where the bulk of the nations students and faculty are relegated. The Department has already gone through various stages of recognition since its inception after the Panjab University re-chartered on Oct 1, 1947 after partition. The Physics department moved to present Panjab University campus in 1958. The department had humble beginning in research in Experimental High Energy Particle Physics with the establishment of Nuclear Emulsion Lab. by Prof. B.M. Anand. The Nuclear Physics group got a boost with establishment of Cyclotron Facility by Prof. H.S. Hans. Since then the department has gone through various prestigious funding stages of UGC/DST/DAE for Research and Teaching as mentioned below: (a) UGC COSIP (College Science Improvement Programme) and ULP (University Leadership Programme) 1977-1983 2 (b) SAP (Special Assistance Programme)1980-1988 (c) COSIST (Committee on Strengthening of Infrastructure in Science and Technology)1984-1991 (d) Center of Advanced Study (CAS) status since1988 Unique feature – CAS in all three major thrust areas of Physics granted : • High Energy Particle Physics (Expt. & Theory) • Solid State Physics (Expt. & Theory) • Nuclear Physics (Expt. & Theory) (e) Funded for IV th phase of Centre for Advanced Studies (CAS) in 2009 after successful completion of previous three phases since 1988. (f) Funding under DST-FIST-I (Funds for Improvement of Science & Technology) Programme (2003-2008) and DST-FIST-II (2009-2013). As mentioned above, the department has already achieved the standing of a National Institute due to its very active research programmes. In the XII Five Year plan, the department has proposed for its status as University Institute of Physics, which would take this department to new heights in research and teaching programs. It will provide the department sufficient autonomy to make the teaching programmes more researchoriented and facilitate scientific research by providing support at all levels ranging from general administrative matters to infrastructure support. The main strengths and achievements of the established research groups in the Department are given. In a related development, recognizing the growth of the Department and its pressing space requirements the University has constituted a high level committee to recommend expansion of the Physics Dept. by construction of addition 15000sq ft as demanded by the department in view of its saturation of available space. The UGC-CAS could greatly help the dept. in gathering funding for this vital requirement. Details are given in Chap. 9 of this report. 3 1B. FACULTY MEMBERS, DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS Professors Univ. Emeritus Professors 1. Prof. C.S. Aulakh 1. Prof. H.S.Hans 2. Prof. J.B. Singh 2. Prof. K.N.Pathak 3. Prof. Manjit Kaur 3. Prof. Nirmal Singh 4. Prof. V.P. Singh 5. Prof. A.K. Bhati 1. Prof. Suman Bala Beri 6. Prof. D. Mehta 2. Prof. M.M. Gupta 7. Prof. Navdeep Goyal 3. Prof. M.M. Aggarwal 8. Prof. R. K. Puri 4. Prof. K. Dharamvir 9. Prof. G.S.S.Saini 5. Prof. K.P. Singh Re-employed Faculty Associate Professors Emeritus Scientists 1. Dr. C.N. Kumar / Project Scientists 2. Dr. S.K. Tripathi 1. Prof. R.K.Gupta 3. Dr. S. Sahijpal 2. Prof. Satya Prakash 4. Dr. K.S. Bindra 3. Prof. V. K. Jindal 5. Dr. Ranjan Kumar 4. Prof. Gulzar Singh Assistant Professors 1 Dr. J.S. Shahi 2 Dr. V. Bhatnagar 3 Dr. Ashok Kumar 4 Dr. S. Srivatsava 5 Dr. B.R. Behera 6 Dr. Kuldeep Kumar 7 Dr. Bimal Rai 8 Er. Manish Dev Sharma 9 Er. Neeru Chaudhary 10 Dr. Samarjit Sihotra 11 Dr. Rajesh Kumar 4 2. RESEARCH GROUP REPORTS. Thrust Area wise Faculty Members High Energy Physics (Experimental) Prof. J.B.Singh Prof. M. Kaur Prof. S.Bala (R) Prof. M.M.Aggarwal (R) Dr. V. Bhatnagar High Energy Physics (Theory) Prof. M.M.Gupta(R-CASCOORD-2011), Prof. C.S.Aulakh(CASCOORD :2011-), Dr. C.N.Kumar Dr. Kuldeep Kumar Nuclear Physics (Experimental) Prof. N.Singh (R) Prof. A.K. Bhati Prof. K.P.Singh (R) Prof. G.Singh (R) Prof. D. Mehta Dr A. Kumar Dr. B.R. Behera Dr. S.Sihotra Dr.J.S. Shahi Nuclear Physics (Theory) Prof. R.K.Gupta Prof. R.K.Puri Cond. MatterPhysics Prof.: K.N.Pathak (R) (Experimental and Theory Prof. S. Prakash (R) Prof. V.K.Jindal (R) Prof. K. Dharamvir (R) Prof. N. Goyal Prof. G.S.S Saini Dr. S.K.Tripathi Dr. S. Srivatsava Dr. Ranjan .Kumar Dr. Rajesh Kumar Non-Thrust Areas Prof. V.P. Singh (MassSpectrometry) Dr. S. Sahijpal (Astrophysics) Dr. K.S. Bindra (Phys.Education) Dr. Bimal Rai Singh (MassSpectr.) Er. M.D.Sharma (Electronics) Er. Neeru Chaudhary (Electronics) 5 (A) Experimental High Energy Physics Group Experimental Particle Physics & Heavy Ion Group: (i) Experimental Particle Physics Group Since 1954, the Physics Department, Panjab University group has been actively engaged in the experimental High Energy Physics Research initially using Nuclear Emulsion Technique. Using this technique several Cosmic rays as well as particle accelerator based experiments were performed. Later on in 1975, after TIFR, Panjab University was thE only University to initiate setting up Bubble Chamber Technique facility and using know how from TIFR and Michigan State University, Bubble Chamber projection Systems were developed at CSIO, Chandigarh. Using this facility group participated with CERN on several Bubble Chamber experiments using beam at 780 MeV, 40 GeV K-Beam and 360GeV Proton Beam. Later of its own with having Collaboration of TIFR, Panjab University used Bubble Chamber Facility to participate in Tevatron Neutrino experiment with Fermilab(USA). During late 80’ Group started participating in Frontline International Experiments using Electronics detectors like; Dzero(Tevatron,USA), Belle(KEK, Japan), WA98(CERN), ZEUS (HERA),CMS(CERN),ALICE(CERN),STAR(USA). These Experiments led to the following discoveries: Discovery of TOP Quark (1995) Discovery of CP-violation in B-meson System(2001,2003) Discovery of new particle state with Belle Observation of Quark-Gluon Plasma Following are the details of contribution and participation in various International Collaborative Experiments : Belle Experiment at KEK (Japan) One of the most mysterious phenomena in the particle physics that remains unresolved is the CP-violation which is considered to be responsible for the baryon-antibaryon asymmetry in our section of universe. Keeping in view the importance of CP-violation effect, two dedicated e^{+}e^{-} collider machines (B-factories) have been pursued in the world - one at KEK(Japan) and another at SLAC(USA). The KEK accelerator and Belle detector have been made operational and started data taking in July 1999. The observation of a CP-violating asymmetry in B-meson decays is an important milestone in high energy particle physics by these B-factories. From Panjab University along with students, we have been participating in this Prestigious International Experiment. The Panjab University would continue to participate in Data taking, Physics analysis of the Belle Experiment at KEK B-factory (Japan). The Belle collaboration has already made truly historic achievements in the area of Quark Flavour physics and has become a world leader in this branch of high-energy physics. The experiment would continue to run during next several years and also intend to upgrade the World's Highest Luminosity KEKB accelerator to new Accelerator Super-KEKB and the Belle Detector. During next 10-years group would participate in the Physics analysis with higher statistics which would lead to more and more discovery of new particles and new phenomenon in the field of B-physics including Direct CP-Violation. To summarize we intend to Participate in Data taking with Belle Detector at KEKB factory Physics Analysis for the observation 6 new B-decay modes Search for Direct CP-Violation in new rare B-decays Detector development and R&D for Silicon Detector for Super-KEKB detector CMS Experiment at LHC (CERN) Group is participating in the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment at Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, Switzerland. The LHC is going to be the Highest Energy Accelerator for next 10-15 years and would provide unique opportunity Search of new particles and new physics at TeV scale. The CMS experiment is one of two large general purpose particle physics detectors capable of studying many aspects of protonproton collisions at Centre of Mass Energy 14TeV. It contains sub-detectors which are designed to measure the energy and momentum of photons, electrons, muons and other particles produced in the collision. At Panjab University along with TIFR, we took complete responsibility of designing, fabrication, testing and installation of one of the subdetector called Outer Hadron Calorimeter (HO) into the CMS detector. For this purpose, we got about 900 plastic scintillator tiles grooved at CTR, Ludhaina. These tiles were assembled in the form of detector and tested with Data Acquisition at Panjab University and TIFR. After complete tested and assembly, these have been integrated with the CMS detector. The final tests and commissioning has been carried by the team of Engineers and Scientists from TIFR and Panjab University and detector is ready to be used. During next 10-15 years, these detectors would be used for the data collection at LHC and we need to make sure the smoothing running of our HO detector with some required upgrade. Group members and students are studying various physics aspects like, Higgs Search, SUSY particle Search, B-physics, Top Quark study, QCD study, etc. With the start of LHC in June/July 2008, the group members have participated in data taking with CMS and physics analysis related to various physics aspects-Higgs,Bphysics,QCD,etc. The group also developed expertise in setting up Grid Computing infrastructure for unifying with the WLCG (Worldwide LHC Computing Grid) for doing the distributed data analysis. The required computing hardware/software were configured locally to accomplish these tasks of data analyses. Dzero Experiment at Fermilab (U.S.A) Group members are participating in Dzero experiment at Fermilab and are part of International Dzero collaboration. EHEP group of P.U has made significant contribution for hardware and software of D0 experiment at Tevatron energy which led to Top Quark Discovery which was one of the milestone for Particle Physics. Currently we are participating in data analysis and physics studies of signal and background for Higgs and top properties. Group also participates in detector shifts as well as online data monitoring shifts. ZEUS Experiment at DESY (Germany) Members of HEP group are involved in the ZEUS experiment at DESY, Germany. The experiment is aimed at studying electron (positron)-proton collisions at HERA accelerator which collided 27.5 GeV electron/positron longitudinally polarized beams with proton of energy 460, 575 and 860 GeV. The physics is dominated by the 7 interactions of gluons and probes the structure of proton down to distances 10-16 cm to confront the Standard Model (SM) of strong and electroweak interactions in search of signals of Physics beyond the SM. Many important physics topics will benefit from data at different center-of-mass energy, such as measuring associated structure function FL , to understand small-x physics, measuring structure functions at higher values of x leading to more precise extractions of parton distribution functions, measurements of cross sections for longitudinally polarized virtual photons to scatter off protons for inclusive and diffractive physics. The results thus obtained will make an important and essential input to LHC physics. (ii) Heavy Ion Physics Group: The Chandigarh group is a part of international collaborations, STAR experiment at RHIC(BNL, USA) and ALICE experiment at LHC (CERN, Geneva), to study QCD matter as a function of density and temperature reached during heavy ion collisions at ultra-relativistic energies, i.e. the state of matter existed during the first few microseconds of the big bang. Recent results of four experiments, BRAHMS, PHENIX, PHOBOS and STAR, at RHIC have shown the formation of extremely high energy density system in Au+Au collision, whose description in terms of simple hadronic degrees of freedom is inappropriate. Further more, the constituents of this system (quark-gluon plasma) experience a significant level of interaction with each other inside the medium (liquid state). This is considered to be an ideal gas in the theory of QCD. The minibangs at LHC will briefly reach several times the energy density and the temperature that reached in RHIC collisions. This will be interesting to see if the liquid like behavior witnessed at RHIC will persist at the higher temperature and densities encountered at the LHC. The research work at Chandigarh is related with the development fabrication and testing of the Photon Multiplicity Detector (PMD), read-out chip testing, installation and calibration of PMD, maintenance and data taking during the runtime and in the analysis of data to extract following signals of QGP: i) Determination of reaction plane and collective flow. ii) Fluctuations in the number of produced particles. iii) Disoriented chiral condensates. In addition to the above experiments, the group is intended to participate in the Compressed Baryonic Matter (CBM) experiment at Darmstadt (Germany) also. The experiment offers the possibility to discover the first order deconfinement phase transition and the critical end point of the QCD phase diagram expected to exist at high net baryon densities. Participation in Neutrino Physics Program using INO - India-based Neutrino Observatory During next 10-15-years, several faculty members of the department would participate in the Neutrino Physics Program of the Country. In this regard, jointly Department of Atomic Energy and Department of Science and Technology have proposed a 1300 Crore Rupee Mega science project near Mysore. This experiment would require big 2mX2m 8 more than 12000 Resistive Plate Chamber detectors and also, huge efforts on Neutrino Physics and detector simulation. Panjab University group members have started working on the Detector development, theoretical aspect of Neutrino physics and physics simulations. Detector Development Facility: Panjab University group established the various modern detector development facilities during the course of these years starting from the collaboration with the DZERO detector at Fermilab to the latest on-going CMS detector at CERN. These facilities include: Scintillator Based Detector To provide the coverage to the DZERO detector from the cosmic muons (forming one of the background signals) and vetoing them, the local HEP group started the R & D work and setup the scintillator based detectors. A prototype was developed which was approved by the collaboration. This whole activity allowed us to develop local zigs for testing the WLS (wave length shifting) fibers for attenuation studies, bonding-coupling of fibers with the light guide and shaping the scintillators for maximum light gathering. The whole setup was CAMAC controlled. This expertise with the scintillators led to the participation in the CMS Outer Hadronic detector. Thousands of scintillator based detectors were cut/polished/assembled and fabricated with embedded optical fibers with the help from the Central Tool Room, Ludhiana. These were all tested for quality checks locally and where shipped to CERN for installation in the CMS detector. Gaseous Based Detectors: Under these category of detectors, the group took the responsibility along with BARC, Mumbai to set-up the lab for assembly and testing of Resistive Plate Chambers(RPC) for Muon Detector upgrade. The overall work included: Fabrication and testing in India and then testing, Installation and Commissioning of Indian RPC at CERN with CMS Detector. For this work a new gaseous detector development lab was setup in the department with 4 channel automatic gas mixing and distribution system. The CAMAC based DAQ is being upgraded with the VME based system. Since the group is involved in the INO-ICAL (India based Neutrino Observatory-Iron Calorimeter) experiment which also uses RPCs as the active medium, it was obvious to use the existing facilities for the detector development work for the INO-ICAL. The RPCs used in INO are glass based where as the ones used in CMS are Bakelite based. The group has gained expertise in all the aspects of RPC fabrication, testing (using the cosmic test stand), scintillator paddles/telescope assembly and testing of its response, for both the glass as well as Bakelite. Projects handled by the HEP Group (Since 1999 till date) Number of Projects: Total Amount of Projects: 8 (funded by DST, DAE-BRNS) ~ Rs. 12.5 Crores 9 Project Proposals Approved (on-going/future collaboration) The group has joined the Fermilab based neutrino program and has put forward a proposal to participate in the detector building for the Near detector as part of the Longbaseline neutrino experiment proposed by Fermilab. Other than National Research Institutes, Panjab University has been a major centre being heavily supported by DST and DAE to have active participation in prestigious LHC(CERN) program. Govt. of India has placed the LHC program under Mega Project programe as India has Been recognized as Assosiate Member state of CERN and being considered as member state. The very active participation of this University in this Mega Project program has National interest. 10 A2. Theoretical High Energy Particle Group Over the last 15 years both in collaboration with an International group based at the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Trieste, Italy and independently Prof. C.S. Aulakh and his students have developed Left Right Supersymmetric models and the the Minimal Supersymmetric SO(10) Grand Unified Theory in a sustained way that has brought these theories to the point where these theories are now in active confrontation with the lates data from the LHC, Dark Matter experiments as well as contributing a testable locus for Lepto-Baryogenesis and Inflationary Cosmology. His work is well recognized by over 1800 citations in the International literature and has resulted in a number of invitations to speak at International Conferences, and direct national (SERC-THEP) and international (ICTPSummer School in Particle Physics). The theory group has also established a High Performance Computation Centre with Tera-flop supercomputation facilities on a 80 node cluster. These facilities are expressly set up to be of use in the research program of the Theoretical High Energy Physics, Nuclear Physics and Condensed Matter Physics Groups which are already using them intensively. The HEP theory group has made important contributions which are well recognized at the national and international level. Some of the well recognized contributions of the group concerns: (i) Formulation & analysis of consistent Minimal Super-symmetric models of the corresponding Grand Unified Theories, (ii) Texture specific mass matrices and CP violation, (iii) Proton Spin Crisis(iv) Study of existence and the stability of solitonic solutions of non-linear evolution equations. The group proposes to carry out the following activities in the coming year/s. a) Minimal Supersymmetric Grand Unified Theory: In the last 7 years the generic class of left-right Supersymmetric Unified models was studied. This study together with Neutrino mass data led us to revive an SO (10) GUT model proposed by us in 1982 as the Minimal Supersymmetric GUT (MSGUT). This GUT is now known to be the minimal GUT compatible with all experimental data and is a focus of intense investigation by at least 5 groups worldwide. We developed a new method for analysing the group theory of SO(10) which enables us to calculate all group theoretic coefficients required. We have already calculated the complete spectrum and couplings at the GUT scale and used them to calculate the threshold corrections to the gauge couplings ab initio (for the first time in any GUT). We have also proposed a new scenario of Asymptotically strong unification based on this type of GUT. In the coming year/s, we will further deepen our studies of the MSGUT and investigate the fermion spectra, GUT scale dynamical symmetry breaking, renormalization group fixed points and corrections, baryon decay and a host of other phenomenological issues that come into sharp focus once one has available the complete spectra and couplings of this MSGUT. 11 (b) Phenomenological Fermion Mass Matrices & CP Violation: We have been carrying out intensive studies in the field of fermion mixings, CP violation and fermion mass matrices. In order to understand the quark mixing phenomenon at more fundamental level, texture specific mass matrices have been formulated at phenomenological level. Mass matrices based on discrete symmetry have also been studied with good results for the rare decays. Fermion flavour mixings, neutrino oscillations, neutrino mass matrices and CP violation in the leptonic sector continues to be the thrust areas at present. In the coming years, we plan to investigate intensively the possibility to find CP violation in the electronic sector and viable set of Fermion Mass matrices which are in agreement with the quark mixing and neutrino oscillation phenomena. (c) Proton Spin Crisis: We are also investigating the ‘proton spin crisis’ within chiral quark model with configuration mixings generated by gluon exchange. In the next two three years, we plan to investigate the gluon contribution to the spin angular momentum of the nucleon in the context of Chiral Constituent Quark Model. (d) Nonlinear Evolution Equations of Physics During the last few years, we studied the existence and the stability of Solitary Wave like solutions for various Nonlinear Evolution Equations of Physics interest. We find exact solutions to the nonlinear Schrödinger equation NLSE in the presence of self-steepening and a self-frequency shift. These include periodic solutions and localized solutions of dark-bright type which can be chiral, the chirality being controlled by the sign of the selfsteepening term. A form of self-phase modulation that can be tuned by higher-order nonlinearities as well as by the initial conditions, distinct from the nonlinear Schrödinger equation, characterizes these solutions. In certain nontrivial parameter domains, solutions are found to satisfy the linear Schrödinger equation, indicating the possibility of linear superposition in this nonlinear system. Dark and bright solitons exist in both the anomalous and normal dispersion regimes, and a duality between the dark-bright type of solution and kinematics higher-order chirping is also seen. Localized kink solutions similar to NLSE solitons, but with very different self-phase-modulation, are identified. The sol–gel system which is known, experimentally, to exhibit a power law decay of stress autocorrelation function has been studied theoretically. A second-order nonlinear differential equation obtained from Mori's integro-differential equation is derived which provides the algebraic decay of a time correlation function. Involved parameters in the expression obtained are related to exact properties of the corresponding correlation function. The algebraic model has been applied to Lennard-Jones and sol–gel systems. The model shows the behavior of viscosity as has been observed in computer simulation and theoretical studies. The expression obtained for the viscosity predicts a logarithmic divergence at a critical value of the parameter in agreement with the prediction of other theories. 12 For the first time, we find the complex solitons for a quasi-one-dimensional Bose– Einstein condensate with two- and three-body interactions. These localized solutions are characterized by a power law behavior. The dynamic structure factor S(q, ω) of a harmonically trapped Bose gas has been calculated well above the Bose-Einstein condensation temperature by treating the gas cloud as a canonical ensemble of non-interacting classical particles. The static structure factor is found to vanish s8 q 2 in the long-wavelength limit. We also incorporate a relaxation mechanism phenomenological by including a stochastic friction force to study S(q, ω). A significant temperature dependence of the density fluctuation spectra is found. The Debye-Waller factor has been calculated for the trapped thermal cloud as a function of q and the number N of atoms. A substantial difference is found for small- and large-N clouds. We studied the nonlinear dynamics of DNA, for longitudinal and transverse motions, in the framework of the microscopic model of Peyrard and Bishop. The coupled nonlinear partial differential equations for dynamics of DNA model, which consists of two long elastic homogeneous strands connected with each other by an elastic membrane, have been solved for solitary wave solution which is further generalized using Riccati parameterized factorization method. We demonstrated that the competing cubic-quintic nonlinearity induces propagating soliton like dark (bright) solitons and double-kink solitons in the nonlinear Schrödinger equation with self-steepening and self-frequency shift. Parameter domains are delineated in which these optical solitons exist. Also, fractional-transform solitons are explored for this model. It is shown that the nonlinear chirp associated with each of these optical pulses is directly proportional to the intensity of the wave and saturates at some finite value as the retarded time approaches its asymptotic value. We further show that the amplitude of the chirping can be controlled by varying the self-steepening term and selffrequency shift. Keeping in view the importance of dynamical invariants, attempts have been made to investigate complex invariants for two-dimensional Hamiltonian systems within the framework of the extended complex phase space approach. The rationalization method has been used to derive an invariant of a general non Hermitian quartic potential. Invariants for three specific potentials are also obtained from the general result. During the last few years, various aspects of supersymmetric quantum mechanics and the application of this formalism to various physical situations have been studied. Some of the applications are in the area of information theory, in rearranging the information entropy in a given system, Nonlinear Physics, Atomic Physics and Particle Physics. We use a fractional transformation to connect traveling wave solutions of the nonlinear Schrödinger equation, phase-locked with a source, to the elliptic equations. Bright and dark solitons are obtained in the suitable range of parameter values. 13 (e) Noncommutative spaces and deformed symmetries Although it has a longer history, the idea that configuration-space coordinates may not commute has arisen recently from string theory. Noncommuting spatial coordinates and fields can be realised in actual physical situations. Therefore, many physicists have investigated what follows just from the idea that coordinates are operators that do not commute. Noncommutative field theories have many novel features. We studied the general deformed conformal-Poincare (Galilean) symmetries consistent with relativistic (nonrelativistic) canonical noncommutative spaces. In either case, we obtained deformed generators, containing arbitrary free parameters, which close to yield new algebraic structures. We showed that a particular choice of these parameters reproduces the undeformed algebra. We also studied the deformed conformal-Poincare symmetries consistent with the Snyder-de Sitter space. A relativistic particle model invariant under these deformed symmetries was given. This model was used to provide a gauge independent derivation of the Snyder-de Sitter algebra. Our results were valid in the leading order in the parameters appearing in the model. A3. Theoretical Astrophysics We have recently started working on the galactic chemical abundance evolution (GCE). The idea is to understand the complete galactic elemental (isotopic) evolution of our galaxy and probably other galaxies. There has been revolutionary development in the stellar nucleosynthesic theories in almost all the stellar evolutionary models. As a result the GCE models could be made much more efficient now. We have been recently working on some of the aspects of GCE models and hopefully will be able to develop my own model. We will continue to work in GCE models for our galaxy and probably other galaxies. In addition, we would like to initiate some work in the laboratory simulation of irradiation of grains by energetic particles to study the production of short-lived nuclides that are found to be present in the early solar system. The group has been working on the theoretical studies related with the origin and the early evolution of the solar system. In this regard, the thermal models related with the early evolution of planetesimals in the early solar system have been developed. This includes the planetary bodies that underwent large scale planetary scale melting and differentiation. The studies include the thermal evolution of icy planetesimals and transNeptunian objects. Further, the work is going on for the processes that triggered the formation of the solar system and planetary bodies. The group has extensive cordial, professional relationship with other Institutions through collaborations and visits. The faculty participates in International / national workshops, seminars and conferences and invites visitors under TPSC programme. Participation in Indian Neutrino Initiative (INO), Associateship at ICTP, Visiting Scientist position at IUCAA, DAAD fellowship are some of the honors the group received recently. With this expertise, the group is confident in holding Winter /Summer schools and take up long term collaborative research projects. 14 (B). Nuclear Physics Experimental Activities In House Facilities: B1. Chandigarh Variable Energy Cyclotron: Current activities: Chandigarh Variable Energy Cyclotron is an unique facility amongst the Universities in India. It has been functioning satisfactorily since last many years. This machine has been mainly used to produce 3.0 MeV protons in the last few years and is being used as a regional facility for PIXE, PIGE and polymer irradiation experiments. A new beam line (zero degree) for general purpose experiments is under progress. (a) PIXE and PIGE Programme: The low-energy proton beam (~ 3 MeV) is very much suitable for elemental analysis using PIXE and PIGE techniques. At present, Cyclotron is being used effectively for determination of trace elements in Archaeological, bio-medical sciences, Forensic science, aerosol samples etc. Our next aim is to make use of PIGE and RBS facilities along with PIXE for elemental analysis for a variety of samples from various fields. PIGE facility will be used for the detection of light elements such as Li, B, F, Na. Mg, Al, Si and P for which PIXE technique is not suitable. The main thrust of PIGE program will be the elemental analysis of Boron in biological samples, Fluoride in water samples, detection of Al and Si in aerosol samples. PIXE and PIGE techniques will also be employed to the study of elemental constituents of some traditional medicinal plants generally used in curing many diseases and in commonly edible vegetables of medicinal and pharmacological importance. RBS facilities will be used for elemental analysis and depth profiling of the thin films. This programme will be continued for next five years. (b) Irradiation Work: The Studies on the effect of low energy (2 to 3) MeV proton beam irradiation on polypropylene (PP), polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polyimide (PI), ethyle vinyl acetate (EVA), polycarbonate (PC) and blended PVC/PET have been investigated at different fluences. Now the focus on polymer nano composites films have been planned for future work. Polymeric films will be synthesized by the dispersion of different concentration of nanoparticles in the polymer matrix using sol gel technique. This work is being done in collaboration with M S University of Baroda, Vadodara. It is planned to strengthen collaboration with other Indian universities for PIXE/PIGE and irradiation experiments in the cyclotron lab. It is planned to Establish an experimental set up for the (p,γ) and (α,γ) reactions at the Cyclotron of the Department. It is planned to set up neutron activation using proton beam from the cyclotron. Recently, old power supplies of the cyclotron magnet systems were replaced by solid state power supply, by the funding from the departmental CAS 15 programme and a DST project for the regional PIXE programme. At present this is the only accelerator in the country available for low energy proton and alpha beam in the above energy range. We propose to upgrade the existing experimental set up and start a programme for measuring (p,γ) and (α,γ) reaction cross sections which has a direct relevance for nuclear astrophysics and nuclear data. This programme will be use full as a training ground for students of M.Sc., Ph.D. and post-M.Sc. course in accelerator physics of the department, besides its nuclear physics importance. The group efforts for next five years will also be useful for the proposed 5 MV accelerator of the Panjab University. We will need a new HPGe detector and we will also explore to repair the old HPGe detector for measuring life time of the astrophysically important nuclei using DSAM technique. B2. Establishment of a New 5 MV Electrostatic Accelerator: In the next five years it is planned to concentrate on a major proposal for 5 MV Tandetron accelerator. The proposal is already defended before the Expert Committee of the DST, Govt. of India. In the next new few months we are expecting final decision from DST. The cost estimate has been projected to be Rs.60 Crores for the main machine, beam lines and some major experimental apparatus. The recurring expenditure will be about 2 Crores which include the salary of the staff, running cost of the machine and arrangement for carrying out the research programme. The facilities will also be extended to other universities and institutes in the country. Planned research programs using 5 MV Tandetron facility are (i) Cluster Physics, (ii)Neutron generation, (iii)Accelerator Mass Spectrometry, (iv) Material modification, and (v) Characterization using Analytical techniques : RBS, PIXE, PIGE, ERDA, NRA, Micro-beam facility and a time-of-flight set-up for heavy ion RBS, Masked ion beam lithography (vi) Nuclear Astrophysics (vii) PAC Experiments. It will also be used for production of radioisotopes for medical/industrial uses – New radioactive probes for PAC studies, PET sources, Positron sources for positron annihilation investigations and radio-active sources for commercial values. In addition, beam will also be given for detector testing facility – for International collaborations and Radiation damage testing of silicon detectors. B3. Activities at National/ International Level: Nuclear Structure at High Spins: The group has been investigating the high spin states in the nuclei populated through fusion-evaporation reactions using heavy-ion beams from pelletron accelerators at the IUAC and TIFR accelerator facilities. Reactions have been investigated through in-beam -ray spectroscopic techniques using the Clover detector spectrometers INGA for gamma-spectroscopy studies. The following investigations have been carried out during the recent past: (a) Excited states in the 99Pd nucleus populated in the 75As (28Si, p3n) fusion-evaporation reaction at Elab = 120 MeV have been investigated through in-beam -ray spectroscopic techniques using an array of Compton suppressed clover detectors. The level scheme is established up to excitation energy ~11.5 MeV and spin ~ 25ħ with the addition of about 60 new transitions. The level structures observed in 99Pd have been interpreted in the framework of a microscopic theory based on the deformed Hartree-Fock and angular momentum projection techniques. Band structures at lower spins are based on the low -Ω 16 νg7/2 and vd5/2 orbitals, and those at higher spins are reproduced for the π(g9/2)5 π(g7/2) ν(g7/2)2 ν(h11/2)2 ν(g9/2)−1 and π(g9/2)6 ν(g9/2)10 ν(g7/2)2 ν(h11/2) configurations. The octupole correlations in 99Pd have been inferred from new interband E1 transitions linking the I = 1 states of the bands based on the νh11/2 and νd5/2 orbitals (l = 3, j = 3, and π = −1) with the deduced B(E1) values ~ 10−6 W.u. (b) High spin states in neutron-deficient 106,107In were investigated using 78Se (32S, pxn) reaction at 125 MeV. The de-excitations were studied using in-beam -ray spectroscopic techniques involving the Compton-suppressed clover detector array. The level schemes are extended up to 7 MeV of excitation energy and spin ~ 22 ħ. In 106In, the negative parity states constituting four dipole bands have been observed. The positive parity states mainly exhibit single-particle excitations. Projected deformed Hartree-Fock calculations were carried out in 106,107In to understand the configurations of different bands in this nucleus. Various bands are reproduced in band mixing calculations with the configurations involving high-Ω πg9/2 and νd5/2 orbits, and low-Ω πg7/2, νg7/2 and νh11/2 orbits. (c) High spin states in 112In were investigated using the 100Mo(16O, p3n) reaction at 80 MeV. The excited level has been observed up to ~ 6 MeV excitation energy and spin ~20ħ with the level scheme showing three dipole bands. Polarization and lifetime measurements were carried out for the dipole bands. Tilted axis cranking model calculations were performed for different quasiparticle configurations of this doubly odd nucleus. Comparison of the calculations of the model with the B(M1) transition strengths of the positive- and negative-parity bands firmly established their configurations. (d) Excited states in 131Cs were investigated through in-beam -ray spectroscopic techniques following its population in the 124Sn(11B, 4n) fusion-evaporation reaction at a beam energy of 46 MeV. The previously known level scheme has been substantially extended up to ~9 MeV excitation energy and 49/2ħ spin with the addition of seven new band structures. The present level scheme consisting of 15 bands exhibits a variety of collective features in this nucleus at intermediate spin. The excitation energies of the observed levels in different bands and the corresponding ratios of transition strengths, i.e., B(M1)/B(E2), have been compared with the results of projected deformed HartreeFock calculations based on various quasiparticle configurations. A strongly coupled band has been reassigned a high-K three-quasiparticle πh11/2 νh11/2 νd3/2 configuration based on the properties of this band and that of its new coupled side band. The configurations of these bands are also discussed in the framework of tilted-axis cranking model calculations and the systematics of the odd-A Cs isotopes. Additional three energetically closely placed coupled bands have been assigned different unpaired threequasiparticle configurations. -vibrational bands coupled to the πh11/2 and πg7/2 singleparticle configurations have been reported in this nucleus. Observation of new E1 transitions linking the opposite-parity πh11/2 and πd5/2 bands provides fingerprints of possible octupole correlations. (e) A bandlike structure, based on the πh11/2νh11/2 configuration, has been identified for the first time in 134Cs in a gamma-ray spectroscopic study using fusion evaporation reactions. The nature of this band in 134Cs has been found to be distinctly different than 17 the nearly degenerate doublet rotational band structures, observed in the lighter Cs isotopes for the same configuration. Both the total Routhian surface and the tilted axis cranking calculations were performed to understand the experimental observations. The present results suggest that the N = 77 defines the border of the deformed structure in the A ~130 region while approaching N = 82. Sn(11B,4n) fusion-evaporation reaction at Elab=60 MeV was used to populate excited states in 129Cs, and the deexcitations were investigated using in-beam γ-ray spectroscopic techniques. The level scheme of 129Cs is established up to ~8MeV excitation energy and 47/2ħ spin. The observed band structures are interpreted for their configurations in the framework of cranking model calculations and systematic of the neighboring 55Cs isotopes. A negative-parity I=1 coupled band has been assigned the h11/2(νh11/2)2 configuration as solution of the tilted-axis cranking, which coexists with the πh11/2 yrast band resulting from the principal-axis cranking. A new band has been identified as a γ-vibrational band built on the πh11/2 orbital. A pair of strongly coupled positive-parity bands exhibiting similar features have been assigned different unpaired three-quasi-particle configurations involving the h11/2νh11/2 component. The previously identified unfavored signature partners of the πd5/2 and πg7/2 bands are reassigned as γ vibrations of the core coupled to the πg7/2 single-particle configuration, and the favored signature of the πd5/2 band, respectively. (g) We carried out the experiment using INGA to study the high spin structure in 130,131 Ba using 13C + 122Sn at 65 MeV. Preliminary results have been presented in DAE symposium and final results are being prepared to send for publication in some referred journal. (f) The 122 (h) We have proposed the 28Si + 116Cd reaction at 115 MeV to study the high spin structure in 140Pm and 140Sm. This experiment will be carried out at TIFR, Mumbai using INGA in phase –II run. In the future experiments, it is planned to use HYRA for recoil tagging of heavy nuclei, and the ancillary equipments - charged particle ball. Active participation of the group will be there in setting up of the world class facility along with the other ancillary equipments at IUAC. Life time measurements of excited nuclei will be continued through DSAM and RDM techniques. Nuclear Reaction Dynamics studies at National Accelerator Facilities: Nuclear reaction dynamics studies will be continued and new experiments will be planned in the National accelerator facilities of Inter University accelerator centre (IUAC), BARC-TIFR accelerator facility and the variable energy cyclotron centre (VECC) at Calcutta. The upgrading of IUAC accelerator with LINAC booster and the new super conducting cyclotron of variable energy cyclotron centre will provide us some unique projectile target combinations in low and medium energy regime for reaction studies. For the last three years we are engaged in the Neutron multiplicity, Fission cross sections and evaporation residue cross section measurements for the System 16,18 O+194,198Pt and 19F + 194,196,198 Pt systems. All the measurements were performed using the Pelletron+Linac accelerator facilities of IUAC New Delhi. For 16,18O+194,198Pt 18 systems the role of N/Z in the neutron multiplicities is established. For 19F + 194,196,198 Pt systems the effect of shell closure in nuclear dissipation is established. The two programmes are complete and Ph.D. students are writing their thesis. The group will be actively engaged in the fission dynamics studies at IUAC, New Delhi. A neutron array is being established at IUAC in collaboration with Delhi University, Panjab University and Karnataka University and it will come up in next few years. The group has been actively involved in designing this apparatus and proposing experiment the department will be a part of National Neutron Array Collaboration. An experiment using the LINAC beam of IUAC using a 16 neutron detector array was performed to understand the fission dynamics of the heavy nuclei. New experiments are already planned. New experiments for the measurements of spin distribution of medium mass system and Fusion barrier distribution for heavy nuclei is planned and approved by IUAC , accelerator user Committee. Charged particle spectrum for 32S+45Sc and 28Si+45Sc is analyzed. Nuclear Level density for medium mass nuclei in the mass region A=5-80 are extracted from the Alpha particle spectra and systematic study was undertaken. The group has been actively involved in designing and setting up of National Neutron Array at IUAC. An experiment using the LINAC beam of IUAC using a 16 neutron detector array was performed to understand the fission dynamics of the heavy nuclei. Fusion barrier distribution studies through quasi-elastic scattering methods for heavy Nuclei will be performed at IUAC accelerator facilities. The experiments have also been proposed to study the precission and postscission charged particles emission in heavy ion induced reactions at IUAC, New Delhi. Light charged particles spectra will be measured in coincidence with fission fragments and the fission time scales will be extracted using the charged multiplicities. A Project has been sanctioned by IUAC to perform these experiments. Nuclear physics groups plan to continue with Nuclear Structure, static nuclear electromagnetic moment, Nuclear reaction dynamics studies in the new experiments using National accelerator facilities. The upgrading of IUAC accelerator with LINAC booster and the new super conducting cyclotron of variable energy cyclotron centre will provide us some unique projectile target combinations in low and medium energy regime for reaction studies. New generation gas filled recoil separator (HYRA) at IUAC will give us ample opportunities to study fusion dynamics and gamma ray spectroscopy of heavy system. The group also plans to upgrade PAD facilities involving BaF2 and LaBr3 scintillators at IUAC. The planned new generation gas filled recoil separator (HYRA) at NSC will give us some opportunities to study fusion dynamics of heavy system. Once it comes up fusion experiments will be proposed for this facility. B4. International Facilities: Besides using the national accelerator facilities and the activities in house facilities the group is planning to start renew collaboration and active contacts with the international 19 facilities like GSI at Germany, LNL at Italy and Argon National Lab in USA. The group is planning to join in the GSI future accelerator (FAIR) Collaboration. Faculty members will be involved in planning of the experiments and apparatus for this new FAIR Collaboration. B5. X-ray Fluorescence Laboratory: Photon-atom interaction and subsequent processes near the electron binding energies and applications: The laboratory is equipped with X-ray tube based intense photon source, 241Am and 55Fe radioisotope based photon sources and Low energy Ge detector, Si(Li) detector and recently procured Peltier-cooled detector. Peltier cooled X-ray fluorescence (XRF) spectrometer (AMPTEK Make, USA) consisting of 0.5 m Silicon Drift Detector (25 mm2, 500 mm Be window), Digital pulse processor and MCA. The Peltier cooled EDXRF spectrometer has been installed. The spectrometer shows FWHM 130 eV at 5.89 keV Mn K X-rays. The data acquisition and analysis software has been loaded on PC/Laptop, which makes it capable for in-vivo field measurements. Geometrical set ups has been designed for use with (i) Mn K x-rays from the 55Fe source and (ii) the K x-rays of various elements, viz., Se, Mo, Zr, Rh, Ag, Sn, and Gd elements excited by the 59.5 keV gamma ray from the 241Am point source (100 mCi) (secondary excitation mode). The geometrical set up has been designed and fabricated using workshop facility available Department of Physics. The spectrometer can be used efficiently in the photon energy range up to 30 keV. The following measurements are being performed/planned using the detector set up: (a) Characterization of the Peltier cooled detector – Measurements of resolution as a function of energy, escape peaks and its theoretical modeling. (b) In-vivo field measurements for articles lying in the Museum are being planned. (c) Angular distribution of the L3 subshell x-ray emission and the scattering cross-section measurements are being planned using this detector and secondary exciter source. Because of the small size, measurements at large angles approaching 180o are possible and the solid angle corrections will be minimized. (b) The procurement of Microfocus XRF spectrometer is under process. The following are the current investigations taken by the group: (a) Study of Influence of resonant Raman scattering in the elemental analysis using X-ray emission based techniques. Contribution of near-edge processes (RRS and XAFS) to attenuation of the characteristic X-rays in various elements for the photon energies (Ein) in the region of respective K-shell/Li subshell (i = 1, 2, 3) ionization threshold (BK/BLi). The observed alteration from the theoretical values is attributed to the X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (XAFS) for negative BK/Li - Ein values, and the K-shell/Li subshell resonant Raman scattering (RRS) process for positive BK/Li-Ein values. Systematic of the K-shell/Li subshell RRS contribution to attenuation of the X-rays are discussed in terms of the respective oscillator density and fraction of electrons available in the K-shell/Li subshell Lorentzian profile of the attenuation element below Ein. Possible matrix effects in the energy dispersive x ray spectrometry due to RRS are also explored. (b) Differential cross sections for Elastic scattering of 59.54-keV γ-rays in elements with 22 ≤ Z ≤ 92 at momentum transfer 0.4 ≤ x ≤ 4.7 Å−1 . The measured differential 20 scattering cross sections are compared with those based on the form-factor (FF) formalism and state-of-the-art S-matrix calculations to differentiate between their relative efficacies and to check angular-dependence of the anomalous scattering factors (ASF) incorporated as correction to the modified form-factor (MF). (c) Alignment of the L3 subshell (J = 3/2) vacancy states produced following photoionization in the Li (i = 1–3) subshells of 79Au, 83Bi, 90Th, and 92U have been investigated through angular distribution of the subsequently emitted L3 subshell x rays. The measurements were also performed for these elements to investigate the effects of external magnetic field (0.60 T) on the L3 subshell x-ray emission. (d) The EDXRF set up has been used in the following applications (i) Heavy metal uptake studies by biomass of immobilized microorganisms (ii) Heavy metal induced physiological alterations in Salvinia natans (iii) Elemental analysis of ground water from different regions of Punjab state (India) using EDXRF technique and the sources of water contamination - Multielemental analysis of the ground water samples from different locations at the boundary between Hoshiarpur and Nawanshahr districts, and Bathinda district of Punjab state (India) was performed. These regions are known to be contaminated by selenium and uranium, respectively. The water samples were analysed using the Energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence (EDXRF) technique. The water samples from surroundings of the coal-fired thermal power plant in the city and the industrial waste water draining into Sutlej river were also analyzed to investigate the possible sources of water contamination in Bathinda. Agrochemical processes in the water-logged agricultural areas with calcareous soils and use of phosphate fertilizers are favoured sources deterioration of ground water quality in Bathinda district. (iv) Elemental analysis of some ceria-based synthesized catalyst particles is preformed to know the composition of the mixed oxides of some metals with gold. The possibility of the reversible transition from CeO2 to Ce2O3 makes cerium oxide one of the promising materials. Mixed oxide catalytic particlas were synthesized by the research group of Dept. of applied Chemistry, ISM, Dhanbad. (v) EDXRF set up has been used to study of uptake of selenium in different portions of chick pea plant i.e. seeds leaves stem and roots is performed. The research group at Department of Botany, Panjab University, has undertaken these investigations. The experiment was designed for application as phytoremidation. (vi) Thickness determination of CNT (carbon nanotube) films deposited on Si/Glass substrate using the EDXRF set-up involving Mo anode x-ray tube with suitable absorber to reduce the bremsstrahlung and LEGe detector. (vii) Qualitative and quantitative analysis of Eu3+ and Sm3+ ions doped ZnS nanocrystals synthesized at Nano-material research laboratory, Chitkara University, Punjab for the photo-catalytic degradation of environmental organic pollutants. (viii) The analysis of the targets used for nuclear and material science experiments by the students from IUAC, New Delhi. X-ray production using Heavy ions : The group has also measured the Li-subshell X-ray production cross-sections for 78Pt, 19 F ions in the energy range 76 79Au, 82Pb, 83Bi, 90Th, and 92U elements ionized by (i) 28 114 MeV, and (b) Si ions in the energy range 84 - 140 MeV. The measurements have 21 been performed at 15 UD Pelletron accelerator at IUAC, New Delhi. Measured cross sections reproduced by Ionisation cross-sections based on the ECUSAR theory and recently recommended set of the Li subshell fluorescence and Coster-Kronig yields after accounting for the effect of multiple ionisation. We are using the accelerator at National Centre for Compositional Characterization of Materials (CCCM), BARC Hydrabad for trace elements analysis and atomic physics. We have performed the experiment on Aerosole, soil and water samples and analysis is in progress. We have also proposed the experiment there to measure the L-subshell ionization cross -sections. We are planning to do the experiment in Feb-March to measure the cross-sections on La-57, Sm-62, Dy-66 and Yb-70 with O-16 and F-19 beams with energies 0.5-1.5 MeV/amu. B6. Hyperfine Interaction Studies: The research group has been engaged in the measurement of Hyperfine Interactions i.e. measurement of nuclear electromagnetic moments of the excited states and electric and magnetic hyperfine fields in the magnetic and non-magnetic systems, using PAC (offline) and PAD (In Beam) techniques. The present facilities include a PAC set up involving multi-BaF2 Scintillators, a Closed Cycle Helium Refrigerator (10K-300K) and Argon Arc Furnace. In the PAC experiments, the activity of the sample cannot be increased beyond a certain level set by the signal-to-noise requirements, the only way to reduce the data collection time, especially for shorter lived radioactive samples, is to increase the efficiency of the spectrometer. The proposed PAC spectrometer with 6 conical LaBr3 detectors and NIM based data acquisition system will be resulting in 30 coincidence spectra simultaneously, with optimised detector-sample geometries covering about 60% of the 4 solid angle and the system having excellent time resolution to resolve the fast interaction frequencies encountered in many experiments. Solid state physics with radioactive isotopes is a prospering and growing field. The established nuclear techniques based upon hyperfine techniques (like PAC, PAD, NMR, NQR, Mössbauer spectroscopy etc have clearly proven the enormous potential of using radioactive probe atoms to characterize defects and impurities in solids. To exploit radioactive probe atoms even more efficiently, implantation energies up to some MeV would be highly desirable. Numerous radioactive species have been employed in the past to attack problems involved with defects or impurities in metals, semiconductors and superconductors. B7. Nuclear Physics (Theory) Group: Theoretical nuclear physics group at Chandigarh is involved in studying the nuclear dynamics at low, intermediate and relativistic energies. The research topics undertaken are (a) Cluster radioactivity, (b) Fusion, (c) Multifragmentation (d) Nuclear flow and its disappearances, and (e) Particle production at intermediate energies. At low energy, the concern is on the problems of fusion and fission processes whereas at intermediate energies, the work is on the problems of multifragmentation, collective flow and its disappearance, differential flow, elliptic flow, and their connection with nuclear equation of state, rapidity and stopping of nuclear matter and thermalization reached in a reaction. Efforts will be made to compare our theoretical predictions with experimental data. A dynamical cluster decay model is advanced for the formation and decay of hot and 22 rotating compound nuclear formed in light heavy ion reactions. Calculations are made for various compound systems. Studies are being done to include deformations and orientations degree of freedom to generalize proximity nuclear potential and the Coulomb potential. Possible new reactions for synthesis of new and super-heavy elements are pursued. During 2008-2012 period, we studied various phenomena at low and intermediate energies. Some of these are fusion using proximity potentials for both symmetry and asymmetric reactions. At intermediate energies the process of multuifragmentaton, collective flow and nuclear stopping were investigated. We also studied the entropy production using SACA and MST models. Fusion-fission dynamics of low energy heavy-ion reactions: Knowing that Wong formula is a simplification of the dynamical cluster-decay (DCM) of Gupta et al., we have analyzed the Wong model for angular momentum and barrier modification effects in capture cross-sections σcapture, fusion-evaporation cross-sections σevr known for fusion hindrance phenomenon in coupled-channels calculations at subbarrier energies, and fusion-fission cross-sections σff using the proximity potential due to Blocki et al. with effects of multipole deformations (β2 -β4) and orientations (both coplaner and non-coplaner) included, and the one derived from Skyrme forces based semiclassical energy density formalism in extended Thomas Fermi (ETF) method. One of the interesting result is that the ℓ-dependence in Wong via ℓ-summation is found enough to explain the σcapture for all the reactions studied, but in the case of σevr, a further modification of barriers is required for below barrier energies, affected in terms of either the barrier ''lowering" or barrier ''narrowing" via the curvature constant or choosing different Skyrme forces. Furthermore, the DCM is shown to contain the "barrier lowering" property as its inbuilt characteristic. The role of deformations and orientations of nuclei is investigated in detail for the exotic cluster radioactive decay using the preformed cluster model (PCM) of Gupta and Malik. An interesting result of this study is that, except for 14C decays where higher multipole deformations up to β4are found essential, the β2 alone is found good enough to fit all other experimental data on cluster-decay half-lives. More recently, this study is extended to the use of relativistic mean field densities in the double folding procedure for constructing the cluster-daughter potential with M3Y nucleon-nucleon interaction containing exchange effects. Interestingly, the RMF-densities based nuclear potential supports the concept of preformation for both the α- and heavier cluster decays. As a by product of this study, the phenomenological M3Y type of effective interaction is shown to be derivable from the RMF theory itself, whose optical potential is shown to describe the exotic cluster radioactive decay process nicely. Further studies are on fusion-fission dynamics of the compound nucleus Z=117, the nuclear structure effects in Z=117 nucleus, nuclear sub-structure of cluster effects in 112122 Ba nuclei using the RMF theory, the problem of establishing the magic shells in superheavy mass region by using the reaction data in DCM, entrance channel effects in some reactions, and nuclear reaction cross-sections of exotic nuclei in the Glauber model for the RMF densities. 23 Some of the recent works are reviewed in the following two Reviews: Lecture Notes in Physics 818, “Clusters in Nuclei”, 1 (2010) 223-264, and International Review of Physics (I.RE.PHY.) 5 (2011) 74-87. The following innovations and new observations are made: A complete dynamical theory of heavy ion reactions, based on microscopic Skyrme energy density formalism (SEDF), using the semiclassical extended Thomas Fermi (ETF) method, is developed which includes temperature of the compound system and deformations to all higher multi-pole orders and orientations of both coplanar and noncoplanar nuclei. The model developed help us to calculate the fusion cross-sections, barrier modification effects at sub-barrier energies with in one parameter description, the neck length parameter, with nuclear structure effects included, missing in its simplified version, the Wong model. The new results obtained are given as the following observations: 1. Use of a simplified version of DCM, the Wong formula, in SEDF of semiclassical ETF method. 2. Barrier modification effects assessed by using the ℓ-summed extended Wong model for both the “pocket formula” and Skyrme forces based proximity potential derived from ETF method. 3. The role of deformations and orientations in spontaneous exotic cluster decays using PCM. 4. Role of Skyrme forces in capture reactions, for which the Wong model is most suited. 5. Role of co-planar and non-coplanar degrees of freedom in dominantly quasi-fission, equivalently capture, evaporation residue and fusion-fission reactions. 6. Use of RMF densities in cluster decay studies, including the deformation effects. 24 (C) Condensed Matter Group C1. Experimental Condensed Matter Solid state Physics is one of the thrust areas recognised by UGC under CAS. The experimental activities of this group involve materials which are important from applications point of view as well as those that lead to an understanding of basic properties of matter and materials. On-going work involves identification of materials suitable for opto-electronic devices, fabrication and characterisation of semi-conducting thin films and preparation and characterisation of carbon Nanotubes. During the last decade, this group has made significant contributions in training graduate and post-graduate students as well as research personnel. They have picked up the latest techniques being used by academics, research organisations and industry. At any given point in time there are about 18 Ph.D. scholars, 3-4 M.Sc. students, 2-3 M. Tech. (Nanoscience and nano-technology) students and 2-3 M.Phil. students working in these laboratories. Carbon nanomaterials such as C60 and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are deposited as thin films on various substrates, irradiated with swift heavy ions at IUAC, Delhi, and characterized by various means. We have also set up an arc discharge unit which can produce C60 as well as CNTs, and has been used mainly as a training equipment for M. Sc. and M.Tech (NSNT) project students. This apparatus is also a part of regular lab. Course for M. Tech. (NSNT). Magnetic properties of nanoparticles of Ni are being studied in collaboration with materials science group at Central Scientific Instrumentation Organisation, Chandigarh, a CSIR lab. Ion Beams on Materials The importance of studying the properties of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) under various extreme conditions is underlined by the fact that numerous usages have been envisaged. Some of these conditions are purported to be created by a passing ion beam through the material. We irradiate films of CNTs with swift heavy ions of widely varying energies to simulate these, and find the surprising result that instead of being damaged at the outset, the CNTs are healed (annealed) to better crystallinity when there is a low dose of incident ions. The following is the summary of the work done during the recent past: (a) Optical constants of thermally deposited In50Se50 and Ag10(In50Se50)90 thin films: Thin films of chemical composition In50Se50 and Ag10(In50 Se50)90 are prepared by thermal evaporation technique. The optical properties of these thin films are determined by a method, based only on the transmission spectra at normal incidence, measured over the 400-1000 nm spectral range. The optical absorption edge is described using the indirect transition model proposed by Tauc and the optical band gap (Eg) is calculated 25 from the absorption coefficient (α) by Tauc’s extrapolation procedure. It is observed that the value of refractive index (n) and α decrease and the value of Eg increases after the incorporation of Ag. (b) Light, Annealing and Plasma induced changes on the electrical properties of aGaSe Thin films Thin films of GaSe have been deposited at room temperature on glass substrate by physical vapor deposition technique. These films are irradiated with light for 6 hrs at room temperature using heat filtered white light by using tungsten lamp (1035 lux), annealed at 523K for 1 hr and irradiated with argon- plasma (p~0.2 mbar, I=20mA) for 1 hr. Dark conductivity measurements were made on as-deposited and irradiated GaSe thin films in the temperature range 100-370 K in order to identify the conduction mechanism and the effect of different treatments on its electrical properties. The obtained results revealed two distinct regions. The mechanisms of such regions were analyzed. At high temperatures dc conductivity (σd) obeys the law: ln σ 1/T, indicating conduction in extended states, and at low temperatures, obeys the law ln σ T-1/4, indicating variable range hopping in localized states near the Fermi level. The density of localized states N(EF) and various other Mott’s parameters like degree of disorder (To), hopping distance (R) and hopping energy (W) near the Fermi level is calculated before and after different treatments using dc conductivity measurements at low temperatures. Steady state photoconductivity measurements were done in the temperature range 303-373 K by using heat filtered white light. (c) Effect of In concentration on the electrical properties of InSe alloy: InxSe1-x (x = 0.4, 0.5, 0.6) thin films are deposited at room temperature on glass substrates by thermal evaporation technique. The X-Ray diffraction analysis showed that both the as-deposited films In2Se3 and InSe (x = 0.4 and 0.5) are amorphous in nature while the as-deposited films of In3Se2 are polycrystalline. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) photographs of these samples have been taken. The dc measurements are made on the InxSe1-x films at all concentrations, in the temperature range 100-400 K. The obtained results revealed three distinct regions. Temperature dependence of conductivity are analyzed by three mechanisms, extended state conductivity, conduction in band tail and conduction in localized sites. It is clear from the results, that at high temperatures conductivity mechanism obeys the law ln σ 1/T and at low temperatures: ln σ T-1/4, indicating variable range hopping energy in the localized states near the Fermi level N (Ef). The incorporation of In atoms in Se matrix leads to an increase in the electrical conductivity and decrease in the thermal activation energy. The change in the above parameters has been discussed in terms of the phase transition which is taking place in InxSe1-x thin films. 26 (d) Effect of Bi Addition on the Physical Parameters of a-GeSe Glassy Alloy: Physical parameters like mean bond energy (<E>), average heat of atomization and average coordination number (<r>) have been calculated. Cohesive energy (CE) is also calculated by using chemical bond approach (CBA) method and electronegtivity is calculated by using Sanderson principle. The glass transition temperature (Tg) has been calculated and it increases as the Bi concentration increases. The results have been explained on the basis of some structural changes which occur after the addition of Bi into the system. (e) Effect of proton irradiations on amorphous InSe thin film: Optical parameters have been studied after proton irradiation (fluence: 1 × 1015 and 1 × 1014 ions/cm2)of a-In50Se50 thin films at room temperature in vacuum (~10−6 Torr) at 3 MeV proton energy from Chandigarh Cyclotron. The beam was focused using a circular collimator so that an area of ~0.75 cm2 on the films received a uniform ion dose. Changes in the optical parameters like refractive index (n), absorption coefficient (α), optical gap (Egopt), extinction coefficient (k), real and imaginary dielectric constants (ε1 and ε2) are observed in a-In50Se50 thin films prepared by thermal evaporation technique under vacuum. Transmission measurements have been done before and after proton irradiation. The mechanism of optical absorption follows the rule of indirect allowed transition model proposed by Tauc and the optical band gap (Egopt) is calculated by Tauc’s extrapolation. It is found that after the proton irradiation, the refractive index, absorption coefficient and optical gap decreases for the fluence 1 × 1014 ions/cm2 and for higher fluence the value of these parameters increase. These results will be explained on the basis of some structural changes occurring after proton irradiations. (f) On the calorimetric study of chalcogenide Se85Te15 glass: The calorimetric parameters of Se85Te15 glass has been investigated using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) in non-isothermal conditions at different heating rates of 5, 10, 15, and 20 0Cmin-1. Double crystallization behaviour is observed at all heating rates. The glass transition temperature (Tg) is found to increase with increase in heating rate (α). The activation energy for glass transition (Eg) and for the both crystallization phases is determined using different empirical approaches for different heating rates. The kinetic parameters are calculated using methods recently developed for non-isothermal conditions. The calculated value of kinetic exponent n indicates one dimensional growth with surface nucleation for first crystallization peak and two (two- and three-dimensional 27 growth) mechanisms are working simultaneously for second crystallization peak. The average value of crystallization reaction order, n is (1.28±0.03) and (3.4±0.5) for the first and second crystallization stages respectively. The average value of Eg, Ec1 and Ec2 are (67.02±1.5) kcalmol-1, (37.93±2.1) kcalmol-1 and (57.11±7.5) kcalmol-1 respectively. Thermal stability and glass forming tendency have also been studied for different heating rates. (g) Crystallization study of Sn additive Se-Te chalcogenide alloys: Calorimetric study of Se85–xTe15Snx (x = 0, 2, 4 and 6) glassy alloys have been performed using Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) under non-isothermal conditions at four different heating rates (5, 10, 15 and 20°C/min). The glass transition temperature and peak crystallization temperature are found to increase with increasing heating rate. It is remarkable to note that a second glass transition region is associated with second crystallization peak for Sn additive Se-Te investigated samples. Three approaches have been employed to study the glass transition region. The kinetic analysis for the first crystallization peak has been taken by three different methods. The glass transition activation energy, the activation energy of crystallization and Avrami exponent (n) are found to be composition dependent. The crystallization ability is found to increase with increasing Sn content. From the experimental data, the temperature difference (Tp – Tg) is found to maximum for Se83Te15Sn2 alloy, which indicates that this alloy is thermally more stable in the composition range under investigation. (h) Glass transition and crystallization study of chalcogenide Se70Te15In15 glass Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) data at different heating rates (5, 10, 15 and 20°Cmin–1) of Se70Te15In15 chalcogenide glass is reported and discussed. The crystallization mechanism is explained in terms of recent analyses developed for use under non-isothermal conditions. The value of Avrami exponent (n) indicates that the glassy Se70Te15In15 alloy has three dimensional growths. The average values of the activation energy for glass transition, Eg, and crystallization process, Ec, are (154.16 ± 4.1) kJmol–1 and (98.81 ± 18.1) kJmol–1, respectively. The ease of glass formation has also been studied. The reduced glass transition temperature (Trg), Hruby’ parameter (Kgl) and fragility index (Fi) indicate that the prepared glass is obtained from a strong glass forming liquid. (i) On the crystallization kinetics of In additive Se-Te chalcogenide glasses The calorimetric parameters of glassy Se85–xTe15Inx (x = 0, 2, 6 and 10) alloys have been investigated using Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) in non-isothermal conditions at different heating rates of 5, 10, 15 and 20ºC/min. It is observed that in these glasses, the glass transition temperature, the onset crystallization temperature and the peak temperature of crystallization are found to be dependent on the composition and heating rates. The glass transition activation energy and crystallization activation energy have been determined using different empirical approaches. The kinetic analysis of the 28 crystallization peak has been performed using Matusita’s model. The values of Avrami exponent (n) and activation energy of crystallization (Ec) are evaluated. The validity of Matusita’s model is ascertained by comparison with the results obtained by Kissinger model and Augis and Banett method as well as their approximations. The activation energy of crystallization is determined by analyzing the data using the isoconversional methods. The present study shows that the activation energy of crystallization varies with the degree of conversion and hence with temperature. Thermal stability and glass forming tendency have also been studied for different heating rates. (j) Effect of irradiation on the optical properties of a-GaSe thin films: The effect of laser irradiation (λ= 532 nm), argon plasma treatment (p~0.2 mbar, I=20mA), effect of proton irradiation (1×1014 ions/cm2) and effect of annealing (T = 523K) have been studied on the optical properties of GaSe semi-conducting material. Thin films of GaSe are deposited by physical vapor deposition technique. Optical measurements have been taken at room temperature and the different parameters like refractive index (n), absorption coefficient (α), optical gap (Egopt), extinction coefficient (k), real and imaginary dielectric constants (ε1 and ε2), before and after these treatments have been calculated. The mechanism of optical absorption follows the rule of indirect allowed transition and the optical band gap (Egopt) is calculated by Tauc’s extrapolation. (k) Optical nonlinearity in chalcogenide glasses: Chalcogenide glasses have large values of non-linearity at 1.55 μm, several orders of magnitude larger than the value for conventional silica glass. Recently, third-order optical nonlinearity of chalcogenide glasses has attracted a considerable attention. According to the semi empirical Miller’s rule, third order optical nonlinear susceptibility (χ(3)) can be enhanced with the increase of the refractive index (n). As metal ions play an important role in augmenting the value of ‘n’, the addition of metal ions may rise the value ‘n’ and is expected to improve the value χ(3) comparing with the host material. Thin films of Ge20Se80 and Ag10Ge0.18Se0.72 have been prepared using thermal evaporation technique. Photo-diffusion of Ag metal has also been done on Ge20Se80 thin films. Refractive index (n) has been measured using the transmission data. Third order optical nonlinear susceptibility (χ(3)) have been calculated using the Miller’s formula for all three samples. It has been observed from the results that the addition of Ag into the Ge20Se80 system enhances the value of ‘n’ and χ(3). Increase in these values is more in case of the photodiffused film. A careful analysis of these results also suggests that the contribution to polarizability from the lone electron pairs is not predominant factor influencing the nonlinear properties of Ag metal alloyed Ge20Se80 glasses. Additional factors such as glass structure or density, the presence of unpaired electrons and the presence of defect states must be taken into account. 29 (l) Non-Ideal p-n junction Diode of SbxSe1-x (x = 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7) Thin Films: We have made diodes consisting of the same alloy i.e. SbxSe1-x (x = 0.4, 0.5, 0.6 and 0.7), but change the concentration of Sb metal from 40% to 70% atomic weight percentage. It is observed from the Hall measurements that the nature of charge carriers have changed from p- to n-type at x = 0.6 for SbxSe1-x. We have measured I-V characteristics of four pn junction diodes i.e. p-Sb2Se3 / n-Sb3Se2, p-Sb2Se3 / n-Sb7Se3, p-SbSe / n-Sb3Se2 , pSbSe / n-Sb7Se3. We have calculated the parameters as built -in voltage (Vbi), forward resistance (Rf), ideal factor (n), saturation current (Io), breakdown current (IBd) and breakdown voltage (VBd). (m) Photodarkening Effect in a-(GaSe)90Ag10 Thin Films: The present paper reports the laser induced changes on the optical properties of a(GaSe)90Ag10 thin films prepared by thermal evaporation technique. Thin film samples, on glass substrate, were exposed to laser light of wavelength λ = 532 nm for different exposure times, tE (tE = 0 s, 500 s, 1000 s and 3000 s). Optical parameters like absorption coefficient and optical energy gap of as- deposited thin film and their laser induced changes were studied at three different times of exposure. The value of absorption coefficient of these thin film increases on exposing the film to laser irradiation. The optical absorption edge shift to lower photon energy i.e. the photo darkening (PD) effect occurs. The results have been explained on the basis of structural changes that are occurring after the laser irradiation. C2. Condensed Matter (Theory) Group: Solid state Physics is one of the thrust areas recognised by UGC under CAS. The computational activities of this group involve carbon nano-materials which form currently important area of research. On-going work involves study of properties of carbon nanotubes and clusters of metals and semiconductors using various techniques. We also study anharmonic properties especially in the context of shock wave propagation in materials. A large number of Ph.D.s have been granted in these areas and a significant number of M.Sc. (project) and M. Tech. (Nano-science and nano-technology) student are working with this group. Current Activities The last decade has seen a huge interest in the properties of matter at nanometer scale. Today it is practically (and arguably) the most active area of research in Physical sciences. Our work mainly consist of predicting/ confirming the structure, dynamics and thermal properties of various carbon materials and other nanosystems such as metal clusters, BN Nanotubes etc., using potential models. We are also using proprietary software to 30 determine electronic structure of these systems. Beginnings have been made in nanofluidics. Properties of Clusters – Calculations We are exploring structure and electronic properties of endohedral fullerenes and carbon nanotubes doped with different metals, transition metal and magnetic atoms and their clusters. Apart from this dilute magnetic semiconductors and oxide semiconductors are also studied for their application as spintronic materials. We use various Packages, all using Density Functional schemes. The systems investigated are gold nanocages, endohedral buckyballs and gold clusters with Si doping. All these systems have projected uses in nano-electronics. Two important results have been obtained so far -- the Au-Si system is shown to have a far greater tendency to form monatomic sheets as compared to pure gold, which may have relevance for nano-electronica; the C60 buckyball ia capable of accommodating a large number of N atoms in single bonded configuration, which may have relevance for energy storage material. Single atom gold chains, which are actually seen to form under an atomic force microscope, have been investigated by an atom- atom potential method using simple molecular mechanics methods. Calculations not only match experimental findings, but predict a few interesting mechanical properties (plasticity) of such monatomic Au nanowires. Our computational efforts are going to see a thrust in electronic structure calculations. This requires cluster computing for which the system needs to be acquired. We also need to do molecular dynamics simulations for which software has to be obtained. All of these are being planned to be included in regular teaching courses (e.g., 'simulation' course under NSNT, 'programming' course under M.Sc. and special paper on nanomaterials for M.Sc. Physics students). (D) Molecular Spectroscopy Group: The Molecular Spectroscopy group is working in the following areas: (1) Porphyrins, which are biologically important molecule and found in heamoglobin, myoglobin, and cytochromes etc. Chlorophyll and Vitamin B12 are also related compounds. We are studying chemical and photo-induced electron transfer processes in porphyrins and their gas sensing properties with the help of vibrational spectroscopic techniques and density functional theory calculations. (2) Phthalocyanines: These are organic semi conductors and have many practical applications. We are studying their volatile organic chemical sensing properties by spectroscopic techniques and density functional theory. Initially, we studied the effect of pyridine on the geometrical structure and vibrations of zinc phthalocyanine in order to understand the possible interactions of organic vapours molecules with the phthalocyanine molecules. We have used density functional theory calculations and infrared absorption spectroscopy for this purpose. X-ray diffraction pattern was also recorded in the absence and presence of pyridine. In the presence of pyridine phase of the crystalline zinc phthalocyanine changes from b to a. Some infrared bands show changes in their positions and/or intensities. These 31 changes have been interpreted on the basis of coordination of the pyridine molecule with the central zinc ion. Coordinated pyridine transfers some of its charge to the p electron system of the phthalocyanine ring through zinc ion. Pyridine molecule also distorts the phthalocyanine molecule by pulling zinc ion out of the phthalocyanine plane. Density functional theory also confirms the ligation of pyridine molecule at the fifth coordination site of the central metal ion. Next, we have studied zinc phthalocyanine thin film and chemical analyte interactions by density functional theory and vibrational techniques. For this purpose, thin films of zinc phthalocyanine were deposited on KBr and glass substrates by the thermal evaporation method and characterized by the x-ray diffraction, optical, infrared and Raman techniques. The observed x-ray diffraction and infrared absorption spectra of as-deposited thin films suggested the presence of an a crystalline phase. Infrared and Raman spectra of thin films after exposure to vapours of ammonia and methanol had also been recorded. Shifts in the position of some IR and Raman bands in the spectra of exposed films were observed. Some bands also showed changes in their intensity on exposure. Increased charge on the phthalocyanine ring and out-of-plane distortion of the core due to interaction between zinc phthalocyanine and vapour molecules involving the fifth coordination site of the central metal ion might be responsible for the band shifts. Changes in the intensity of bands were interpreted in terms of the lowering of molecular symmetry from D4h to C4v due to doming of the core. Molecular parameters and Mulliken atomic charges of zinc phthalocyanine and its complexes with methanol and ammonia had been calculated from density functional theory. The binding energy of the complexes had also been calculated. Calculated values of the energy for different complexes suggested that axially coordinated vapour molecules formed the most stable complex. Calculated Mulliken atomic charges showed net charge transfer from vapour molecules to the phthalocyanine ring for the most stable complex. We have also studied the effects of chemical vapours on the vibrational spectra of nickel phthalocyanine thin films experimentally and theoretically by density functional theory. Effects of chemical vapours on the Raman and infrared absorption spectra of a crystalline nickel phthalocyanine thin films were reported. Transmission electron micrograph of the thin films suggested presence of nano-sized particles of nickel phthalocyanine in the thin film. Some vibrational bands showed changes in their positions and/or intensities on exposure of thin films with chemical vapours. These changes were interpreted on the basis of interactions of the vapours molecule with the central nickel ion and other peripheral atoms of the phthalocyanine ring. Density functional theory calculations were also carried out to determine the probable geometric structures of the complexes of vapour and phthalocyanine molecules. Calculated geometric structures showed in-plane and out-of-plane distortions in the phthalocyanine molecule. Calculations further suggested charge transfer between vapour and phthalocyanine molecules. In contrast to zinc phthalocyanine, this molecule can form six coordinated species with vapour molecules. We have also studied the sensing mechanism of zinc tetraphenylporphine (ZnTPP) towards the methanol, pyridine, diethylamine, dichloromethane, acetonitrile, bromine 32 and NO2 vapours. We deposited thin films of ZnTPP and recorded the resonance Raman and infrared absorption spectra of thin films before and after exposure with diethyl amine/methanol vapours. Positions of some vibrational bands show detectable change on exposure. Changes in the intensity of some vibrational bands of the thin films have also been observed on exposure. Coordination of vapours molecules at the zinc ion and subsequent charge transfer are responsible for the shift in the vibrational bands. Density functional theory calculations have been carried out to determine the probable geometric structures of the porphyrin-vapour complexes. Calculated geometric structures show in-plane and out-of-plane distortions in the porphyrin macrocycle. Calculations also result in charge transfer between vapour and porphyrin molecules. (3) Laser dyes: We are also interested in some laser dyes of xanthene family and coumarins. Presently, we are studying the salvation dynamics of these dyes with the help of vibrational spectroscopic techniques and density function theory calculations. (4) We are also working on the vibrational dynamics of some potential radio protective antioxidant and radical reactions. (E) Mass Spectrometry and Geochronology Group: Group Members: The group are carrying out the Rb-Sr Isotopic and Geochronological investigations on the granitic and gneissic rocks of the Himalaya. The granitic and gneissic rocks have preserved in them episodes of magmatic and metamorphic activities which occurred over a great span of time from Precambrian to recent, including Himalayan Orogeny. It is not possible to establish and define precisely most of these events by routine geological methods such as the nature of xenoliths present, field relationship with the country rocks, petrographical similarities, structural trends, grade of metamorphism etc. The Rb-Sr isotopic and geochronological studies provide an invaluable tool to unravel many important events such as the ages of some igneous and metamorphic rocks, petrogenetic history, metamorphism, mineral ages, rate of cooling etc. The Rb-Sr age data could be used for correlation of the rocks under study with their possible equivalents in different parts of the Himalaya and also in the Peninsular India. Highlights / achievements of Research Work done by the group : The group has published a number of Rb-Sr isotopic ages for the Himalaya granites and gneisses which provided a new dimension to the interpretation of geological events and completely changed the old conjectural geological thinking about these rocks. Thus when Jaeger et al, 1971 for the first time reported the age of 517± 100 M.Y. for the Mandi granite, it was taken with criticism as most of the geologists at that time considered it to be of Tertiary age (<65M.Y.). When the same age data was confirmed by scientists working in foreign laboratories, it changed the geological thinking. The work of the group led to the recognition of the following main periods of magmatic activity based on Rb-Sr whole rock isotopic ages of the granites and gneisses: 33 a) Ages around 2000 M.Y. The granitic and gneissic rocks of this age group have been reported from Munsiari, Askot, Tawaghat, Namik, Dhakuri, Joshimath-Guptkashi, Hanuman Chatti, Rihee-Gangi, Bhatwari and Naitwar areas of Kamaun-Garhwal Himalaya; Wangtu, Bandal and Baragaon of Himachal Himalaya and Shasho and Lopara Kashmir Himalaya. b). Ages around 1500 M.Y. The granites and gneisses of this age group have been obtained from Mayali, Maithana, Chandrapuri, Chamoli and Amritpur areas of Kumaun Himalaya; Baragaon and Nirath of Himachal Himalaya and Kalaktang of Arunachal Himalaya. c) Ages around 1200 M.Y. The rocks of the age group of about 1200 M.Y. include Koidal gneiss, Gwaldom granite, Baijnath-Therali gneiss, Ramgarh gneiss and Amritpur grey granite of Kumaun Himalaya and Bandal granite and Chor granitic gneiss of Himachal Himalaya. c) Ages around 500 M.Y. This is the most widely spread age group. The granites and gneisses of the age group of about 500 M.Y. have been reported from Doda and Kishtwar- Thathari areas of Kashmir Himalaya; Mandi,Karsog, Sarangi- Ranga Thach N.E. of Manikaran, Manali, Koksar, Chhotadara, Jaspa, Dalhousie, Akpa, Rakcham-Chitkul-Sangla, Chor and Khadrala areas of Himachal Himalaya and Ranikhet, Champawat, Dudatoli, Vaikrita group north of Tawaghat and Harsil areas of Kumaun Himalaya. e) Ages around 350 M.Y. The granitic and gneissic rocks of this age group have been obtained from Dalhousie area of Himachal Himalaya and Masi, Lansdowne and Almora areas of Kumaun Himalaya. Presently we are carrying out Rb-Sr Isotopic and Geochronological studies on the biotite and muscovite separated from the granitic and gneissic rocks of the following areas from Himachal Himalaya: 1. Manali, Chhotadara and Jaspa 2. Wangtu and Tapri 3. Rakcham, Karcham and Chitkul This study will provide the • Thermal history • Rate of uplift • Other geological aspect of these areas. We are also carrying out Systematic Rb-Sr isotopic studies on the water samples of hot springs from different areas of Himachal Himalaya and rivers Satluj, Baspa, Beas and their tributories and nullahs. This study will give information about 34 • • • • • • The source material of the water Sr isotopic constituents Mineral explorations Contribution of Satluj, Baspa and Beas rivers to the oceanic Strontium budget Explanation to the increasing 87Sr/ 86Sr ratio in ocean water even beyond global values Information about basement rocks of hot water sources and the presence of radioactive material. 35 3. List of Publications (2008 onwards) Experimental High Energy Group & Heavy Ion Group (CMS, D0, BELLE, L3, ZEUS Experiments) 1. Search for anomalous $Wtb$ couplings in single top quark production in $p\bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 1.96$ TeV, By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B708 (2012) 21-26. 2. Measurement of the relative branching ratio of $B^0_s to J/\psi f_{0}(980) \to B_{s}^{0} \to J/\psi \phi$ By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D85 (2012) 011103. 3. Evidence for spin correlation in $t\bar{t}$ production By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 108 (2012) 032004. 4. Measurement of the weak mixing angle with the Drell-Yan process in proton-proton collisions at the LHC, By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D84 (2011) 112002. 5. Measurement of energy flow at large pseudorapidities in pp collisions at sqrt(s) = 0.9 and 7 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JHEP 1111 (2011) 148. 6. Search for a Vector-like Quark with Charge 2/3 in t + Z Events from pp Collisions at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 271802. 7. $W\gamma$ production and limits on anomalous $WW\gamma$ couplings in $p\bar{p}$ collisions, By The D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 241803. 8. Search for Supersymmetry at the LHC in Events with Jets and Missing Transverse Energy By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 221804. 36 9. Measurement of the t $\bar{t} Production Cross Section in pp Collisions at 7 TeV in Lepton + Jets Events Using b-quark Jet Identification By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D84 (2011) 092004. 10. Measurements of single top quark production cross sections and $|V_{tb}|$ in $p\bar{p} collisions at $\sqrt{s}=1.96$ TeV By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D84 (2011) 112001. 11. Measurement of the Differential Cross Section for Isolated Prompt Photon Production in pp Collisions at 7 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D84 (2011) 052011. 12. Measurement of the Drell-Yan Cross Section in pp Collisions at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JHEP 1110 (2011) 007. 13. Search for B(s) and B to dimuon decays in pp collisions at 7 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 191802. 14. Forward-backward asymmetry in top quark-antiquark production By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D84 (2011) 112005. 15. Search for Resonances in the Dijet Mass Spectrum from 7 TeV pp Collisions at CMS By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Lett. B704 (2011) 123-142. 16. Measurement of the Inclusive W and Z Production Cross Sections in pp Collisions at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). arXiv:1107.4789 [hep-ex]. JHEP 1110 (2011) 132. 17. Dependence on pseudorapidity and centrality of charged hadron production in PbPb collisions at a nucleon-nucleon centre-of-mass energy of 2.76 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JHEP 1108 (2011) 141. 37 18. Search for the standard model and a fermiophobic Higgs boson in diphoton final states By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 151801. 19. Determination of Jet Energy Calibration and Transverse Momentum Resolution in CMS By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 6 (2011) P11002. 20. Search for Three-Jet Resonances in pp Collisions at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 101801. 21. Search for supersymmetry in pp collisions at sqrt(s)=7 TeV in events with a single lepton, jets, and missing transverse momentum By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JHEP 1108 (2011) 156. 22. Search for first generation leptoquark pair production in the electron + missing energy + jets final state, By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D84 (2011) 071104. 23. A search for excited leptons in pp Collisions at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Lett. B704 (2011) 143-162. 24. Search for associated Higgs boson production using like charge dilepton events in $p\bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 1.96$ TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D84 (2011) 092002. 25. Measurement of the Underlying Event Activity at the LHC with $\sqrt{s}= 7$ TeV and Comparison with $\sqrt{s} = 0.9$ TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JHEP 1109 (2011) 109. 26. Measurement of the anomalous like-sign dimuon charge asymmetry with 9 fb^-1 of p pbar collisions By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D84 (2011) 052007. 38 27. Precision measurement of the ratio ${\rm B}(t \to Wb)/{\rm B}(t \to Wq)$ and Extraction of $V_{tb}$ By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 121802. 28. Search for neutral Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model Higgs bosons decaying to tau pairs produced in association with $b$ quarks in $p\bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}=1.96$ TeV By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 121801. 29. Missing transverse energy performance of the CMS detector By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 6 (2011) P09001. 30. Search for Higgs bosons decaying to $\tau\tau$ pairs in $p\bar {p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 1.96$ TeV, By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B707 (2012) 323-329. 31. Search for New Physics with a Mono-Jet and Missing Transverse Energy in $pp$ Collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 7$ TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 201804. 32. Search for New Physics with Jets and Missing Transverse Momentum in pp collisions at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV, By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JHEP 1108 (2011) 155. 33. Search for doubly-charged Higgs boson pair production in $p\bar {p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 1.96$ TeV, By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 108 (2012) 021801. 34. Measurement of the Strange B Meson Production Cross Section with J/Psi phi Decays in pp Collisions at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D84 (2011) 052008. 39 35. Search for Supersymmetry in Events with b Jets and Missing Transverse Momentum at the LHC By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JHEP 1107 (2011) 113. 36. Measurement of the t-channel single top quark production cross section in pp collisions at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 091802. 37. Search for Light Resonances Decaying into Pairs of Muons as a Signal of New Physics By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JHEP 1107 (2011) 098. 38. Bounds on an anomalous dijet resonance in $W+$jets production in ppbar collisions at $\sqrt{s} =1.96$ TeV, By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 011804. 39. Direct measurement of the mass difference between top and antitop quarks By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D84 (2011) 052005. 40. Search for Same-Sign Top-Quark Pair Production at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV and Limits on Flavour Changing Neutral Currents in the Top Sector By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JHEP 1108 (2011) 005. 41. Measurements of inclusive $W+$jets production rates as a function of jet transverse momentum in $p\bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}=1.96$~TeV By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B705 (2011) 200-207. 42. Measurement of the Top-antitop Production Cross Section in pp Collisions at sqrt(s)=7 TeV using the Kinematic Properties of Events with Leptons and Jets By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Eur.Phys.J. C71 (2011) 1721. 40 43. 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Measurement of the $WZ\rightarrow \ell\nu\ell\ell$ cross section and limits on anomalous triple gauge couplings in $p\bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96 TeV By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B695 (2011) 67-73. 133. Measurement of the normalized $Z/\gamma^* -> \mu^+\mu^-$ transverse momentum distribution in $p\bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}=1.96$ TeV By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B693 (2010) 522-530. 134. Measurement of the charge ratio of atmospheric muons with the CMS detector By CMS Collaboration (Vardan Khachatryan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Lett. B692 (2010) 83-104. 135. Search for scalar bottom quarks and third-generation leptoquarks in p p-bar collisions at sqrt(s) = 1.96 TeV By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B693 (2010) 95-101. 136. Evidence for an anomalous like-sign dimuon charge asymmetry By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D82 (2010) 032001. 137. Combined Tevatron upper limit on $gg \to H \to W^+W^-$ and constraints on the Higgs boson mass in fourth-generation fermion models By CDF and D0 Collaboration (T. Aaltonen,… , S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D82 (2010) 011102. 138. Measurement of Bose-Einstein correlations with first CMS data By CMS Collaboration (Vardan Khachatryan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 105 (2010) 032001. 139. Transverse-momentum and pseudorapidity distributions of charged hadrons in pp collisions at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Vardan Khachatryan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 105 (2010) 022002. 140. Search for Randall-Sundrum gravitons in the dielectron and diphoton final states with 5.4 fb-1 of data from ppbar collisions at sqrt(s)=1.96 TeV By The D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 104 (2010) 241802. 51 141. Measurement of direct photon pair production cross sections in $p\bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}=1.96$ TeV By The D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B690 (2010) 108-117. 142. Measurement of the dijet invariant mass cross section in proton anti-proton collisions at sqrt{s} = 1.96 TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B693 (2010) 531-538. 143. b-Jet Identification in the D0 Experiment By The D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Nucl.Instrum.Meth. A620 (2010) 490-517. 144. Transverse momentum and pseudorapidity distributions of charged hadrons in pp collisions at $\sqrt(s)$ = 0.9 and 2.36 TeV By CMS Collaboration (Vardan Khachatryan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JHEP 1002 (2010) 041. 145. Combination of Tevatron searches for the standard model Higgs boson in the W+Wdecay mode By CDF and D0 Collaboration (T. Aaltonen,… , S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 104 (2010) 061802. 146. Search for Higgs boson production in dilepton and missing energy final states with 5.4 fb-1 of p-pbar collisions at sqrt(s) =1.96 TeV By The D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 104 (2010) 061804. 147. Dependence of the $t\bar{t}$ production cross section on the transverse momentum of the top quark By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B693 (2010) 515-521. 148. Search for the standard model Higgs boson in the ZH ---> v v-bar b b-bar channel in 5.2 fb**-1 of p p-bar collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 104 (2010) 071801. 149. Double parton interactions in photon+3 jet events in p p-bar collisions sqrt{s}=1.96 TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D81 (2010) 052012. 52 150. Search for single top quarks in the tau+jets channel using 4.8 fb**-1 of p p-bar collision data By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B690 (2010) 5-14. 151. Search for the associated production of a b quark and a neutral supersymmetric Higgs boson which decays to tau pairs By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 104 (2010) 151801. 152. Search for a resonance decaying into WZ boson pairs in $p\bar{p}$ collisions By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 104 (2010) 061801. 153. Commissioning and Performance of the CMS Pixel Tracker with Cosmic Ray Muons By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03007. 154. Performance of the CMS Level-1 Trigger during Commissioning with Cosmic Ray Muons By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03002. 155. Measurement of the Muon Stopping Power in Lead Tungstate By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) P03007. 156. Commissioning and Performance of the CMS Silicon Strip Tracker with Cosmic Ray Muons By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03008. 157. Performance of CMS Muon Reconstruction in Cosmic-Ray Events By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03022. 158. Performance of the CMS Cathode Strip Chambers with Cosmic Rays By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03018. 53 159. Performance of the CMS Hadron Calorimeter with Cosmic Ray Muons and LHC Beam Data By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03012. 160. Fine Synchronization of the CMS Muon Drift-Tube Local Trigger using Cosmic Rays By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03004. 161. Calibration of the CMS Drift Tube Chambers and Measurement of the Drift Velocity with Cosmic Rays, By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03016. 162. Performance of the CMS Drift-Tube Local Trigger with Cosmic Rays By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03003. 163. Commissioning of the CMS High-Level Trigger with Cosmic Rays By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03005. 164. Identification and Filtering of Uncharacteristic Noise in the CMS Hadron Calorimeter By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03014. 165. Performance of CMS Hadron Calorimeter Timing and Synchronization using Test Beam, Cosmic Ray, and LHC Beam Data By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03013. 166. Performance of the CMS Drift Tube Chambers with Cosmic Rays By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03015. 167. Commissioning of the CMS Experiment and the Cosmic Run at Four Tesla By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03001. 54 168. CMS Data Processing Workflows during an Extended Cosmic Ray Run By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03006. 169. Aligning the CMS Muon Chambers with the Muon Alignment System during an Extended Cosmic Ray Run, By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03019. 170. Measurement of the $t\bar{t}$ cross section using high-multiplicity jet events By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D82 (2010) 032002. 171. Performance Study of the CMS Barrel Resistive Plate Chambers with Cosmic Rays By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03017. 172. Time Reconstruction and Performance of the CMS Electromagnetic Calorimeter By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03011. 173. Alignment of the CMS Muon System with Cosmic-Ray and Beam-Halo Muons By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03020. 174. Determination of the strong coupling constant from the inclusive jet cross section in ppbar collisions at sqrt(s)=1.96 TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D80 (2009) 111107. 175. Precise Mapping of the Magnetic Field in the CMS Barrel Yoke using Cosmic Rays By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03021. 176. Performance and Operation of the CMS Electromagnetic Calorimeter By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03010. 55 177. Alignment of the CMS Silicon Tracker during Commissioning with Cosmic Rays By CMS Collaboration (Serguei Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 5 (2010) T03009. 178. Direct measurement of the W boson width By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 103 (2009) 231802. 179. Search for charged Higgs bosons in top quark decays By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B682 (2009) 278-286. 180. Measurement of the W boson mass By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 103 (2009) 141801. 181. Measurement of trilinear gauge boson couplings from WW + WZ ---> l nu j j events in p anti-p collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96 TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D80 (2009) 053012. 182. Measurement of Z/gamma*+jet+X angular distributions in p anti-p collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96.TeV By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B682 (2010) 370-380. 183. Measurement of the t-channel single top quark production cross section By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B682 (2010) 363-369. 184. A Novel method for modeling the recoil in W boson events at hadron collider By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Nucl.Instrum.Meth. A609 (2009) 250-262. 185. The CMS barrel calorimeter response to particle beams from 2-GeV/c to 350-GeV/c By USCMS and ECAL/HCAL Collaborations (S. Abdullin, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Eur.Phys.J. C60 (2009) 359-373, Erratum-ibid. C61 (2009) 353-356. 186. Search for pair production of first-generation leptoquarks in p anti-p collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV, By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B681 (2009) 224-232. 187. Search for charged Higgs bosons in decays of top quarks By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D80 (2009) 051107. 56 188. Measurement of dijet angular distributions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV and searches for quark compositeness and extra spatial dimensions By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 103 (2009) 191803. 189. Search for Resonant Pair Production of long-lived particles decaying to b anti-b in p anti-p collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 103 (2009) 071801. 190. Direct measurement of the mass difference between top and antitop quarks By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 103 (2009) 132001. 191. Search for squark production in events with jets, hadronically decaying tau leptons and missing transverse energy at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B680 (2009) 24-33. 192. Search for NMSSM Higgs bosons in the h ---> aa ---> mu mu mu mu, mu mu tau tau channels using p anti-p collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 103 (2009) 061801. 193. Search for dark photons from supersymmetric hidden valleys By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 103 (2009) 081802. 194. Search for CP violation in semileptonic $B_s$ decays By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D82 (2010) 012003, Erratum-ibid. D83 (2011) 119901. 195. Measurement of the top quark mass in final states with two leptons By D0 Collaboration (Victor Mukhamedovich Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D80 (2009) 092006. 196. Measurement of the WW production cross section with dilepton final states in p anti-p collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV and limits on anomalous trilinear gauge couplings By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 103 (2009) 191801. 197. Combination of t anti-t cross section measurements and constraints on the mass of the top quark and its decays into charged Higgs bosons By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D80 (2009) 071102. 57 198. Search for the standard model Higgs boson in tau final states By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 251801. 199. Measurements of differential cross sections of Z/gamma*+jets+X events in proton antiproton collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B678 (2009) 45-54. 200. Observation of Single Top Quark Production By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 103 (2009) 092001. 201. Measurement of the Z gamma ---> nu anti-nu gamma cross section and limits on anomalous Z Z gamma and Z gamma gamma couplings in p anti-p collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 201802. 202. Measurement of the t anti-t production cross section and top quark mass extraction using dilepton events in p anti-p collisions By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B679 (2009) 177-185. 203. Search for Resonant Diphoton Production with the D0 Detector By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 231801. 204. Search for admixture of scalar top quarks in the t anti-t lepton+jets final state at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV, By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B674 (2009) 4-10. 205. Measurement of gamma + b + X and gamma + c + X production cross sections in p anti-p collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 192002. 206. Search for associated production of charginos and neutralinos in the trilepton final state using 2.3 fb$^{-1}$ of data By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B680 (2009) 34-43. 207. Search for anomalous top quark couplings with the D0 detector By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 092002. 58 208. Evidence for decay $B_s^0 \to D_s^{(*)}D_s^{(*)}$ and a measurement of $\Delta\Gamma_s^{CP}/\Gamma_s$ By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 091801. 209. Design, performance, and calibration of the CMS Hadron-outer calorimeter By CMS HCAL Collaboration (S. Abdullin, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Eur.Phys.J. C57 (2008) 653-663. 210. Search for the lightest scalar top quark in events with two leptons in $p\bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B675 (2009) 289-296. 211. Search for neutral Higgs bosons at high tan(beta) in the b(h/H/A) ---> b tau+ tauchannel By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 051804. 212. Evidence of $WW+WZ$ production with lepton + jets final states in proton-antiproton collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ =1.96 TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 161801. 213. Measurement of the angular and lifetime parameters of the decays $B^0_{d} \to J/\psi K^{*0}$ and $B^0_{s} \to J/\psi \phi$ By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 032001. 214. Search for Long-Lived Charged Massive Particles with the D0 Detector By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 161802. 215. The CMS experiment at the CERN LHC By CMS Collaboration (S. Chatrchyan, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). JINST 3 (2008) S08004. 216. Search for Large extra spatial dimensions in the dielectron and diphoton channels in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 051601. 217. Observation of the doubly strange $b$ baryon $\Omega_b^-$ By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 232002. 59 218. Search for pair production of second generation scalar leptoquarks By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B671 (2009) 224-232. 219. A Search for associated $W$ and Higgs Boson production in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 051803. 220. Measurement of $\sigma(p\bar{p} \to Z + X)$ Br($Z \to \tau^+ \tau^-$) at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B670 (2009) 292-299. 221. Measurement of differential $Z / \gamma^{*}$ + jet + $X$ cross sections in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B669 (2008) 278-286. 222. A search for the standard model Higgs boson in the missing energy and acoplanar b-jet topology at $\sqrt{s}$=1.96 By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 251802. 223. Observation of $Z Z$ production in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 171803. 224. Search for scalar leptoquarks and $T$-odd quarks in the acoplanar jet topology using 2.5 $fb^{-1}$ of $p \bar{p}$ collision data at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B668 (2008) 357-363. 225. $Z Z \to \ell^{+} \ell^{-}$ v anti-v production in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov , S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D78 (2008) 072002. 226. Measurement of the electron charge asymmetry in $p \bar{p} \to W + X \to e \nu + X$ events at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 211801. 227. Precise measurement of the top quark mass from lepton+jets events at D0 By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov , S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 182001. 60 228. Search for anomalous Wtb couplings in single top quark production By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 221801. 229. Design, performance, and calibration of CMS hadron-barrel calorimeter wedges By CMS HCAL Collaboration (S. Abdullin, S.B.Beri, V.Bhatnagar, M.Kaur, J.B.Singh et al.). Eur.Phys.J. C55 (2008) 159-171. 230. Search for charged Higgs bosons decaying to top and bottom quarks in $p \bar{p}$ collisions By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 191802. 231. Search for third generation scalar leptoquarks decaying into $\tau b$ By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 241802. 232. Search for long-lived particles decaying into electron or photon pairs with the D0 detector By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 111802. 233. Search for a scalar or vector particle decaying into $Z \gamma$ in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$=1.96 TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B671 (2009) 349-355. 234. Search for neutral Higgs bosons in multi-b-jet events in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV, By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 221802. 235. Measurement of the lifetime of the $B_c^\pm$ meson in the semileptonic decay channel By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 092001. 236. Relative rates of $B$ meson decays into $\psi_{2S}$ and $J/\psi$ mesons By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D79 (2009) 111102. 237. Search for Higgs bosons decaying to $\tau$ pairs in $p \bar{p}$ collisions with the D0 detector By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 071804. 61 238. Search for $t \bar{t}$ resonances in the lepton plus jets final state in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B668 (2008) 98-104. 239. Measurement of the forward-backward charge asymmetry and extraction of sin**2 Theta(W)(eff) in p anti-p ---> Z/gamma* + X ---> e+ e- + X events produced at s**(1/2) = 1.96$-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 191801. 240. Measurement of the polarization of the $\upsilon_{1S}$ and $\upsilon_{2S}$ states in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 182004. 241. Measurement of the differential cross-section for the production of an isolated photon with associated jet in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B666 (2008) 435-445. 242. Search for $W^\prime$ Boson Resonances Decaying to a Top Quark and a Bottom Quark By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 211803. 243. Measurement of the $t \bar{t}$ production cross section in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV, By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 192004. 244. Search for scalar top quarks in the acoplanar charm jets and missing transverse energy final state in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B665 (2008) 1-8. 245. Measurement of the ratio of the $p \bar{p} \to W^+ c^-$ jet cross section to the inclusive $p \bar{p} \to W +$ jets cross section By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B666 (2008) 23-30. 246. Search for large extra dimensions via single photon plus missing energy final states at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV, By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 011601. 62 247. Search for pair production of doubly-charged Higgs bosons in the $H^{++} H^{--} \to \mu^{+} \mu^{+} \mu^{-} \mu^{-}$ final state at D0 By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 071803. 248. Search for decay of a fermiophobic Higgs boson $h(f) \to \gamma \gamma$ with the D0 detector at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 051801. 249. Evidence for production of single top quarks By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D78 (2008) 012005. 250. First study of the radiation-amplitude zero in $W \gamma$ production and limits on anomalous $W W \gamma$ couplings at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96- TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 241805. 251. Observation of the $B_c$ Meson in the Exclusive Decay $B_c \to J/\psi \pi$ By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 012001. 252. Study of direct CP violation in $B^{\pm} \to J/\psi K^{\pm}(\pi^{\pm})$ decays By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 211802. 253. Measurement of the inclusive jet cross-section in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $s^{91/2)}$ =1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 062001. 254. Measurement of $B^0_{s}$ mixing parameters from the flavor-tagged decay $B^0_{s} \to J/\psi \phi$, By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 241801. 255. Simultaneous measurement of the ratio B($t\to Wb$) /B($t\to Wq$) and the top quark pair production cross section with the D0 detector at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 192003. 256. Search for excited electrons in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D77 (2008) 091102. 63 257. Search for squarks and gluinos in events with jets and missing transverse energy using 2.1 $fb^{-1}$ of $p \bar{p}$ collision data at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96- TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B660 (2008) 449-457. 258. Measurement of the $B^0_{s}$ semileptonic branching ratio to an orbitally excited $D_s$ state, Br($B^0_s\to D^-_{s1}(2536) \mu^{+} \nu X$) By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 051801. 259. First measurement of the forward-backward charge asymmetry in top quark pair production By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 142002. 260. Measurement of the shape of the boson transverse momentum distribution in $p \bar{p} \to Z / \gamma^{*} \to e^+ e^- + X$ events produced at $\sqrt{s}$=1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 102002. 261. Search for $ZZ$ and $Z\gamma^*$ production in $p\bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96 TeV and limits on anomalous $ZZZ$ and $ZZ\gamma^*$ couplings By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 131801. 262. A Combined search for the standard model Higgs boson at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B663 (2008) 26-36. 263. Search for Scalar Neutrino Superpartners in $e + \mu$ Final States in $p\bar{p}$ Collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 241803. 264. Model-independent measurement of the $W$ boson helicity in top quark decays at D0 By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 062004. 265. Observation and properties of the orbitally excited B*(s2) meson By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 082002. 266. Search for supersymmetry in di-photon final states at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B659 (2008) 856-863. 64 267. Search for Randall-Sundrum gravitons with 1 $fb^{-1}$ of data from $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 091802. 268. Search for $W^\prime$ bosons decaying to an electron and a neutrino with the D0 detector By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 031804. 269. Measurement of the muon charge asymmetry from $W$ boson decays By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev. D77 (2008) 011106. 270. Search for flavor-changing-neutral-current $D$ meson decays By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 101801. 271. Search for the lightest scalar top quark in events with two leptons in $p \bar{p}$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B659 (2008) 500-508. 272. Measurement of the ratios of the Z/gamma* + >= n jet production cross sections to the total inclusive Z/gamma* cross section in p anti-p collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV By D0 Collaboration (V.M. Abazov, S. B. Beri, V. Bhatnagar et al.). Phys.Lett. B658 (2008) 112-119. BELLE Collaboration 273. Observation of $B^- \to \bar{p} \Lambda D^0$ at Belle By BELLE Collaboration (P. Chen, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D84 (2011) 071501.O 274. bservation of $D^+ \rightarrow K^{+} \eta^{(\prime)}$ and Search for CP Violation in $D^+ \rightarrow \pi^+ \eta^{(\prime)}$ Decays By Belle Collaboration (E. Won, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 221801. 275. Observation of $X(3872)\to J/\psi \gamma$ and search for $X(3872)\to\psi'\gamma$ in B decays By Belle Collaboration (V. Bhardwaj, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 107 (2011) 091803. 276. First observation of the $P$-wave spin-singlet bottomonium states $h_b(1P)$ and $h_b(2P)$ By Belle Collaboration (I. Adachi, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 108 (2012) 032001. 65 277. Observation of $B_s^0\to J/\psi f_0(980)$ and Evidence for $B_s^0\to J/\psi f_0(1370)$ By Belle Collaboration (J. Li et, J.B.Singh al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 106 (2011) 121802. 278. Study of the decays $B -> D_{s1}(2536)^+ \bar{D}^{(*)}$ By Belle Collaboration (T. Aushev, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D83 (2011) 051102. 279. Search for CP Violation in the Decays $D^0\rightarrow K^0_S P^0$ By Belle Collaboration (B.R. Ko, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 106 (2011) 211801. 280. First Measurement of Inclusive B -> X_s eta Decays By Belle Collaboration (I. Adachi, J.B.Singh et al.). Contributed to 24th International Symposium on Lepton-Photon Conference: C09-08-17.1 281. Measurement of the form factors of the decay B0 -> D*- ell+ nu and determination of the CKM matrix element |Vcb| By Belle Collaboration (W. Dungel, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D82 (2010) 112007. 282. Measurements of Branching Fractions for $B^0 -> D_s^+\pi^-$ and $\bar{B}^0 -> D_s^+K^-$ By Belle Collaboration (A. Das, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D82 (2010) 051103. 283. Evidence for $B^- -> \tau^- \bar{\nu}$ with a Semileptonic Tagging Method By Belle Collaboration (K. Hara, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D82 (2010) 071101. 284. Search for a Low Mass Particle Decaying into mu^+ mu^- in B^0 -> K^{*0} X and B^0 -> rho^0 X at Belle By Belle Collaboration (H.J. Hyun, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 105 (2010) 091801. 285. Observation of $B_s^0 -> D_s^{*-} \pi^+, B_s^0 - >D_s^{(*)-} \ rho^+$ Decays and Measurement of $B_s^0 -> D_s^{*-} \rho^+$ Polarization By Belle Collaboration (R. Louvot, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 104 (2010) 231801. 286. Evidence for direct CP violation in the decay B->D(*)K, D->KsPi+Pi- and measurement of the CKM phase phi3, By The Belle Collaboration (A. Poluektov et al.). Phys.Rev. D81 (2010) 112002. 287. Search for Lepton Flavor Violating tau- Decays into \ell-K0s and \ell-K0sK0s By Belle Collaboration (Y. Miyazaki, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Lett. B692 (2010) 4-9. 66 288. Measurement of the branching fractions for B-0 --> Ds*+pi- and B-0 --> Ds*-K+ decays By Belle Collaboration (N.J. Joshi, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D81 (2010) 031101. 289. Search for CP violation in the decays $D^+_{(s)} \to K_S^0\pi^+$ and $D^+_{(s)} \to K_S^0K^+$ By Belle Collaboration (B.R. Ko, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 104 (2010) 181602. 290. Measurement of the branching fractions and the invariant mass distributions for $\tau^\to h^-h^+h^-\nu_{\tau}$ decays By Belle Collaboration (M.J. Lee, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D81 (2010) 113007. 291. Observation of a charmonium-like enhancement in the gamma gamma ---> omega J/psi process By Belle Collaboration (S. Uehara, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 104 (2010) 092001. 292. Measurement of the branching fractions for B0 ---> D*(s)+ pi- and B0 ---> D*(s)- K+ decays By Belle Collaboration (N.J. Joshi, J.B.Singh et al.). 293. Evidence for a new resonance and search for the Y(4140) in the gamma gamma ---> phi J/psi process, By Belle Collaboration (C.P. Shen, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 104 (2010) 112004. 294. Observation of the decay B0(s)0 ---> J/psi eta and Evidence for B0(s) ---> J/psi eta' By Belle Collaboration (I. Adachi , J.B.Singh et al.). 295. First Measurement of Inclusive $B \to X_s \eta$ Decays By Belle Collaboration (K. Nishimura, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 105 (2010) 191803. 296. Measurement of the e+ e- ---> D0 D*- pi+ cross section using initial-state radiation By Belle Collaboration (G. Pakhlova, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D80 (2009) 091101. 297. Measurement of Inclusive Radiative B-meson Decays with a Photon Energy Threshold of 1.7-GeV By Belle Collaboration (A. Limosani, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 103 (2009) 241801. 298. Measurement Of |V(ub)| From Inclusive Charmless Semileptonic B Decays By Belle Collaboration (P. Urquijo, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 104 (2010) 021801. 299. High-statistics study of eta pi0 production in two-photon collisions By Belle Collaboration (S. Uehara, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D80 (2009) 032001. 67 300. Measurement of y(CP) in D0 meson decays to the K0(S) K+ K- final state By Belle Collaboration (A. Zupanc, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D80 (2009) 052006. 301. Measurements of Charmless Hadronic b ---> s Penguin Decays in the pi+ pi- K+ piFinal State and Observation of B0 ---> rho0 K+ piBy Belle Collaboration (S.-H. Kyeong, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D80 (2009) 051103. 302. Measurement of B ---> D(*)(s) K pi branching fractions By Belle Collaboration (J. Wiechczynski, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D80 (2009) 052005. 303. Measurement of the e+ e- ---> J/psi c anti-c cross section at s**(1/2) ~10.6-GeV By Belle Collaboration (P. Pakhlov et al.). Phys.Rev. D79 (2009) 071101. 304. Measurement of the branching fraction for the decay Upsilon(4S) ---> Upsilon(1S) pi+ piBy Belle Collaboration (A. Sokolov, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D79 (2009) 051103. 305. Observation of the phi(1680) and the Y(2175) in e+e- ---> phi pi+ piBy Belle Collaboration (C.P. Shen, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D80 (2009) 031101. 306. Observation of B0 ---> Lambda anti-Lambda K0 and B0 to Lambda anti-Lambda K*0 at Belle By Belle Collaboration (Y.-W. Chang, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D79 (2009) 052006. 307. Time-dependent Dalitz Plot Measurement of CP Parameters in B0 ---> K0(s) pi+ piDecays By Belle Collaboration (J. Dalseno, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D79 (2009) 072004. 308. Precise measurement of hadronic tau-decays with an eta meson By Belle Collaboration (K. Inami, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Lett. B672 (2009) 209-218. 309. Evidence for B ---> K eta-prime gamma Decays at Belle By Belle Collaboration (Robin Wedd, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D81 (2010) 111104. 310. Measurement of CP asymmetries in B0 ---> K0 pi0 decays By Belle Collaboration (M. Fujikawa, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D81 (2010) 011101. 68 311. Measurement of the Decay $B_s 0 \to D_s - \pi^{+}$ and Evidence for $B_s 0 \to D_s \pm K^\pm$ in $e^+ e_-$ Annihilation at $\sqrt{s}$ ~ 10.87-GeV By Belle Collaboration (R. Louvot, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 102 (2009) 021801. 312. Evidence for B0 ---> chi(c1) pi0 at Belle By Belle Collaboration (R. Kumar, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D78 (2008) 091104. 313. Study of intermediate two-body decays in $\bar{B}^0\to \Sigma_c(2455)^{0}\bar{p}\pi^{+}$ By Belle Collaboration (H.O. Kim, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Lett. B669 (2008) 287-293. 314. Measurement of B0 ---> pi+ pi- pi+ pi- Decays and Search for B0 ---> rho0 rho0 By Belle Collaboration (C.-C. Chiang, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D78 (2008) 111102. 315. Observation of a near-threshold enhancement in the e+e- ---> Lambda+(c) Lambda-(c) cross section using initial-state radiation By Belle Collaboration (G. Pakhlova, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 172001. 316. Evidence for Neutral B Meson Decays to omega K*0 By Belle Collaboration (P. Goldenzweig, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 231801. 317. Observation of B+- ---> psi(2S) pi+- and search for direct CP-violation By Belle Collaboration (V. Bhardwaj, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D78 (2008) 051104. 318. Measurement of CP asymmetry in Cabibbo suppressed $D^0$ decays By Belle Collaboration (M. Staric, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Lett. B670 (2008) 190-195. 319. Observation of two resonance-like structures in the pi+ chi(c1) mass distribution in exclusive anti-B0 ---> K- pi+ chi(c1) decays By Belle Collaboration (R. Mizuk, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D78 (2008) 072004. 320. High-Statistics Study of the tau- ---> pi- pi0 nu(tau) Decay By Belle Collaboration (M. Fujikawa, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D78 (2008) 072006. 321. High-statistics measurement of neutral pion-pair production in two-photon collisions By Belle Collaboration (S. Uehara, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D78 (2008) 052004. 69 322. Search for B-0 --> J/psi phi decays By Belle Collaboration (Y. Liu, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D78 (2008) 011106. 323. Measurement of Azimuthal Asymmetries in Inclusive Production of Hadron Pairs in e+e- Annihilation at s**(1/2) = 10.58-GeV By Belle Collaboration (R. Seidl, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D78 (2008) 032011. 324. Measurement of branching fractions, isospin and CP-violating asymmetries for exclusive b --> d gamma modes By Belle Collaboration (N. Taniguchi, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 111801, Erratum-ibid. 101 (2008) 129904. 325. Search for B ---> pi l+ l- Decays at Belle By Belle Collaboration (J.-T. Wei, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D78 (2008) 011101. 326. Improved Measurement of Inclusive Radiative B-meson decays By Belle Collaboration (K. Abe, J.B.Singh et al.). AIP Conf.Proc. 1078 (2009) 342344. 327. Search for B+ ---> D*+ pi0 decay By Belle Collaboration (M. Iwabuchi, J.B.Singh et al.).Phys.Rev.Lett. 101 (2008) 041601. 328. Difference in direct charge-parity violation between charged and neutral $B$ meson decays By The Belle Collaboration (S.W. Lin, J.B.Singh et al.).Nature 452 (2008) 332-335. 329. Improved search for D0 - anti-D0 mixing using semileptonic decays at Belle By BELLE Collaboration (U. Bitenc, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D77 (2008) 112003. 330. Observation of B0 ---> p anti-p K*0 with a large K*0 polarization By Belle Collaboration (J.H. Chen, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 251801. 331. Search for lepton-flavor-violating tau ---> l V0 decays at Belle By Belle Collaboration (Y. Nishio, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Lett. B664 (2008) 35-40. 332. Measurement of the ratio $B(D^0 \to \pi^{+} \pi^{-} \pi^0)$ / $B(D^0 \to K^{-} \pi^{+} \pi^0)$ and the time-integrated CP asymmetry in $D^0 \to \pi^{+} \pi^{-} \pi^0$ By Belle Collaboration (K. Arinstein, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Lett. B662 (2008) 102110. 70 333. Measurement of Time-Dependent CP-Violating Parameters in B0 ---> K0(S) K0(S) decays By Belle Collaboration (Y. Nakahama, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 121601. 334. Observation of $B^0_{s} \to \phi \gamma$ and Search for $B^0_{s} \to \gamma \gamma$ Decays at Belle, By Belle Collaboration (J. Wicht, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 121801. 335. Measurement of CP asymmetries and branching fractions in a time-dependent Dalitz analysis of B0 ---> (rho pi)0 and a constraint on the quark mixing angle phi(2) By Belle Collaboration (A. Kusaka, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D77 (2008) 072001. 336. Time-dependent CP-violating asymmetry in B0 ---> rho0 gamma decays By BELLE Collaboration (Y. Ushiroda, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 021602. 337. Observation of e+e- ---> K+ K- J/psi via initial state radiation at Belle By Belle Collaboration (C.Z. Yuan, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev. D77 (2008) 011105. 338. Measurement of B(D(s)+ ---> mu(nu)) By Belle Collaboration (L. Widhalm, J.B.Singh et al.). Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 241801. 339. Production of New Charmoniumlike States in e+ e- --> J/psi D(*) anti-D(*) at s**(1/2) ~ 10. 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Sanjeev Kumar, Veena Sharma, D. Mehta and Nirmal Singh. Physical Review A 77 (2008) 032510. 472. Li (i = 1-3) subshell vacancy decay processes for the elements with 52 Z 57 following ionization using Mn K x rays. Veena Sharma, Sanjeev Kumar, D. Mehta and Nirmal Singh. Physical Review A 78 (2008) 12507. 473. Resonant Raman scattering contribution to attenuation of x-rays having energy in lower vicinity of K-shell ionization threshold of element with 22 ≤ Z ≤ 92. Sanjeev Kumar, Veena Sharma, D. Mehta and Nirmal Singh. Journal of applied Physics 105 (2008) 104909. 474. Radiation induced modification of Organometallic compound dispersed polymer composites. Singh, N.L., Shah, S., Qureshi, A., Singh, K.P., Shrinet, V., Kulriya, P.K. and Tripathi, A. Radiation Effects & Defects in Solids 163: 181 (2008). 475. Dielectric and structural modification of proton beam irradiated polymer composite. Shah, S., Singh, N.L., Qureshi, A., Singh, D., Singh, K.P., Shrinet, V. and Tripathi, A. Nuclear Instruments & Methods B 266: 1768 (2008). 83 476. Modification of polymer composite by proton beam. Shah, S., Qureshi, A., Singh, N.L. Singh, K.P. and Ganesan, V. Soft Materials 6(2): 75 (2008) 477. AC dielectric properties and surface morphology of proton irradiated ferric oxalate dispersed PVC films. Shah, S., Qureshi, A., Singh, D., Singh, N.L., Singh, K.P. and Shrinet, V. Indian Journal of Pure and Applied Physics (2008). 478. Dielectric response of proton irradiated polymer composite films. Shah, S., Qureshi, A., Singh, N.L., Singh, K.P. and Avasthi, D.K. Radiation Measurements 43 (Supplement 1): S603 (2008) 479. Decay of 246Bk* formed in similar entrance channel reactions of 11B+235$U and 14 N+232Th at low energies using the dynamical cluster-decay model. Singh, B.B., Sharma, M.K. and Gupta, R.K., Phys. Rev. C 77: 054613 (2008). 480. Fission of hyper-hyperdeformed 56Ni: a clustering analysis within mean-field approaches; Gupta, R.K., Patra, S.K., Stevenson, P.D., Beck, C. and Greiner, W. J. Phys. G (Nucl. Part. Phys.) 35: 075106 (2008). 481. Clusters in light, heavy, super-heavy and super-superheavy nuclei. Gupta, R.K., Arun, S.K., Singh, D., Kumar, R., Niyti, Patra, S.K., Arumugam, P. and Sharma, B.K.; Int. J. Mod. Phys. Phys. E (2008). 482. Band structures in 129Cs. S.Sihotra, K.Singh, S.S. Malik, J. Goswamy, R.Palit, Z.Naik, D. Mehta, N. Singh, R Kumar, R. P. Singh and S. Muralithar. Phys. Rev. C. 79 (2009) 044317. 483. Structure of dipole bands in 106In, A. Y. Deo, R. Palit, Z. Naik, S. Sihotra, S. Kumar, P. K. Joshi, I. Mazumdar, R. Chakrabarti, R. Kshetri, D. Mehta, and H. C. Jain, Phys. Rev. C. 79 (2009) 067304. 484. The study of α + 14C cluster states of 18O through the resonant breakup reaction 12C(18O, 14 Cα) at E(18O) = 94.5 MeV; S.Adhikari, C.Basu, B.R.Behera, S.Ray, A.K.Mitra, M.S.Kumar, A.Chatterjee; Int. J. Mod. Phys. E18, 1917 (2009). 485. Measurement of neutron multiplicity from fission of 228U and nuclear dissipation; Hardev Singh, B.R.Behera, G.Singh, I.M.Govil, K.S.Golda, A.Jhingan, R.P.Singh, P.Sugathan, M.B.Chatterjee, S.K.Datta; Phys.Rev. C 80, 064615 (2009). 486. Elastic scattering measurements in elements with 22 ≤ Z ≤ 92 for 59.54 keV -rays at momentum transfer x = 0.4 - 4.7 Å. Sanjeev Kumar, Veena Sharma, J.S. Shahi, D. Mehta and Nirmal Singh. European Physical Journal D 55, (2009) 23-33. 487. Structural and chemical modification of polymer composite by proton irradiation; Sejal Shah, Anjum Qureshi, N. L. Singh, P. K. Kulriya, K. P. Singh and D. K. Avasthi; Surface and Coating Technology, Vol. 203, 2595 (2009). 84 488. AC Electrical Properties of proton irradiated EVA films; Anjum Qureshi, Sejal Shah, Dolly Singh, N. L. Singh and K. P. Singh; Indian J. Physics 83(3), 1117-1122(2009). 489. Microscopic Approach to the Spectator Matter Fragmentaton from 400 to 1000 MeV/A. Yogesh K. Vermani and R.K. Puri; Europysics Letters 85 (2009) 62001. 490. Momentum Dependence of Nuclear Mean Field and System Size Effects in Central Heavy Ion Collisions. Yogesh K. Vermani, Supriya Goyal and R.K. Puri; Physical Review C 79 (2009) 064613. 491. Mass Dependence of Onset of Multifragmentation in Low Energy Heavy Ion Collisions. Yogesh K. Vermani and R.K. Puri; J. Phys. G: Nucl & Part Physics 36 (2009)105103. 492. Participant Spectator Matter and Collision Dynamics in Heavy Ion Colliisions. A.D. Sood and R.K. Puri; Physical Review C 79 (2009) 064618. 493. Decay of 118,122Ba* compound nuclei formed in 78,82Kr+40Ca reactions using the dynamical cluster-decay model of preformed clusters. Raj Kumar and Raj K. Gupta; Phys. Rev. C 79 (2009) 034602 [1-5]. 494. Isomeric state in 53Co: A mean field analysis. S.K. Patra, F.H. Bhat, R.N. Panda, P. Arumugam, and R.K. Gupta, Phys. Rev. C 79 (2009) 044303 [1-7]. 495. Role of static deformation and compact orientation of target nucleus in measured fusion, fusion-fission and capture cross-sections of 244Pu+48Ca reaction. R.K. Gupta, Niyti, M. Manhas, S. Hofmann and W. Greiner, Int. J. Mod. Phys. E 18 (2009) 601619. 496. Universal function of nuclear proximity potential for Skyrme nucleus-nucleus interaction in semiclassical approach. R.K. Gupta, D. Singh, R. Kumar, and W. Greiner, J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys. 36 (2009) 075104. 497. 208 Pb-daughter cluster radioactivity and the deformations and orientations of nuclei. S.K. Arun, R.K. Gupta, B.B. Singh, S. Kanwar, and M.K. Sharma, Phys. Rev. C 79} (2009) 064616 [1-7]. 498. Fusion-evaporation cross-sections for 64Ni+100Mo reaction using the dynamical clusterdecay model. S.K. Arun, R. Kumar, and R.K. Gupta, J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys. 36 (2009) 085105. 499. Decay of 202Pb* formed in 48Ca+154Sm reaction using the dynamical cluster-decay model. S. Kanwar, M.K. Sharma, B.B. Singh, R.K. Gupta, and W. Greiner, Int. J. Mod. Phys. E {\bf 18}(2009) 1453-1467. 85 500. Investigation of 152Sm by Complementary Reactions. P. E. Gerrett…..,A. Kumar et.al. Proc.13th Intern.Symposium on Capture Gamma-Ray Spectroscopy and Related Topics, Cologne, Germany, 25-29 Aug.2008, J.Jolie, A.Zilges, N.Warr, A.Blazhev, Eds., p.391 (2009); AIP Conf.Proc. 1090 (2009). 501. Superdeformed and hyperdeformed states in Z=122 isotopes. S.K. Patra, M. Bhuyan, M. S. Mehta, and Raj K. Gupta; Phys. Rev. C 80 (2009) 034312 (1-8). 502. Cluster radioactivity with effects of deformations and orientations of nuclei included. S.K. Arun, R.K. Gupta, S. Kanwar, B.B. Singh, and M.K. Sharma; Phys. Rev. C 80 (2009) 034317. 503. Island of stability for superheavy elements and the dynamical cluster-decay model for fusion evaporation residue cross sections: 48Ca+238U→286112* as an example. R.K. Gupta, Niyti, M. Manhas, and W. Greiner; J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys. 36 (2009) 115105 (15 pages). 504. Angular momentum effects and barrier modification in sub-barrier fusion reactions using the proximity potential in the Wong formula. R. Kumar, M. Bansal, S.K. Arun, and R.K. Gupta; Phys. Rev. C 80 (2009) 034618 (1-8). 505. Nuclear reaction cross-sections of exotic nuclei in Glauber model for relativistic mean field densities. S. K. Patra, R. N. Panda, P. Arumugam, and R. K. Gupta; Phys. Rev. C 80 (2009) 064602 (1-12). 506. Study of fragmentation using clusterization algorithm with realistic binding energies. Yogesh K. Vermani , J. K. Dhawan, Supriya Goyal, R.K. Puri and J. Aichelin; J. Phys G: Nucl & Part Physics 37 (2010) 015105. 507. Effect of Symmetry Energy on Nuclear Stopping and its Relation to the Production of Light Charged Particles. S. Kumar, S. Kumar and R.K. Puri; Physical Review C81 (2010) 014601. 508. Elliptic Flow and Isopspin Effects in Heavy Ion Collisions at Intermediate Energies. S.Kumar, S. Kumar and R.K. Puri; Physics Review C 81(2010) 014611. 509. On the Balance Energy and Nuclear Dynamics in Peripheral Heavy Ion Collisions.R. Chugh and R.K. Puri; Int J Mod. Phys E 19 (2010) 2009-2021. 510. The Role of Surface Energy Coefficients and Nuclear Surface Diffuseness on the Fusion of Heavy Ion Collisions. I. Dutt and R.K. Puri; Physical Review C 81 (2010) 047601. 86 511. A Systematic Study of Fusion Barriers of Symmetric Colliding Nuclei using Different Proximity Type Potentials. I. Dutt and R.K. Puri; Physical Review C 81 ( 2010) 044615. 512. Analytical Parameterization of Fusion Barriers Using Proximity Potentials; I Dutt and R.K. Puri; Physical Review C 81 (2010) 064608. 513. Isospin effects on the Energy of Vanishing of Flow in Heavy Ion Collisions. S. Gautum, R. Chugh, A. Sood R.K. Puri, J. Aichelin and Ch. Hartnack J. Physics G: Nucl & part Physics 37 085102 (2010) . 514. A comparison of Different Proximity Potentials for Asymmetric Colliding Nuclei. I. Dutt and R.K. Puri; Physical Review C 81 ( 2010) 064609. 515. Importance of Momentum dependent Interactions at the Energy of Vanishing Flow. R. Chugh and R.K. Puri; Physical Review C 82 (2010)014603. 516. Entropy and Light Cluster Production in Heavy Ion Collisions at Intermediate Energies.Y. Vermani and R.K. Puri; Nuclear Physics A 847 (2010) 243. 517. Level structures in the 107In nucleus and their microscopic description, S. Sihotra, Z. Naik, R. Palit, A.Y. Deo, S. Kumar, P.K. Joshi, D. Mehta, and N. Singh; Eur. Phys. J. A 43, 45–53 (2010). 518. Structure of degenerate dipole bands in 106In and investigation of similar structure in neighbouring odd-odd isotopes, R. Palit, A.Y. Deo, Z. Naik, S. Sihotra,S. Kumar,P.K. Joshi, D. Mehta,H.C. Jain. Nucl. Phy. A 834 (2010), 81. 519. Study of fission fragment mass distribution for 16O + 194Pt reaction; E.Prasad, K.M.Varier, , K.S.Golda, P.Sugathan, A.Jhingan, A.K.Sinha, B.R.Behera, Rohit.Sandal, Hardev Singh, R.Singh, Nucl.Phys. A834, 208c (2010). 520. Contribution of near-edge processes to attenuation of the characteristic x rays in element with 48 ≤ Z ≤ 92. Sunil Kumar, Sanjeev Kumar, S.C. Bedi, D. Mehta and Nirmal Singh. Nucl. Instrum. and Meth. B. 268 (2010) 431-439. 521. Influence of resonant Raman scattering in the elemental analysis using X-ray emission based techniques. Sunil Kumar, Gurjeet Singh, Sanjeev Kumar, D. Mehta and Nirmal Singh; Nucl. Instrum. and Meth. B, 268 (2010) 2437-2445. 522. Trace elements of soil samples from mining area; Mumtaz Oswal, Harneet Bedi, M. Hajivaliei, Ashok Kumar and K. P. Singh; Nuclear Instruments & Methods B268, 2138 (2010). 523. Level Density Parameter: A Tool to Study the Particle Spectra Ajay Kumar, A.Kumar, G.Singh, H.Singh, R.P.Singh, R.Kumar, K.S.Golda, I.M.Govil; Proc.Intern.Symposium Exotic Nuclei, Sochi, (Russia), 28 Sept.-2 Oct. 2009, Yu.E.Penionzhkevich, S.M.Lukyanov, Eds., p.14 (2010); AIP Conf.Proc. 1224 (2010). 87 524. Conductivity studies in proton irradiated AgI-Ag2O-V2O5-TeO2 Super-Ionic Glass System; Poonam Sharma, Dinesh Kumar Kanchan, Meenakshi Pant, K. P. Singh; Materials Sciences & Applications 1, 59-65(2010). 525. Dynamical cluster-decay model for fusion cross-sections below the barrier. R. K. Gupta, S. K. Arun, R. Kumar, and M. Bansal ; Nucl. Phys. A 834 (2010) 176c-179c. 526. Cluster radioactive decay within the preformed cluster model using relativistic mean field theory densities. BirBikram Singh, S.K. Patra, and Raj K. Gupta, Phys. Rev. C 82 (2010) 014607. 527. Entrance channel independence of the decay of 215Fr* nucleus. M. K. Sharma, G. Sawhney, S. Kanwar and R. K. Gupta; Mod. Phys. Lett. A 25 (2010) 2022-2023. 528. Collective clusterization in nuclei and excited compound systems: The dynamical cluster-decay model. R. K. Gupta, Lecture Notes in Physics, "Clusters in Nuclei", Editor: C. Beck Vol. 1 (2010) 223-262. 529. Establishing the island of stability for superheavy nuclei via the dynamical clusterdecay model applied to hot fusion reaction 48Ca+238U→286112*. Niyti, Raj K. Gupta, and Walter Greiner , J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys. 37 (2010) 115103 (12pp). 530. Structural change of the unique-parity h11/2 νh11/2 configuration in 134Cs. H. Pai, G. Mukherjee, A. Raghav, R. Palit, C. Bhattacharya, S. Chanda, T. Bhattacharjee, S. Bhattacharyya, S. K. Basu, A. Goswami, P. K. Joshi, B. S. Naidu, Sushil K. Sharma, A. Y. Deo, Z. Naik, R. K. Bhowmik, S. Muralithar, R. P. Singh, S. Kumar, S. Sihotra, and D. Mehta. PRC 84, 041301(R) (2011). 531. Excited states in 99Pd, S. Sihotra, Z. Naik, S. Kumar, K. Singh, J. Goswamy, N. Singh, R. Kumar, R. P. Singh, S. Muralithar, R. K. Bhowmik, R. Palit, and D. Mehta, PRC 83, 024313 (2011). 532. Radioisotopes Applications in Physical Sciences, Book Edited by Nirmal Singh (Emeritus Professor, P. U.), Published by InTech October 2011. 533. Radioisotopes Applications in Bio-Medical Science, Book Edited by Nirmal Singh (Emeritus Professor, P. U.), Published by InTech, Nov. 2011. 534. Fabrication of thin self-supporting platinum targets using evaporation techniques; V. Singh, B.R. Behera, S.R. Abhilash, D. Kabiraj; Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A, 653 (2011) 20. 535. Study of the effect of shell closure on the nuclear dissipation; V. Singh, B.R. Behera, M. Kaur, D. Siwal, S. Goyal, P. Sugathan, K.S. Golda, A. Jhingan, A. Kumar, A. Saxena, R.K. Bhowmik; EPJ Web of Conferences 17, 16014 (2011). 536. Influence of near-edge processes in the elemental analysis using X-ray emission based techniques. Gurjeet Singh, Sunil Kumar, N. Singh J. Goswamy and D. Mehta; Pramana-Journal of Physics, 78 (2011) 233-239. 88 537. Heavy metal induced physiological alterations in Salvinia natans. Bhupinder Bhir, P. Sharmila, P. Pardha Saradhi, S. Sharma, R. Kumar and Devinder Mehta; Ecotoxilcology and environmental safety, 74 (2011) 1678-1684. 538. Elemental analysis of ground water from different regions of Punjab state (India) using EDXRF technique and the sources of water contamination. Atul Bhalla, Gurjeet Singh, Sanjeev Kumar, J.S. Shahi and D. Mehta. Accepted for publication as CBEES ISI proceedings of 4th International Conference on Environmental and Computer Science (ICECS-2011), Singapore. 539. Effect of proton irradiation on electrical properties of a-As2S3, Sanjeev Gautam, Anup Thakur, D. K. Shukla, H.J. Shin, Keun Hwa Chae, K. P. Singh, and Navdeep Goyal; Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids 357, 2340(2011). 540. Fusion excitation functions of 64Ni+112-132Sn reactions studied on the dynamical clusterdecay model; Manoj K. Sharma, Shefali Kanwar, Gudveen Sawhney, Raj K. Gupta, and W. Greiner, J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys. 38 (2011) 055104 (14pp). 541. Importance of preformation probability in cluster radioactive-decays using relativistic mean field theory within the preformed cluster model. BirBikram Singh, S.K. Patra and Raj K. Gupta; Int. J. Mod. Phys. E 20 (2011) 1003-1007. 542. Role of higher-multipole deformations in exotic 14C cluster radioactivity. Gudveen Sawhney, M.K. Shama and Raj K. Gupta; Phys. Rev. C 83 (2011) 064610 (1-8). 543. Nuclear sub-stucture in 112-122Ba nuclei within relativistic mean field theory. M. Bhuyan, S.K. Patra, P. Arumugam, and Raj K. Gupta; Int. J. Mod. Phys. E 20 (2011) 1227-1241. 544. Relativistic mean-field study of the properties of Z=117 nuclei and the decay chains of the 293,294117 isotopes. M. Bhuyan, S.K. Patra, and Raj K. Gupta; Phys. Rev. C 84 (2011) 014317. 545. Heavy ion reactions studied on Wong and Dynamical cluster-decay models using proximity potential for non-coplanar nuclei. Raj K. Gupta and Manie Bansal; International Review of Physics (I.RE.PHY.) 5 (2011), 74-87. 546. The decay of the compound nucleus 215Fr* formed in the 11B+204Pb and 18O+197}Au reaction channels using the dynamical cluster-decay model. Manoj K. Sharma, Gudveen Sawhney, Raj K. Gupta, and W. Greiner, J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys. 38 (2011) 105101 (13pp). 547. Barrier modification in sub-barrier fusion reaction 64Ni+100Mo using Wong formula with Skyrme forces in semiclassical formalism. Raj Kumar and Raj K. Gupta; J. Phys. Conf. Series 312 (2011) 082025 (1-6). 89 548. Clusters in 18,20O and 22Ne nuclei using the quantum mechanical fragmentation theory Manie Bansal, Raj Kumar and Raj K. Gupta; J. Phys. Conf. Series 321 (2011) 012046 (1-4). 549. Fusion reaction cross-sections using the Wong model within Skyrme energy density based semiclassical extended Thomas Fermi approach. Raj Kumar, Manoj K. Sharma and Raj K. Gupta; Nucl. Phys. A 870-871 (2011) 42-57. 550. Mass independent and asymmetry of the reaction: Multifragmentation as an example. V. Kaur, S. Kumar and R.K. Puri; J. of Physics: Conference Series 312 (2011)082028. 551. Isospin Effects in the disappearance of flow as a function of colliding geometry. S. Gautum, A.D. Sood, R.K. Puri and J. Aichelin; Physical Review C 83 (2011) 014603. 552. Fragment Production in Peripheral Au-Au Reaction at 35 MeV Using Dynamical Cluster Method. Y. Vermani and R.K. Puri; Central European J. of Physics 9 (3) (2011)621-627 [ Rapid Communication]. [Springer] 553. On the Sensitivity of the Energy of Vanishing Flow towards Mass Asymmetry of Colliding Nuclei. S. Goyal and R.K. Puri, Nuclear Physics 853 (2011)164. 554. Sensitivity of the Transverse Flow towards Symmetry Energy. S. Gautam, A.D. Sood, R.K. Puri and J. Aichelin, Physical Review C 83 (2011) 034606. 555. On the Elliptical Flow and Asymmetry of the Colliding Nuclei. V. Kaur, S. Kumar and R.K. Puri, Physics Letters B 697 (2011) 512. 556. Formation of Fragments in central and semi central heavy ion collisions using modified clusterization method; S. Goyal and R.K. Puri; Physical Review C 83 (2011) 047601. 557. On the Nuclear Stopping in Asymmetric Colliding Nuclei. V. Kaur, S. Kumar and R.K. Puri Nuclear Physics A 861, 37 (2011). 558. Correlations between balance energy and transition energy for symmetry colliding nuclei Rajni, S. Kumar and R.K. Puri; Phys Rev C 84 (2011) 037606. 559. Influence of Charge asymmetry and isospin dependent cross-section on nuclear stopping; Anupriya Jain, S. Kumar and R.K. Puri; Phys Rev C 84 (2011) 057602. 560. Small Quadrupole Deformation for the Dipole Bands in 112In, T. Trivedi R. Palit, J. Sethi, S. Saha, S. Kumar, Z. Naik, V. V. Parkar, B.S. Naidu, A.Y. Deo, A. Raghav, P. K. Joshi, H. C. Jain, S. Sihotra, D. Mehta, A. K. Jain, D. Choudhury, D. Negi, S. Roy, S. Chattopadhyay, A.K. Singh, P. Singh, D.C. Biswas, R.K. Bhowmik, S. Muralithar, R. P. Singh, R. Kumar, and K. Rani, PRC 85, 014327 (2012). 90 561. Study of uranium contamination of ground water in Punjab using X-ray fluorescence technique. Muhanad Alrakabi, Gurjeet Singh, Atul Bhalla, Sunil Kumar, Sanjeev Kumar, Alok Srivastava Bimal Rai, N. Singh, J.S. Shahi and D. Mehta. Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry (2012). 562. Theoretical Interpretation of Systematics of Effective Single Particle Level Densities from (n, p) Reactions at 14.8 MeV Energies; H. S. Hans, Gulzar Singh, Ashok Kumar, K. P. Singh, B. R. Behera and Sudip Ghosh; Physical Review C (2012) (Accepted for publication). 563. Optical potential obtained from relativistic-mean-field theory-based microscopic nucleon-nucleon interaction: applied to cluster radioactive decays. BirBikram Singh, M. Bhuyan, S. K. Patra, and Raj K. Gupta, J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys. 39 (2012) 025101 (10pp). 564. Fusion-evaporation residue as a dynamical decay process in 48Ca+249Bk→297117* reaction; Kirandeep Sandhu, Manoj K. Sharma, and Raj K. Gupta; Phys. Rev. C 85 (2012) 024604 (1-8). 565. Skyrme forces and the fusion-fission dynamics of the 132Sn+64Ni→196Pt* reaction. Deepika Jain, Raj Kumar, Manoj K. Sharma, and Raj K. Gupta; Phys. Rev. C 85 (2012) 004600 (1-8) 566. Cold nuclear phenomena and collisions between two non-coplanar nuclei; Manie Bansal and Raj K. Gupta; Romanian J. Phys. (2012), accepted. 567. Investigation of major and trace elements in some medicinal plants using PIXE; Rajbir Kaur, A. Kumar, Navneet Kaur, B. P. Mohanty, Mumtaz Oswal, K. P. Singh, B. R. Behera and Gulzar Singh. International Journal of PIXE (Accepted) 2012. 568. On the multifragmentation around the energy of vanishing flow using Isospin dependent model; Rajni, Suneel Kumar and R.K. Puri; Nuclear Physics A 875 (2012) 173. 91 CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS (EXPERIMENTAL and THEORY) 569. Effect of pyridine on infrared absorption of copper phthalocyanine, Singh, S., Tripathi S.K. and Saini, G.S.S., Spectrochim. Acta A 69: 619-623 (2008). 570. Comparative study of carbon nanotube dispersion using surfactants; Richa Rastogi, Rahul Kaushal, S.K. Tripathi, Amit L Sharma, Lalit M Bharadwaj; J. Colloid & Interface Sci. 328 (2008) 421. 571. “Common misconceptions in mechanics, electricity and magnetism” Swinky Dhingra and K.S. Bindra IAPT Bulletin, Volume 25, Number 4, page 138, April 2008 572. Bond lengths of armchair single-waled carbon nanotubes and their pressure dependence; Jindal, V.K., Imtani, A.N; (2008) Computational Materials Science, 44 (1), pp. 156-162. 573. Role of electron energy loss in modification of C60 thin films by swift heavy ions; Bajwa, N., Ingale, A., Avasthi, D.K., Kumar, R., Tripathi, A., Dharamvir, K., Jindal, V.K. (2008) Journal of Applied Physics, 104 (5), art. no. 054306. 574. Immobilization of single walled carbon nanotubes on glass surface ; Kumar, S., Kumar, R., Jindal, V.K., Bharadwaj, L.M.; (2008) Materials Letters, 62 (4-5), pp. 731-734. 575. Dimerization and fusion of two C60 molecules; Kaur, N., Dharamvir, K., Jindal, V.K.;(2008) Chemical Physics, 344 (1-2), pp. 176-184. 576. The formation of dimerized molecules of C60 and their solids; Kaur, N., Gupta, S., Dharamvir, K., Jindal, V.K.; (2008) Carbon, 46 (2), pp. 349-358. 577. TEMPOS devices as humidity sensors, Saroch, M.; Srivastava, S.; Fink, D. and Chandra, Amita ; Radiation Effects and Defects in Solids 163:7,645 -653 (2008) 578. Room Temperature Ammonia Gas Sensing Using Mixed Conductor based TEMPOS; Saroch, M.; Fink Dietmar; Srivastava, S.; Fink, D. and Chandra, Amita; Structures Sensors, 8, 6355-6370, (2008). 579. Longitudinal and bulk viscosities of binary fluid mixtures; Zaheri, A.H.M. ; Srivastava, S. and Tankeshwar , K.; Eur. Phys. J. B 61, 465–473 (2008) 580. Science Education and job training in India; Prakash , Satya - Prakash , S.; Current Science 94, 1121 (2008). 581. Stability of Na clusters inside C240 molecule, Kaur, Harkiran; Ranjan , Kand Keya Dharamvir; Recent Advances in Innovative Materials (RAIM-08) Excel India Publishers, 260(2008). 92 582. Effect of Zn incorporation on optical properties of amorphous Se-Te thin films . Srivastava,, S. ; Pandey,, V. ; Tripathi,, S.K.; Shukla , R.K. and Kumar, A.; J. Ovonic Res. ; 4 ; 83, (2008). 583. The formation of dimerized molecules of C60 and their solids. Kaur, N. Gupta, S., Dharamvir, K. and Jindal, V.K. ; Carbon 46: 349-358 (2008). 584. Dimerization and Fusion of Two C60 Molecules. Kaur, N., Gupta, S., Dharamvir, K. and Jindal, V.K.; Chemical Physics 344: 176-184 (2008) 585. BNNT in Contact with h-BN Sheet and other BNNT and DW-BNNT as GHz Oscillator. Verma, V. and Dharamvir, K.; Int. J. Nanosystems 1: 27-34 (2008) 586. Role of Electron Energy Loss in Modification of C60Thin Films by Swift Heavy Ions. Bajwa, N., Ingale, A., Avasthi, D.K., Kumar, R., Tripathi, A., Dharamvir, K. and Jindal, V.K.; Journal of Applied Physics (2008), in press I–9. 587. Effect of pyridine on infrared absorption of copper phthalocyanine. Singh, S., Tripathi, S.K. and Saini, G.S.S.; Spectrochim. Acta A 69: 619-623 (2008) 588. Science education and job training in India, S.Prakash Current Science 94, 1123 (2008). 589. Effect of Ag on the electrical properties of a-Ge20Se80 glasses; Gurinder Singh, N. Goyal, G.S.S. Saini, P.S. Chandel and S.K. Tripathi; J. Mat. Sci. 44 (2009) 3376. 590. Temperature dependence of the energy gap, refractive index and optical-oscillator parameters of amorphous GaxSe1-x (x = 0.4, 0.5, 0.6) thin films; Falah I Mustafa, Shikha Gupta, N. Goyal and S.K. Tripathi; Physica Stat. Solidi: C6 (2009) S135. 591. Rhodamine 6G interaction with solvents studied by vibrational spectroscopy and density functional theory. G.S.S. Saini, A. Sharma, S. Kaur, K.S. Bindra, V. Sathe, S.K. Tripathi, and C.G. Mhahajan, J. Mol. Struc. 931 (2009) 10–19. 592. Characterization of thermally evaporated thin films of Rhodamine 6G S.K. Tripathi, Alka Monga and G.S.S. Saini; Smart Mater. Struct. 18 (2009) 125012. 593. Effect of temperature on the optical parameter of amorphous SbSe thin films; Falah I. Mustafa, Shikha Gupta, N. Goyal and S.K. Tripathi; J. Optelectronic Mat. 11 (2009) 2019. 594. Swift heavy ion induced structural changes in CdS thin films possessing different microstructures: A comparative study; V. V. Ison, A. Ranga Rao, V. Dutta, P. K. Kulriya, D. K. Avasthi and S. K. Tripathi; J. Appl. Phys. 106 (2009) 023508. 595. Effect of chemical analyte interactions on electrical and optical properties of iron phthalocyanine thin films; S. Singh, G.S.S. Singh and S.K. Tripathi; J. Opt-electronic Mat. 11 (2009) 1147. 93 596. Zinc phthalocyanine thin films and chemical analyte interactions studies by density functional theory and vibrational techniques; G.S.S. Saini, Sukhwinder. Singh, Sarvpreet Kaur, Ranjan Kumar, Vasant Sathe and S.K. Tripathi; J. Phys.: Condens. Mat. 21 (2009) 225006. 597. Effect of deposition parameters on structural, optical and electrical properties of nanocrystalline ZnSe thin films; Charita Mehta, G.S.S. Saini, Jasim M. Abbas, and S.K. Tripathi; Appl. Surf. Sci. 256 (2009) 608. 598. Laser induced changes on a-Ga50Se50 thin films; S.K. Tripathi, Shikha Gupta, F. I. Mustafa, N. Goyal and G.S.S. Saini; J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 42 (2009) 185404. 599. Characterizing single-walled carbon nanotubes by pressure probe; Imtani, A.N., Jindal, V.K.; (2009) Carbon, 47 (14), pp. 3247-3251. 600. Lattice constant of cubic perovskites; Verma, A.S., Jindal, V.K.; (2009) Journal of Alloys and Compounds, 485 (1-2), pp. 514-518. 601. Phonon dynamics and thermodynamical properties of alkali metal doped C 60 compounds; Varshney, D., Jain, R.K., Ranjan, K., Dharamvir, K., Jindal, V.K.; (2009) Modern Physics Letters B, 23 (20-21), pp. 2557-2571. 602. Structural, electronic, and vibrational properties of C 60-nNn (n = 1-12); Sharma, H., Garg, I., Dharamvir, K., Jindal, V.K.; (2009) Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 113 (31), pp. 9002-9013. 603. Structure of chiral single-walled carbon nanotubes under hydrostatic pressure (2009); Imtani, A.N., Jindal, V.K.; Computational Materials Science, 46 (2), pp. 297302. 604. Pressure effects on bond lengths and shape of zigzag single-walled carbon nanotubes; Imtani, A.N., Jindal, V.K.; (2009) Computational Materials Science, 44 (4), pp. 11421149. 605. Structural properties of amorphous rutile, S.Prakash, Kulbir Kaur, S.Physics (India) 54, 489-490 (2009). 606. Spin polarized density functional study on hetrofullerene and metallofullerene clusters, Ranber Singh and, S.Prakash Int. J. Mod. Phys. B 23,5119-5130(2009). 607. Phonon dynamics and thermodynamical properties of alkalimetal doped MC60 compounds, D. Varshney, Rajendra K. Jain, K. Ranjan, Keya Dharamvir and V. K. Jindal, Modern Physics Letters B23 (2009)2557. 608. ‘Dynamics of gelling liquids: Algebraic Relaxation’, J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 21 (2009) 335106 (5pp) (Sunita Srivastava1, C NKumar1 and K Tankeshwar). 94 609. ‘Effect of mass on shear viscosity of binary Fluid mixture confined to nanochannels’, International Journal of Nanoscience Vol. 8, No. 6 (2009) 543–550 (Rohan kaushal, Sunita Srivastava and K. Tankeshwar). 610. Zinc phthalocyanine thin film and chemical analyte interactions studies by density functional theory and vibrational techniques. G.S.S. Saini, S. Singh, S. Kaur, R. Kumar, V. Sathe and S.K. Tripathi, J. Phys. Condens. Mater 21 (2009) 225006. 611. Stability of Thin Gold Nanowires, Veena Verma and Keya Dharamvir, Journal of Nano Research 4, 65-77 (2009). 612. Rhodamine 6G interaction with solvents studied by vibrational spectroscopy and density functional theory. G.S.S. Saini, A. Sharma, S. Kaur, K.S. Bindra, V. Sathe, S.K. Tripathi, and C.G. Mhahajan, J. Mol. Struc. 931 (2009) 10-19. 613. Role of adenine and guanine sites in hole hopping in DNA nanowires; Kaur, I. . Kulkarni, G. S., Ajore, Ram. Bhardwaj, R., Kotamarthi, Prakash, B., Bhardwaj, L & Mehta, D, Singh, N.,.; Journal of Theoretical and Computational Chemistry Vol. 8, 3 (2009) 529539; World Scientific Publishing Company. 614. Magnetism in endohedral metallofullerenes TM@Cn for n=20,28,32,36 where TM= Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni and Cu: A spin polarized density functional study (2010) Sharmaa, H., Garg, I., Dharamvir, K., Jindal, V.K ; AIP Conference Proceedings, 1276, pp. 432-435. 615. DFT study of Aln (1-13) clusters encapsulated inside single walled carbon nanotubes; Garg, I., Sharma, H., Dharamvir, K., Jindal, V.K., Kanhere, D.G. Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 114 (44), (2010) pp. 18762-18772. 616. Ab initio study of structural and electronic properties of AlnN (n = 1-22) clusters (2010); Sharma, H., Garg, I., Dharamvir, K., Jindal, V.K. ; Journal of Computational and Theoretical Nanoscience, 7 (11), pp. 2297-2307. 617. Evaluating optical parameters from electronic structure and crystal structure for binary (ANB8-N) and ternary (A NB2+NC2 7-N) tetrahedral semiconductors (2010); Verma, A.S., Sharma, S., Jindal, V.K. ; Modern Physics Letters B, 24 (24), pp. 2511-2524. 618. Damaged carbon nanotubes get healed by ion irradiation (2010); Jeet, K., Jindal, V.K., Bharadwaj, L.M., Avasthi, D.K., Dharamvir, K.; Journal of Applied Physics, 108 (3), art. no. 034302. 619. 100 MeV Ag ions irradiation effects on the optical properties of Ag0.10(Ge0.20Se0.80)0.90 thin films; Akshay Kumar, S K Tripathi, P K Kulriya, A Tripathi, F Singh and D K Avasthi; J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 43 (2010) 095302. 620. Effect of Indium concentration on the electrical properties of InSe alloy; Falah I. Mustafa, Shikha Gupta, N. Goyal, S.K. Tripathi; Physica B 405 (2010). 95 621. Temperature dependence of barrier height in CdSe Schottky diode; S. K. Tripathi; J Mater Sci. 45 (2010) 5468. 622. Structure of polynitrogen clusters encapsulated in C 60: A density functional study; Sharma, H., Garg, I., Dharamvir, K., Jindal, V.K.; Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 114 (19), (2010) pp. 9153-9160. 623. Structural modifications of multiwalled carbon nanotubes by swift heavy ions irradiation; Dharamvir, K., Jeet, K., Du, C., Pan, N., Jindal, V.K.; (2010) Journal of Nano Research, 10, pp. 1-9. 624. Inherent properties of binary tetrahedral semiconductors; Verma, A.S., Sarkar, B.K., Jindal, V.K.; (2010) Physica B: Condensed Matter, 405 (7), pp. 1737-1739. 625. Computational and experimental studies on the growth of nonpolar surfaces of gallium nitride; Jindal, V., Shahedipour-Sandvik, F.; (2010) Journal of Applied Physics, 107 (5), art. no. 054907. 626. Pressure induced transformations in condensed and molecular phases of C60 Kaur, N., Gupta, S., Jindal, V.K., Dharamvir, K.; (2010) Carbon, 48 (3), pp. 744-755. 627. Dynamics of uniform quantum gases I: Density and current correlations, (J. Bosse, K. N. Pathak and G.S. Singh) Physica A 389 408-418 (2010). 628. Density excitations of a harmonically trapped ideal gas, (Jai Carol Cruz, C. N. Kumar, K. N. Pathak and J. Bosse) Pramana J. Phys: 74, 83-96 (2010). 629. Dynamics of Uniform Quantum Gases: II. Magnetic Susceptibility (J. Bosse, K. N. Pathak and G. S Singh), Physica A 389, 1173-1177 (2010). 630. Confinement and Correlation effects on plasmons in atomic scale metallic wire, (R. K. Moudgil, Vinayak Garg and K. N. Pathak) J. Phys: Condensed Matter 22. 135003-06 (2010). 631. Cohesive energy of zincblende AIIIBV and A IIBVIstructured solids; Verma, A.S., Sarkar, B.K., Jindal, V.K.; (2010) Pramana - Journal of Physics, 74 (5), pp. 851-855. 632. Fabrication of ZnO/α-NPD:F4-TCNQ based inorganic–organic hybrid junction: Effect of doping of organic layer on the diode like characteristics; Rajesh Kumar, Neeraj Khare, G.L. Bhalla, M.N. Kamalasanan Thin Solid Films, Volume 518, 1 October 2010, Pages e61-e64. 633. Staticstructure factor of amorphous rutile nanoparticles, Kulbir Kaur, S.Prakash, Navdeep Goyal, AIP Cof. Proc. 55,1349(2010). 634. First principle investigations into structural and magnetic properties of binary graphite 3d-transition metal intercalated compounds (XC6; X=Cr, Mn, Fe), Ranber Singh & S.Prakash, Carbon 48, 1341-1344(2010). 96 635. Structure and stability of endohedral Cn@C60, Reena Devi and Ranjan Kumar, Modern Physics Lettres B24(2010)1255. 636. Influence of grain size on the superconductivity of La1.85Sr0.15CuO4, Devina Sharma, Ranjan Kumar, H. Kishan and V.P.S. Awana, J. Supercond. Nov. Magn. (2010) doi 10.1007/s10948-010-0920-8. 637. ‘Diffusion of fluid confined to nanotube with rectangular cross section’, Microfluid Nanofluid (2010) 9:737–742 (Reena Devi, Jyoti Sood, Sunita Srivastava and K. Tankeshwar). 638. Light, annealing and plasma induced changes on the electrical properties of a-GaSe thin films; Shikha Gupta, F. I. Mustafa, N. Goyal and S.K. Tripathi; Appl. Phys. A- 103 (2011) 477. 639. Effect of pyridine on zinc phthalocyanine studied by density functional theory calculations and infrared absorption spectroscopy; S.D. Dogra, S. Singh, S. Kaur, S.K. Tripathi, G.S.S. Saini, Vib. Spectrosc. 56 (2011) 60. 640. On the crystallization kinetics of In additive Se-Te chalcogenide glasses Balbir Singh Patial, Nagesh Thakur and S.K. Tripathi; Thermochimica Acta 513 (2011) 1-8. 641. Crsytallization kinetics of Sn additive Se-Te chalcogenide alloys; Balbir Singh Patial, Nagesh Thakur and S.K. Tripathi; J. Thermal Anal. & Calorimetry 106 (2011) 845. 642. In-situ direct electrochemistry of Hemoglobin using vertically aligned Carbon nanotube ropes; Richa Rastogi, Satish Tuteja, S.K. Tripathi, Inderpreet Kaur, Lalit M Bharadwaj; Adv. Sci. Lett. 4 (2011) 1-8. 643. Irradiation effects on CdS thin films; Indra Sulvania, D.K. Avasthi, S.K. Tripathi; Rad. Effects & Defects in Solids (2011) (DOI:10.1080/10420150.2011.569715). 644. Meyer-Neldel DC conduction in Chalcogenide glasses; Satya Prakash, Kulbir Kaur, Navdeep Goyal and S.K. Tripathi; Pramana 76 (2011) 629. 645. Effect of deposition parameters and semi-empirical relations between non-linear refractive index with linear refractive index and third order susceptibility for aGe20Se70-xIn10Bix thin films; Ishu Sharma, S.K. Tripathi and P.B. Barman; J. Appl. Phys. 110 (2011) 043108. 646. Non-isothermal crystallization study of chalcogenide Se85Te15 glass using differential scanning calorimetry; Balbir Singh Patial, Nagesh Thakur, S.K. Tripathi; Physica Scripta (2011) (In Press). 647. Microstructure, phase formations and optical bands in nanostructured alumina; Jitendra Gangwar, Kajal Kumar Dey, Komal, Praveen, Jai Shankar Tawale, Surya Kant Tripathi, Avanish Kumar Srivastava; Adv. Mat. Letts. (2011) (In Press). 97 648. Electronic and mechanical properties of ZnX (X=S, Se and Te) - An ab initio study, Verma, A.S., Sharma, S., Sarkar, B.K., Jindal, V.K. (2011) AIP Conference Proceedings, 1393, pp. 237-238. 649. Structural modification of single wall and multiwalled carbon nanotubes under carbon, nickel and gold ion beam irradiation, Jeet, K., Jindal, V.K., Bharadwaj, L.M., Dharamvir, K., (2011) AIP Conference Proceedings, 1393, pp. 67-68. 650. Structure and stability of pure and doped lithium clusters (Lin and LinX, n=2-8, X=B, Al) - A DFT study, Rani, P., Sharma, S., Jindal, V.K., (2011) AIP Conference Proceedings, 1393, pp. 191-192. 651. Elastic properties of chalcopyrite structured solids, Verma, A.S., Sharma, S., Bhandari, R., Sarkar, B.K., Jindal, V.K., (2011) Materials Chemistry and Physics, . Article in Press. 652. First principles study on the elastic and electronic properties of CdX (X=S, Se and Te), Sharma, S., Verma, A.S., Sarkar, B.K., Bhandari, R., Jindal, V.K., (2011) AIP Conference Proceedings, 1393, pp. 229-230. 653. Structural, electronic and magnetic properties of Mn, Co, Ni in Ge n for (n=113), Kapila, N., Jindal, V.K., Sharma, H., (2011) Physica B: Condensed Matter, 406 (24), pp. 4612-4619. 654. The role of N dopant in inducing ferromagnetism in (ZnO)n clusters (n=116) Kapila, N., Jindal, V.K., Sharma, H., (2011) Journal of Physics Condensed Matter, 23 (44), art. no. 446006. 655. Structural and magnetic properties of TMGen (TM=Mn,Co,Ni) for n=1-13, Kapila, N., Sharma, H., Bhandari, R., Jindal, V.K., (2011) AIP Conference Proceedings, 1349 (PART A), pp. 1171-1172. 656. Elastic constants of CaF2 at different temperature, Sharma, S., Verma, A.S., Jindal, V.K., (2011) AIP Conference Proceedings, 1349 (PART A), pp. 825-826. 657. Models for lattice thermal expansion and thermal conductivity for ternary (ANB2+NC2 7-N) tetrahedral semiconductors, Verma, A.S., Sarkar, B.K., Sharma, S., Bhandari, R., Jindal, V.K. , (2011) Materials Chemistry and Physics, 127 (1-2), pp. 74-78. 658. A first-principle investigation of boron- and nitrogen-doped heterofullerenes Garg, I., Dharamvir, K., Jindal, V.K., Sharma, H.; (2011) International Journal of Nanoscience, 10 (1-2), pp. 29-33. 659. Transition metal induced magnetism in smaller fullerenes (Cn for n [UTF-8?]≤ 36) Garg, I., Sharma, H., Kapila, N., Dharamvir, K., Jindal, V.K. (2011) Nanoscale, 3 (1), pp. 217-224. 98 660. Analytical pair correlations in ideal quantum gases: Temperature-dependent bunching and antibunching (J. Bosse, K. N. Pathak, and G. S. Singh) Phy. Rev. E 84, 042101(2011). 661. Structurefactor of amorphous TiO2 nanoparticle: Molecular Dynamics Study, Kulbir Kaur, Satya Prakash, Navdeep Goyal, Ranber Singh and P.Entel, J. Non-Crystalline Solids 357,3399-3404(2011). 662. Strained structure of differently prepared amorphpus TiO2nanoparticles, Kulbir Kaur, Satya Prakash and Navdeep Goyal, Molecular Dynamics Study, J. Material Research 237, 1 (2011). 663. Structural Transitions in Rutile at High Pressures: A Molecular DynamicsStudy, Kulbir Kaur, Satya Prakash, Journal of Physics Conference Series, IOP Publishing (2011). Kulbir Kaur, Satya Prakash. 664. “Make learning stimulating” Kanwarjit Bindra The Tribune, Oped Education, Oct. 10, 2011. 665. Structure of alkaline-earth and rare earth metal doped C60 solids, Kumari Seema and Ranjan Kumar, Phys. Scr. 83 (2011) 025603. 666. Comparative experimental and density functional theory study of the physical properties of MgB2 and AlB2, Devina Sharma, Jagdish Kumar, Arpita Vajpayee, Ranjan Kumar, P.K. Ahluwalia and V.P.S. Awana, J. Supercond. Nov. Magn. 24 (2011) 1925. 667. Structure and electronic properties of Hn@C20 molecule, Ranjan Kumar and Anita Rani, Physica B 406 (2011) 1173. 668. ‘ Dynamics of fluids contained in a Nano-cube’, R. Devi, Sunita Srivastava, K. Tankeshwar, Nano Biomed. Eng. 2011, 3(1), 47-52. 669. ‘Effect of Particle Shape and Interfacial Layer in Thermal Conductivity and Viscosity of Nanofluids’, AIP Conf. Proc. 2011 1349, 407-408. (Gaganpreet and S. Srivastava). 670. ‘Anomalous behaviour of Mori’ coefficients for the Gaussian core Fluid’, 2011 AIP Conf. Proc. 1393, pp. 263-264 (Gaganpreet, Sunita Srivastava and K. Tankeshwar,) 671. Vibrational spectroscopic and density functional theory studies of chloranil imidazole interaction, G.S.S. Saini, S. Kaur, S.K. Tripathi, S.D. Dogra, J.M.. Abbas, C.G. Mahajan, Vib. Spectrosc. 56 (2011) 66–73. 672. Effect of pyridine on zinc phthalocyanine studied by density functional theory calculations and infrared absorption spectroscopy. S.D. Dogra, S. Singh, S. Kaur, S.K. Tripathi, G.S.S. Saini, Vib. Spectrosc. 56 (2011) 60–65. 99 673. Experimental and density functional theoretical study of the effects of chemical vapours on the vibrational spectra of nickel phthalocyanine thin films. G.S.S. Saini, S.D. Dogra, K. Sharma, S. Singh, V. Sathe and R. K.Singh, Vib. Spectrosc. 57 (2011) 61–71. 674. Hydrogen peroxide vapour sensor using metal-phthalocyanine functionalized carbon nanotubes. A.L. Verma, S. Saxena , GSS Saini, V. Gaur and V.K. Jain, Thin Solid Films 519 (2011) 8144. 675. Elastic Moduli of Carbon Nanohorns, Dinesh Kumar, Veena Verma, H. S. Bhatti and Keya Dharamvir, Journal of Nanomaterials 2011 (2011), Article ID 127952. 676. Density Functional Studies of Lin and Lin+ (N= 2–30) Clusters: Structure, Binding and Charge Distribution, Neetu Goel, Seema Gautam, Keya Dharamvir, International Journal of Quantum Chemistry 112 , 575–586 (2012); first published online: 8 MAR 2011. 677. Structural Evolution and Stability of Hydrogenated Lin (n =1 - 30) Clusters – A Density Functional Study, Seema Gautam, Keya Dharamvir, Neetu Goel, J. Phys. Chem. A 115, 6383–6389 (2011); first published online: May 13, 2011. 678. Comparison of Cluster Calculation with Different Software – The Case of Small Clusters, Neetu Goel, Seema Gautam, Keya Dharamvir AIP Conf. Proc. -- December 12, 2011 -- Volume 1393, pp. 289-290. International conference on advances in condensed and nano materials (icacnm-2011). 679. Structural, Electronic and Optical Properties of Medium Sized Neutral and Cationic Lin Cluster (n = 2, 8 10 20, 30) by Density Functional Theory. Goel, Neetu; Gautam, Seema; Dharamvir, Keya, AIP Conference Proceedings, Volume 1349, pp. 241-242 (2011). 680. Structural and stability of GeAun, n=1-10 clusters: Density Functional study, Priyanka, Hitesh Sharma and Keya Dharamvir, AIP Conf. Proc. -- December 12, 2011 Volume 1393, pp. 189-190 (2011). International conference on advances in condensed and nano materials (ICACNM-2011). 681. Elastic Moduli of Carbon Nanotubes Using Second Generation Improved Brenner Potential, Dinesh Kumar, Veena Verma and Keya Dharamvir, J. Nano Res. 15, 1 – 10 (2011). 682. International Conference on Advances in Condensed and Nano Materials (ICACNM2011) AIP Conference Proceedings 1393, Eds. S. K. Tripathi, Keya Dharamvir, Ranjan Kumar and G. S. S. Saini; Conference Location and Date: Chandigarh, India, 23-26 February 2011; Published December 2011; ISBN 978-0-7354-0963-7, One Volume, Print; 408 pages; 100 683. Structure and Strength of Carbon Nanohorns, Dinesh Kumar, Veena Verma, Keya Dharamvir and H. S. Bhatti, AIP Conf. Proc. 1393, 207 (2011) International conference on advances in condensed and nano materials (ICACNM-2011) 684. Glass transition and crystallization kinetics of chalcogenide Se85Te15 glass; Balbir Singh Patial, Nagesh Thakur and S.K. Tripathi; J. Thermal Anal. & Calorimetry 107 (2012) 31. 685. Glass transition and crystallization study of chalcogenide Se70Te15In15 glass; S. K. Tripathi, Balbir Singh Patial and Nagesh Thakur; J. Thermal Anal. & Calorimetry 107 (2012) 31. 686. Dielectric constants of zinc-blende semiconductors, Verma, A.S., Pal, N., Sarkar, B.K., Bhandari, R., Jindal, V.K.; (2012) Physica Scripta, 85 (1), 015705. 687. Exchange and correlation effects on density excitation spectra of metallic quantum wires at finite temperature (Renu Bala, R. K. Moudgil, Sunita Srivastava,and K. N. Pathak) submitted Phy. Rev. B (2012). 688. Effect of Nano-Confinement on Molecular Motion of Fluid, Advances in Nanotechnology.Volume 6 pp.195-212; Editors: Zacharie Bartul and Jérome Trenor (K. Tankeshwar, Sunita Srivastava and Jyoti Sood). 689. Nanotechnology Research Progress, ‘Restricted Flow in Nanochannels’, pp. 301-321 Authors: Julian F. Vogel and Felix T. Jung (K. Tankeshwar, Sunita Srivastava and Jyoti Sood). 690. Magnetic field-guided orientation of carbon nanotubes through their conjugation with magnetic nanoparticles, Suresh Kumar, Harsimran Kaur, Harkiran Kaur, Inderpreet Kaur, Keya Dharamvir, Lalit M. Bharadwaj, J Mater Sci 47, 1489–1496 (2012). 691. Controlling the density and site of attachment of gold nanoparticles onto the surface of carbon nanotubes, Suresh Kumar, Inderpreet Kaur, Keya Dharamvir. and, Lalit M. Bharadwaj, Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 369, 23–27 (2012). 101 4. SUMMARY OF GRADUATES FROM TEACHING PROGRAMS B.Sc. (Hons. School) Physics 2007-08 26 2008-09 - 27 2009-2010 - 32 2010-1011 - 26 Total - 111 M.Sc. (Hons. School) Physics 2007-08 - 52 2008-09 - 67 2009-2010 - 80 2010-1011 - 60 Total - 259 B.Sc. (Hons. School) Physics & Electronics 2010-1011 - 11 Total - 11 M.Sc. (Hons. School) Physics & Electronics 2009-2010 - 21 2010-1011 - 12 Total - 33 2008-2009 - 15 2010-2011 - 12 Total - 27 M.Phil Ph.D. Awarded (2008-2011) - 53 102 5. SEMINARS & EXTENSION LECTURES GIVEN BY FACULTY (2008-2012) Name Prof. C.S. Aulakh Prof. Keya Dharamvir Topic of Lecture Institution Dates Electrodynamics as the key to Modern physics Pinning MSGUT at LHC IISER, Mohali 25.04. 2008 CPT@ICTP: Trieste 3 July 2008 SO(10) NMSGUT, Realistic Fits Aspects of Neutrinos/ Nu Goa09 Most Important Theorem Refresher course, Physics Dept., P.U., Chandigarh, Grand Unification ditto 6 Lectures on Group Theory, BITS-Pilani, Theoretical High Energy Goa preparatory SERC School Susy SO(10) and the Fermion PRL, Ahmedbad Mass Puzzle (TPSC) 2 Lectures on SO(10) IIT Mumbai SO(10) NMSGUT, Ready to Goran-Fest, Split, Roll ? Croatia Grand Unification Upended ICTP, Trieste , Italy Threshold Corrections, Minimal New Trends in Field supersymmetric SO(10) Grand BHU, Varanasi Theory Unification and the Planck Scale PRL,Ahmedabad New Minimal Supersymmetric SO(10) GUT and Dark Matter : some possibilities Minimal Susy SO(10) and Dark Confronting particleMatter cosmology with PLANCK and LHC IUCAA Pune NMSGUT University of Lancaster , UK. SO(10) NMSGUT open WHEPP-XII, problems Mahabaleshwar Mechanical Strength of Carbon Dept. of Physics, Nanotubes Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi Carbon Nanotubes – Structure, Teachers’ Training Properties and Applications Program, NITTTR, Chd. Computational Methods in Teachers’ Training Nano- Materials Program, Kurukshetra Introduction to Nanotechnology Careers Institute of And the Indian Perspective Technology and Management, Faridabad 103 April 8-15, 2009 20 September 2010 15-20.11.2010 February 24, 2010 June 3,4 2010 June 2010 July 7, 2011 8-12 Feb. 2011 6-8 April, 2011 10-12 August 2011 Sept. 30, 2011 Jan. 2012 22.02. 2008 22.04.2008 18.06. 2008 04.04. 2008 Name Topic of Lecture Institution Dates Terrestrial Planets: Evolution Through Time National Space Science Symposium Symposium on Radiation Sources, Detection and Applications (SRSDA-2008) ISRO, Ahmedabad 22.01. 2008 ISRO, Ooty 26.02. 2008 Punjabi University Patiala 9.02. 2008 Dr. Manmohan Gupta Inaugural address on Nano technology and Nano-Science 30.9.2008 Dr. V.K. Jindal Modeling and characterizing carbon nanotubes by pressure probe LHC Experiment A Journey from Cosmic Master Tara Singh College for Women, Ludhiana MATS University, Raipur DAV College, Jalandhar 22.10.2008 through EDUSAT many colleges in Haryana 31-10-2008 NITTTR, Sector 26, Chandigarh 20.10.2008 Doordarshan, Chandigarh NITTTR, Chandigarh Master Tara Singh College, Ludhiana DAV College, Dasua. 8.9.2008 Govt. B. Ed. College, Dharamshala Govt. B. Ed. College, Dharamshala 11.9.2008 Dr. S. Sahijpal Dr. J.S. Shahi Dr. Suman Bala Beri Rays to Accelerators LHC Experiment – Advances in Particle Dr. Keya Dharamvir Dr.. Manjit Kaur Dr. K.P. Singh Dr. S.K. Tripathi Dr. K.S. Bindra Physics Carbon Nanotubes – Structure Properties and Applications Panel Discussion on ‘India’s Nuclear Deal Energy from Accelerators Towards Smaller Size: Influence on properties Fabrication and Characterization of n-CdSe Schottky Diodes Do our schools serve the purpose of True education ? Active learning in Physics through innovative teaching strategies Do our schools serve the purpose of True education Science in Daily life (6-8).11.2008 11.11.2008 30.09.2008 4.12.2008 11.9.2008 Deptt. Of Education, 25.9.2008 Vidya Bhawan Society, Udaipur Education Resource 30.9.2008 Centre, Vidya Bhawan Society, Udaipur Vidya Bhawan Society 30.9.2008 Udaipur , Active learning in Physics through innovative teaching strategies Do our schools serve the purpose Deptt. Of Education of True Education Vidya Bhawan Society, Udaipur 104 4.10.2008 Name Dr. K.S. Bindra Dr. V.K. Jindal Dr. Suman Bala Dr. Keya Dharamvir Topic of Lecture Institution Dates Active learning in Physics through innovative teaching strategies Science in Daily life Deptt. Of Physics, Jodhpur University. 6.10.2008 Deptt. Of Physics, P.U. Chd. 00,10.2008 BHU, Varanasi (7-9).3.2009 University of Venice Italy 22.6.2009 University of Bologna Italy University of Bayreuth Germany Physics Department (under IAPT chapter and Prof.P.S.Gill foundation) Delhi University, Delhi 23.6.2009 Haryana Engg. Coll., Jagadhri NITTTR, Sector 26, Chandigarh Blind School, Sector 26, Chandigarh. Ryat & Bahra Instt. For Technology, Ropar - do Centre for Nanoscience, BHU, Varanasi 6.2.2009 Khalsa Girls College, Ludhiana NITTTR, Sec. 26, Chandigarh. 28.4.2009 Science camp for school students sponsored by Punjab Council for Science and Technology) Nitrogen doped C60 new nanoscale energy materials and suggesting pressure probe to characterize carbon nanotubes Polynitrogen encapsulated fullerenes-new nanoscale energetic materials Two bond length behavior of carbon nanotubes Structure of carbon nanotubes under hydrostatic pressure Perspectives of New Physics at Tevatron and LHC colliders Status of CMS related research Work and report of CMS week at CERN Overview of Nanotechnology Mechanical Strength of Nanotubes Carbon World earth Day (in Hindi) Theoretical Techniques in Nanotechnology Tools of Nanotechnology Strength of Carbon Nanotubes Nanomaterials – Computation Graphene, Carbon Nano- Tubes and their Applications Introduction to Nano-Technology 30.6.2009 9-3-2009 27-3-2009 4.5.2009 22.4.2009 14.1.2009 15.1.2009 (7-9).3.2009 08.11.2011 Manav Mangal, Public 15.02.2011 School,Panchkula. 105 Name Topic of Lecture Institution Dates Dr. G.S.S. Saini Laser based Scientific & Analytical Techniques National Institute of Technical Teachers Training, Sector 26, Chandigarh 22.01.2009 Dr. C.N. Kumar Factorization method and particular Solutions for driven Nonlinear evolution equations Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Tombay,Mumbai (13-16).1.2009 Dr. S.K. Tripathi Organic Thin Films: Sensing Hindustan Engg.College Agra NIT, Hamirpur (H.P.) 18.01.2009 Inter University Accelerator Centre, (IUAC), New Delhi Bhaba Atomic Research Centre,Mumbai 29.5. 2009 Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar 30.6.2009 Texas A&M, College Station, Texas,USA 20.9.2009 Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies (FIAS), J.-W.-GoetheUniversität, Frankfurt. Germany Univ. of Gissen, Giessen, Germany 12 3.2009 GSI, Darmstadt, Germany 25. 3.2009 Deptt. Of Physics, Goa Univ., Goa 7. 7.2009 (Refresher course on Environment P.U. Chd. Rayat & Bahra College of Education, Kharar Physics Department 19. 7.2009 Preparation of Nano Materials and their Characterization Matter Physics Dr. Bivash Ranjan Fusion near the barrier Behra (Open Problems) Recent trends in Heavy-ion Induced Fusion-Fission Reactions Dr.Sandeep SahijpalNorthern zone master resource persons ” training programme on “Total Solar Eclipse – Prof. Raj K. Gupta Clusters in light, heavy super-heavy and super- super-heavy nuclei Island of Stability for Super-heavy Elements: a new look Dr. K.S. Bindra A new study on Island Stabililty for Super-heavy elements. Island of stability and Dynamical clusterdecay. Model Modern Education kills creativity and obstructs real learning Science related with daily life and environment Environment which encourages Learning Use of Innovative teaching 106 24.05.2009 9.6. 2009 20. 3.2009 26.9.2009 6.11.2009 Name Dr. K.S. Bindra Topic of Lecture Institution Dates Strategies in Physics Education; H.P. University, Refresher course In Physics education -do- -do- -do-do- 7.11.2009 -do- Panjab University Chandigarh. University of Notre Dame Indiana, USA 14.3.2008 Workshop on Introductory Tutorials in Mechanics Environment which stimulates Learning, Refresher course in Physics education Dr. Nirmal Singh Emeritus Tandem Accelerator Scientist (CSIR) Nuclear based structure in A-100-130 Mass region X-ray spectroscopy in Astro Physics Dr. Suman Beri (reemployed) Prof.J.B. Singh Prof. Manjit Kaur Prof. Manjit Kaur Dr. B.R. Behera Dr. Vipin Bhatnagar 19-26,9.2009 George Washington Univ., Washington DC,USA Front Ranking Lawrence Berkeley Experiments in National Laboratory, Nuclear Physics Berkeley, California,USA Exploring the Quantum Universe Deptt. Of Physics, – The LARGE HADRON D.A.V.College, COLLIDER and CMS Jalandhar 28.9.2009 Science Day Celebrations The Big Bang Experiment – LHC,The Myths and Realities Large Hadron Collider (LHC)Engineering wonders: Engineer’s Day New particle searches at LHC: An experimental perspective Pushpa Gujral Science City,Kapurthala 26.2.2010 Chitkara Institute of Engg. & Tech., Rajpura 08.09.2010 Department of Physics Windsor University Canada Windsor University Canada 14.10.2010 Variable energy cyclotron Centre, Kolkata. 16-17.12.2010 GGDSD College, Chandigarh. 17.12.2011 RPC system for CMS experiment Department of Physics and its applications in medical imaging Fusion-fission process for heavy systems -Opportunities with high intensity beams from VECC, Theme meeting on Nucleus Nucleus Collisions Around Fermi Energy Internet and Physics 107 5-6.10.2009 5. 2. 2010 1.12.2010 6. LIST OF DEPARTMENT SEMINARS A. Theoretical Physics Seminar Circuit (TPSC) Seminars (during 2008 to 2011) S. No. Title 1 Black Holes and Gravitational Waves Speaker Date Prof. Gaurav Khanna 01.01.2008 University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, USA 2 3 Probing Nuclear Dynamics via Evaporation Residue Cross-Section and Spin Distribution Measurements Dr. Praveen D. Shidling Modeling of Atomic Systems for Quantum Information And Atomic Clocks Dr. Binidya Arora 04.01.2008 IUAC, New Delhi 17.01.2008 Univ. of Delaware, Newark, USA 4 5 6 Perspectives in NMR Quantum Computing: Decompositions of the QFT Using Selective Pulses Dr. Kavita Dorai How to Attain Temperatures Below 1 K and Down To < 1 Mk and Superfluidity in 3He Prof. R.G. Sharma Collective Density Oscillation of Harmonically Trapped Gas Prof. J. Bosse 31.01.2008 IISER, Mohali 07.02.2008 NSC IUAC, New Delhi 06.04.2008 Universitat Berlin, Germany 7 Thermal Conductivity of OneDimensional Carbon Systems Prof. Deepak Kumar 16.07.2008 JNU, New Delhi 8 Introduction to Hawking Effect and Anomalies Prof. Rabin Banerjee 27.09.2008 SNBNCBS, Kolkota 9 Carbon: The Material and its Characterisation by Raman Spectroscopy Prof. S.N. Behera IOP, Bhubaneswar 108 04.10.2008 10 Mechanical Properties of Nanomaterials Prof. Olga Bylya 06.10.2008 ITER, Bhubaneswar 11 Magnetisation Switching Dynamics in Nanomagnets Prof. M. Daniel 13.01.2009 Centre of Nonlinear Dynamics, Tiruchirapalli 12 Materials Under High Pressure Dr. Surinder M. Sharma 14.02.2009 BARC, Mumbai 13 Dielectric Properties of Glassy Materials Prof. J. Bosse 15.02.2009 Universitat Berlin, Germany 14 Indirect Methods for Nuclear Astrophysics Dr. Rajdeep Chatterjee 21.03.2009 IIT, Roorkee 15 Life Time Measurements as a Test for Existence of Chirality Prof. D. Tonev 19.06.2009 INFN-LBL, Italy 16 Prospects of Nanostructured Metal Oxides For Biosensors Prof. Bansi D. Malhotra 03.09.2009 NPL, New Delhi 17 18 Construction of Second Constant of Motion in Two Dimensional Classical and Quantum Systems Prof. S.C. Mishra Y. Nambu and Modern High-Energy Physics Prof. N.D. Haridass 18.09.2009 Kurukshetra Univ. 25.09.2009 IISc, Bangalore 19 Observing Early Universe in Hyperfine Transition Of Netural Hydrogen Prof. J.S. Bagla 23.10.2009 HRI Allahabad 20 Why LHC? Prof. D.P. Roy 04.11.2009 TIFR, Mumbai 21 Neutrino Mass, Mixing and Oscillations Prof. D.P. Roy 05.11.2009 TIFR, Mumbai 22 Experiments on Semiconductor Devices Under High Magnetic Fields (~8T), at Mr. Asish Arora 109 11.11.2009 Low Temperature (~4K) TIFR, Mumbai 110 23 24 25 Can we Give Quantum Mechanical Description to Pseudo-Hermitian Hamitonians Prof. Ashok Das Semiconductor Quantum Dots as a Source of on Demand Single Photons and Entangled Photon Pairs Dr. Ranber Singh A Recapitulation of Indo-US Nuclear Deal Prof. R. Rajaraman 21.12.2009 Univ. of Rochester, USA 07.01.2010 Max Planck Institute, Germany 21.01.2010 JNU, New Delhi 26 An Introduction to Quantum Hall Effect Prof. R. Rajaraman 22.01.2010 JNU, New Delhi 27 Inducing Order in a Network of Chaotic Elements Dr. Sudheshna Sinha 25.02.2010 IMSc, Chennai 28 Throwing Light on Dark Energy Dr. Harvinder Kaur Jassal 25.03.2010 HRI, Allahabad 29 From Beta Decay to Double Beta Decay Through Unification Prof. M.K. Parida 28.07.2010 Visiting Professor, NISER, Bhubaneswar 30 An Antineutrino Detector for Monitoring a CANDU Reactor Dr. Bhaskar Sur 26.08.2010 Nuclear Science Division, AECL Chalk River Nuclear Laboratories, Canada 31 Atomic Structure Holography using Thermal Neutrons Dr. Bhaskar Sur 22.11.2010 Nuclear Science Division, AECL Chalk River Nuclear Laboratories, Canada 32 Unzipping an Adsorbed Polymer and DNA by Force Dr. Rajeev Kapri IISER, Mohali 25.11.2010 33 The Transient Field Measurements of Pico-Second Lifetime Nuclear States at ANU Dr. Sanjay Kumar Chamoli Department of Physics & Astrophysics, University of Delhi 07.12.2010 111 34 Search for a Unified Theory Prof. Sudhakar Panda 24.12.2010 Harish-Chandra Research Institute, Allahabad 35 Indigenous Technology in a Globalised World: A Case Study Prof. Deshdeep Sahdev 01.02.2011 Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur 36 What Strange Particles Can Tell Us About Prof. Joerg Aichelin Hadronic Matter and What Hadronic SUBATECH, EMN, Nantes, France Matter Tells Us About Strange Particles 04.03.2011 37 A Unified View of the Basic Forces 21.03.2011 Prof. Naresh Dadhich Emeritus Professor, InterUniversity Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics, Pune 38 Effect of Resonant Neutrino Oscillation on Tev Neutrino Flavor Ratio From Choked Grbs Dr. Sarira Sahu Instituto de Ciencias Nucleares, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico City Dr. Hardev Singh 08.07.2011 39 Mass Fragments Emission and IsoScaling in Ca+Sn Reactions at 45 Amev 40 Synthesis and Engineering of Nanocomposites and Nanostructures by Energetic Ions Dr. D.K. Avasthi 08.09.2011 41 Field Induced Switching in Non-Tilted Polar Orthogonal Smectic Phases of BentCore Liquid Crystals Prof. J.K. Vij School of Engineering, Trinity College, University of Dublin, Dublin, Ireland 15.09.2011 42 Success Story of Chandrayaan-I Dr. S.M. Ahmed Central Instruments Laboratory, University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad 04.10.2011 43 Doing Parallel: Tools, Techniques and Scope of Parallel Compuation in Scientific Research Dr. Jayanti Prasad 04.11.2011 17.07.2011 Inter University Accelerator Centre, New Delhi Inter-University Centre for Astronomy & Astrophysics, Pune 112 44 From Outer Space to Inner Space Imaging with Cosmic Rays 45 Optical Similaritons in a Graded-Index Nonlinear-Fiber Amplifier with an External Source Rays Dr. Bhaskar Sur Applied Physics Branch, Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, Chalk River Nuclear Laboratories, Canada Dr. Thokala Soloman Raju, Department of Physics, Karunya University, Coimbatore 113 25.11.2011 02.12.2011 B. Talks arranged by the Department ( 2008 - 2011) S. No. Title Speaker Date 1 Project X and Other Blue-Sky Experimental Proposals Prof. Brajesh C. Choudhary 12.08.2010 Dept. of Physics and Astrophysics, University of Delhi 2 History of Spectroscopy – As Depicted on Postal Stamps Prof. Subash H. Behere 12.11.2010 Department of Physics, Dr. B.A.M. University, Aurangabad 3 Basics of HPCC Prof. Jasjeet Bagla 12.11.2010 IISER, Mohali 4 Basics of HPCC II Prof. Jasjeet Bagla 19.11.2010 IISER, Mohali 5 Band Termination of Collective Nuclear Rotation Prof. Ingemar Ragnarsson 03.12.2010 Lund Institute of Technology, Sweden 6 Recent Results From Belle KEK B-Factory Prof. K. Trabelsi 07.01.2011 KEK High Energy Accelerator Organization, Tsukuba, Japan 7 Fermilab Future Physics and Accelerator Program Prof. Shekhar Mishra 17.01.2011 Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, USA 8 Particle Detectors for the Future Prof. A. Sharma 03.03.2011 CERN, Geneva 9 Tutorial on Parallel Programming WIPRO 114 22.07.2011 10 Experiments at the Tevatron From the Discovery of the Top Quark to Search for the Higgs Boson Prof. Dimitri Denisov 29.07.2011 11 Innovations in Biosciences Using Technology Padma Shri Prof. D. Balasubramanian, L.V. Prasad Eye Institute, Hyderabad 04.11.2011 12 High-Resolution X-Ray Diffraction and Reflection Studies of Crystals, Thin Films and Surfaces Prof. Krishan Lal 14.12.2011 DZERO Experiment Spokesman, Fermilab, USA INSA Sr. Scientist & Former Director, National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi; Visiting Professor, P.U., Chandigarh 115 7. Conferences/Meetings (during 2008 to 2011) S.No. 1 Title IUCAA Introductory Workshop in Astronomy and Astro Physics Organizers Prof. M. M .Gupta Dates 19-23 November, 2009 Dr. S. Sahijpal(secretary) 2 Tenth Planex Workshop On Planetary Sciences and Space Instrumentation LOC : Dr. S. Sahijpal 1-5 February, 2010 3 XXV SERC THEP Main School Prof. C. S. Aulakh 2-22 April, 2010 No. of Speakers - 8 C. N. Kumar (Secretary) No. of Participants - 46 4 One-day Seminar Programme on Recent Trends in Physics Prof. C. S. Aulakh 31 August, 2010 Dr. C. N. Kumar No. of Speakers - 6 Dr. Kuldeep Kumar Dr. B. R. Behera 5 Refresher Course in Physics Prof. C. S. Aulakh 7-27 September, 2010 6 Two-day Seminar Programme on Trends in Frontiers of Physics Prof. C. S. Aulakh 15-16 February, 2011 Dr. C. N. Kumar No. of Speakers - 8 Dr. B. R. Behera Dr. Kuldeep Kumar 7 International Conference on Advances in Condensed and Nano Materials Prof. C. S. Aulakh 23-26 February, 2011 Prof. S. K. Tripathi No of Speakers - 31 8 2nd Chandigarh Science Congress Physical Sciences Section Feb. 2008 3rd Chandigarh Science Congress President – Chairperson Feb. 2009 4th Chandigarh Science Congress Deptt. of Physics 5th Chandigarh Science Congress Feb. 2010 Feb. 2011 116 9 10 The 4th DAE-BRNS Theme Meeting on EXFOR Compilation of Nuclear Data LOC : Dr. B.R. Behera One-day Seminar Programme on Analytical Techniques in Nuclear Science Prof. C. S. Aulakh No. of Speaker - 3 Dr. B. R. Behera 4-8 April, 2011 Dr. Ashok Kumar 27 January, 2012 Dr. C. N. Kumar Dr. Kuldeep Kumar 11 International Workshop on Structure and Dynamics of Trapped Quantum Gases Prof. C. S. Aulakh Dr. C. N. Kumar No. of Speaker - 7 117 2-4 February, 2012 8. UTILIZATION OF FUNDS CAS in PHYSICS (2011– 12) 2008-2012 (upto February, 2012) University Grants Commission It is certified that the University Grants Commission sanctioned Rs.97.50 Lacs (Rs. Ninty seven lacs fifty thousand only) vide Letter No.530/4/CAS/2008(SAP-1) dated 7.7.2008 for CAS programme for 5 years (20082013) Dated of Implementation 1.4.2008 which is under implementation. It is certified that the progress of expenditure on the programme as under:S. No. Item Approved Amount Approved in Lakhs Expenditure 2008-09 Expenditure 200910 Expenditure 201011 2. 3. (Equipment) High speed computing system for high energy, low energy and condensed matter group Software for the above groups including MD software Monochromater (CMP Expt. Group) Unspent balance against released Upto Feb.,12 NON-RECURRING I 1. Expenditure 201112 12.00 NIL NIL 9,25,330.00 8.00 NIL NIL 1,51,499.00 6.00 NIL NIL NIL 1,97,152.00 77,518.00 4,15,748.00 2,32,753.00 Tender document ready 2,55,816.00 NIL Tender document ready Under process 2,27,855.00 6,00,000.00 4. 5. 6. Sputter Unit (N.P. Group) Low energy HPGe Detector CV measurement (High Energy Expert. Group) Probe Station 5.00 8.50 8.00 NIL NIL NIL NIL 8,50,000.00 NIL NIL NIL NIL 7. 8. Upgradation of M.Sc. Lab Upgradation of Spectrometery and Geochoronology Lab. Maintenance of Cyclotron, X-ray Fluorescence and experimental solid state Lab equipments. Building (Upgradation) Augmentation & extension etc. Total 3.00 4.50 NIL NIL 13,013.00 2,19,977.00 NIL NIL 5.00 NIL 36,442.00 1,65,977.00 1,41,541.00 1,56,040.00 10.00 Not yet released NIL Not yet released 11,19,432.00 Not yet released 12,42,806.00 Applied for the funds 12,38,112.00 Not yet released 23,99,650.00 9. II 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. RECURRING Contingency/Working expenses/Consumables Rs.7.50 Lacs for 5 years Chemical/consumable/Glass Rs.5.00 Lacs for 5 years. Travel/Field Facilities/Field trips for Faculty members only (all within India only) Rs.2.50 Lacs for 5 years. Visiting Fellows Rs.2.50 Lacs for 5 years. 70.00 2,44,184.00 NIL 8,00,000.00 2,86,987.00 2,168.00 1,50,000.00 1,47,602.00 1,49,993.00 1,49,515.00 19,246.00 1,30,754.00 1,00,000.00 99,421.00 96,004.00 95,304.00 9,989.00 90,011.00 50,000.00 42,551.00 9,250.00 17,308.00 18,043.00 31,957.00 50,000.00 49,790.00 NIL 50,000.00 50,000.00 60,000.00 59,896.00 40,000.00 40,000.00 40,000.00 1,875.00 39,865.00 39,995.00 Under process Under process 20,200.00 19,800..00 50,000.00 Nil 50,000.00 NIL 50,000.00 NIL 50,000.00 49,918.00 46,391.00 49,181.00 50,000.00 4,31,503.00 Total for 5 years (Rs.27,50,000/-) 5,50,000.00 4,51,053.00 A. This certificate is based on the audited/unaudited statement of expenditure. B. This item of stock have been in the assets ledger/register of the Institution. 4,41,303.00 Spent by the Main Library 1,17,478.00 Seminars/Symposia/Workshop on thrust area Rs.3.00 Lacs for 5 years. Hiring the services of Technical/ Industrial/Secretarial assistance as relevant to the programme (for programme duration only) Rs.2.00 Lacs for 5 years. Advisory Committee Meeting (TA/DA for UGc nominees in the Committee Rs.2.50 Lacs for 5 years. Books and Journals Rs.2.50 Lacs for 5 years. C.S. Aulakh CAS Coordinator & Chairman 118 60,000.00 4,32,522.00 CAS in PHYSICS (2011-12) Statement of expenditure for the year 2011-12 for the period 1.4.2011 to February, .2012 in respect of UGC/CAS programme in Physics, Panjab University, Chandigarh. Sr. ITEMS Sanctioned Released Total No. grant grant expenditure Upto Feb.,12 NON-RECURRING I (Equipment) 1. High speed computing system for high energy, low 12.00 12.00 1,97,152.00 energy and condensed matter group 2. Software for the above groups including MD 8.00 8.00 4,15,748.00 software 3. Monochromater (CMP Expt. Group) 6.00 6.00 Tender document ready 4. Sputter Unit (N.P. Group) 5.00 5.00 2,55,816.00 5. Low energy HPGe Detector 8.50 8.50 NIL 6. CV measurement (High Energy Expert. Group) 8.00 8.00 Tender Probe Station document ready 7. Upgradation of M.Sc. Lab 3.00 3.00 Under process 8. Upgradation of Spectrometery and 4.50 4.50 2,27,855.00 Geochoronology Lab. 9. Maintenance of Cyclotron, X-ray Fluorescence and 5.00 5.00 1,41,541.00 experimental solid state Lab equipments. II Building (Upgradation) Augmentation & extension 10.00 Not yet Applied for the etc. released funds Total 70.00 60.00 12,38,112.00 RECURRING Sr.N Item Approved Amount Approved o. in Lakhs (per year) 19,246.00 1. Contingency/Workingexpenses/ Consumables 1.50 1,50,000.00 Rs.7.50 Lacs for 5 years 9,989.00 2. Chemical/consumable/Glass Rs.5.00 Lacs for 5 1.00 1,00,000.00 years. 18,043.00 3. Travel/Field Facilities/Field trips for Faculty 0.50 50,000.00 members only (all within India only) Rs.2.50 Lacs for 5 years. Under 4. Visiting Fellows Rs.2.50 Lacs for 5 years. 0.50 50,000.00 process Under 5. Seminars/Symposia/Workshop on thrust area 0.60 60,000.00 process Rs.3.00 Lacs for 5 years. 20,200.00 6. Hiring the services of Technical/Industrial/ 0.40 40,000.00 Secretarial assistance as relevant to the programme (for programme duration only) Rs.2.00 Lacs for 5 years. 50,000.00 7. Advisory Committee Meeting (TA/DA for UGc 0.50 50,000.00 nominees in the Committee Rs.2.50 Lacs for 5 years. Spent by the 8. Books and Journals Rs.2.50 Lacs for 5 years. 0.50 50,000.00 Main Library 1,17,478.00 Total for 5 years (Rs.27,50,000/-) 5.50 5,50,000.00 1. 2. Unspent balance 2,74,670.00 6,48,501.00 6,00,000.00 5,00,000.00 NIL 8,00,000.00 2,86,987.00 2,30,023.00 2,97,581.00 Not yet released Certified that the grant has been utilized for the purpose for which it was sanctioned and in accordance with the terms and conditions attached to the grant. If as a result of check or audit objection, if any, irregularity is noticed will be taken to refund adjust or regularize the amount. (C.S. Aulakh) CAS Coordinator & Chairman, 119 36,37,762.00 1,30,754.00 90,011.00 31,957.00 50,000.00 60,000.00 19,800..00 NIL 50,000.00 4,32,522.00 9. ADDITIONAL FUNDING REQUIRED During the last CAS-Advisory committee meeting certain additional funds were recommended for the CAS-Program. However no funds were released since then. In view of the continuing requirements as well as additional requirements that have arisen the following list of funding is placed before the committee for discussion. Items recommended by the Committee in last Meeting (present estimates given ) HPCC Facility Rs. 15 Lac Sputter Unit Rs. 3 Lac HPGe detector electronics module Rs. 3 Lac Monochromator Accessories and nano-voltmeter Rs. 6 Lac High Energy Theory Group Rs. 3 Lac Computer/Laptops Mass spectrometer accessories and maintenance Rs. 6 Lac Teaching Labs Rs 5 lacs Travel (International & Domestic travel) Rs 5 lacs. Extension of Building Rs. 50 Lac New Requirements Microniser Machine (XRF) Rs. 5 Lacs Condensed matter Physics lab (Electric wiring and upgradation of Power supply) Rs. 6 Lacs Optical-fibre coupled microscope for existing Raman Spectrograph Rs. 30 lacs Microfocus XRF laboratory (lab. Renovation and UPS) Rs. 3 Lacs Contribution towards new building Rs 50 Lacs. Total Rs. 190 lacs 120 Justification of Building funds: The roof of the Department has undergone severe wear and tear and needs urgent renovation.The space requirements have increased greatly because of the expansion of the Department in terms of number of courses, number of undergraduate and post graduate students and Research students in various research fields. The University has begun the process of approving plans for the new construction. However funding needs to be arranged from several sources in view of resource crunch. Therefore the UGC-CAS may consider making aid for this purpose to act as seed money for the new building. Sanctioned strength M.Sc I 138 M.Sc II 138 B.Sc I 69 B.Sc II 69 B.Sc III 69 B.Sc Subsidiary Chemistry Geology Maths 80 B.Sc I 80 B.Sc II BioMedical Sciences 80 240 x 1/6 = 40 M.Phil 15 Ph.D. students 120 Nano Science 15 Medical Physics and Nuclear Medicine 20 Sanctioned total Students strength 483+40+14+30+15+10 = 592 All theory Papers held in the department 121 SPACE REQUIREMENTS : Class rooms M.Sc I 1 section 3 bay class room M.Sc II 1 section 3 bay class room B.Sc I 3 bay class room B.Sc II 3 bay class room B.Sc III 3 bay class room M.Phil/Pre Ph.D. 2 bay class room Total 17 bays Teaching Laboratory M.Sc I 6 bays Physics M.Sc II 6 bays Physics + 3 bays Electronics B.Sc I 6 bays Physics 4 bays Electronics (I,II,III) B.Sc II B.Sc III 6 bays Physics M.Phil Lab./ Advanced instrumentation lab. 3 bays Computer teaching laboratories 6 bays Total 40 bays Teachers Rooms and Research Labs. Office space for Faculty 10 bays Lab. Space for theory and Expt. Including Ph. D. students sitting space) 20 bays Total 10 office bays + 20 Lab. Bays = 30 bays Teaching Class rooms 17 bays Teaching Labs 40 Bays Faculty Office + Research Lab 30 Bays Total 87 Bays Summary - Total Building space requirements after the adjustments in the present existing space (spread over several floors) about 75 bays x 200 sq. Ft. = 15000 Sq. Ft. 122