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IIT Kanpur is located on the Grand Trunk Road, 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) west of Kanpur City and measures close to 420 hectares (1,000 acres).This land was donated by the Government of Uttar Pradesh in 1960 and by March 1963 the institute had moved to its current location.
In 1993, he became a professor of mechanical engineering at IIT Kanpur, where he went on to hold the Deva Raj Endowed Chair (2007–2010) and the Gurmukh and Veena Mehta Endowed Chair (2011–2013). For his next position, he left for the Michigan State University , where has been the Herman E. & Ruth J. Koenig Endowed Chair since 2013.
Complex analysis, traditionally known as the theory of functions of a complex variable, is the branch of mathematical analysis that investigates functions of complex ...
In 1962, he returned to India to work as an Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering at Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur (IITK). He went as a visiting Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering at University of California, Berkeley during period 1965–66.It was during this time that he shifted his focus to then nascent discipline ...
Sachchida Nand Tripathi (born 24 July 1971) is an Indian scientist who works in the field of Atmospheric Sciences.He is the Dean of Kotak School of Sustainability and Professor in the Department of Civil Engineering and the Department of Sustainable Energy Engineering at Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur.
Mittal earned his bachelor's degree in aeronautical engineering from IIT Kanpur in 1989. He received an MS in aerospace engineering from University of Florida and a PhD in applied mechanics from University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign 1991 and 1995, respectively.
Nitin Saxena (born 3 May 1981 [1]) is an Indian scientist in mathematics and theoretical computer science.His research focuses on computational complexity.. He attracted international attention for proposing the AKS Primality Test in 2002 in a joint work with Manindra Agrawal and Neeraj Kayal, for which the trio won the 2006 Fulkerson Prize, and the 2006 Gödel Prize.
Mahan Mitra studied at St. Xavier's Collegiate School, Calcutta, till Class XII.He then entered the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, with an All India Rank (AIR) of 67 in the Joint Entrance Examination, where he initially chose to study electrical engineering but later switched to mathematics. [4]