Modern high technology is
the base for development in the industrialised countries. This is where
the third world countries lack -- the gap getting wider since they are
deficient in the fundamental science which forms the backbone of
technological development. Mere transfer of technology would not help in
developing a sustainable growth since the underlying scientific
knowledge would not be there to support this growth. Realising the
importance of these fields of physics which form the core of modern
technology, the Second College was devoted to in-depth lectures and
discussions on the topics covering both fundamental and applied aspects
of technological and industrial development, condensed matter physics,
semi-conductors, material science, surface phenomenon, super
conductivity, polymer physics, crystal growth, and low temperature
physics.
Super conductivity and its
applications to fundamental research in physics was the topic discussed
in the First College. Prof. Yaqub emphasised the experimental and
applied aspects of this field. The intriguing and exciting phenomenon of
high temperature superconductivity, discovered in 1987 pointed to an
important discovery of this century. Prof. Silbernagel gave an
interesting talk on this phenomenon during 12th College. The first
week's proceedings of the next year, the 13th College were entirely
devoted to this subject where rapid discoveries during last two years
jolted the scientific community around the world and also earned the
Nobel prize of the year. R.N. Shelton, H.Koinuma, S.S. Xie and Shahid A.
Shaheen discussed various aspects of superconductors and associated
problems of material science. Recent developments in high temperature
oxide superconductors were also highlighted during 16th College by Dr.
Jamil A.A. Khan.
The participants of 2nd
College had the opportunity of hearing about tunnel diodes from its
inventor himself, namely the Nobel laureate Leo Esaki. He gave a broad
view of semiconductor devices in historical perspective and indicated
their applications. His concluding lectures overviewed the current
research concerning the development of semiconductors super-lattices,
thus bringing the audience at par with very frontiers of semi-conductor
devices physics. Lectures of Prof. E.H. Rhoderick followed which were
complementary to Dr. Esaki's in as much as the vast spectrum of
superconductor devices namely the p-n junction and the metal
semi-conductors. During 15th College, Dr. Zafar Iqbal reviewed recent
advances in semiconductor materials.
The focus of many Colleges
have been various topics ofmaterial science Mechanical properties of
materials, formation of alloys and radiation damage have been discussed
in various Colleges by K.J. Miller, W.J.Pardee, J.J. Lewadowski, Raza
Abbaschian, Robert Cook, F.Gautier, Peter Ernest and B.L. Eyre.
The scientific program of
Fifteenth College centered around the development of advanced materials
and the tailoring of their strength and toughness properties. The
emphasis of the series of lectures was on light weight materials such as
light alloys, composites and advanced Ceramics. Prof. F.H.Froes, M.H.
Lewis and J.J.Lewandowski discussed various topics. A workshop on
characterisation of materials was also held.
Surface studies of
materials have been discussed by such eminent faculty members like
E.Tosatti, Michael Wortis, R. Pincus, C.S. Fadley and N.March. Certain
topics under low temperature physics have been discussed by W.Fairbank,
M.Yaqub and W.A. Phillips.
It was during the Second
College that we had the honour of having Prof. P.G. De Gennes on our
faculty. He gave a very interesting lecture course on polymer physics
which was new to the most of the participants but which has a nice
overlap between physical chemist and physicists. Prof De Gennes was
later awarded the Nobel prize in 1990.
On the Physics and the
frontiers of knowledge aspects of the scientific program of INSC, the
fields such as elementary particle physics, astrophysics, cosmology
general relativity have their importance in the educational concern of
the science and in the long run for the scientific effort of a
country.Elementary particle physics is the area which has been the theme
of many colleges and attracted many important contributors to the
development of this field. In the very First College, Professor Abdus
Salam, in his semi-popular lecture gave a lucid account of the status of
the particle physics and the unification of weak and electromagnetic
forces, discovery of weak neutral currents and a new family of particles
which might be indicative of new quantum numbers. He stressed the point
that the concept of elementary constituents versus composite particles
is less important than the idea of basic charges such as electric
charge, flavours and colours. He gave analogies with some concepts used
in general relativity and emphasised that nature is not economical of
structures but only of principles of universal applicability. Let us
recall how he concluded his lecture titled "Probing into the heart of
the matter".
"This thought motivates my
concluding remarks about what physics can and cannot do. Physics can
unify disparate phenomena. Last century saw the great unification,
in the hands of Faraday and Maxwell, of magnetic and electrical
phenomena. We believe that we have achieved a unified understanding
of weak forces with electromagnetism and possibly of these with the
strong nuclear physics. Physics when correctly and deeply understood
can lead to staggering quantitative predictions and agreements
(1:109 or 1:1012). But what physics cannot do is to explain. Physics
does explain for the time being but by assuming some concepts as
basics. The explanations will again be in terms of a certain
unquestioned truth ---- which in their turn will be questioned by
the next generation. In this sense, physics will never end and we
shall probe and probe for ever".
The probe continues and
the later experiments proved his unification theory and the great
scientist was honored with Nobel Prize in physics. Professor B.W. Lee,
Prof. Nuyts, were the other speakers. Again during the Fifth College, we
had a distinguished faculty for lectures on particle physics---Nobel
laureates S.C.C. Ting and C.N. Yang. Prof. N.S. Craig, Fayyazuddin,
Ahmed Ali, Paolo Bundirich, Qaiser Shafi, M.D. Scadron and A. Zee were
the other leading scientists who have been associated with our faculty
to discuss the topics at the frontiers of particle physics.
The College has also been
active in arranging lectures in general relativity, astrophysics and
cosmology and its interface with particle physics. We had the honour of
having Professor R. Ruffini with us during first, second and fifth
colleges. He gave a very stimulating and interesting series of lectures
covering the frontiers of physics involving Neutron Stars, Black holes
and cosmology. In his thought provoking lecture on "Astrophysics,
general relativity and cosmology", he opined: "........I feel that
fundamental knowledge is always necessary for all countries--- whether
they be developed or developing. The right to think for ourselves cannot
be delegated to anybody else. The developing countries can no more
afford to be intellectually dependent on the developed countries than
they can afford to be economically dependent.". Dr. Fang Lizhi, Li Qibi,
Xie Guangzhong and L. Halpern were the other speakers.
It was during Tenth
College that Prof. W. Saggewiss presented the audience with a rare treat
of observing through a telescope, the spectacular view of the night sky.
It was simply thrilling to see the Saturn with its rings, Jupiter and
its moons and other objects like red giants binaries and moon craters.
These informal sessions lasted till late at night and naturally led to
the discussions about the origin of the solar system, the birth,
evolution and death of stars and other heavenly objects. These sessions
were highly stimulating and generated among many the desire to learn
more about the universe we live in. He lectured on observational
astronomy. Prof. Pietro Giannons explained the theory of evolution of
stars, binaries and stellar clusters while Asghar Qadir gave a review of
dark matter in the universe.
The Supernova explosion in
1987 , a spectacular event having important implications not only for
our universe but also about fundamental constituents of matter, was the
focus of attention during 13th college. Prof. John Ellis explained the
implications in astrophysics and particle physics. Prof. P.L.Bernacca,
M.S. Turnr, Dr. Ahmed Ali, C. Rouse, and Fang Li Zhi were other
speakers.
The Fifteenth College was
devoted to accelerator physics. The design and fabrication of different
types of accelerators and ion sources and the physics which could be
derived from the study of spin or the modification of properties of
solids on interaction with ion beam was highlighted by G. Tungate, H.
Winter, J.P. Biersack and C.J. Lister were the speakers. A panel
discussion followed, emphasising indigenisation in the Third World
countries in the development of low energy accelerators.
A new perspective of
Atomic Physics has been introduced as a quest for many-body effects in
small systems. The lasers have found widespread applications in
technology , for example in communications, in isotopic separation,
medicine etc. A full week's deliberations during 12th College were
devoted to discussions relating to Atomic, molecular and laser physics.
The major topics discussed were high Rydberg states of atoms and
molecules, atomic structure theory, many body atomic theory,
laser-material interaction, high resolution laser spectroscopy etc. We
had a distinguished faculty comprising J.P. Connerade, M.L. Ginter, W.R.
Johnson, R.R. Freeman, C.R. Stroud, S.R.J. Brueck, E. Tiemann and H.
Welling. Interestingly, Prof. H. Elling also elucidated various aspects
of lasers during First College as well.
A two day workshop on
laser source and spectroscopy was also held.
Dr G. leuchs and Prof. R.W.
Hellworth were the speakers who reviewed laser technology in later
colleges. Various topics in photo electronics were discussed by J.D.
McGee during the First College while Dr. Atique Mufti lectured on
principles and ingredients of photovoltaic technology and its
applications.
Various topics under
nuclear and reactor physics were focussed for deliberations on many
occasions. Recognising the needs of the scientists from developing
countries for a review of latest discoveries in this field, the
scientific program of one week's duration was devoted for this purpose
during the 12th College. We had a distinguished faculty comprising Prof.
O. Schult, G.A. Miller and Pervez Hoodbhoy. Many recent developments in
the field were discussed. Nuclear polarisation phenomenon was discussed
by Prof. M.J. Moravscik during the Third College. Dr. Ugo Fairnelli and
Prof. L. Murray discussed topics relating to reactor physics.
Photovoltaic technology
was one of the topics the discussed during Tenth College. Principles and
ingredients of photovoltaic were discussed by Dr. A. Mufti.
Nuclear data plays a very
vital role in reactor design calculations, fuel management and dosimetry
etc. An excellent review of nuclear data evaluation and compilation was
provided by Dr. J.J. Schmidt from IAEA, during the 9th College. Dr. Kolb
and Dr. S.M. Qaim were the other speakers.
Solid State Nuclear Track
Detectors (SSNTD) is a fast emerging useful technique finding
applications in various fields. Nuclear track studies of meteorites,
their ages and radiation histories were reviewed by Dr. S. A. Durrani
during the Tenth College. Dr. H. A. Khan discussed their applications in
Nuclear physics, anthropology and space studies.
Computational physics has
acquired an important role in theoretical mode of research with the
revolutionary developments in numerical techniques and computers. Apart
from revolutionising the signal manipulation work of the experimental
physics and the model manipulation capabilities of theoretical physics,
computational physics has opened up whole new vistas of basic and
applied research. Simulation methods involving molecular dynamics and
Monte Carlo techniques etc. have played a leading role. One week's
programme during the Seventeenth College was entirely devoted to
discussions on recent developments in computational physics and related
topics and applications. We had a very distinguished faculty comprising
such advanced workers in the fields of neural network models and
artificial intelligence like J. W. Clark and Dai RuWai. Simulation
techniques, variational methods and molecular dynamics and multigrid
methods were discussed by J. D. Lewins, T.S. Rahman, S. Murad and D.J.E.
Callaway.
The theme of the Ninth
College was finite element methods and Dr. N. Z. Nashed, K. Morgan and
D. Kolb lectured on various topics. Other faculty members who lectured
on related topics include K.V. Foberls, S. Kirkpatrick, S Atzeni and Y.Y.
Xiang.
Much of the development in
modern day science and technology is attributed to computers. Various
topics relating to softwares, PCs, interpersonal communications,
microprocessors and applied system analysis were covered. We had Prof.
P. C. Poole, Niedermeyer, A. Jeschke, Stroud, Ben Segal, G. Ehret and
Castigare as our faculty members.