Showing posts with label Indian stamps 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian stamps 2011. Show all posts

Monday, December 26, 2011

New Stamp from India..

 

Srinivasa Ramanujan – Greatest Mathematician

scan0022

Date of Issue : 26 December 2011

India Post issues  second time, a postage stamp on Srinivasa Ramanujan .

 

Stamp Image: Courtesy Mansoor B., Mangalore

 

image

India Post issued a commemorative postage stamp on 75th Birth Anniversary of Srinivasa Ramanujan  on 22 December 1962.

Born: 22 Dec 1887 in Erode, Tamil Nadu
Died: 26 April 1920 in Kumbakonam, Tamil Nadu

 

cover rs

Special Cover on Srinivasa Ramanujan : 37th International Olympiad Mumbai, India 1996

Ramanujan's birthday will be National Mathematics Day

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Monday emphasised the need to carry forward the legacy of great mathematicians such as Srinivasa Ramanujan, Aryabhata and Brahmagupta so as to encourage and nurture the glorious tradition of the country in mathematics.

Inaugurating the Ramanujan Centre for Higher Mathematics at the Alagappa University here, he said mathematics had been widely used in the study of Science and other disciplines.

The country was short of competent mathematicians and it was the responsibility of mathematical community to encourage and facilitate the study of mathematics as an academic discipline in the country, the Prime Minister said.

Paying tribute to Srinivasa Ramanujan, Dr. Singh said he was a legendary mathematician after whom the centre had been named. He was a great son of India and Tamil Nadu. He ranked among giants in the world of mathematics. In recognition of his contribution to mathematics, the Central government had decided to celebrate Ramajuan's birthday as the National Mathematics Day every year and declared 2012 as the National Mathematical Year.

 

image

Srinivasa Ramanujan was one of India's greatest mathematical geniuses. He made substantial contributions to the analytical theory of numbers and worked on elliptic functions, continued fractions, and infinite series.

Ramanujan was born  in Erode, a small village about 400 km southwest of Madras.

When he was nearly five years old, Ramanujan entered the primary school in Kumbakonam although he would attend several different primary schools before entering the Town High School in Kumbakonam in January 1898. At the Town High School, Ramanujan was to do well in all his school subjects and showed himself an able all round scholar. In 1900 he began to work on his own on mathematics summing geometric and arithmetic series.

Ramanujan was shown how to solve cubic equations in 1902 and he went on to find his own method to solve the quartic. The following year, not knowing that the quintic could not be solved by radicals, he tried (and of course failed) to solve the quintic.

It was in the Town High School that Ramanujan came across a mathematics book by G S Carr called Synopsis of elementary results in pure mathematics. This book, with its very concise style, allowed Ramanujan to teach himself mathematics, but the style of the book was to have a rather unfortunate effect on the way Ramanujan was later to write down mathematics since it provided the only model that he had of written mathematical arguments. The book contained theorems, formulae and short proofs. It also contained an index to papers on pure mathematics which had been published in the European Journals of Learned Societies during the first half of the 19th century. The book, published in 1856, was of course well out of date by the time Ramanujan used it.

By 1904 Ramanujan had begun to undertake deep research. He investigated the series ∑(1/n) and calculated Euler's constant to 15 decimal places. He began to study the Bernoulli numbers, although this was entirely his own independent discovery.

He continued his mathematical work, however, and at this time he worked on hypergeometric series and investigated relations between integrals and series. He was to discover later that he had been studying elliptic functions.

In 1906 Ramanujan went to Madras where he entered Pachaiyappa's College. His aim was to pass the First Arts examination which would allow him to be admitted to the University of Madras. He attended lectures at Pachaiyappa's College but became ill after three months study. He took the First Arts examination after having left the course. He passed in mathematics but failed all his other subjects and therefore failed the examination. This meant that he could not enter the University of Madras. In the following years he worked on mathematics developing his own ideas without any help and without any real idea of the then current research topics other than that provided by Carr's book.

Continuing his mathematical work Ramanujan studied continued fractions and divergent series in 1908. At this stage he became seriously ill again and underwent an operation in April 1909 after which he took him some considerable time to recover. He married on 14 July 1909 when his mother arranged for him to marry a ten year old girl S Janaki Ammal. Ramanujan did not live with his wife, however, until she was twelve years old.

Ramanujan continued to develop his mathematical ideas and began to pose problems and solve problems in the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society. He devoloped relations between elliptic modular equations in 1910. After publication of a brilliant research paper on Bernoulli numbers in 1911 in the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society he gained recognition for his work. Despite his lack of a university education, he was becoming well known in the Madras area as a mathematical genius.

In 1911 Ramanujan approached the founder of the Indian Mathematical Society for advice on a job. After this he was appointed to his first job, a temporary post in the Accountant General's Office in Madras. It was then suggested that he approach Ramachandra Rao who was a Collector at Nellore. Ramachandra Rao was a founder member of the Indian Mathematical Society who had helped start the mathematics library. He writes in :-

A short uncouth figure, stout, unshaven, not over clean, with one conspicuous feature - shining eyes - walked in with a frayed notebook under his arm. He was miserably poor. ... He opened his book and began to explain some of his discoveries. I saw quite at once that there was something out of the way; but my knowledge did not permit me to judge whether he talked sense or nonsense. ... I asked him what he wanted. He said he wanted a pittance to live on so that he might pursue his researches.

Ramachandra Rao told him to return to Madras and he tried, unsuccessfully, to arrange a scholarship for Ramanujan. In 1912 Ramanujan applied for the post of clerk in the accounts section of the Madras Port Trust. In his letter of application he wrote :-

I have passed the Matriculation Examination and studied up to the First Arts but was prevented from pursuing my studies further owing to several untoward circumstances. I have, however, been devoting all my time to Mathematics and developing the subject.

Despite the fact that he had no university education, Ramanujan was clearly well known to the university mathematicians in Madras for, with his letter of application, Ramanujan included a reference from E W Middlemast who was the Professor of Mathematics at The Presidency College in Madras. Middlemast, a graduate of St John's College, Cambridge, wrote :-

I can strongly recommend the applicant. He is a young man of quite exceptional capacity in mathematics and especially in work relating to numbers. He has a natural aptitude for computation and is very quick at figure work.

On the strength of the recommendation Ramanujan was appointed to the post of clerk and began his duties on 1 March 1912. Ramanujan was quite lucky to have a number of people working round him with a training in mathematics. In fact the Chief Accountant for the Madras Port Trust, S N Aiyar, was trained as a mathematician and published a paper On the distribution of primes in 1913 on Ramanujan's work. The professor of civil engineering at the Madras Engineering College C L T Griffith was also interested in Ramanujan's abilities and, having been educated at University College London, knew the professor of mathematics there, namely M J M Hill. He wrote to Hill on 12 November 1912 sending some of Ramanujan's work and a copy of his 1911 paper on Bernoulli numbers.

Hill replied in a fairly encouraging way but showed that he had failed to understand Ramanujan's results on divergent series. The recommendation to Ramanujan that he read Bromwich's Theory of infinite series did not please Ramanujan much. Ramanujan wrote to E W Hobson and H F Baker trying to interest them in his results but neither replied. In January 1913 Ramanujan wrote to G H Hardy having seen a copy of his 1910 book Orders of infinity. In Ramanujan's letter to Hardy he introduced himself and his work :-

I have had no university education but I have undergone the ordinary school course. After leaving school I have been employing the spare time at my disposal to work at mathematics. I have not trodden through the conventional regular course which is followed in a university course, but I am striking out a new path for myself. I have made a special investigation of divergent series in general and the results I get are termed by the local mathematicians as 'startling'.

Ramanujan left a number of unpublished notebooks filled with theorems that mathematicians have continued to study. G N Watson, Mason Professor of Pure Mathematics at Birmingham from 1918 to 1951 published 14 papers under the general title Theorems stated by Ramanujan and in all he published nearly 30 papers which were inspired by Ramanujan's work. Hardy passed on to Watson the large number of manuscripts of Ramanujan that he had, both written before 1914 and some written in Ramanujan's last year in India before his death.

Read the whole article..

Read More…

The Ramanujan Prize

image

The Ramanujan Prize for young mathematicians from developing countries has been created in 2005 at ICTP in the name of the great Indian mathematician, Srinivasa Ramanujan. The Prize is funded by the Niels Henrik Abel Memorial Fund. Marcelo Viana, professor at the Institute of Pure and Applied Mathematics in Brazil and one of Latin America's most eminent mathematicians, has won the first-ever Ramanujan Prize.

The Ramanujan Prize, named for the world-renowned Indian scientist Srinivasa Ramanujan who died in 1920 at the age of 33, is designed to recognize the achievements of scientists less than 45 years old who have lived and worked in the developing world. The prize, which carries a US$10,000 cash award, is sponsored by the Niels Henrik Abel Memorial Fund in Norway, the same organization that sponsors the Abel Prize for Mathematics, an internationally renowned award for lifetime achievement. In its three brief years of existence, the Abel Prize, named after the Norwegian-born Niels Henrik Abel, a world-renowned 19th century mathematician, has emerged as one of the world?s most prestigious prizes in mathematics.

Friday, December 23, 2011

New Stamp from India..

 

 

scan0020

 Date of Issue : 23 December 2011

Today India Post issued a commemorative postage stamp on 100 years of King George Medical College Lucknow. The King George Medical College, Lucknow, established in 1911, has been a frontrunner among medical education institutions in the country, By an act passed by the Government of Uttar Pradesh on the 16th September 2002, the college was transferred under a new university  Chhatrapati Shahuji Maharaj Medical University.

image

KGMC ( Chhatrapati Shahuji Maharaj Medical University) , Lucknow

  image image

Release of Postage stamp marking 100 years of the university by His Excellence Shri B.L Joshi, Honourable Governor of UP

King George Medical College, Lucknow – Centenary Year

scan0020

Screenshot_3 : Mansoor Bolar, Mangalore

 

New Special Cover from Gujarat

Rajpex – 2011, Rajkot

rajpex

rajpex

Screenshot_3 : Ashwani Dubey - Gorakhpur

Thursday, December 22, 2011

New stamps from India..

 

Archaeological Survey of India

arch 3

On 20th December 2011 India Post issued a set of two stamps and a miniature sheet on 150 years of Archaeological Survey of India.

 

arch 1 arch 2

Date of Issue : 20 December 2011

Source : Stamps of India

From Our Readers..

Vipan Kumar Thakur of Chandigarh shares here   some picture Post cards  prepared by him on Kavi Pradeep.

KP3

KP4

KP1

 KP2

Screenshot_3 : Vipan Kumar Thakur, Chandigarh email : philavpnthakur@rediffmail.com

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

New stamp from India…

 

image

President Smt. Pratibha Devi Singh Patil released commemorative postage stamps on the eve of the Presidential Fleet Review in Mumbai on 19.12.2011.

image image

image image

Date of Issue : 19 December 2011

Source : Stamps of India

Golden Jubilee of Goa Liberation

scan0016

Date of Issue : 19 December 2011

On19th December 2011, India Post released a stamp to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of Goa Liberation.

Screenshot_3 : Mansoor B. – Mangalore

Club News

Glimpses of UPHILEX 2011, Lucknow

Photo0162

Photo0203

Photo0165 

Photo0201 

Screenshot_3 : Ashwani Dubey, Gorakhpur

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

New Christmas and New Year Stamps

 

Christmas stamp from Czech Republic

Screenshot_6

Date of Issue : 9 November 2011

Nativity scene with Mary, Joseph, Baby Jesus and animals. This year's stamp comes out printed on a Christmas picture card.

New Year Stamp from Thailand

Thai

Date of Issue : 15 November 2011

Thai 3

FDC showing 12 o’clock Time….entering New Year …

Thai 2

 

New Stamp from India

image

President Smt. Pratibha Patil released a  postage stamp on Kavi Pradeep on 11th December 2011

A special commemorative postal stamp on Pt Kavi Pradeep, a noted poet whose songs played a major role during the country's freedom struggle, was released by President Smt Pratibha Patil on Sunday. The President  launched the stamp on December 11 at a simple function in Amravati, Maharashtra, in the presence of Law Minister Salman Khurshid and Minister of State for Communication and Information Technology Sachin Pilot. It is the first step towards the preparation for Pt Kavi Pradeep's centenary celebrations which falls on February 6, 2015, Avinash Pande, Chairman of Kavi Pradeep Foundation, said .

The poet, originally known as Ramchandra Naryanji Dwivedi, was born in Badnagar in Ujjain district in Madhya Pradesh and had a passion for writing and rendering Hindi poetry. His songs like 'Aj Himalay ki choti se phir hamne lalkara hai...door hato ae duniyawalon hindustan hamara hai' played a crucial role in the country's freedom struggle. Kavi Pradeep also penned a song in tribute to soldiers who died in 1962 Sino-Indian War and was also a towering figure in Hindi cinema. During his film career spanning nearly five decades, Kavi Pradeep penned lyrics for 72 films like Bandhan (1940) and Jai Santoshi Ma (1975).

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

New Stamp from India

 

The Smile Train – Cleft Surgery

the-smile-train-cleft-surgery 

Date of Issue : 6 December 2011

Screenshot_3 : Mahesh Reddiar  www.PhilaIndia.info

 

Smile Train is a not-for-profit,  organization based in New York City with the mission of providing free corrective surgery for children with cleft lip and palate in about 80 developing countries. Founded in 1999, Smile Train focuses on providing free cleft-related training for doctors and medical professionals. Smile Train uses technology including surgery-training software and grading of operations via digital imaging to increase efficiency.

 

Hi ! After a gap I have started giving regular updates on new stamps and other philatelic activities. I have received covers of 11.11.11 from my friends and readers which I would publish soon. India Post issued a new postage stamp on The Smile Train – Cleft Surgery on 6 December 2011.

New Stamp Booklets

19 stamp  Booklets were issued during Chinar 2011,Stamp Exhibition  Srinagar.

 

Stamp Booklets – 5 - 9

Chinar-2011-Stamp Booklet-15 (each 10x5) 02 

Chinar-2011-Stamp Booklet-15 (each 10x5) 02

Chinar-2011-Stamp Booklet-15 (each 10x5) 02

Chinar-2011-Stamp Booklet-15 (each 10x5) 02 

image

Screenshot_3 : Hemant Kr.Jain , Mandla (MP)

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Club News

 

New Stamp from India

gl

Date of Issue : 25 November 2011

India Post released a stamp of the grand Lodge of India on 25th November 2011 on the occasion of  its Golden Jubilee Celebrations.

 

From our Readers…

Press Clippings

Eastern Indian Philatelic Association – Making a Mark

An article about EIPA & Stamp Mela. was published in Times of India,Odisha edition on 25th November 2011.

- SS Rath Bhubaneshwar

 

EIPA NewsEIPA News 

26  November 2011, Times of India, Odisha edition

Combination Cover of Jaimal Ji Maharaj Stamp
- Sudhir Jain


India Post had issued a stamp on Jain Saint Jaimal Ji Maharaj on 25-09-2011. A special cover was issued at Chennai on four years ago on the same date i.e. 25-09-2007. Here is a combination cover  on Jaimal Ji Maharaj with the special cancellation of 25-09-2007 and first day cancellation on 25-09-2011.

Jaimalji Comb

3 D Special Cover

 

jaisimsl ji mshraj

A unique 3D cover on Achrya Shree Jaimal Ji Mahraj ,One can see the 3D effect with the help of blue red 3d glasses.

- Sanjiv Jain - Dehradun