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India is second to none in research and development in battlefield technology, V.K.Aatre, former head, Defence Research and Development Organisation and Scientific Advisor to Defence Minister, said on Tuesday.
Mr.Aatre was delivering a talk on technologies of electronic warfare of India, in continuation of PROBE '12 national symposium on the theme: Defence Electronics, at the National Institute of TechnologyTiruchi (NIT-T).
IMPACT ON SOCIETY
Explaining how technology impacts society to a great extent, he compared ancient and recent war techniques. Mr.Aatre dwelt on the role of unmanned aerial vehicles in defence arena, digital techniques in war field, information technology applications, importance of radar, weapon technology, communication jamming, software defined radio, and antenna types with real-time examples.
Mr.Aatre, the brain behind MEMS (Micro Electronics Mechanical System) lab in SCL (Semiconductor limited), Chandigarh, explained how technology was multidimensional, and advised engineering students to dutifully aspire for core engineering jobs. IT must be applied for enhancement of practical hardware technology, he emphasised.
Mr.Aatre, a Padma Bhusan awardee, released Electro Buzz' the first newsletter brought out by the Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, in the presence of NIT-T Director S.Sundarrajan and S.Raghavan, Professor, ECE Department.
Mr Sundarrajan spoke of Mr.Aatre's role in areas such as MEMS and underwater acoustics while Prof. Raghavan thanked Mr.Aatre for his instrumental role in getting the biggest MEMS fabrication lab in SITAR (Society of Integrated Circuit Technology and Application Research) commissioned in two months time.
The Hindu : Cities / Tiruchirapalli :
Mr.Aatre was delivering a talk on technologies of electronic warfare of India, in continuation of PROBE '12 national symposium on the theme: Defence Electronics, at the National Institute of TechnologyTiruchi (NIT-T).
IMPACT ON SOCIETY
Explaining how technology impacts society to a great extent, he compared ancient and recent war techniques. Mr.Aatre dwelt on the role of unmanned aerial vehicles in defence arena, digital techniques in war field, information technology applications, importance of radar, weapon technology, communication jamming, software defined radio, and antenna types with real-time examples.
Mr.Aatre, the brain behind MEMS (Micro Electronics Mechanical System) lab in SCL (Semiconductor limited), Chandigarh, explained how technology was multidimensional, and advised engineering students to dutifully aspire for core engineering jobs. IT must be applied for enhancement of practical hardware technology, he emphasised.
Mr.Aatre, a Padma Bhusan awardee, released Electro Buzz' the first newsletter brought out by the Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, in the presence of NIT-T Director S.Sundarrajan and S.Raghavan, Professor, ECE Department.
Mr Sundarrajan spoke of Mr.Aatre's role in areas such as MEMS and underwater acoustics while Prof. Raghavan thanked Mr.Aatre for his instrumental role in getting the biggest MEMS fabrication lab in SITAR (Society of Integrated Circuit Technology and Application Research) commissioned in two months time.
The Hindu : Cities / Tiruchirapalli :