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The Centre for High Energy Physics (CHEP) is a federally funded national research laboratory managed by the University of Punjab. [1]The CHEP is dedicated towards the scientific advancement and understanding of high energy physics (or particle physics) — a branch of fundamental physics that is concerned with unraveling the ultimate constituents of matter and with elucidating the forces ...
Syed Mujahid Kamran (born 23 January 1951) is a Pakistani theoretical physicist and a former vice-chancellor of the University of the Punjab in Lahore, Pakistan.. He is a professor of Physics [1] and previously served as the chairman of the Physics Department at the University of the Punjab [2] (1995–2001) and (January 2007 – January 2008).
The Abdus Salam Chair in Physics, also known as Salam Chair in Physics, is an academic physics research institute of the Government College University at Lahore, Punjab province of Pakistan. Named after Pakistan's only Nobel Laureate, Abdus Salam , the institute is partnered with the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) and International ...
From its establishment, the space observatory was operated by the Punjab University's Physics department until the creation of a separate research institute, Department of Space Science, in 1985. In 1985, the Punjab University decided to start an academic program in this field and consequently the Department of Astronomy was re-organized as the ...
The Government College University (colloquially known as GCU; Punjabi, Urdu: گورنمنٹ کالج یونیورسٹی) is a public research university in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan. Founded as Government College, Lahore, in 1864 under British administration , it became a university in 2002.
Ahmad was born in Gurdaspur, Punjab in India on 3 November 1930 into a Kakazai family that had long been settled in Punjab. [8] [9] [10] Ahmad obtained his early education in Jalandhar, later schooling in Lyallpur, and Lahore before enrolling in the Punjab University in Lahore to study Physics, and earned his undergraduate, BSc degree, in Physics in 1949.
University of Engineering and Technology, Lahore: 75.19 9: University of Lahore: 71.26 10: National Defence University, Pakistan: 70.52 11: Forman Christian College: 69.93 12: Allama Iqbal Medical College: 68.47 13: University of Central Punjab: 61.32 14: International Islamic University: 59.92 15: Government College University (Lahore) 59.30 16
At age 30, Chaudhry moved to Lahore and took an academic professorship in physics at the Lahore Islamia College. [4] In 1935, he became the chairman of the department of physics there, remaining in that position until 1938. In 1938, Chaudhry moved back to Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) to teach physics, again becoming head of his department. [4]