BACHELOR
OF TECHNOLOGY
(Information
Technology)
GURU GOBIND SINGH INDRAPRASTHA UNIVERSITY
BACHELOR OF TECHNOLOGY
(B.TECH.)
DEGREE COURSE (Common to all branches)
FIRST SEMESTER EXAMINATION
Code
No.
|
Paper
|
L
|
T/P
|
Credits
|
THEORY PAPERS
|
||||
ETMA 101
|
Applied
Mathematics – I
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETPH 103
|
Applied
Physics – I
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
ETCH 105
|
Applied
Chemistry – I
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
ETME 107
|
Manufacturing
Process
|
2
|
0
|
2
|
ETCS 109
|
Introduction
to Computers and Auto CAD
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
ETEL 111
|
Communication
Skills – I
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
ETEL 113*
|
Impact
of Science & Technology on Society
|
1
|
0
|
1
|
PRACTICAL/VIVA
VOCE
|
||||
ETPH 151
|
Applied
Physics Lab. – I
|
-
|
2
|
1
|
ETCH 153
|
Applied
Chemistry Lab. – I
|
-
|
2
|
1
|
ETCS 155
|
Introduction
to Auto CAD Office Automation and Web Design
|
-
|
3
|
2
|
ETME 157
|
Workshop
Practice
|
-
|
3
|
2
|
ETME 159
|
Engineering
Graphics Lab.
|
-
|
2
|
1
|
TOTAL
|
14
|
17
|
26
|
ETEL-113*
is NUES
BACHELOR
OF TECHNOLOGY
(B.TECH.)
DEGREE COURSE (Common to all branches)
SECOND SEMESTER EXAMINATION
Code
No.
|
Paper
|
L
|
T/P
|
Credits
|
THEORY PAPERS
|
||||
ETMA 102
|
Applied
Mathematics – II
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETPH 104
|
Applied
Physics – II
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
ETCH 106
|
Applied
Chemistry – II
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
ETCS 108
|
Introduction
to Programming
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
ETME 110
|
Engineering
Mechanics
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
ETEC 112
|
Electrical
Science
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
ETEL 114
|
Communication
Skills – II
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
PRACTICAL/VIVA
VOCE
|
||||
ETPH 152
|
Applied
Physics Lab. – II
|
-
|
2
|
1
|
ETCH 154
|
Applied
Chemistry Lab. – II
|
-
|
2
|
1
|
ETCS 156
|
C
Programming Lab.
|
-
|
2
|
1
|
ETME 158
|
Engineering
Mechanics Lab.
|
-
|
3
|
2
|
ETEC 160
|
Electrical
Science Lab.
|
-
|
2
|
1
|
TOTAL
|
15
|
18
|
28
|
BACHELOR
OF TECHNOLOGY
(Information
Technology)
THIRD SEMESTER EXAMINATION
Code
No.
|
Paper
|
L
|
T/P
|
Credits
|
THEORY PAPERS
|
||||
ETMA 201
|
Applied
Mathematics – III
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 203
|
Analog
Electronics
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETEC 205
|
Circuits and
Systems
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 207
|
Foundations of
Computer Systems
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 209
|
Object
Oriented Programming using C++
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 211
|
Data
Structures
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
PRACTICAL/VIVA
VOCE
|
||||
ETCS 251
|
*Analog
Electronics Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETEC 253
|
*Circuits
& Systems Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 255
|
Object
Oriented Programming using C++ Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETCS 257
|
Data Structure
Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
TOTAL
|
18
|
14
|
28
|
· Some
lab experiments must be performed using any circuit simulation software e.g.
PSPICE.
BACHELOR
OF TECHNOLOGY
(Information
Technology)
FOURTH SEMESTER EXAMINATION
Code
No.
|
Paper
|
L
|
T/P
|
Credits
|
THEORY PAPERS
|
||||
ETCS 202
|
Software
Engineering
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 204
|
Algorithm
Analysis & Design
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETEC 206
|
Digital
Circuits & System – I
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 208
|
Communication
Systems
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 210
|
Computer
Graphics
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 212
|
Operating
Systems
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
PRACTICAL/VIVA
VOCE
|
||||
ETCS 252
|
Software
Engineering Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETCS 254
|
Algorithm
Analysis and Design Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETEC 256
|
*Digital
Circuits & System – I Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETCS 258
|
Computer
Graphics Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
TOTAL
|
18
|
14
|
28
|
*
Some lab experiments must be performed using any circuit simulation software
e.g. PSPICE.
NOTE: 4-6 weeks
training will be held after fourth semester. However, Viva-Voce will be
conducted in the fifth semester.
BACHELOR
OF TECHNOLOGY
(Information
Technology)
FIFTH SEMESTER EXAMINATION
Code
No.
|
Paper
|
L
|
T/P
|
Credits
|
THEORY PAPERS
|
||||
ETEC 301
|
Digital
Circuits & Systems – II
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 303
|
Java
Programming and Website Design
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 305
|
Computer
Architecture
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 307
|
Digital
Communication – I
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 309
|
Database
Management Systems
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETMS 311
|
Organizational
Behaviour
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
PRACTICAL/VIVA
VOCE
|
||||
ETEC 351
|
Digital
Circuits & Systems – II Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 353
|
Java
Programming & Website Design Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 355
|
Digital
Communication – I Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETCS 357
|
Database
Management Systems Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 359
|
#^Practical
Training
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
TOTAL
|
18
|
14
|
29
|
#NUES
^Practical
training was conducted after fourth semester. However, Viva-Voce for evaluation
of
Practical
Training will be conducted in this semester.
BACHELOR
OF TECHNOLOGY
(Information
Technology)
SIXTH SEMESTER EXAMINATION
Code
No.
|
Paper
|
L
|
T/P
|
Credits
|
THEORY PAPERS
|
||||
ETCS 302
|
Microprocessor
Systems
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 304
|
Object
Oriented Software Engineering
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 306
|
Computer
Networks
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 308
|
Digital Signal
Processing
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 310
|
Data
Warehousing & Data Mining
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 312
|
Digital
Communication - II
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
PRACTICAL/VIVA
VOCE
|
||||
ETCS 352
|
Microprocessor
Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETCS 354
|
Object
Oriented Software Engineering Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 356
|
Digital Signal
Processing Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 358
|
Data
Warehousing & Data Mining Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 360
|
Digital
Communication - II Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
TOTAL
|
18
|
16
|
29
|
^Practical
training was conducted after sixth semester. However, Viva-Voce for evaluation
of Practical Training will be conducted in this semester.
BACHELOR
OF TECHNOLOGY
(Information
Technology)
SEVENTH SEMESTER EXAMINATION
Code
No.
|
Paper
|
L
|
T/P
|
Credits
|
THEORY PAPERS
|
||||
ETIT 401
|
Advanced
Computer Networks
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 403
|
Multimedia
Applications
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ELECTIVE
PAPERS (Choose any two)
|
||||
ETCS 405
|
Compiler
Construction
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETEC 407
|
Mobile
Computing
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 409
|
VLSI Design
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETEC 411
|
Digital Image
Processing
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 413
|
Requirements
& Estimation Techniques
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 415
|
Advanced
Computer Architecture
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 417
|
Project
|
-
|
-
|
4
|
PRACTICAL/VIVA
VOCE
|
||||
ETIT 451
|
Advanced
Computer Network Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 453
|
Multimedia
Applications Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 455
|
Practical Lab
(based on Electives)
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 457
|
#Seminar
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 459
|
*Minor Project
|
0
|
8
|
4
|
ETIT 461
|
#^Practical
Training
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
TOTAL
|
12
|
20
|
25
|
#
NON UNIVERSITY EXAMINATION SYSTEM
*The student
will submit a synopsis at the beginning of the semester for approval from the
departmental committee in a specified format. The student will have to present
the progress of the work through seminars and progress reports.
^Practical
training was conducted after sixth semester. However, Viva-Voce for evaluation
of Practical Training will be conducted in this semester.
BACHELOR
OF TECHNOLOGY
(Information
Technology)
EIGHTH SEMESTER EXAMINATION
Code
No.
|
Paper
|
L
|
T/P
|
Credits
|
THEORY PAPERS
|
||||
ETIT 402
|
Mobile
Communication
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETEC 404
|
Embedded
System
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ELECTIVE
PAPERS (Choose any one)
|
||||
ETCS 406
|
Soft Computing
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETCS 408
|
Artificial
Intelligence
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 410
|
E-Commerce
& ERP
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 412
|
Network
Security
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
ETIT 414
|
Software
Testing
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
PRACTICAL/VIVA
VOCE
|
||||
ETEC 452
|
Embedded
System Lab.
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 454
|
Practicals
(based on Electives)
|
0
|
2
|
1
|
ETIT 456
|
*Major Project
|
0
|
14
|
7
|
TOTAL
|
09
|
21
|
21
|
*The
student will submit a synopsis at the beginning of the semester for approval
from the departmental committee in a specified format. The student will have to
present the progress of the work through seminars and progress reports.
NOTE:
1. The
total number of the credits of the B.Tech. (IT) Programme = 214
2. Each student shall be required to appear
for examinations in all courses. However, for the award of the degree a student
shall be required to earn the minimum of 200 credits.
Paper
Code: ETMA-101 L T C
Paper: Applied Mathematics – I 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT I
COMPLEX NUMBERS
AND INFINITE SERIES: De
Moivre’s theorem and roots of complex numbers. Euler’s theorem, Logarithmic
Functions, Circular, Hyperbolic Functions and their Inverses. Convergence and
Divergence of Infinite series, Comparison test d’Alembert’s ratio test. Higher
ratio test, Cauchy’s root test. Alternating series, Lebnitz test, Absolute and
conditioinal convergence. [No.
of Hrs. 10]
UNIT II
CALCULUS OF ONE
VARIABLE: Successive
differentiation. Leibnitz theorem
(without proof) McLaurin’s and Taylor’s expansion of functions, errors and
approximation.
Asymptotes
of Cartesian curves. Curveture of curves in Cartesian, parametric and polar
coordinates, Tracing of curves in Cartesian, parametric and polar coordinates
(like conics, astroid, hypocycloid, Folium of Descartes, Cycloid, Circle,
Cardiode, Lemniscate of Bernoulli, equiangular spiral). Reduction Formulae for
evaluating
Finding area under the curves, Length of
the curves, volume and surface of solids of revolution. [No.
of Hrs. 15]
UNIT III
LINEAR ALGEBRA –
MATERICES: Rank
of matrix, Linear transformations, Hermitian and skeew – Hermitian forms,
Inverse of matrix by elementary operations. Consistency of linear simultaneous
equations, Diagonalisation of a matrix, Eigen values and eigen vectors. Caley –
Hamilton theorem (without proof). [No.
of Hrs. 09]
UNIT IV
ORDINARY
DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS: First order differential equations – exact and
reducible to exact form. Linear differential equations of higher order with
constant coefficients. Solution of simultaneous differential equations.
Variation of parameters, Solution of homogeneous differential equations –
Canchy and Legendre forms. (No.
of Hrs. 10]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. Kresyzig, E., “Advanced Engineering
Mathematics”, John Wiley and Sons. (Latest edition).
2. Jain, R. K. and Iyengar, S. R. K.,
“Advanced Engineering Mathematics”, Narosa, 2003 (2nd Ed.).
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Mitin, V. V.; Polis, M. P. and Romanov,
D. A., “Modern Advanced Mathematics for Engineers”, John Wiley and Sons, 2001.
2. Wylie, R., “Advanced Engineering
Mathematics”, McGraw-Hill, 1995.
3. “Advanced Engineering Mathematics”, Dr.
A. B. Mathur, V. P. Jaggi (Khanna publications)
Paper
Code: ETPH – 103 L T C
Paper: APPLIED PHYSICS – I 2 1 3
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT - I
Interference of
Light: Interference
due to division of wavefront and division of amplitude, Young’s double slit
expt., Interference, Principle of Superposition, Theory of Biprism,
Interference from parallel thin films, wedge shaped films, Newton rings,
Michelson interferometer.
Diffraction: Fresnel Diffraction, Diffraction at a
straight edge, Fraunhoffer diffraction due to N slits, Diffraction grating,
absent spectra, dispersive power of Grating, resolving power of prism and
grating. [No.
of Hrs. 8]
UNIT
- II
Polarization: Introduction,
production of plane polarized light by different methods, Brewster and Malus
Laws. Double refraction, Quarter & half wave plate, Nicol prism, specific
rotation, Laurent’s half shade polarimeter.
Optical
Instruments : Ramdson
& Huygen Eye pieces, Electron microscope.
[No. of Hrs. 8]
UNIT
- III
Laser: Introduction,
temporal and spatial coherence, principle of Laser, stimulated and spontaneous
emission, Einstein’s Coefficients, He-Ne Laser, Ruby Laser, Application of
Lasers.
Fibre Optics: Introduction,
numerical aperture, step index and graded index fibres, attenuation &
dispersion mechanism in optical fibers (Qualitative only), application of
optical fibres, optical communication (block diagram only)
[No. of Hrs. 8]
UNIT
- IV
Mechanics: Central and
non-central forces, Inverse square force, SHM, Damped, undamped and forced
Oscillations.
Special theory
of Relativity: Frame
of reference, Michelson-Morley experiment, basic postulates of special
relativity, Lorentz transformations (space – time coordinates & velocity
only), mass energy relation.
[No. of Hrs. 8]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. A. Ghatak, “Optics”
2. N. Subrahmanyam and Brij Lal, “Optics”
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Jenkins and White, “Fundamentals of
Optics”
2. C. Kittle, “Mechanics”, Berkeley Physics
Course, Vol.- I.
3. A. Beiser, “Concepts of Modern Physics”
Paper Code: ETCH
– 105 L T C
Paper: Applied Chemistry – I 2 1 3
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
- I
Water:
Specifications for water, analysis of water – alkalinity, hardness and its
determination (EDTA method only). Water for domestic use, Water softening
processes – Lime – Soda process, Ion exchange method, boiler feed water, boiler
problems-scale, sludge, priming and foaming, caustic embitterment and corrosion,
their causes and prevention, removal of silica, removal of dissolved gases,
carbonate and phosphate conditioning, colloidal conditioning, calgon treatment,
Numerical problems on alkalinity, hardness, Lime-Soda process and Ion exchange
method, EDTA method. [No.
of Hrs: 08]
UNIT
- II
Fuels: Classification,
combustion and chemical principles involved in it, calorific value: gross and
net calorific values and their determination by bomb calorimeter and Boy’s gas
calorimeter.
Solid Fuels: Proximate and
ultimate analysis of coal and their importance, High and low temperature
carbonisation, Coke: Its manufacture by Otto Hoffman oven.
Liquid Fuels: Conversion of
coal into liquid fuels (Bergius process and Fisher-Tropsch Process) and mechanism,
Petroleum: its chemical composition and fractional distillation, cracking of
heavy oil residues – thermal and catalytic cracking, knocking and chemical
structure, octane number and cetane number and their significance, power
alcohol, Analysis of flue gases by Orsat’s apparatus, Numerical on calorific
value, combustion, proximate and ultimate analysis of coal, flue gas analysis.
[No.
of Hrs: 08]
UNIT
- III
Environmental Pollution and Control: Air Pollution: Types of pollutants, source effects, sink and control of
primary pollutants – CO, Nox, HC, Sox and particulates,
effects of pollutants on man and environment – photochemical smog and acid
rain.
Water Pollution:
Classification
of pollutants, their sources, waste water treatment – domestic and industrial.
Soil Pollution: Composition of
soil, classification and effects of soil pollutants and their control.
Solid Waste
Pollution:
Classification, waste treatment & Disposal methods (Composting, sanitary
landfilling, thermal processes, recycling and reuse).
Hazardous Wastes: Classification
– radioactive, biomedical and chemical, treatment and disposal – physical,
chemical and biological processes. [No.
of Hrs: 08]
UNIT
- IV
Solutions: Ideal and
non-ideal solutions, Raoult’s Law, Distillation of binary solutions, Henry’s
Law, Nernst distribution law, Arrhenius theory and special behaviour of strong
electrolytes.
Corrosion: Types of
corrosion (dry, wet, atmospheric and soil corrosion), theories of corrosion,
protective measures against corrosion. [No.
of Hrs: 08]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. Chemistry in Engineering & Technology
(Vol I & II) (Latest ed.), By J.C. Kuriacose & J. Rajaram
2. Environmental Chemistry & Pollution
Control (Latest ed.), By S.S. Dara
3. Applied Chemistry (Latest ed.), By H.D.
Gesser
Paper Code: ETME
107 L
T C
Paper:
Manufacturing Processes 2 0 2
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
- I
Casting
Processes:
Principles of
metal casting: Pattern materials, types and allowance; Study of moulding, sand
moulding, tools, moulding materials, classification of moulds, core, elements
of gating system, casting defects, description and operation of cupola: special
casting processes e.g. die-casting, permanent mould casting, centrifugal
casting, investment casting.
[No. of
Hrs. 6]
UNIT
- II
Smithy and
Forging:
Basic operation
e.g. upsetting, fullering, flattening, drawing, swaging: tools and appliances:
drop forging, press forging.
Bench Work and Fitting
Fitting, sawing, chipping,
thread cutting (die), tapping; Study of hand tools, Marking and marking tools. [No.
of Hrs. 6]
UNIT
- III
Metal joining:
Welding
principles, classification of welding techniques; Oxyacetylene Gas welding,
equipment and field of application, Arc-welding, metal arc, Carbon arc,
submerged arc and atomic hydrogen welding, Electric resistance welding: spot,
seam, butt, and percussion welding; Flux: composition, properties and function;
Electrodes, Types of joints and edge preparation, Brazing and soldering. [No.
of Hrs. 6]
UNIT
– IV
Sheet Metal Work:
Common
processes, tools and equipments; metals used for sheets, standard specification
for sheets, spinning, bending, embossing and coining. [No. of Hrs. 5]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Manufacturing Process by Raghuvanshi.
1.
Manufacturing Technology by P.N.Rao (TMH publications)
REFERENCE BOOK:
1.
Workshop Technology by Hazra-Chowdhary
2.
Production Engineering by R.K.Jain
3.
Workshop Technology by Chapman
Paper Code: ETCS
109 L T C
Paper:
Introduction to Computer Systems 2 1 3
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT - I
Introduction to
Computer:
Overview of Computer
organization and historical perspective computer applications in various fields
of science and management.
Data representation: Number
systems, character representation codes, Binary, hex, octal codes and their
inter conversions.
Binary
arithmetic, Floating-point arithmetic, signed and unsigned numbers.
[No. of Hrs. 8]
UNIT
- II
Introduction
to OS and Office Automation
Concept of computing,
Introduction to Operating Systems such as DOS, windows 2000/Xp, UNIX, Client
Server Technology, etc. (only brief user level description).
Introduction to
World Processing, Spread Sheet & Presentation software e.g. MS-Word,
MS-Excel, MS-Power Point. [No.
of Hrs. 8]
UNIT - III
Introduction to
Auto CAD
Coordinate System, 2D
drafting: lines, circles, arc, polygon, etc., Editing, 3D, Solid modeling,
Rendering, Use of Auto CAD for engineering drawing practices.
[No.
of Hrs. 8]
UNIT - IV
Web Technologies
Introduction to World Wide Web, Search engines, e-mail, news,
gopher, Audio & Video Conferencing, Internet Protocols: FTP, telnet,
TCP/IP, SMTP, HTTP, Languages used for WEB Technology: HTML, practical examples
using DHTML and Static HTML
[No.
of Hrs. 8]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Rajaraman, “Fundamentals of Computers”,
Prentice Hall of India, 3rd Edition.
2. Mark Middlebrook, “Autocad 2004 for
Dummies”, Pustak Mahel Prakashan, 2000.
3. Vikas Gupta, “Comdex Computer Course
Kit”, Dreamtech Press, 2004.
REFERENCE
BOOKS:
1. Alexis Leon & Mathews Leon,
“Fundamentals of Computer Science & Communication Engineering”, Leon
Techworld, 1998.
2. Omura, “Mastering Autocad 2000 for
Mechanical Eng ineers” BPB Publications, 2nd Edition, 1998.
3. A.S. Tanenbaum, “ Computer Networks”,
Pearson Education India Ltd., 3rd Edition, 2002.
Paper Code:
ETEL-111 L T C
Paper: Communication Skills – I 2 1 3
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT - I
Remedial
Grammar: Errors
of Accidence and syntax with reference to Parts of Speech; Agreement of Subject
and Verb; Tense and Concord; Conditional Clauses; Use of connectives in Complex
and Compound sentences; Question tags and short responses.
[No.
of Hrs: 06]
UNIT - II
Vocabulary and
Usage: Word
Formations (by adding suffixes and prefixes); Technical Word Formation;
Synonyms, Antonyms, Homophones, and Homonyms; One Word Substitution;
Misappropriations; Indianisms; Redundant Words; Phrasal Verb Idioms. [No. of Hrs: 06]
UNIT
- III
Technical
Writing:
(A) Scientific Attitude and Impersonal
Style; Plain Statements, Definitions; Description and Explanations (of objects,
instruments, Processes, Scientific Principles, etc.)
Summarizing and
abstracting; Expressing ideas within a restricted word limit; Paragraph Writing
(Paragraph division, introduction and the conclusion, Variety in sentences and
paragraphs)
Interpretation
and use of charts, graphs and tables in technical writing.
Punctuation
(B) Reading at various speeds (slow, fast,
very fast); reading different kinds of texts for different purpose (e.g. for
relaxation, for information, for discussion at a later stage, etc.); reading
between the lines.
Comprehension
of Unseen Passages [No.
of Hrs: 10]
UNIT - IV
Text: The following
prose pieces from Best Science Writing : Reading and Insights
edited by Robert Gannon prescribed text (Hyderabad: University Press (India)
Limited, 1991).
1. Chapter 2: “After 63 years, Why Are They
Still Testing Einstein?” by C.P. Gilmore
2. Chapter 5: “Star Wars : The Leaky Shield” By Carl Sagan
3. Chapter 10: “Chaos : The Ultimate
Asymmetry” by Arthur Fisher
4. Chapter 11: “Bill Moss, Tentmaker” by
Robert Gannon
5. Chapter 12: “Totality - A Report” by
Michael Rogers
[No.
of Hrs: 10]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. Maison, Margaret M. Examine Your English,
Hyderabad: Orient Longman, 1980
2. Sharma,
R.S. Technical Writing. Delhi: Radha Publication, 1999
3. Sudarsanam, R. Understanding Technical
English. Delhi: Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd., 1992
4. Gannon, Robert, Edt. Best Science Writing:
Readings and Insights. Hyderabad: University Press (India) Limited, 1991.
Paper
Code: ETEL-113 L T C
Paper: Impact of
Science & Technology on Society 1 0 1
*Non
University Examination Scheme (NUES)
There will not be any external examination of the
university. The performance of the candidates should continuously be evaluated
by an internal committee. The committee may conduct viva-voce at the end for
the award of the marks.
Paper Code:
ETPH-151 L P C
Paper: Applied PHYSICS LAB – I 0 2 1
List
of Experiments
(1)
To plot a graph between the distance of the knife-edge from the center of the
gravity and the time period of bar pendulum. From the graph, find
(a)
The acceleration due to gravity
(b) The radius of gyration and the moment of
inertia of the bar about an axis.
(2)
To determine the moment of inertia of a flywheel about its own axis of rotation.
(3)
To determine the value of acceleration due to gravity using koter’s pendulum.
(4)
To determine the frequency of A.C. mains using sonometer and an electromagnet.
(5)
To determine the frequency of electrically maintained turning fork by Melde’s
method.
(6)
To determine the dispersive power of prism using spectrometer and mercury
source.
(7)
To determine the wavelength of sodium light by Newton’s Ring.
(8)
To determine the wavelength of sodium light using diffraction grating.
(9)
To determine the refractive index of a prism using spectrometer.
(10)
To determine the specific rotation of cane sugar solution with the help of
polarimeter.
(11)
To find the wavelength of He-Ne Laser using transmission diffraction grating.
(12)
To determine the numeral aperture (NA) of a Optical Fibre.
(13)
Compute simulation (simple application of Monte Carlo) e.g. Brownian motion,
charging & discharging of capacitor.
Note: Any 8-10 experiments out of the list may be
chosen. Proper error – analysis must be carried out with all the experiments.
Paper Code: ETCH – 153 L P C
Paper: Applied Chemistry Lab – I 0 2 1
List of
Experiments
1. To determine the percentage composition
of a mixture of Sodium hydroxide and Sodium Chloride.
2. To determine the amount of Sodium
Carbonate in the given mixture of Sodium Carbonate and Sodium Bicarbonate.
3. Determine the amount of Oxalic Acid and
Sulphuric Acid/Hydrochloric Acid in one litre of solution given standard Sodium
Hydroxide and Potassium Permanganate.
4. To determine the Carbonate, Bicarbonate
and Chloride contents in irrigation water.
5. To determine the no. of water molecules
of crystallization in Mohr’s salt provided standard dichromate solution using
internal indicator.
6. Determine the amount of Cu in the copper
ore solution provided hypo solution.
7. Iodometric Titration of K2Cr2O7
v/s Na2S2O3 to determine the percentage purity
of K2Cr2O7 sample.
8. Argentometric titration one each of
Vohlard’s method and of Mohr’s method.
9. Complexometric Titrations.
10. Detrmination of dissolved Oxygen in given
sample if water.
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Vogel’s Textbook of Quantitative Chemical
Analysis (Latest ed.), Revised by G.H. Jeffery, J. Bassett, J. Mendham &
R.C. Denney
2. Applied Chemistry: Theory and Practice (Latest
ed.), By O.P. Vermani & A.K. Narula
Paper Code: ETCS
155 L P C
Paper:
Introduction to AutoCAD, Office Automation and Web Design 0 3 2
List
of Experiments
1. Use Microsoft-Word to perform the
following:
a)
Send out invitation letter to several people using mail merge facility.
b)
Create tabular data in word and insert graph to represent data.
c)
Create a Macro and use it in an application.
2. Use Microsoft-Excel to perform the
following:
a)
Create a Macro and use it in an application
b)
Enter the name and marks of 10 students and perform various mathematical
functions on it.
c)
Enter first quarter performance of five companies and create a pie chart
showing there shareholders in the market.
3. Use Microsoft Power-Point to perform the
following
a)
Create a slide show on any subject of your choice using minimum five slides.
b)
Create slideshow in operating sound.
c)
Create an animation using group, ungroup, order, textbox image insert etc.
4. Use HTML to design a Home page for IGIT
using all the features of HTML like buttons, frames, marquee check boxes etc..
5. Use AutoCAD to do the following:
a)
Use of Drawing & Editing Properties: Modify Object Properties and a know
how of layers, colors and prototype drawing.
b)
Draw line (Poly line, multi line, linear line), polygon, ellipse, circle, arc,
rectangle and use cross hatching, regions, boundary, spline, donut, fillet and
extent commands.
c)
Dimensioning commands, styles, control scale factors, drawing set-up, grip
editing objects snaps, utility commands.
d)
Projection of points, lines and solids,
e)
Section of Solids
f)
Development and Intersection of Surface
g)
Isomeric Projections
Create a WEB
page containing hyperlinks to the pages having information about Science and
Technology.
Paper
Code: ETME-157 L P C
Paper: Workshop
Practice 0 3 2
UNIT - I
Materials: Spectrography
method for finding composition of materials.
Wood
Working Shop: Making
of various joints, Pattern making.
UNIT - II
Foundary Shop: Bench moulding
with single piece pattern and two piece pattern.
Floor moulding –
Making of bend pipe mould etc.
Machine moulding
– Making of mould using Match-plate pattern.
Core
making- Making and baking of dry sand cores for placing in horizontal, vertical
and hanging positions in the mould cavity.
Fitting Shop: Learning use of
fitting hand tools, marking tools, marking gauge.
Exercises:
Jobs made out of MS Flats, making saw – cut filling V-cut taper at the corners,
circular cut, fitting square in square, triangle in square.
UNIT - III
Welding Shop: Electric arc
welding, Edge preparations, Exercises making of various joints. Bead formation
in horizontal, vertical and overhead positions.
Gas Welding: Oxy-Acetylene
welding and cutting of ferrous metals.
Soldering: Dip soldering.
Brazing:
With
Oxy-Acetylene gas.
UNIT - IV
Sheet Metal
Shop:
Learning use of sheet-metal tools, Exercises: Making jobs out of GI sheet
metal. Cylindrical, Conical and Prismatic shapes.
Project
Shop: Extrusion
of soft metals, Plastic coating of copper wires, Plastic moulding.
Paper Code: ETME-159 L P C
Paper Code: ETME-159 L P C
Paper:
Engineering Graphics Lab 0 2 1
UNIT
- I
General: Importance,
Significance and scope of engineering drawing, Lettering, Dimensioning, Scales,
Sense of proportioning, Different types of projections, Orthographic
Projection, B.I.S. Specifications,
Projections of
Point and Lines:
Introduction of planes of projection, Reference and auxiliary planes,
projections of points and Lines in different quadrants, traces, inclinations,
and true lengths of the lines, projections on Auxiliary planes, shortest
distance, intersecting and non-intersecting lines.
UNIT - II
Planes other
than the Reference Planes: Introduction of other planes (perpendicular and
oblique), their traces, inclinations etc., Projections of points and lines
lying in the planes, conversion of oblique plane into auxiliary Plane and
solution of related problems.
Projections of
Plane Figures:
Different cases of plane figures (of different shapes) making different angles
with one or both reference planes and lines lying in the plane figures making
different given angles (with one of both reference planes). Obtaining true shape of the plane figure by
projection.
UNIT
- III
Projection of
Solids:
Simple cases when solid is placed in different positions, Axis faces and lines
lying in the faces of the solid making given angles.
CADD
UNIT
- IV
Isometric
Projection
Nomography : Basic Concepts
and use.
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Engineering drawing by N.D.Bhatt
(Charotar Publications).
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Engineering Drawing by S.C.Sharma &
Navin Kumar (Galgotia Publications)
2. Engineering Drawing by Venugopalan.
3. Engineering Drawing by P.S.Gill
Paper Code:
ETMA-102 L T C
Paper:
Applied Mathematics - II 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT - I
CALCULUS
OF SEVERAL VARIABLES:
Partial
differentiation, ordinary derivatives of first and second order in terms of
partial derivaties, Euler’s theorem on homogeneous functions, change of
variables, Taylor’s theorem of two variables and its application to approximate
errors. Maxima and Minima of two variables, Langranges method of undermined
multipliers and Jacobians.
[No.
of Hrs. 12]
UNIT - II
FUNCTIONS
OF COMPLEX VARIABLES:
Derivatives
of complex functions, Analytic functions, Cauchy-Riemann equations, Harmonic
Conjugates, Conformal mapping, Standard mappings – linear, square, inverse and
bilinear. Complex line integral, Cauchy’s integral theorem, Cauchy’s integral
formula, Zeros and Singularities / Taylor series, Laurents series, Calculation
of residues. Residue theorem, Evaluation and real integrals. [No.
of Hrs. 12]
Unit - III
VECTOR
CALCULUS:
Scalar
and Vector point functions, Gradient, Divergence, Curl with geometrical
physical interpretations, Directional: derivatives, Properties.
Line
integrals and application to work done, Green’s Lemma, Surface integrals and
Volume integrals, Stoke’s theorem and Gauss divergence theorem (both without
proof).
[No.
of Hrs. 10]
UNIT - IV
LAPLACE
TRANSFORMATION:
Existence
condition, Laplace transform of standard functions, Properties, Inverse Laplace
transform of functions using partial fractions, Convolution and coinvolution
theorem. Solving linear differential equations using Laplace transform. Unit
step function, Impulse function and Periodic function and their transforms. [No. of
Hrs. 10]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. E. Kresyzig, “Advanced Engineering
Mathematics”, John Wiley and Sons. (Latest edition).
2. R. K. Jain and S. R. K. Iyengar,
“Advanced Engineering Mathematics”, Narosa, 2003 (2nd Ed.).
3. Dr. A. B. Mathur, V. P. Jaggi, “Advanced
Engineering Mathematics”, Khanna Publishers.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. V. V. Mitin, M. P. Polis and D. A. Romanov,
“Modern Advanced Mathematics for Engineers”, John Wiley and Sons, 2001.
2. R. Wylie, “Advanced Engineering
Mathematics”, McGraw-Hill, 1995.
Paper Code:
ETPH-104
L T C
Paper: APPLIED PHYSICS – II 2 1 3
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT - I
Electromagnetic Theory (EMT)
Motion of Charged Particles
in crossed electric & magnetic fields, Velocity Selector & Magnetic
focussing, Gauss law, continuity equation, inconsistency in Ampere’s Law,
Maxwell’s equations (differential and integral forms), poynting vector, Poynting
Theorem (Statement only), propagation of plane electromagnetic waves in
conducting and non-conducting medium. [No.
of Hrs. 8]
UNIT - II
Quantum Mechanics & Statistical Physics:
De-Broglie Hypothesis,
Davisson Germer experiment, wave function and its properties, expectation
value, Wave Packet, Uncertainity principle. Schrodinger Equation for free
Particle, Time Dependent Schrodinger Equation, Particle in a box (1-D), Single
step Barrier, Tunneling effect.
Qualitative
Features of Maxwell Bollzman, Bose-Einstein and Fermi-Dirac statistics
distribution, functions & their comparison (no derivation) [No. of Hrs. 8]
UNIT - III
Solid State
Physics
Formation of
energy bands in metals, semiconductors and insulators; intrinsic and extrinsic
semiconductors, Fermi energy levels for doped, undoped semiconductors and pn
junction; Tunnel diode, Zener diode.
Superconductivity: Meissner
Effect, Type I and Type II Superconductors, BCS theory (Qualitative only),
London’s equation, properties of superconductors & applications. [No.
of Hrs. 8]
UNIT - IV
X-Rays: production and properties, Crystalline and
Anorphous solids (Brief) Bragg’s Law, Applications.
Ultrasonics: Introduction,
Production of Ultrasonics (Magentostriction and piezoelectric methods),
engineering applications. [No.
of Hrs. 8]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. A. BEISER, “Concept of Modern Physics”
2. Rajam, “Atomic Physics”
3. Greiner, “Quantum Physics”
4. Griffth, “Introduction to
Electrodynamics”
REFERENCE
BOOKS:
1. Jordan & Balmain, “Electromagnetic
waves and Radiating Systems”
2. Kittel, “Solid State Physics”
3. R.L. Singhal, “Solid State Physics”
4. Schiff, “Quantum Mechanics”
Paper Code: ETCH – 106 L T C
Paper: Applied Chemistry – II 2 1 3
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
- I
Chemical
Bonding:
Potential Energy
curve for H2 molecule, co-ordinate bond, Werner’s theory, effective
atomic numbers, isomerism in co-ordinate compounds. Hydrogen bonding, Vander
Waal’s forces, hybridization including d-orbitals, Valence shell Electron
Repulsion Theory (VSEPR). Discussion of structures of IF3, SnCl2,
CO32-, Molecular Orbital theory, Linear combination of
atomic orbitals (LCAO) method. Structures of simple heteronuclear diatomic
molecules such as CO, NO, HF, HCl. [No. of Hrs: 08]
UNIT
- II
Gaseous State: Gas laws and
Kinetic theory of gases, Distribution of molecular velocities, Mean free path,
Real gases – non ideal behaviour, causes of deviation from ideal behaviour,
Vander Waal’s equation. Liquefaction of gases. Numericals based on above
topics.
Thermochemistry:
Hess’s
Law, Heat of a reaction, Effect of temperature on heat of reaction at constant
pressure (Kirchoff’s eq.), heat of dilution, heat of hydration, heat of
neutralization and heat of combustion, Flame temperature. [No.
of Hrs: 08]
UNIT
- III
Catalysis: Criteria for
catalysis : Homogeneous catalysis – acid-base, Enzymatic catalysis, Catalysis
by metal salts, Heterogeneous catalysis, concepts of promoters, inhibitors and
poisoning, physiosorption, chemisorption, surface area.
The Phase Rule: Definitions of
various terms, Gibb’s Phase rule, Application of phase rule to one component
system – the water system and Sulphur system. Two component system : Lead –
Silver, FeCl3 – water, Na2SO4 – water. [No.
of Hrs: 08]
UNIT
- IV
Polymers and
Composites: Functionality,
Degree of polymerization, concept of molecular weight (number average, weight
average & numerical based on them), Linear, branched and cross-linked
polymers, Tacticity of polymers, Homo and Copolymers (Classification based on
repeat unit), Structure – property relationship of polymers. Industrial
applications of important thermoplastic, thermosetting polymers, Elastomers,
Natural Polymers.
Conducting
Polymers : Properties and applications.
Composites :
Classification, Fibre and particle reinforced composites. [No. of Hrs: 08]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. J.D. Lee, “Inorganic Chemistry”, Latest
ed.
2. J.C. Kuriacose & J. Rajaram,
“Chemistry in Engineering & Technology, Vol I & II, Latest ed.
3. Puri, Sharma & Pathania, “Principles
of Physical Chemistry”, Latest ed.
4. V.R. Gowarikar, N.V. Viswanathan &
Jayadev Sreedha, “Polymer Science”, Latest ed.
Paper Code: ETCS
108 L T C
Paper:
Introduction to Programming 2 1 3
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
- I
Introduction to
Programming: Concept
of algorithms, Flow Charts, Data Flow diagrams etc., Introduction to the
Editing tools such as vi or MS-VC editors, Concepts of the finite storage, bits
bytes, kilo, mega and gigabytes.
Concepts of character representation, Number Systems & Binary
Arithmetic. [No.
of Hrs. 8]
UNIT
- II
Programming
using C: The
emphasis should be more on programming techniques rather than the language
itself. The C Programming language is
being chosen mainly because of the availability of the compilers, books and
other reference materials.
Example of some
simple C program. Concept of variables, program statements and function calls
from the library (Printf for example)
C data types,
int, char, float etc., C expressions, arithmetic operation, relational and
logic operations, C assignment statements, extension of assignment of the
operations. C primitive input output
using getchar and putchar, exposure to the scanf and printf functions, C
Statements, conditional executing using if, else. Optionally switch and break statements may be
mentioned.
[No.
of Hrs. 8]
UNIT - III
Iterations
and Subprograms: Concept
of loops, example of loops in C using for, while and do-while. Optionally continue may be mentioned.
One dimensional
arrays and example of iterative programs using arrays, 2-d arrays Use in matrix
computations.
Concept of
Sub-programming, functions Example of functions. Argument passing mainly for the simple
variables. [No.
of Hrs. 8]
UNIT - IV
Pointers
and Strings: Pointers,
relationship between arrays and pointers Argument passing using pointers Array
of pointers. Passing arrays as
arguments.
Strings and C
string library.
Structure and
Unions. Defining C structures, passing
strings as arguments Programming examples. [No.
of Hrs. 8]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Yashwant Kanetkar, “Let us C”, BPB
Publications, 2nd Edition, 2001.
2. Herbert Schildt, “C:The complete
reference”, Osbourne Mcgraw Hill, 4th Edition, 2002.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Raja Raman, “Computer Programming in C”,
Prentice Hall of India, 1995.
2. Kernighan & Ritchie, “C Programming
Language”, The (Ansi C Version), PHI, 2nd Edition.
Paper Code: ETME
110 L T C
Paper:
Engineering Mechanics 2 1 3
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT - I
Force system: Free body
diagram, Eqilibrium equations and applications.
Friction: Static and
Kinetic friction, laws of dry friction, co-efficient of friction, angle of
friction, angle of repose, cone of friction, friction lock, friction of flat
pivot and collared thrust bearings, Belt drive- derivation of equation.
T1/T2
=emq
and its application
[No.
of Hrs. 8]
UNIT
- II
Structure: Plane truss,
perfect and imperfect truss, assumption in the truss analysis, analysis of
perfect plane trusses by the method of joints, method of section.
Distributed
Force:
Determination of center of gravity, center of mass and centroid by direct
integration and by the method of composite bodies, mass moment of inertia and
area moment of inertia by direct integration and composite bodies method,
radius of gyration, parallel axis theorem, Pappus theorems, polar moment of
inertia. [No. of
Hrs. 8]
UNIT - III
Kinematics of
Particles:
Rectilinear motion, plane curvilinear motion-rectangular coordinates, normal
and tangential component.
Kinetics of
Particles:
Equation of motion, rectilinear motion and curvilinear motion, work energy
equation, conservation of energy, impulse and momentum conservation of
momentum, impact of bodies, co-efficient of restitution, loss of energy during
impact.
[No.
of Hrs. 8]
UNIT
- IV
Kinematics of
Rigid Bodies: Concept of rigid body, type of rigid body
motion, absolute motion, introduction to relative velocity, relative acceleration (Corioli’s component
excluded) and instantaneous center of velocity, Velocity and acceleration
polygons for four bar mechanism and single slider mechanism.
Kinetics of
Rigid Bodies:
Equation of motion, translatory motion and fixed axis rotation, application of work energy
principles to rigid bodies conservation of energy.
Shear force and
bending Moment Diagram. [No.
of Hrs. 8]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. A.K.Tayal, “Engg Mechanics”, Umesh
Publications
2. Sadhu Singh, “Engg Mechanics”, Khanna
Publishers
REFERENCE
BOOKS:
1. Irving H. Shames, “Engg Mechanics”, PHI
publications
2. U.C.Jindal, “Engg Mechanics”, Galgotia
Publications
3. Beer & Johnston, “Engg Mechanics”,
TMH
4. Subramanyam, “Engg Mechanics”
Paper
Code: ETEC-112 L T C
Paper: ELECTRICAL SCIENCE 2 1 3
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT - I
Circuit
Analysis
Ohm’s
Law, KCL, KVL Mesh and Nodal Analysis, Circuit parameters, energy storage
aspects, Superposition, Thevenin’s, Norton’s, Reciprocity, Maximum Power
Transfer Theorem, Millman’s Theorem, Star-Delta Transformation. Application of
theorem to the Analysis of dc circuits. [No.
of Hrs. 8]
UNIT - II
A.C.Circuits
R-L, R-C, R-L-C circuits
(series and parallel), Time Constant, Phasor representation, Response of R-L,
R-C and R-L-C circuit to soinusoidal input Resonance-series and parallel R-L-C
Circuits, Q-factor, Bandwidth. [No.
of Hrs. 7]
UNIT - III
Measuring
Instruments
Principles, Construction and
application of moving coil, moving iron, dynamometer type, induction type
instruments, extension of range of ammeter, voltmeter (shunt and multiplier),
Two-wattmeter method, for the measurement of power, Cathol-ray Oscilloscope and
Applications. [No.
of Hrs. 7]
UNIT - IV
Transformers
Construction
and Working principles and phaser diagrams of Single-phase Transformer, Emf
equation, Equivalent circuit, Regulation and efficiency, and Auto transformer.
Rotating
Machines
Construction and
working principles of dc motor and generator and its characteristics
Applications of DC machines
Construction and
working principles of 3-j-Induction motor, Torque-speed characteristics, and
Industrial applications. [No.
of Hrs. 10]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. P.C.
Sen “Principles of Electric Machines and Power Electronics”, Wiley Eastern
2003.
2. Vincent
DEL TORO “Electrical Engineering Fundamental’s Prentice Hall India”, Ed 2002.
Paper
Code: ETEL-114 L T C
Paper:
Communication Skills – II 2 1 3
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
– I
Basic
Concepts in Communication: Communication as sharing; context of communication;
the speaker/writer and the listener/reader; medium of communication; barriers
to communication; accuracy, brevity, clarity and appropriateness in
communication.
[No. of Hrs: 05]
UNIT - II
Writing
Skills: Types
of writings (Expository, Descriptive, Analytic, Argumentative, Narrative etc)
and their main features. Resumes and CV’s and Cover letters. Memos and Notices.
Basics of Formal Reports. [No.
of Hrs: 08]
UNIT
- III
Verbal,
Non-Verbal and Listening Skills: Elementary Phonetics (Speech Mechanism,
The Description of Speech Sounds, The Phoneme, the syllable; Prosodic Features,
Word Accent, Features of Connected Speech); Paralanguage and Body language; and
Classroom Presentations, Hearing and Listening; Essentials of Good Listening: Achieving ability to comprehend material
delivered at relatively fast speed. [No.
of Hrs: 08]
UNIT - IV
Group
Discussion:
Use of persuasive strategies including some rhetorical devices for emphasizing
(for instance; being polite and firm; handling questions and taking in
criticism of self; turn-taking strategies and effective intervention; use of
body language).
[No. of Hrs: 09]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. R. K. Bansal, and J. B. Harrison, “Spoken
English For India: A Manual of Speech and Phonetics”, Hyderabad: Orient
Longman, 1983.
2. Lewis, Hedwig. “Body Language: A Guide
For Professionals. New Delhi: Response Books”, A division of Sage Publication,
2000
3. Sides, H. Charles, “How to Write &
Present Technical Information”, Cambridge: CUP, 1999.
4. Forsyth, Sandy & Lesley Hutchison,
“Practical Composition”, Edinburgh
Oliver & Boyd, 1981
Paper Code:
ETPH-152 L P C
Paper: Applied
Physics Lab – II 0 2 1
List
of Experiments
1.
To determine the value of e/m of electron by J.J. Thomson method.
2.
To determine unknown resistance of a wire by Carey Foster’s Bridge.
3.
To determine the internal resistance of Leclanche cell using potentiometer.
4.
To study the charging and discharging of a capacitor and to find out the time
constant.
5.
To find the thermal conductivity of a poor conductor by Lee’s disk method.
6.
To study the thermo emf using thermocouple and resistance using Pt. Resistance
thermometer.
7.
To determine the velocity of ultrasound waves using an ultrasonic spectrometer
in a given liquid (Kerosene Oil)
8.
To measure the frequency of a sine-wave voltage obtain from signal generator
and to obtain lissajous pattern on the CRO screen by feeding two sine wave
voltage from two signal generator.
9.
To determine the temp. coefficient of resistance of platinum by Callender &
Griffith’s Bridge.
10.
To study Hall effect.
11.
To determine plank’s constant.
Note:
Atleast 8
experiments must be carried out.
Proper error –
analysis must be carried out with all the experiments.
Paper Code: ETCH
– 154 L P C
Paper: Applied Chemistry Lab – II 0 2 1
List of
Experiments
1. Determine the heat of hydration of CuSO4.5H2O/FeSO4.7H2O.
2. Determine the heat of neutralization of strong
Acid (say H2SO4/HCl) with strong base (NaOH).
3. Determine the heat of neutralization of Weak
Acid with strong base.
4. Determine the molecular weight of a substance
by Rast Method.
5. Determine the reaction rate constant for 1st
order reaction.
6. Determine the surface tension of a liquid
using drop weight method.
7. To determine the viscosity of the given liquid
(density to be determined).
8. Preparation of a Polymer.
9. To determine the cell constant of a
conductivity cell.
10. Titration of strong acid/strong base
conduct metrically.
TEXT BOOKS:
1. B.D. Khosla, A. Gulati & V.C. Garg,
“Practical Physical Chemistry”, Latest ed
2. S.K. Bhasin and Sudha Rani, “Laboratory
Manual on Engineering Chemistry”, Latest ed.
Paper
Code: ETCS 156 L P C
Paper: C
Programming Lab. 0 2 1
List
of Experiments
1. Write a program to produce ASCII
equivalent of given number
2. Write a program to find divisor or
factorial of a given number.
3. Write a program to evaluate the following
algebraic expressions after reading necessary
values from the user
v (ax+b)/(ax-b)
v 2.5 log x-cos
30+|x^2-y^2|+sqrt
(2xy)
v (x^5+10x^4+8x^3+4x+2
4. Write
a program to find sum of a geometric series
5. Write
a program to cipher a string
6. Write a program to check whether a given
string follows English capitalization rules
7. Write
a program to find sum of the following series
1+
½ + 1/3 +________+1/20
8. Write a program to search whether a given
substring exist in an input string or not and then delete this string from input string.
9. Write a recursive program for tower of
Hanoi problem
10. The fibonacci sequence of numbers is 1,1,2,3,5,8…….
Based on the recurrence relation F(n)=F(n-1)+F(n-2)for
n>2
Write
a recursive program to print the first m Fibonacci number
11. Write a menu driven program for matrices to
do the following operation depending on whether the operation requires one or
two matrices
a)
Addition of two matrices
b)
Subtraction of two matrices
c)
Finding upper and lower triangular matrices
d)
Trace of a matrix
e)
Transpose of a matrix
f)
Check of matrix symmetry
g)
Product of two matrices.
12. Write a program that takes two operands and
one operator from the user perform the operation and then print the answer
13. Write a program to print the following
outputs:
1
1
2 2 2 2
3 3 3 3 3 3
4 4 4 4 4
4 4 4
5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
5
14. Write functions to add, subtract, multiply
and divide two complex numbers (x+iy) and (a+ib) Also write the main program.
15. Write a menu driven program for searching
an sorting with following options:-
a) Searching (1) Linear searching
(2) Binary
searching
b) Sorting (1) Insersection sort (2) Selection sorting
16. Write a program to copy one file to other,
use command line arguments.
17. Write a program to mask some bit of a
number (using bit operations)
18. An array of record contains information of
managers and workers of a company. Print all the data of managers and workers
in separate files.
Paper Code: ETME
158 L P C
Paper:
Engineering Mechanics Lab 0 3 2
List
of Experiments
1. To verify the law of Force Polygon
2. To verify the law of Moments using Parallel
Force apparatus. (simply supported type)
3.
To determine the co-efficient of friction between wood and various surface
(like Leather, Wood, Aluminum) on an inclined plane.
4.
To find the forces in the members of Jib Crane.
5.
To determine the mechanical advantage, Velocity ratio and efficiency of a screw
jack.
6.
To determine the mechanical advantage, Velocity ratio and Mechanical efficiency
of the Wheel and Axle
7.
To determine the MA, VR, h of Worm Wheel ( 2-start)
8.
Verification of force transmitted by members of given truss.
9.
To verify the law of moments using Bell crank lever
10.
To find CG and moment of Inertia of an irregular body using Computation
method.
Paper Code: ETEC
160 L P C
Paper: Electrical Science Lab 0 2 1
List of
Experiments
1. Verification of Thevenin’s theorem
2. Verification of Superposition theorem
3. Phasor Diagram and Power factor of LCR
circuit.
4. Measurement
of Power and Power factor in single phase Load using three ammeters/voltmeters.
5. Calibration of Energy
Meter/Wattmeter/Voltmeter/Ammeter
6. Two
wattmeter method of measuring power in three phase circuit (resistive load
only)
7. Load test on Single Phase Transformer,
Regulation and Efficiency of Transformer
8. Short Circuit/Open Circuit tests on
Single Phase transformer
9. Measure
the armature and field resistance of a D.C. Machine
10. Connection and starting of a Three Phase
Induction Motor using direct on line or Star Delta Starter.
11. Starting and Speed Control of a D.C. shunt
motor
12. Resonance
Code No.: ETMA 201 L T C
Paper: Applied
Mathematics – III 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
– I
Laplace
Transformation: Laplace Transformation, Inverse Laplace transformation
Convolution Theorem, application to linear differential equations with constant
coefficients, Unit step function, impulse functions / periodic functions. [No. of
Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– II
Fourier
Series: Fourier Series, Euler’s formulae, even and odd functions, having
arbitrary periods, half range expansion, Harmonic Analysis.
Fourier
Transforms: Fourier transform, Sine and Cosine transforms, Application to
differential equations. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
Special
Functions: Beta and Gamma functions, Bessels functions of first kind,
Recurrence relations, modified Bessel functions of first kind, Ber and Be
functions, Legendre Polynomial, Rodrigue’s formula, orthogonal expansion of
function. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
Partial
Differential Equation: Formation of first and second order linear equations,
Laplace, Wave and heat conduction equation, initial and boundary value
problems. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. E. Kresyig, “Advanced Engineering Mathematics”,
5th Edition, John Wiley & Sons, 1999.
REFERENCE
BOOKS:
1. B.S. Grewal, “Elementary Engineering
Mathematics”, 34th Ed., 1998.
2. H.K. Dass, “Advanced Engineering
Mathematics”, S. Chand & Company, 9th Revised Edition, 2001.
3. Shanti Narayan, “Integral
Calculus”, S. Chand & Company, 1999
4. Shanti Narayan, “Differential Caluculs”,
S.Chand & Company, 1998
Code No.: ETCS 203 L T C
Paper: Analog
Electronics 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
– I
Semiconductors
Diodes and Rectifiers: Introduction, general
characteristics, energy levels, extrinsic materials n & p type,
ideal diode, basic construction and characteristics, DC & AC resistance,
equivalent circuits, drift & diffusion currents, transition & diffusion
capacitance, reverse recovery times, temperature effects, diode specifications,
different types of diodes (zener, varator, schottky, power tunnel, photodiode
& LED), Half wave & full wave rectifiers
[No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– II
Bipolar
junction transistor: Introduction, Transistor, Construction, transistor
operations, BJT characteristics, load line, operation point, leakage currents,
saturation and cut off mode of operations Eber-mall’s model.
Bias
stabilization: Need for stabilization, fixed Bias, emitter bias, self bias,
bias stability with resfpect of variations in Ico, Vbe
& b,
stabilization factors, thermal stability. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
Small
Signal Amplifiers: CB, CE, CC configurations, hybrid model for transistor at
low frequencies, RC coupled amplifiers.
Field
Effect Transistors: Classification & characteristics, operating point,
biasing, enhancement & depletion type MOSFETS. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
Operational
Amplifier: Ideal OPAMP, OPAMP stages, OPAMP Parameters, equivalent circuit,
Ideal voltage transfer curve, open loop OPAMP configuration, closed loop OPAMP
configuration, OPAMP applications: comparator, current sources, rectifiers,
first and second order filters, summer, integrator, differentiators, Clipper,
clamper, waveform generators, instrumentation amplifier, log, antilog
amplifier. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. S. Salivahanam, N. Suresh Kumar, A.
Wallavaraj, “Electronic Devices and Circuits”, TMH, 2001.
REFERENCE
BOOKS:
1. S.G. Burns, P.R. Bond, “Principles of
Electronic Circuits, 2nd Ed., Galgotia, 1999.
2. M.S. Roden, G.L. Carpenter &
W.R.Wieseraman, “Electronic Design”, Shroff Publisher & Distributors, 2003
3.. Millman & Halkias Electronic Devices & Circuits , TMH(ISE), 1998.
4. S. Salivahanan & other, Electronic
Devices & Circuits, TMH, 1999.
5. Malvino, Electronic Principles, TMH,
1998.
6. Jacob Millman, Micro Electronics, TMH,
1998.
Code No.: ETEC 205 L T C
Paper: Circuits
and Systems 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
Unit-I
Introduction
to continuous and discrete signals, their classification and types, periodic
waveforms and signal synthesis, LTI systems and their properties; system
modeling in terms of differential equations and transient response of R, L, C
circuits for impulse, step, ramp, sinusoidal and exponential signals.
No.
of Hours: 11
Unit-II
Laplace
Transform: Review of properties and applications of Laplace transform of
complex waveform and transient response of R, L, C series, parallel,
series-parallel circuits for all kinds of excitations. [No.
of Hours: 11
Unit-III
Graph theory and
its applications, two port networks – z, y, ABCD, h, g, inverse ABCD parameters
their interconversion, interconnection of two 2-port networks, concept of
transform impedance, Network theorems: Reciprocity, Superposition, Thevenin,
Norton, Millman, Maximum Power Transfer and Tellegan
No.
of Hours: 11
Unit
IV
Elements of
Network Synthesis: Foster’s I and II, Cauer’s I& II forms,
Synthesis of LC, RC, RL Networks
No.
of Hours: 11
Text Books:
1. Valkenburg, “ Network analysis” PHI, 2000.
2. D.
R. Choudhary, “Networks and Systems” New Age International, 1999.
Reference
Books
1. Bhise, Chadda,
Kulshreshtha, “ Engineering network analysis and filter design” Umesh publication,
2000.
2. Kuo, “Network analysis and synthesis”
John Weily and Sons, 2nd Edition.
Code No.: ETCS 207 L T C
Paper:
Foundations of Computer Systems 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Formal Logic: Statement,
Symbolic Representation and Tautologies, Quantifiers, Predicator and validity,
Normal form. Propositional Logic, Predicate Logic, Logic Programming and Proof
of correctness.
Proof, Relation
and Analysis of Algorithm: Techniques for theorem proving: Direct Proof, Proof
by Contra position, Proof by exhausting cares and proof by contradiction, principle
of mathematical induction, principle of complete induction. Recursive
definitions, solution methods for linear, first-order recurrence relations with
constant coefficients, Analysis of Algorithms involving recurrence
relations-recursive binary search, quick sort, solution method for a
divide-and-conquer recurrence relation. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Sets and
Combinations: Sets,
Subtracts, powersets, binary and unary operations on a set, set operations/set
identities, fundamental country principles, principle of inclusion, exclusion
and pigeonhole principle, permutation and combination, pascal’s triangles,
binominal theorem, representation of discrete structures.
Relation/function
and matrices:
Rotation, properties of binary rotation, operation on binary rotation,
closures, partial ordering, equivalence relation, Function properties of
function, composition of function, inverse, binary and n-ary operations,
characteristics for, Permutation function, composition of cycles, Boolean
matrices, Boolean matrices multiplication. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
Lattices &
Boolean Algebra: Lattices:
definition, sublattices, direct product, homomorphism Boolean algebra:
definition, properties, isomorphic structures (in particulars, structures with
binary operations) subalgebra, direct
product and homo-morphism, Boolean function, Boolean expression, representation
& minimization of Boolean function.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
Graph Theory: Terminology,
isomorphic graphs, Euler’s formula
(proof) four color problem (without proof) and the chromatic number of a graph,
five color theorem. Trees terminology, directed graphs, Computer representation
of graphs, Warshall’s, algorithms, Decision Trees, Euler path & hamiltonian circuits,
Shortest path & minimal spanning trees, Depth-first and breadth first
searchs, trees associated with DFS & BFS). Connected components, in order,
preorder & post order trees traversal algorithms.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. Keneth H. Rosen, “Discrete
Mathematics and Its Applications”, TMH, 1999.
2. C.L. Liu, “Elements of Discrete
Mathematics”, TMH, 2000.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. Kolman, Busby & Ross, “Discrete
Mathematical Structures”, PHI, 1996.
2. Narsingh Deo, “Graph Theory With
Application to Engineering and Computer Science”, PHI, 2004.
3. J. P. Trembly & P. Manohar, “Discrete
Mathematical Structures with Applications to Computer Science”, McGraw Hill,
1997.
4. Vinay Kumar, “Discrete Mathematics”, BPB
Publications, 1998.
Code No.: ETIT 209 L T C
Paper: Object
Oriented Programming using C++ 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
– I
Introduction: Introducing
Object-Oriented Approach related to other paradigms (functional, data
decomposition), Characteristics of Object-Oriented Languages.
Basic terms and
ideas:
Abstraction, Encapsulation, Information hiding, Inheritance, Polymorphism,
Review of C, Difference between C and C++, cin, cout, new, delete operators. [No.
of Hrs: 11]
UNIT
– II
Classes and
Objects: Abstract
data types, Object & classes, attributes, methods, C++ class declaration,
State identity and behavior of an object, Constructors and destructors,
instantiation of objects, Default parameter value, Copy Constructor, Static
Class Data, Constant and Classes, C++ garbage collection, dynamic memory
allocation.
[No.
of Hrs. 11]
UNIT
– III
Inheritance and
Polymorphism: Inheritance,
Types of Inheritance, Class hierarchy, derivation – public, private & protected,
Aggregation, composition vs classification hierarchies, Polymorphism,
Type of Polymorphism – Compile time and runtime, Method polymorphism,
Polymorphism by parameter, Operator overloading, Parametric polymorphism,
Generic function – template function, function name overloading, Overriding
inheritance methods [No.
of Hrs: 11]
UNIT
– IV
Files and
Exception Handling: Persistant
objects, Streams and files, Namespaces, Exception handling, Generic Classes
Standard
Template Library: Standard
Template Library, Overview of Standard Template Library, Containers,
Algorithms, Iterators, Other STL Elements, The Container Classes, General
Theory of Operation, Vectors. [No.
of Hrs: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. A.R.Venugopal, Rajkumar, T. Ravishanker
“Mastering C++”, TMH, 1997.
2. R. Lafore, “Object Oriented Programming
using C++”, BPB Publications, 2004.
3. Schildt Herbert, “C++: The Complete
Reference”, Wiley DreamTech, 2005.
REFERENCE
BOOKS:
1. D . Parasons, “Object Oriented
Programming with C++”, BPB Publication,
1999.
2. Steven C. Lawlor, “The Art of Programming
Computer Science with C++”, Vikas Publication, 2002.
3. Yashwant Kanethkar, “Object Oriented
Programming using C++”, BPB, 2004.
Code No.: ETCS 211 L T C
Paper: Data
Structures 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Fundamentals
of algorithm analysis: Big ‘O’ notations, Time and space complexity of
algorithms., Elementary data structures and their applications
Arrays: ordered lists,
representation of arrays, sparse matrices, linked lists: singly and doubly linked
lists, stacks, queues, multiples stacks and queues, Applications: polynomial
arithmetic, infix, postfix and prefix arithmetic expression conversion and
evaluations. [No.
of Hrs: 12]
UNIT – II
Trees: Binary trees: Definition, traversal, threaded binary
tree, Counting Binary Tree.
Graphs: Representation, traversal, connected components,
shortest path and transitive closure, topological sort, activity network,
critical path, path enumeration. Dijkstra’s Algorithm, Floyd Warshall’s
Algorithm, Minimum Spanning Tree Definitions.
[No.
of Hrs: 11]
UNIT – III
Searching & Sorting: Binary Search Tree, Insertion & Deletion, AVL Trees, Hash function,
Hash table, Internal sort: Radixsort, Insertion sort, Exchange sort, Selection
sort, Quicksort, Shellsort, Mergesort, Heaport, External sort: K-way mergesort,
balanced mergesort, polyphase mergesort [No.
of Hrs: 11]
UNIT – IV
Files: Files, Queries
and sequential organization; Cylinder surface indexing, Hashed Indexed, Tree
Indexing, B-Trees, Trie Indexing, Sequential file organizational, random file
organization, Hashed file organization, Inverted files, cellular partitions. [No. of Hrs: 10]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. E. Horowitz and S. Sahani,
“Fundamentals of Data Structures”, Galgotia Booksource Pvt. Ltd, 1999.
2. R. L. Kruse, B. P. Leung, C. L. Tondo,
“Data Structures and program design in C”, PHI, 2000.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. Schaum’s outline series, “Data
Structure”, TMH, 2002
2. Y. Langsam et. al., “Data Structures
using C and C++”, PHI, 1999.
3. Yashwant Kanetkar, “Data Structure
through C”, BPB, 2005.
Code No. : ETCS
251 L P C
Paper: Analog
Electronics Lab. 0 2 1
Practical
will be based on Analog Electronics. Some lab experiments must be performed
using any circuit simulation software e.g. PSPICE.
Code No. : ETEC
253 L P C
Paper: Circuits
& Systems Lab. 0 2 1
Practical
will be based on Circuits & Systems. Some lab experiments must be performed
using any circuit simulation software e.g. PSPICE.
Code No. : ETIT
255 L P C
Paper: Object
Oriented Programming using C++ Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Object Oriented Programming using C++.
Code No. : ETCS
257 L P C
Paper: Data
Structure Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Data Structure.
Code No.: ETCS 202 L T C
Paper: Software
Engineering 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Introduction: Software Crisis,
Software Processes & Characteristics, Software life cycle models,
Waterfall, Prototype, Evolutionary and Spiral Models
Software
Requirements analysis & specifications: Requirement engineering,
requirement elicitation techniques like FAST, QFD & Use case approach,
requirements analysis using DFD, Data dictionaries & ER Diagrams,
Requirements documentation, Nature of SRS, Characteristics & organization
of SRS. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Software Project
Planning: Size
Estimation like lines of Code & Function Count, Cost Estimation Models,
COCOMO, COCOMO-II, Putnam resource allocation model, Risk Management.
Software Design:
Cohesion
& Coupling, Classification of Cohesiveness & Coupling, Function
Oriented Design, Object Oriented Design [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT - III
Software
Metrics: Software
measurements: What & Why, Token Count, Halstead Software Science Measures,
Design Metrics, Data Structure Metrics, Information Flow Metrics
Software
Reliability: Importance,
Hardware Reliability & Software Reliability, Failure and Faults,
Reliability Models, Basic Model, Logarithmic Poisson Model, Software Quality
Models, CMM & ISO 9001. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT - IV
Software
Testing: Testing
process, Design of test cases, functional testing: Boundary value analysis,
Equivalence class testing, Decision table testing, Cause effect graphing,
Structural testing, Path Testing, Data flow and mutation testing, Unit Testing,
Integration and System Testing, Debugging, Alpha & Beta Testing, Testing Tools
& Standards.
Software
Maintenance: Management
of Maintenance, Maintenance Process, Maintenance Models, Regression Testing,
Reverse Engineering, Software Re-engineering, Configuration Management,
Documentation. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. K. K. Aggarwal & Yogesh Singh,
“Software Engineering”, 2nd Ed., New Age International, 2005.
2. R. S. Pressman, “Software Engineering – A
practitioner’s approach”, 5th Ed., McGraw Hill Int. Ed., 2001.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Stephen R. Schach, “Classical &
Object Oriented Software Engineering”, IRWIN, TMH, 1996.
2. James Peter, W. Pedrycz, “Software
Engineering: An Engineering Approach”, John Wiley & Sons, 2004.
3. I. Sommerville, “Software Engineering”,
Addison Wesley, 2004
4. K. Chandrasehakhar, “Software Engineering
& Quality Assurance”, BPB, 2005.
Code No.: ETCS 204 L T C
Paper: Algorithm
Analysis & Design 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
– I
Preliminaries: Review of growth
of functions, Recurrences: The substitution method, The iteration method, The
master method, Data Structures for Disjoint Sets.
Divide and
Conquer Approach: Merge
Sort, Quick sort, Medians and Order statistics, Strassen’s algorithm for Matrix
Multiplications. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– II
Dynamic
Programming: Elements
of Dynamic Programming, Matrix Chain Multiplication, Longest common subsequence
and optimal binary search trees problems.
Greedy
Algorithms: Elements
of Greedy strategy, An activity selection problem, Huffman Codes, A task
scheduling problem. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– III
Graph
Algorithms: Representation
of Graphs, Breadth First Search, Depth First Search, Topological Sort, Strongly
Connected Components, Algorithm for Kruskal’s and Prim’s for finding Minimum
cost Spanning Trees, Dijkstra’s and Bellman Fort Algorithm for finding Single
source shortest paths. All pair shortest paths and matrix multiplication, Floyd
– Warshall algorithm for all pair shortest paths. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– IV
String
matching: The
naïve String Matching algorithm, The Rabin-Karp Algorithm, String Matching with
finite automata, The Knuth-Morris Pratt algorithm.
NP-Complete
Problem: Polynomial-time
verification, NP-Completeness and Reducibility, NP-Completeness Proof,
NP-Complete problems. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. T. H. Cormen, C. E. Leiserson, R. L.
Rivest, Clifford Stein, “Introduction to Algorithms”, 2nd Ed., PHI,
2004.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. A.
V. Aho, J. E. Hopcroft, J. D. Ullman, “The Design and Analysis of Computer
Algorithms”, Addition Wesley, 1998.
2. Ellis
Horowitz and Sartaz Sahani, “Computer Algorithms”, Galgotia Publications, 1999.
3. D. E. Knuth, “The Art of Computer
Programming”, 2nd Ed., Addison Wesley, 1998
Code No.: ETEC 206 L T C
Paper: Digital
Circuits & System – I 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Analog &
Digital signals, AND, OR, NOT, NAND, NOR & XOR gates, Boolean algebra.
Standard representation of Logical functions, K-map representation and
simplification of logical functions, Don’t care conditions, X-OR & X-NOR
simplification of K-maps. Combinational circuits: Multiplexers, demultiplexers,
Decoders & Encoders, Adders & Subtractor, Code Converters, comparators,
decoder/drivers for display devices
[No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– II
Flip Flops: S-R, J-K, D
& T Flip-flops, excitation table of a flip-flop, race around condition.
Sequential circuits: Shift registers, Ripple counter, Design of Synchronous
counters and sequence detectors, 555 Timer and its application as mono-stable
and astable multi-vibrator. Nyquist Sampling Theorem [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
- III
A/D and D/A converters:
Binary-weighted DAC, R-2R Ladder type networks, Successive-approximation ADC,
Linear-ramp ADC, Dual-slope ADC Bipolar-Transistor Characteristics, RTL and DTL
circuits, TTL, ECL and CMOS Logic families. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT - IV
Logic
Implementations using ROM, PAL & PLA., Semiconductor Memories: Memory
organization & operation, classification and characteristics of memories,
RAM, ROM and content addressable memory. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1.
R.P. Jain, “Modern Digital
Electronics”, TMH, 3rd Ed, 2004.
2. Morris Mano, “Digital Design”, PHI, 2nd
Ed, 2002.
REFERENCE
BOOKS:
1. R. J. Tocci, “Digital Systems”, PHI, 2000
2. Malvino and Leach, “Digital principles
and applications”, TMH, 2000.
3. I. J. Nagrath, “Electronics, Analog &
Digital”, PHI, 1999.
4. J. M. Yarbrough, “Digital
Logic-Application and Design”, PWS Publishing, 1999.
5. B. S. Nai, “ Digital Electronics and
Logic Design”, PHI, 2000.
6. Balabanian and Carlson, “Digital Logic
Design Principles”, Wiley Pub., 2000.
Code No.: ETIT 208 L T C
Paper:
Communication Systems 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT - I
Analog
Modulation:
Amplitude Modulation, Generation & Demodulation of AM DSBSC waves, Coherent
Detection of DSBSC Signal, Quardrature-Carrier Multiplexing, Generation of SSB
waves, Demodulation of SSB waves.
Pulse Analog
Modulation: Sampling
theorem, Sampling of Low Pass and band pass signals, Aliasing, Aperture effect,
PAM, PWM and PPM generation and modulation, TDM, Cross talk, Spectral analysis
of PAM, PWM and PPM Waves, S/N ratio for different pulse modulation. [No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT – II
Angle
Modulation:
Frequency & phase Modulation, narrow & wide-band, FM, BW of FM waves,
Generation & demodulation of FM waves, S/N ratio, Comparison of AM, FM
& PM.
Random Process:
Probability Random variable, Probability density, mean, moments, transformation
of random variables, Stationary Process, mean, autocorrelation and covariance
functions, ergodicity, power spectral density, response of linear systems to
random signals, Gaussian distribution, central limit theorem. [No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT – III
Pulse Digital
Modulation: Pulse
Code Modulation signal to quantization noise ratio, Companding, Probability of
error for PCM in AWGN Channel, DPCM, DM and ADM modulators and demodulators,
Prediction Filter, line coding, Inter symbol Interference.
Digital
transmission through career modulation
Amplitude,
Frequency and phase shift keying, Differential phase shift keying, CPFSK, MSK
OPSK and QAM modulation & detection, probability of error calculation,
Matched Filter.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT - IV
Introduction to
Information Theory:
Measurement of Information, mutual information Shannon’s Theorem Sowzce coding,
channel coding and channel capacity theorem. Huffman code, Lempel – ziv code. [No.
of Hrs.: 09]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1.
Taub & Schilling, “Principles of
Communication Systems”, TMH, 1998.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. J. C. Hancock,“An Introduction to the
Principles of Communication Theory”, TMH, 1998.
2. Simon Haykins, “Communication Systems”,
John Wiley, 1998.
Code No.: ETCS 210 L T C
Paper: Computer
Graphics 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
– I
Transformation,
Projections, and Clipping Algorithms: Bresenham’s Line Drawing Algorithm,
Homogeneous Coordinate System for 2D and 3D, Various 2D, 3D Transformation
matrices (Translation, Scaling, Rotation, Shear), Rotation about an arbitrary
point (2D), Rotation about an arbitrary axis (3D), Computing location of V.P,
Clipping Algorithms, Sutherland-Cohen Clipping Algorithm. [No. of Hrs. : 11]
UNIT
– II
Curves and
Surfaces: Bresenham’s
Circle Drawing Algorithm, Bezier Curves, 4 point and 5 point Bezier curves
using Bernstein Polynomials, Conditions for smoothly joining curve segments,
Bezier bi-cubic surface patch, B-Spline Curves, Cubic B-Spline curves using
uniform knot vectors, Testing for first and second order continuities [No. of Hrs: 11]
UNIT
– III
Projection and
Solid Modelling: Parallel
Projection, Oblique Projection on xy plane, Isometric Projection, Perspective
Projection, One Vanishing Point (V.P.) projection from a point on z axis,
Generation of 2 V.P. Projection, Isometric Projection, Perspective, Projection,
one vanishing Pint (VP), projection from 0 point on z axis, Generation of 2 VP
Projector & Projections, Solid Modelling. [No.
of Hrs: 11]
UNIT
– IV
Shading and
Hidden Surface Removal: Shading, Illumination Model for diffused Reflection,
Effect of ambient lighting, distances, Specular Reflection Model, Computing
Reflection Vector, Curved Surfaces, Polygonal Approximations, Gourard Shading,
Phong Model, Hidden Surface Removal, Back Face Detection, Depth Buffer
(Z-Buffer, A-Buffer) Method, Scan Line Method, Depth Sorting Method, Area
Subdivision Method.
[No.
of Hrs: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Foley et. al., “Computer Graphics
Principles & practice”, Addison Wesley, 1999.
2. David F. Rogers, “Procedural Elements for
Computer Graphics”, McGraw Hill Book Company, 1985.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. D. Rogers and J. Adams, “Mathematical
Elements for Computer Graphics”, MacGraw-Hill International Edition, 1989.
2. D. Hearn and P. Baker, “Computer
Graphics”, Prentice Hall, 1986.
3. R. Plastock and G. Kalley, “Theory and
Problems of Computer Graphics”, Schaum’s Series, McGraw Hill, 1986.
Code No.: ETCS 212 L T C
Paper: Operating
Systems 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
– I
Introduction,
What is an Operating System, Simple Batch Systems, Multiprogrammed Batches
systems, Time-Sharing Systems, Personal-computer systems, Parallel systems,
Distributed Systems, Real-Time Systems, Memory Management: Background, Logical
versus Physical Address space, swapping, Contiguous allocation, Paging,
Segmentation, Segmentation with Paging, Virtual Memory: Demand Paging, Page
Replacement, Page-replacement Algorithms, Performance of Demand Paging,
Allocation of Frames, Thrashing, Other Considerations, Demand Segmentation [No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT – II
Processes:
Process Concept, Process Scheduling, Operation on Processes, Cooperating
Processes, Interprocess Communication
CPU Scheduling:
Basic Concepts, Scheduling Criteria, Scheduling Algorithms, Multiple-Processor
Scheduling, Real-Time Scheduling, Algorithm Evaluation, Process
Synchronization: Background, The Critical-Section Problem, Synchronization
Hardware, Semaphores, Classical Problems of Synchronization, Critical Regions,
Monitors, Synchronization in Solaris 2, Atomic Transactions [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– III
Deadlocks:
System Model, Deadlock Characterization, Methods for Handling Deadlocks,
Deadlock Prevention, Deadlock Avoidance, Deadlock Detection, Recovery from
Deadlock, Combined Approach to Deadlock Handling, Device Management: Techniques
for Device Management, Dedicated Devices, Shared Devices, Virtual Devices;
Device Characteristics-Hardware Consideration, Input or Output Devices, Storage
Devices, Channels and Control Units, Independent Device Operation, Buffering,
Multiple Paths, Block Multiplexing, Device Allocation Consideration,
Secondary-Storage Structure: Disk Structure, Disk Scheduling, Disk Management,
Swap-Space Management, Disk Reliability, Stable-Storage Implementation
[No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– IV
Information
Management: Introduction, A Simple File System, General Model of a File System,
Symbolic File System, Basic File System, Access Control Verification, Logical
File System, Physical File System File-System Interface: File Concept, Access
Methods, Directory Structure, Protection, Consistency Semantics File-System
Implementation: File-System Structure, Allocation Methods, Free-Space
Management, Directory Implementation, Efficiency and Performance, Recovery. [No.
of Hrs.: 10]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. Silbersachatz and Galvin, “Operating
System Concepts”, Pearson, 5th Ed., 2001
2. Dr. R. C. Joshi, “Operating Systems”,
Wiley Dreamtech, 2005.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. Tannenbaum, “Operating Systems”, PHI, 4th
Edition, 2000
2. E. Madnick, J. Donovan, “Operating Systems”,
Tata McGraw Hill, 2001
Code No. : ETCS 252 L P C
Code No. : ETCS 252 L P C
Paper: Software
Engineering Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Software Engineering.
Code No. : ETCS
254 L P C
Paper: Algorithm
Analysis & Design Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Algorithm Analysis & Design.
Code No. : ETEC
256 L P C
Paper: Digital
Circuits & Systems - I Lab. 0 2 1
Practical
will be based on Digital Circuits & Systems – I. Some lab experiments must
be performed using any circuit simulation software e.g. PSPICE.
Code No. : ETCS
258 L P C
Paper: Computer
Graphics Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Computer Graphics.
Code No.: ETEC 301 L T C
Paper: Digital
Circuits & Systems – II 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Specification of
combinational systems using VHDL, Introduction to VHDL, Basic Language element
of VHDL, Behavioral Modeling, Signal Assignment Statement, Structural modeling,
Component Declaration, component instantiation, package declaration, package
body, Design of standard combinational modules, Generate Statement [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Description and design of
sequential circuits using VHDL, Flip-flop, Register and Counter, Design of a
Serial Adder with Accumulator, State Graph for Control Network, design of a
Binary Multiplier, Multiplication of a Signed Binary Number [No. of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT – III
Subprogram Overloading,
Operator Overloading, Signatures, Generics and Configuration, Functions and
Procedure, Model simulation, Writing a test bench, Dumping results into a text
file, reading vectors from a text file,
state machine modeling [No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT – IV
Overview of FPGA
and CPLD. Study of internal architecture of xilinx’s vertex series of devices
and altera’s cyclone processor. [No.
of Hrs.: 09]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. J. Bhaskar, “ A VHDL Primer”, Addison
Wesley, 1999.
2. C. H. Roth, “Digital System Design using
VHDL”, PWS Publishing, 2003.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. M.
Ercegovac, T. Lang and L.J. Moreno, ”Introduction to Digital Systems”,
Wiley,2000
2. J.F. Wakerly, “Digital Design-Principles
and Practices”, PHL, 2000.
3. Douglas Perry, “VHDL”, MGH, 2000.
4. Michae
John Sebastian Smith, “Application-Specific Integrated Circuits”,
Addison-Wesley, 2000.
5. Z. Navabi, “ VHDL-Analysis and Modeling
of Digital Systems”, MGH, 2000.
Code No.: ETIT 303 L T C
Paper: Java
Programming and Website Design 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question
No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire syllabus. This question should
have objective or short answer type questions. It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart
from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of four units as per the
syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However, student may be asked
to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question should be of 12.5
marks.
UNIT
– I
Introduction
to Java: Importance and features of Java, Keywords, constants, variables and
Data Types, Operators and Expressions, Decision Making, Branching and Looping:
if..else, switch,?: operator, while, do, for statements, labeled loops, jump
statements: break, cotnue return. Introducing classes, objects and methods:
defining a class, adding variables and methods, creating objects, constructors,
class inheritance, Arrays and String: Creating an array, one and two
dimensional arrays, string array and methods, Classes: String and String Buffer
classes, Wrapper classes: Basics types, using super, Multilevel hierarchy
abstract and final classes, Object class, Packages and interfaces, Access
protection, Extending Interfaces, packages. [No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT
– II
Exception
Handling: Fundamentals exception types, uncaught exceptions, throw, throw,
final, built in exception, creating your own exceptions, Multithreaded
Programming: Fundamentals, Java thread model: priorities, synchronization,
messaging, thread classes, Run able interface, inter thread Communication,
suspending, resuming and stopping threads. Input/Output Programming: Basics,
Streams, Byte and Character Stream, predefined streams, Reading and writing
from console and files. Using Standard Java Packages (lang, util, io, net).
Networking: Basics, networking classes and interfaces, using java.net package,
doing TCP/IP and Data-gram Programming [No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT
– III
Event Handling:
Different Mechanism, the Delegation Event Model, Event Classes, Event Listener
Interfaces, Adapter and Inner Classes, Working with windows, Graphics and Text,
using AWT controls, Layout managers and menus, handling Image, animation, sound
and video, Java Applet. Beans: Introduction to Java Beans and Swings, Servlets[No.
of Hrs.: 10]
UNIT
– IV
Website
Designing: Overview of Internet and Intranet Services, Sending and Receiving
Mails, HTML Tags, Creating Tables, Check Boxes, Text Books, Frames, Graphical
and animation techniques, Static & Dynamic Web Pages, Guidelines for a good
website design, DHTML, ASP, Javascript [No.
of Hrs.: 10]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. Patrick
Naughton and Herbertz Schildt, “Java-2 The Complete Reference”, 1999, TMH
2. Rick Dranell, “HTML 4 unleashed”,
Techmedia Publication, 2004.
3. Shelley Powers, “Dynamic Web Publishing”,
2nd Ed., Techmedia, 1998.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. E. Balaguruswamy, “Programming with Java:
A Primer”, TMH, 1998.
2. Horstmann, “Computing Concepts with Java
2 Essentials”, John Wiley, 2004.
3. Decker & Hirshfield, “Programming
Java: A introduction to programming using JAVA”, Vikas Publication, 2000.
4. Tmy Gaddies, “Starting out with Java”,
Wiley Dreamtech, 2005.
5. Holzner, “HTML Blackbook”, Wiley
Dreamtech, 2005.
Code No.: ETCS 305 L T C
Paper: Computer
Architecture 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Introduction and
overview:
Review of digital components, Evolution
of computers.
Register
Transfer and Microoperation: Register transfer language, register
transfer, bus and memory transfer, arithmetic microoperations, logic
microoperations, shift microoperations.
Basic Computer
Organization and Design: Instruction codes, computer registers, computer
instructions, timing & control, instruction cycle, memory reference
instructions, input-output and interrupts, design of basic computer, design of
accumulator logic. [No. of Hrs:
11]
UNIT
– II
Microprogrammed
Control Unit:
Control memory, address sequencing.
Central Processing
Unit: Introduction, general register organization, stack
organization, instruction formats, addressing modes.
Pipeline and vector
processing Parallel Processing, pipelining, arithmetic pipeline, RISC Pipeline,
Vector Processing, Array Processors. [No. of Hrs: 11]
UNIT – III
Computer
Arithmetic:
Introduction, addition and subtraction, multiplication algorithms, division
algorithms, floating point arithmetic operation, decimal arithmetic unit,
decimal arithmetic operations.
Input-Output
Organization: Peripheral devices,
input-output interface, asynchronous data transfer, modes of data transfer,
priority interrupt, direct memory access, input-output processor. [No. of Hrs: 11]
UNIT – IV
Memory
organization:
Memory hierarchy, main memory, auxiliary memory, associative memory, cache
memory, virtual memory, memory management hardware.
Multiprocessors:
Characteristics of multiprocessor, Interconnection Structure, Interprocessor
Communication & Synchronization [No.
of Hrs: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. M Mano, “Computer System and Architecture”, PHI,
1993.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. Malvino, “Digital Computer Electronics:
An Introduction to Microcomputers”, McGraw Hill, 1993.
2. J. P. Hayes, “Computer Architecture and
Organization”, McGraw Hill, 1998.
3. W. Stallings, “Computer Organization
& Architecture”, PHI, 2001.
4. Dandamudi, “Fundamental of Computer
Organization & Design”, Wiley Dreamtech, 2005.
Code No.: ETIT 307 L T C
Paper: Digital
Communication – I 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Analog-to-Digital
Conversion: Sampling theorem, Pulse-Amplitude Modulation, Channel bandwidth for
PAM signal, Natural sampling, Flat top sampling, Quantization of signals,
Quantization error [No.
of Hrs.: 09]
UNIT – II
Pulse-code
modulation (PCM), Electrical representation of binary digits, The PCM system,
Companding, Multiplexing PCM signals, Differential PCM, Delta modulation,
Adaptive delta modulation, Vocoders, Channel Vocoder, Linear Predictive coder. [No. of Hrs.: 10]
UNIT – III
Digital
Modulation Techniques: Binary Phase-Shift Keying (BPSK), Differential
Phase-Shift Keying, Differentially-Encoded PSK (DEPSK), Quadrature Phase-Shift
Keying (QPSK), Quadrature Amplitude Shift Keying (QASK), Binary Frequency-Shift
Keying (BFSK), Similarity of BPSK and BFSK, M-ary FSK, Minimum Shift Keying
(MSK).[No. of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT – IV
Data
Transmission: A base band signal receiver, Probability of error, The Optimum
Filter, Matched Filter, Probability of error in Matched filter, Coherent
reception, Coherent reception of PSK and FSK, Non-Coherent reception of FSK,
PSK and QPSK, Calculation of error probability of BPSK and BFSK, Error
probability for QPSK] Bit-by-bit encoding versus Symbol-by-Symbol encoding,
Relationship between Bit error rate and Symbol Error rate and comparison of
modulation systems. [No.
of Hrs.: 13]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Taub and Schiling, “Principles of
Communication Systems”, TMH, IInd Edition, 1999.
2. S. Haykin, “Digital Communication”,
Wiley, 2000.
3. S. Haykin, “Analog and Digital
Communication”, Wiley, 1998.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. T M Gover, J M Thomos, “Elements of Information Theory”,
Wiley, 1999.
2. J G Proakis, “ Digital Communications”, Mc Graw Hill, 2001.
Code No.: ETCS 309 L T C
Paper: Database
Management Systems 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Basic
Concepts and Conceptual Database Design: Database administrator & Database
Users, Characteristics of the Database, Database Systems, Concepts and
Architecture, Data Models, Schemes & Instances, DBMS Architecture &
Data Independence, Database Languages & Interfaces, Overview of
Hierarchical, Network & Relational Data Base Management Systems, Data
Modelling Using The Entity-Relationship Model – Entities, Attributes and
Relationships, Cardinality of Relationships, Strong and Weak Entity Sets,
Generalization, Specialization, and Aggregation, Translating your ER Model into
Relational Model
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Relational
Model, Languages & Systems: Relational Data Model & Relational Algebra,
Relational Model Concepts, Relational Model Constraints, Relational Algebra,
SQL – A Relational Database Language, Data Definition in SQL, View and Queries
in SQL, Specifying Constraints and Indexes in SQL, Practicing SQL commands
using ORACLE.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
Relational
Data Base Design and Oracle Architecture: Functional Dependencies &
Normalization for Relational Databases, Functional Dependencies, Normal Forms
Based on Primary Keys, (1NF, 2NF, 3NF & BCNF), Lossless Join and Dependency
Preserving Decomposition, Oracle 8 Architecture, Database Storage, Oracle Software
Structures, Shared Database Access Mechanism, Database Protection. [No. of
Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
Transaction
Management: Transaction Concept and State, Implementation of Atomicity and
Durability, Concurrent Executions, Serializability, Recoverability,
Implementation of Isolation, Concurrency Control Techniques, Lock-Based
Protocols, Timestamp-based Protocols, Deadlock Handling, Recovery System,
Failure Classification, Storage Structure, Recovery and Atomicity, Log-based
Recovery, Shadow Paging, Recovery with Concurrent Transactions, Buffer
Management, Indexing, Hashing and Query Processing: Query Processing, Overview,
Measures of Query Cost, Selection Operation, Sorting, Join Operation, Other
Operations, Evaluation of Expressions, Concepts of Object Oriented Database
Management Systems, Distributed Data Base Management Systems.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. Korth, Silberschatz, “Database System
Concepts”, 4th Ed., TMH, 2003.
2. Steve Bobrowski, “Oracle 8 Architecture”,
TMH, 2000
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. C. J. Date, “An Introduction to Database
Systems”, 7th Ed., Narosa Publishing, 2004
2. Elmsari
and Navathe, “Fundamentals of Database Systmes”, 4th Ed., A. Wesley,
2004
3. J. D. Ullman, “Principles of Database
Systems”, 2nd Ed., Galgotia Publications, 1999.
Code No.: ETMS 311 L T C
Paper:
Organizational Behaviour 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Meaning &
Nature of Management, Management Systems and Processes, Managerial Skills,
Tasks & Responsibilities of a Professional Manager.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Planning Types
and Process, Management by Objectives, Decision-Making Models, Organizational
context of decisions, Problem solving techniques and processes, Controlling:
Process and Techniques [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
Organizational
Climate, Culture and Managerial ethos, Organisational structure & Design,
Managerial Communication.
[No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
Individual
Determinants of organizational, Behaviours: Perceptions, Learning, Personality,
Attitudes & Values, Motivation, Job Anxiety & Stress, Analysing,
Interpersonal relations, Group Dynamics, Management of Organizational
Conflicts, Management of Change, Leadership Styles & Influence. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Stephen P. Robbins, David & Decenzo,
“Fundamentals of Management”, 3rd Edition, Pearson Education, 2002.
2. Stoner, et. al., “Management”, 6th
Edition, PHI, 2002.
3. J. S. Chandan, “Organisational
Behaviour”, Vikas Publishing House, 2004.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. Joseph W. Weiss, “Organisational Behaviour
& Change, Managing Diversrity, Cross-Cultural Dynamics & Ethics”, 2nd
Edition, Vikas Publishing House, 2003
2. Richard Pettinger, “Introduction to
Management”, 3rd Edition, Palgrave McMillan, 2002.
3. Udai Pareek, “Understanding
Organisational Behaviour”, 1st Edition, Oxford University Press,
2004.
4. Fred Luthans, “Organisational Behaviour,”
9th Edition, McGraw Hill International Edition, 2004.
Code No. : ETEC
351 L P C
Paper: Digital
Circuits & Systems – II Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Digital Circuits & Systems – II.
Code No. : ETIT
353 L P C
Paper: Java
Programming & Website Design Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Java Programming & Website Design.
Code No. : ETIT
355 L P C
Paper: Digital
Communication – I Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Digital Communication - I.
Code No. : ETCS
357 L P C
Paper: Database
Management Systems Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Database Management System.
Code No. : ETIT
359 L P C
Paper:
*Practical Training 0 0 1
*NUES
Practical
training conducted after fourth semester will be evaluated in the fifth
Semester based on Viva-Voce.
Code
No.: ETCS 302 L T C
Paper:
Microprocessor Systems 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Computer
Number Systems, Codes, and Digital Devices: Computer Number Systems and Codes,
Microprocessor Evolution and Types, the 8086 microprocessor family-overview,
8086 internal architecture, introduction to programming the 8086, addressing
modes of 8086.
8086
Family Assembly Language Programming: Program Development Steps, Constructing
the machine codes for 8086 instructions, writing programs for use with an
assembler, assembly language program development tools [No. of Hrs.:
11]
UNIT – II
Implementing
Standard Program Structures in 8086 Assembly Language: Simple Sequence
Programs, Jumps, Flags, and Conditional Jumps, If-Then, if-then-else, and
multiple if-then-else programs, while-do programs, while-do programs,
repeat-until programs, instruction timing and delay loops
Strings,
Procedures, and macros: the 8086 string instructions, writing and using
procedures, writing and using assembler macros
8086 Instruction
Descriptions and Assembler Directives [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
8086
System Connections, Timing, and Troubleshooting: A abasic 8086 microcomputer
System, An example Minimum-mode System, the SDK-86, Troubleshooting a simple
8086-based microcomputer, Timing Diagrams
8086
Interrupts and Interrupt Applications: 8086 interrupts and Interrupt Responses,
Hardware Interrupt Applications [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
Interfacing 8086
with 8255, 8254, 8259, 8253, 8251, 8259, 8279.
Brief
Introduction to Architecture of 80186, 80286, 80386, 80486, 8087 and Pentium
architecture.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. D.
V. Hall, “Microprocessors and Interfacing”, TMH, 2nd Edition, 1999
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. Peter
Able, “IBM PC Assembly language programming”, PHI, 1994.
2. James. L. Antonaks, “An Introduction to
the Intel Family of Microprocessors”, Addison Wesley, 1999.
3. Liu Gibson, “Microprocessor Systems: The
8086/8088 family Architecture, Programming & Design”, PHI, 1999.
Code
No.: ETCS 304 L T C
Paper: Object
Oriented Software Engineering 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Introduction
to Software Engineering: Software Engineering Development, Software Life Cycle
Models, Comparison of various models
Requirement
Elicitation: Introduction to Object Oriented Methodology, Overview of
Requirements Elicitation, Requirements Model-Action & Use cases,
Requirements Elicitation Activities, Managing Requirements Elicitation. [No. of Hrs.:
11]
UNIT – II
Architecture:
Introduction, System development is model building, model architecture,
requirements model, analysis model, the design model, the implementation model,
test model
Analysis:
Introduction, the requirements model, the analysis model
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
Construction:
Introduction, the design model, block design, working with construction
Testing:
introduction, on testing, unit testing, integration testing, system testing,
the testing process [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
Modelling
with UML: Basic Building Blocks of UML, A Conceptual Model of UML, Basic
Structural Modeling, UML Diagrams.
Case Studies [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. Ivar Jacobson, “Object Oriented Software
Engineering”, Pearson, 2004.
2. Grady
Booch, James Runbaugh, Ivar Jacobson, “The UML User Guide”, Pearson, 2004.
3. Wendy
Boggs,Boggs,Michael Boggs “Mastering UML with Rational Rose”, BPB
Publication, 2003.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. Stephen R. Scach, “Classical & Object
Oriented Software Engineering with UML and Java: McGraw Hill, 1999.
2. Richard C. Lee, William M. Tepfenhard,
“UML and C++, A Practical guide to object-oriented Development”, Pearson
Education, 2002.
Code
No.: ETIT 306 L T C
Paper: Computer
Networks 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Uses of Computer
Networks, Network Architecture, Reference Model (ISO-OSI, TCP/IP-Overview, IP
Address Classes, Subneting), Domain Name Registration & Registrars
The Physical
Layer: Theoretical basis for data communication, transmission media-Magnetic Media,
Twisted Pair, Baseband Coaxial Cable, Broadband Coaxial Cable, Fibre Cable,
Structured Cabling, Cable Mounting, Cable Testing, Wireless transmission, the
telephone system, narrowband ISDN, broadband ISDN and ATM. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
The Data Link
Layer: Data link layer design issues, error detection and correction, data link
protocols, sliding window protocols, Examples of Data Link Protocols. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT - III
The Medium
Access Sublayer: The channel allocation problem, multiple access protocols,
IEEE standard 802 for LANS and MANS, high-speed LANs, satellite networks,
Network devices-repeaters, hubs, switches and bridges. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
The Network
Layer: Network layer design issues, routing algorithms, congestion control
algorithm, internetworking, the network layer in the internet, the network
layer in ATM networks. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. A. S. Tananbaum, “Computer Networks”, 3rd
Ed, PHI, 1999.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. U. Black, “Computer Networks-Protocols,
Standards and Interfaces”, PHI, 1996.
2. W. Stallings, “Computer Communication
Networks”, PHI, 1999.
3. Laura Chappell (ed), “Introduction to
Cisco Router Configuration”, Techmedia, 1999.
4. Michael A. Miller, “Data & Network Communications”,
Vikas Publication, 1998.
5. William A. Shay, “Understanding Data
Communications & Networks”, Vikas Publication, 1999.
Code
No.: ETIT 308 L T C
Paper: Digital
Signal Processing 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Discrete time
signals and systems, Z-transforms, structures for digital filters, design
procedures for FIR and IIR filters. Frequency transformations: linear phase
design; DFT. Methods for computing FFT. Noise analysis of digital filters,
power spectrum estimation.
Signals and
signal Processing: characterization & classification of signals, typical
Signal Processing operations, example of typical Signals, typical Signals
Processing applications.
Time Domain
Representation of Signals & Systems: Discrete Time Signals, Operations on
Sequences, the sampling process, Discrete-Time systems, Time-Domain
characterization of LTI Discrete-Time
systems, state-space representation of LTI Discrete-Time systems, random
signals. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Transform-Domain
Representation of Signals: the Discrete-Time Fourier Transform, Discrete
Fourier Transform, DFT properties, computation of the DFT of real sequences,
Linear Convolution using the DFT. Z-transforms, Inverse z-transform, properties
of z-transform, transform domain representations of random signals, FFT
Algorithms.
[No. of Hrs.:
11]
UNIT – III
Transform-Domain
Representation of LTI Systems: the frequency response, the transfer function,
types of transfer function, minimum-phase and maximum-Phase transfer functions,
complementary transfer functions, Discrete-Time processing of random signals.
Digital
Processing of Continuous-Time Signals : sampling of Continuous Signals, Analog
Filter Design, Anti-aliasing Filter Design, Sample-and-hold circuits, A/D &
D/A converter, Reconstruction Filter Design. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
Digital Filter
Structure: Block Diagram representation, Signal Flow Graph Representation,
Equivalent Structures, FIR Digital Filter Structures, IIR Filter Structures,
Parallel all pass realization of IIR transfer function, Digital Sine-Cosine
generator.
Digital Filter
Design: Impulse invariance method of IIR filter design, Bilinear Transform
method of IIR Filter Design, Design of Digital IIR notch filters, FIR filter
Design based on truncated fonner sens, FIR filter design based on Frequency
Sampling approach.
Applications of
DSP. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Sanjit K. Mitra, “DSP a Computer
based approach” , TMH, 2nd Ed., 2001.
2. Allan Y. Oppenhein & Ronald W.
Schater , "Digital Signal Processing”, PHI, 2004.
REFERENCE
BOOKS:
1. J. R. Jhohnson, “Intorduction to Digital
Signal Processing”, PHI, 2000.
2. B. Somanthan Nair, “Digital Signal
Processing: Theory, Analysis & Digital Filter Design”, PHI, 2004.
Code
No.: ETCS 310 L T C
Paper: Data
Warehousing and Data Mining 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
– I
The
Compelling Need for data warehousing: Escalating Need for strategic
information, failures of Past decision-support systems, operational versus
decision-support systems, data warehousing – the only viable solution, data
warehouse defined
Data
warehouse – The building Blocks: Defining Features, data warehouses and data
marts, overview of the components, metadata in the data warehouse
Defining
the business requirements: Dimensional analysis, information packages – a new
concept, requirements gathering methods, requirements definition: scope and
content
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– II
Principles of
dimensional modeling: Objectives, From Requirements to data design, the STAR
schema, STAR Schema Keys, Advantages of the STAR Schema
Dimensional
Modeling:
Updates to the
Dimension tables, miscellaneous dimensions, the snowflake schema, aggregate
fact tables, families of STARS [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– III
OLAP
in the Data Warehouse: Demand for Online analytical processing, need for
multidimensional analysis, fast access and powerful calculations, limitations
of other analysis methods, OLAP is the answer, OLAP definitions and rules, OLAP
characteristics, major features and functions, general features, dimensional
analysis, what are hypercubes? Drill-down and roll-up, slice-and-dice or
rotation, OLAP models, overview of variations, the MOLAP model, the ROLAP
model, ROLAP versus MOLAP, OLAP implementation considerations [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– IV
Data
Mining Basics: What is Data Mining, Data Mining Defined, The knowledge
discovery process, OLAP versus data mining, data mining and the data warehouse,
Major Data Mining Techniques, Cluster detection, decision trees, memory-based
reasoning, link analysis, neural networks, genetic algorithms, moving into data
mining, Data Mining Applications, Benefits of data mining, applications in
retail industry, applications in telecommunications industry, applications in
banking and finance. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. Paul Raj Poonia, “Fundamentals of Data
Warehousing”, John Wiley & Sons, 2004.
2. Sam
Anahony, “Data Warehousing in the real world: A practical guide for building
decision support systems”, John Wiley, 2004
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. W.
H. Inmon, “Building the operational data store”, 2nd Ed., John
Wiley, 1999.
2. Kamber and Han, “Data Mining Concepts and
Techniques”, Hartcourt India P. Ltd., 2001
3. “Data Warehousing”, BPB Publications,
2004.
Code
No.: ETIT 312 L T C
Paper: Digital
Communication – II 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Information, channel
capacity, The concept of amount of information, entropy, Information rate,
Conditional and joint entropies. [No. of Hrs.: 09]
UNIT – II
Source coding: Noise less
coding, Shannon’s first fundamental theorem, Discrete memory less channel,
Mutual information, Sources with finite memory, Markov sources, Shannon’s
second fundamental theorem on coding, Huffman coding, Lempel – Ziv algorithm,
Shannon-Fano algorithm. [No. of Hrs.: 13]
UNIT - III
Channel coding : Error detecting
codes, Hamming distance, Error correcting codes, Repitition codes, Linear block
codes, binary cyclic codes, BCH codes, Reed-Soleman codes, Golay codes. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT - IV
Convolution
Coding: Code tree, state diagram, Trellis diagram,
Maximum-Likelihood decoding – Viterbi’s algorithm, sequential decoding.
Network information theory,
introduction to Cryptography [No. of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. S. Haykins, “Digital Communications”, Wiley, 2000.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. T M Gover, J M Thomos, “Elements of Information Theory”,
Wiley, 1999.
2. J G Proakis, “ Digital Communications”, Mc Graw Hill, 2001.
Code No. : ETCS
352 L P C
Paper:
Microprocessor Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Microprocessor Systems
Code No. : ETCS
354 L P C
Paper: Object
Oriented Software Engineering Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Object Oriented Software Engineering.
Code No. : ETIT
356 L P C
Paper: Digital
Signal Processing Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Digital Signal Processing.
Code No. : ETIT
358 L P C
Paper: Data
Warehousing and Data Mining Lab. 0 2 1
Practical
will be based on Data Warehousing and Data Mining.
Code No. : ETIT
360 L P C
Paper: Digital
Communication - II Lab. 0 2 1
Practical
will be based on Digital Communication - II.
Code
No.: ETIT 401 L T C
Paper: Advanced
Computer Networks 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
– I
Review
of Physical & Data link layer, ISDN, Frame Relay, ATM [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Network Layer:
ARP and RARP, Routing algorithms and protocols, Congestion control algorithm,
Router Operation, Router configuration, Internetworking, IP Protocol, IPv6 (an
overview). [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
Transport Layer:
UDP, TCP (Flow Control, Error Control, Connection Establishment)
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
Application
layer: DNS, SNMP, RMON, Electronic Mail, WWW.
Network
Security: Firewalls (Application and packet filtering), Cryptography, Virtual
Print,
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. B. A. Forouzan, “TCP/IP Protocol Suite”,
TMH, 2nd Ed., 2004.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. U. Black, “Computer Networks-Protocols,
Standards and Interfaces”, PHI, 1996.
2. W. Stallings, “Computer Communication
Networks”, PHI, 1999.
3 W. Stallings, “SNMP, SNMPv2, SNMPv3,
RMON 1&2”, 3rd Ed., Addison Wesley, 1999.
4. Michael A. Miller, “Data & Network
Communications”, Vikas Publication, 1996.
5. William A. Shay, “Understanding Data
Communications & Networks”, Vikas Publication, 1999.
6. A. S. Tananbaum, “Computer Networks”, 3rd
Ed, PHI, 1999.
7. Laura Chappell (ed), “Introduction to
Cisco Router Configuration”, Techmedia, 1999.
Code
No.: ETIT 403 L T C
Paper:
Multimedia Applications 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Introductory
Concepts: Multimedia – Definitions, CD-ROM and the Multimedia Highway, Uses of
Multimedia, Introduction to making multimedia – The Stages of project, the
requirements to make good multimedia, Multimedia skills and training, Training
opportunities in Multimedia. Motivation for multimedia usage, Frequency domain
analysis, Application Domain & ODA etc.
Multimedia-Hardware
and Software: Multimedia Hardware – Macintosh and Windows production Platforms,
Hardware peripherals – Connections, Memory and storage devices, Media software
– Basic tools, making instant multimedia, Multimedia software and Authoring
tools, Production Standards. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Multimedia –
making it work – multimedia building blocks – Text, Sound, Images, Animation
and Video, Digitization of Audio and Video objects, Data Compression: Different
Compression algorithms concern to text, audio, video and images etc., Working
Exposure on Tools like Dream Weaver, 3D Effects, Flash Etc., [No. of
Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– III
Animation:
Different techniques, 2D and 3D Animation, working on 3D animation tools.
Modelling:
NURBS, Polygon, Organic modeling.
Animation:
Keyframe, Path animation, skeleton animation, etc. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– IV
Dynamics:
Active and Passive bodies, fields, expressions, constrains, etc.
Rendering:
Different rendering techniques like IPR, Mental ray, software, hardware etc.,
Shadows,
materials, light and special effects. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. Steve Heath, “Multimedia &
Communication Systems”, Focal Press, UK, 1999.
2. Tay Vaughan, “Multimedia: Making it
work”, TMH, 1999.
3. K. Andleigh and K. Thakkar, “Multimedia
System Design”, PHI, PTR, 2000.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. Keyes, “Multimedia Handbook”, TMH, 2000.
2. Ralf Steinmetz and Klara Naharstedt,
“Multimedia: Computing, Communications & Applications”, Pearson, 2001.
3. Steve Rimmer, “Advanced Multimedia
Programming”, MHI, 2000.
Code
No.: ETCS 405 L T C
Paper: Compiler
Construction 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
- I
Classification
of grammars, Context free grammars, Deterministic finite state automata (DFA)
Non-DFA.
[No.
of Hrs.: 10]
UNIT - II
Scanners, Top
down parsing, LL grammars, Bottom up parsing, Polish expression Operator
Precedence grammar, IR grammars, Comparison of parsing methods, Error handling.
Symbol table
handling techniques, Organization for non-block and block structured languages
[No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT - III
Run time storage
administration, Static and dynamic allocation, Intermediate forms of source
program, Polish N-tuple and syntax trees, Semantic analysis and code
generation.
[No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT - IV
Code
optimization, Folding, redundant sub-expression evaluation, Optimizatiion
within iterative loops. [No.
of Hrs.: 10]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Tremblay, et. al., “The Theory and
Practice of Compiler Writing”, McGraw Hill, New York, 1985.
2. A. Holub, “Compiler Design in C”, PHI,
2004
3. Aho, Ullman & Ravi Sethi, “Principles
of Compiler Design”, Pearson Education, 2002
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. Andrew L. Appel, “Modern Compiler
Implementation in C”, Delhi, Foundation Books, 2000.
2. Dick Grune et. Al., “Modern Compiler
Design”, Wiley Dreamtech, 2000.
Code
No.: ETEC 407 L T C
Paper: Mobile
Computing 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Introduction to
Personal Communications Services (PCS): PCS Architecture, Mobility
management, Networks signalling.
Global System
for Mobile Communication (GSM) system overview: GSM
Architecture, Mobility management, Network signalling.
General Packet
Radio Services (GPRS): GPRS Architecture, GPRS Network Nodes.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Mobile Data
Communication: WLANs (Wireless LANs) IEEE 802.11 standard,
Mobile IP.
Wireless
Application Protocol (WAP): The Mobile Internet standard, WAP Gateway and
Protocols, wireless mark up Languages (WML). [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
Third Generation
(3G) Mobile Services:
Introduction to International Mobile Telecommunications 2000 (IMT 2000) vision,
Wideband Code Division Multiple Access (W-CDMA), and CDMA 2000, Quality of
services in 3G.
Wireless Local
Loop(WLL): Introduction to WLL Architecture, wireless
Local Loop Technologies. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
Global Mobile
Satellite Systems;
case studies of the IRIDIUM and GLOBALSTAR systems.
Wireless
Enterprise Networks:
Introduction to Virtual Networks, Blue tooth technology, Blue tooth Protocols. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Yi-Bing Lin & Imrich Chlamtac,
“Wireless and Mobile Networks Architectures”, John Wiley & Sons, 2001.
2. Raj Pandya, “Mobile and Personal
Communication systems and services”, Prentice Hall of India, 2001.
3. Hansmann, “Principles of Mobile Computing”, Wiley Dreamtech,
2004.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Mark Ciampa, “Guide to Designing and
Implementing wireless LANs”, Thomson learning, Vikas Publishing House, 2001.
2. Ray Rischpater, “Wireless Web
Development”, Springer Publishing, 2000.
3. Sandeep Singhal, “The Wireless
Application Protocol”, Pearson Education Asia, 2000.
4. P.Stavronlakis, “Third Generation Mobile Telecommunication
systems”, Springer Publishers, 2001.
Code
No.: ETIT 409 L T C
Paper: VLSI
Design 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT
– I
MOS
Transistor Theory: nMOS Enhancement Transistor, pMOS Enhancement transistor,
Threshold voltage, Fabrication of MOSFET: Silicon Semiconductor technology,
Wafter processing, Oxidation, Epitaxy, Deposition, Ion-implanation and
diffusion, The silicon gate Process, CMOS Technology, basic n-well cmos
process, p-well process, twin tub process CMOS process enhancement: metal
interconnect, Polysilicon / Refractory metal interconnect, Circuit element:
Resistor, Capacitor. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– II
Operation
of MOS transistor as a switch, Design and analysis of nMOS, pMOS and CMOS
circuits, CMOS Logic, The Inverter, NAND gate, NOR Gate, Compound Gate.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– III
Modeling
of MOS transistors using SPICE, MOS Inverters: Static Characteristics, MOS
Inverters: Switching Characteristics and Interconnect Effects, Combinational
MOS Logic Circuits: MUX, DMUX, Transmission gate, Differential Inverter,
Tristate Inverter.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
– IV
Sequential
MOS Logic Circuits, Dynamic Logic Circuits, Semiconductor Memories.
[No. of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOK:
1. Sung-Mo Kang and Yusuf Leblebici, “CMOS –
Digital Integrated Circuits Analysis and Design”, TMH, 2004.
REFERENCE
BOOKS:
1. Douglas A. Pucknell, “Basic VLSI Design,
3rd Edition, 2004.
2. Neil H. E. Weste & K. Eshranghian,
“Principles of CMOS VLSI design”, 2nd Edition, Addison Wesley, 2003.
3. S. M. Sze, “VLSI Technology, Wiley, 2000.
4. Demassa & Ciccone, “Digital
Integrated Circuits”, Wiley Publications, 2003.
5. Jacob Millman and Arvin Grabel,
“Microelectronics”, TMH, 2004.
Code
No.: ETEC 411 L T C
Paper: Digital
Image Processing 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT -I
Introduction And
Digital Image Fundamentals: The origins of
Digital Image Processing, Examples of Fields that Use Digital Image Processing,
Fundamentals Steps in Image Processing, Elements of Digital Image Processing
Systems, Image Sampling and Quantization, Some basic relationships like
Neighbours, Connectivity, Distance Measures between pixels, Linear and Non
Linear Operations.
Image
Enhancement in the Spatial Domain: Some basic Gray Level Transformations,
Histogram Processing, Enhancement Using Arithmetic and Logic operations, Basics
of Spatial Filters, Smoothening and Sharpening Spatial Filters, Combining
Spatial Enhancement Methods. [No.
of Hrs.: 10]
UNIT - II
Image
Enhancement in the Frequency Domain: Introduction to Fourier Transform and
the frequency Domain, Smoothing and Sharpening Frequency Domain Filters,
Homomorphic Filtering.
Image
Restoration: A
model of The Image Degradation / Restoration Process, Noise Models, Restoration
in the presence of Noise Only Spatial Filtering, Pereodic Noise Reduction by
Frequency Domain Filtering, Linear Position-Invarient Dedradations, Estimation
of Degradation Function, Inverse filtering, Wiener filtering, Constrained Least
Square Filtering, Geometric Mean Filter, Geometric Transformations. [No. of
Hrs.: 12]
UNIT - III
Image
Compression: Coding,
Interpixel and Psychovisual Redundancy, Image Compression models, Elements of
Information Theory, Error free comparison, Lossy compression, Image compression
standards.
Image
Segmentation: Detection
of Discontinuities, Edge linking and boundary detection, Thresholding, Region
Oriented Segmentation, Motion based segmentation.[No. of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT - IV
Representation
and Description: Representation,
Boundary Descriptors, Regional Descriptors, Use of Principal Components for
Description, Introduction to Morphology, Some basic Morphological Algorithms.
Object
Recoginition: Patterns
and Pattern Classes, Decision-Theoretic Methods, Structural Methods. [No.
of Hrs.: 10]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Rafael C. Conzalez & Richard E.
Woods, “Digital Image Processing”, 2nd edition, Pearson Education, 2002.
2. A.K. Jain, “Fundamental of Digital Image
Processing”, PHI, 1989.
REFERENCES:
1. Bernd Jahne, “Digital Image Processing”,
5th Ed., Springer, 2002.
2. William K Pratt, “Digital Image
Processing: Piks Inside”, John Wiley & Sons, 2001.
Code
No.: ETCS 413 L T C
Paper:
Requirements & Estimation Techniques 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Requirements
engineering: Requirements Elicitation, Requirement Elicitation techniques,
Requirement Analysis, Requirement Analysis Models, Requirement Documentation,
Requirement Management, IEEE Std. For SRS [No.
of Hrs.: 10]
UNIT - II
Size Estimation:
Function Point Analysis, Mask II FPA, LOC estimation, Conversion between size
measures [No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT - III
Effort, schedule
& cost estimation: Estimation factors, COCOMO-II, Putnam Estimation
Model, Estimation by Analogy, Validating
Software Estimates [No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT - IV
Introduction to
software life cycle, management activities in software project
Tools: Software
Estimation Tools
Industry
Resources; IFPUG, UQAM-SEMRL, COSMIC, IEEE, COCOMO[No. of Hrs.: 10]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Swapna Kishore, Rajesh Naik, “Software
Requirements and Estimation”, TMH, 1992.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. K.K. Aggarwal & Yogesh Singh,
"Software Engineering", 2nd Ed., New Age International Publishers,
New Delhi, 2005.
2. Roger Pressman, “Software Engineering: A
Practitioiner’s Approach”, 3rd Edition, McGraw Hill, 1992.
Code
No.: ETCS 415 L T C
Paper: Advanced
Computer Architecture 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Parallel
computer models: The state of computing , Multiprocessors and multicomputers,
Multivector and SIMD computers, Architectural development tracks
Program and
network properties :Conditions of parallelism, Data and resource
dependences,Hardware and software parallelism,Program partitioning and
scheduling, Grain size and latency, Program flow mechanisms,Control flow versus
data flow,Data flow architecture,Demand driven mechanisms,Comparisons of flow
mechanisms[No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT - II
System Interconnect
Architectures : Network properties and routing, Static interconnection
networks, Dynamic interconnection Networks, Multiprocessor system
interconnects, Hierarchical bus systems, Crossbar switch and multiport
memory,Multistage and combining network.
Processors and
Memory Hierarchy : Advanced processor technology, Instruction-set
Architectures,CISC Scalar Processors, RISC Scalar Processors, Superscalar
Processors,VLIW Architectures, Vector and Symbolic processors
Memory
Technology :Hierarchical memory technology, Inclusion, Coherence and Locality,
Memory capacity planning, Virtual Memory Technology [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
- III
Backplane Bus
System: Backplane bus specification, Addressing and timing protocols,
Arbitration transaction and interrupt, Cache addressing models, Direct mapping
and associative caches.
Pipelining
:Linear pipeline processor, Nonlinear pipeline processor, Instruction pipeline
design, Mechanisms for instruction pipelining, Dynamic instruction scheduling,
Branch handling techniques, Arithmetic Pipeline Design, Computer arithmetic
principles, Static arithmetic pipeline, Multifunctional arithmetic pipelines [No. of Hrs. 11]
UNIT - IV
Vector
Processing Principles : Vector instruction types, Vector-access memory schemes.
Synchronous
Parallel Processing : SIMD Architecture and Programming Principles, SIMD
Parallel Algorithms, SIMD Computers and Performance Enhancement [No. of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. Kai Hwang, “Advanced computer
architecture”; TMH, 2000.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. J.P.Hayes, “computer Architecture and
organization”, MGH, 1998.
2. M.J Flynn, “Computer Architecture,
Pipelined and Parallel Processor Design”, Narosa Publishing, 1998.
3. D.A.Patterson, J.L.Hennessy, “Computer
Architecture :A quantitative approach”, Morgan Kauffmann, 2002.
4. Hwang and Briggs, “ Computer Architecture
and Parallel Processing”; MGH, 2000.
Code No.: ETIT 417 L P C
Paper: Project
- 4 4
Students may
select a project related to any of the subjects of the current semester.
Code No. : ETIT 451 L P C
Code No. : ETIT 451 L P C
Paper: Advanced
Computer Network Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Advanced Computer Network.
Code No. : ETIT
453 L P C
Paper:
Multimedia Applications Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Multimedia Applications.
Code No. : ETIT
455 L P C
Paper: Practical
Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Electives
Code No. : ETIT
457 L P C
Paper: *Seminar 0 2 1
*NUES
A
college committee will evaluate the performance of the students & marks
will be awarded accordingly.
Code No. : ETIT
459 L P C
Paper: Minor
Project 0 8 4
Students
may choose a project based on any subject of Computer Science. The student will
submit a synopsis at the beginning of the semester for approval from the
departmental committee in a specified format. The student will have to present
the progress of the work through seminars and progress reports.
Code No. : ETIT
461 L P C
Paper:
*Practical Training 0 0 1
*NUES
Practical
training conducted after sixth semester will be evaluated in the Seventh
Semester based on Viva-Voce.
Code
No.: ETIT 402 L T C
Paper: Mobile
Communication 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Introduction to
Cellular Mobile Systems: A basic cellular system, performance criteria,
uniqueness of mobile radio environment, operation of cellular systems, planning
a cellular system, overview of generations of cellular systems.
Elements
of Cellular Radio Systems Design and Interference: General description of the
problem, concept of frequency reuse channels, co-channel interference reduction
factor, desired C/I from a normal case in an omni directional antenna system,
cell splitting, consideration of the components of cellular systems,
Introduction to co-channel interference, co-channel measurement design of
antenna system, antenna parameter and their effects.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Cell Coverage
for Signal & Antenna Structures: General introduction, obtaining the mobile
point to point mode, propagation over water or flat open area, foliage loss,
propagation near in distance, long distance propagation, point to point
prediction model – characteristics, cell site, antenna heights and signal
coverage cells, mobile to mobile propagation, Characteristics of basic antenna
structures, antenna at cell site, mobile antennas.
Frequency
Management & Channel Assignment, Hand Off & Dropped Calls: Frequency
Management, fixed channel assignment, non-fixed channel assignment, traffic
& channel assignment, Why hand off, types of handoff and their
characteristics, dropped call rates & their evaluation. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
Modulation
methods and coding for error detection and correction: Introduction to Digital
modulation techniques, modulation methods in cellular wireless systems, OFDM,
Block Coding, convolution coding and Turbo coding.
Multiple access
techniques: FDMA, TDMA, CDMA: Time-division multiple access (TDMA), code
division multiple access (CDMA), CDMA capacity, probability of bit error
considerations, CDMA compared with TDMA. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
Second
generation, digital, wireless systems: GSM, IS_136 (D-AMPS), IS-95, mobile
management, voice signal processing and coding. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. William, C. Y. Lee, “Mobile Cellular
Telecommunications”, 2nd Edition, McGraw Hill, 1990.
2. Mischa Schwartz, “Mobile Wireless
Communications”, Cambridge University Press, UK, 2005.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. “Mobile Communication Hand Books”, 2nd
Edition, IEEE Press.
2. Theodore S Rappaport, “Wireless
Communication Principles and Practice”, 2nd Edition, Pearson
Education, 2002.
3. Lawrence Harte, “3G Wireless
Demystified”, McGraw Hill Publications, 2001.
4. Kaveh Pahlavan and Prashant
Krishnamurthy”, Principles of Wireless Networks”, PHI, 2001.
Code
No.: ETEC 404 L T C
Paper: Embedded
System 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Introduction to an embedded systems design & RTOS: Introduction to
Embedded system, Processor in the System, Microcontroller, Memory Devices,
Embedded System Project Management, ESD and Co-design issues in System
development Process, Design cycle in the development phase for an embedded
system, Use of target system or its emulator and In-circuit emulator, Use of
software tools for development of an ES.
Inter-process
Communication and Synchronization of Processes, Tasks and Threads, Problem of
Sharing Data by Multiple Tasks, Real Time Operating Systems: OS Services, I/O
Subsystems, Interrupt Routines in RTOS Environment, RTOS Task Scheduling model,
Interrupt Latency and Response times of the tasks. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Overview of Microcontroller: Microcontroller and Embedded
Processors, Overview of 8051 Microcontroller family: Architecture, basic assembly language
programming concepts, The program Counter and ROM Spaces in the 8051, Data
types, 8051 Flag Bits ad PSW Register, 8051 Register Banks and Stack
Instruction set, Loop and Jump Instructions, Call Instructions, Time delay
generations and calculations, I/O port programming Addressing Modes, accessing
memory using various addressing modes, Arithmetic instructions and programs,
Logical instructions, BCD and ASCII application programs, Single-bit
instruction programming, Reading input pins vs. port Latch, Programming of 8051
Timers, Counter Programming
[No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
Communication
with 8051: Basics of Communication,
Overview of RS-232, I2C Bus, UART, USB, 8051 connections to RS-232,
8051 serial communication programming, 8051 interrupts, Programming of timer
interrupts, Programming of External hardware interrupts, Programming of the
serial communication interrupts, Interrupt priority in the 8051 [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT - IV
Interfacing with
8051: Interfacing an LCD to the 8051, 8051 interfacing to
ADC, Sensors, Interfacing a Stepper Motor, 8051 interfacing to the keyboard,
Interfacing a DAC to the 8051, 8255 Interfacing with 8031/51, 8051/31
interfacing to external memory
[No. of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Raj Kamal, “Embedded Systems”, TMH, 2004.
2. M.A. Mazidi and J. G. Mazidi, “The 8051
Microcontroller and Embedded Systems”,
PHI, 2004.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. David E. Simon, “An Embedded Software
Primer”, Pearson Education, 1999.
2. K.J. Ayala, “The 8051 Microcontroller”,
Penram International, 1991.
3. Dr. Rajiv Kapadia, “8051 Microcontroller
& Embedded Systems”, Jaico Press
4. Dr. Prasad, “Embedded Real Time System”,
Wiley Dreamtech, 2004.
Code
No.: ETCS 406 L T C
Paper: Soft
Computing 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Neural Networks:
History, overview of biological Neuro-system, Mathematical Models of Neurons,
ANN architecture, Learning rules, Learning Paradigms-Supervised, Unsupervised
and reinforcement Learning, ANN training Algorithms-perceptions, Training
rules, Delta, Back Propagation Algorithm, Multilayer Perceptron Model, Hopfield
Networks, Associative Memories, Applications of Artificial Neural Networks. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Fuzzy Logic:
Introduction to Fuzzy Logic, Classical and Fuzzy Sets: Overview of Classical
Sets, Membership Function, Fuzzy rule generation.
Operations on
Fuzzy Sets: Compliment, Intersections, Unions, Combinations of Operations,
Aggregation Operations. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
Fuzzy
Arithmetic: Fuzzy Numbers, Linguistic Variables, Arithmetic Operations on
Intervals & Numbers, Lattice of Fuzzy Numbers, Fuzzy Equations.
UNIT – III
Fuzzy Logic:
Classical Logic, Multivalued Logics, Fuzzy Propositions, Fuzzy Qualifiers,
Linguistic Hedges. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
Uncertainty
based Information: Information & Uncertainty, Nonspecificity of Fuzzy &
Crisp Sets, Fuzziness of Fuzzy Sets.
UNIT – IV
Introduction of
Neuro-Fuzzy Systems, Architecture of Neuro Fuzzy Networks.
Application of
Fuzzy Logic: Medicine, Economics etc.
Genetic
Algorithm: An Overview, GA in problem solving, Implementation of GA
[No. of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. J. A. Anderson, “An Introduction to
Neural Networks”, PHI, 1999.
2. Hertz J. Krogh, R.G. Palmer,
“Introduction to the Theory of Neural Computation”, Addison-Wesley, California,
1991.
3. G.J. Klir & B. Yuan, “Fuzzy Sets
& Fuzzy Logic”, PHI, 1995.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. “Neural Networks-A Comprehensive
Foundations”, Prentice-Hall International, New Jersey, 1999.
2. J. A. Freeman, D.M. Skapura, “Neural
Networks: Algorithms, Applications and Programming Techniques”, Addison Wesley,
Reading, Mass, (1992).
3. Melanie Mitchell, “An Introduction to
Genetic Algorithm”, PHI, 1998.
Code
No.: ETCS 408 L T C
Paper:
Artificial Intelligence 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Scope
of AI: Games, theorem proving, natural language processing, vision and speech
processing, robotics, expert systems, AI techniques-search knowledge,
abstraction.
Problem
Solving (Blind): State space search; production systems, search space control;
depth-first, breadth-first search.
Heuristic
Based Search: Heuristic search, Hill climbing, best-first search, branch and
bound, Problem Reduction, Constraint Satisfaction End, Means-End Analysis. [No. of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT – II
Game Playing:
Game Tree, Minimax Algorithm, Alpha Beta Cutoff, Modified Minimax Algorithm,
Horizon Effect, Futility Cut-off.
Knowledge
Representation: Predicate Logic: Unificatioin, Modus Ponens, Modus Tolens,
Resolution in Predicate Logic, Conflict Resolution Forward Chaining, Backward Chaining,
Declarative and Procedural Representation, Rule based Systems.
Structured
Knowledge Representation: Semantic Nets: Slots, exceptions and default frames,
conceptual dependency, scripts. [No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT – III
Handling
Uncertainty: Non-Monotonic Reasoning, Probabilistic reasoning, use of certainty
factors, fuzzy logic.
Natural
Language Processing: Introduction, Syntactic Processing, Semantic Processing,
Pragmatic Processing. [No.
of Hrs.: 10]
UNIT – IV
Learning:
Concept of learning, learning automation, genetic algorithm, learning by
inductions, neural nets.
Expert Systems:
Need and justification for expert systems, knowledge acquisition, Case Studies:
MYCIN, RI. [No.
of Hrs.: 10]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. E. Rich and K. Knight, “Artificial
Intelligence”, TMH, 2nd Ed., 1992.
2. N. J. Nilsson, “Principles of AI”, Narosa
Publ. House, 1990.
3. M. N. Hoda, “Foundation Course in
Artificial Intelligence”, Vikas Pub., 2004.
REFERENCES
BOOKS:
1. P. H. Winston, "Artificial
Intelligence", Pearson Education, 3rd Edition, 2002.
2. D. W. Patterson, “Introduction to AI and
Expert Systems”, PHI, 1992.
3. R. J. Schalkoff, “Artificial Intelligence
– An Engineering Approach”, McGraw Hill Int. Ed. Singapore, 1992.
4. M. Sasikumar, S. Ramani, “Rule Based
Expert Systems”, Narosa Publishing House, 1994.
5. Tim Johns, “Artificial Intelligence,
Application Programming”, Wiley Dreamtech, 2005.
Code
No.: ETIT 410 L T C
Paper:
E-Commerce & ERP 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Introduction and
Concepts: Networks and commercial transactions – Internet and other novelties;
networks and electronic transactions today, Model for commercial transactions;
Internet environment – internet advantage, worlds wide web and other internet sales
venues; Online commerce solutions.
Security
Technologies: Insecurity Internet; A brief introduction to Cryptography; Public
key solution; Key distribution and certification; prominent cryptographic
applications.
Electronic
Payment Methods: Updating traditional transactions; secure onine transaction
models; Online commercial environments; digital currencies and payment systems;
Offline secure processing; private data networks. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Protocols for
Public Transport of Private Information: Security protocols; secure protocols;
Secure hypertext transfer protocols; Secure sockets layers; Integrating
security protocols into the web; Non technical provide.
Electronic
Commerce Providers: On-line Commerce options: Company profiles.
Electronic
Payment Systems: Digital payment systems; First virtual internet payment
system; cyber cash model.
On-line Commerce
Environments: Servers and commercial environments; Netscape product line;
Netscape commerce server; Microsoft internet explorer and servers; open market.
Digital
Currencies: Optional process of Digicash, Ecash Trail; Using Ecash; Smart
cards, Electronic Data Interchange; Its basics; EDI versus Internet and EDI
over Internet.
Strategies,
Techniques and Tools: Internet Strategies: Internet Techniques, Shopping
techniques and online selling techniques; Internet tools.
Electronic
Commerce Online Resources and Guide to the CD-ROM [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
ERP – An
Enterprise Perspective; Production Finance, Personnel disciplines and their
relationship, Transiting environment, MIS Integration for disciplines, Case
Study, Information / Workflow, Network Structure, Client Server Integrator
System, Virtual Enterprise.
ERP – Resource
Management Perspective; Functional and Process of Resource. Management, Basic
Modules of ERP System-HRD, Personnel Management, Training and Development,
Skill Inventory, Material Planning and Control, Inventory, Forecasting,
Manufacturing, Production Planning, Production Scheduling, Production Control,
Sales and Distribution, Finance, Resource Management in global scenario,
dynamic data management in complex global scenario. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – IV
ERP –
Information System Perspective: Evolution of Application Software Technology
Management, EDP, MIS, DBMS, DSS OLAP (Online Analysis and Processing), TP, OAS,
KBS, MRP, BPR, SCM, REP, CRM, Information Communication Technology, E-Business,
E-Commerce, EDI
ERP-Key
Managerial Issues: Concept Selling, IT Infrastructure, Implication, of ERP
Systems on Business Organization, Critical success factors in ERP System, ERP
Culture Implementation Issues, Resistance to change, Public Service and
Organizations (PSO) Project, ERP Selection issues, Return on Investment, Pre and
Post Implementation Issues.
[No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Pete Loshin and P.A.Murphy, “ Electronic
Commerce ” Jaico Publishing House, 1999.
2. Gary Schneider and James T. Perry,
“Electronic Commerce” by Thomson learning, 2001.
3. S.
Sadagopan, “Enterprise Resource Planning”, Tata McGraw Hill, 1999.
4. Alexis Leon, “Enterprise Resource
Planning”, Tata McGraw Hill, 2000.
REFERENCE
BOOKS:
1. Kalakota, “Frontiers of E-Commerce ”
Addition Wesley long man Publishers, 1999.
2. Kamlesh Bajaj & Debjani Nag,
“E-Commerce: The cutting edge of Business” Tata Mcgraw Hill, 2000.
3. Trepper, “E-Commerce strategies”,
Prentice Hall of India, 2001.
Code No.: ETIT 412 L T C
Code No.: ETIT 412 L T C
Paper: Network
Security 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Introduction:
Codes and Ciphers – Some Classifical systems – Statistical theory of cipher
systems – Complexity theory of Crypto systems – Stream ciphers, Block ciphers.
Stream Ciphers:
Rotor based system – shift register based systems – Design considerations for
stream ciphers – Cryptanalysis of stream ciphers – Combined eneryption and
encoding.
Block Ciphers –
DES and variant, modes of use of DES. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – II
Public Key
systems – Knacksack systems – RSK – Diffle Hellman Exchange 0 Authentication
and Digital signatures, Elliptic curve based systems.
System
Identification and clustering
Cryptology of
speech signals – narrow band and wide band systems – analogue & digital
systems of speech encryption. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT – III
Network
Security: Hash function – Authentication:
Protocols –
Digital Signature standards.
Electronics Mail
Security – PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) MIME, Data Compression technique.
IP Security:
Architecture, Authentication Leader, Encapsulating security Payload – Key
management.
Web Security:
Secure Socket Layer & Transport Layer security, Secure electronic
transactions.
Firewalls Design
principle, established systems. [No.
of Hrs.: 12]
UNIT – IV
Telecommunication
Network architecture, TMN management layers, Management information Model,
Management servicing and functions, Structure of management information and TMN
information model. [No.
of Hrs.: 10]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. William Stallings, “Network Security
Essentials, 2nd Edition, 2002.
2. William Stallings, “Cryptography &
Network Security”, 3rd Edition, 1999.
Code
No.: ETIT 414 L T C
Paper: Software
Testing 3 1 4
INSTRUCTIONS
TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM
MARKS: 75
1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire
syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions.
It should be of 25 marks.
2. Apart from question no. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of
four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However,
student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question
should be of 12.5 marks.
UNIT – I
Introduction: What is software
testing and why it is so hard?, Error, Fault, Failure, Incident, Test Cases,
Testing Process, Limitations of Testing, No absolute proof of correctness,
Overview of Graph Theory. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT - II
Functional
Testing: Boundary
Value Analysis, Equivalence Class Testing, Decision Table Based Testing, Cause
Effect Graphing Technique.
Structural
Testing: Path
testing, DD-Paths, Cyclomatic Complexity, Graph Metrics, Data Flow Testing,
Mutation testing. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
- III
Reducing the number of test cases:
Prioritization guidelines, Priority category, Scheme, Risk
Analysis, Regression Testing, Slice based testing
Testing
Activities: Unit
Testing, Levels of Testing, Integration Testing, System Testing, Debugging,
Domain Testing. [No. of Hrs.: 11]
UNIT
- IV
Object Oriented
Testing: Issues
in Object Oriented Testing, Class Testing, GUI Testing, Object Oriented
Integration and System Testing.
Testing Tools: Static Testing
Tools, Dynamic Testing Tools, Characteristics of Modern Tools. [No.
of Hrs.: 11]
TEXT
BOOKS:
1. William Perry, “Effective Methods for
Software Testing”, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1995.
2. Louise Tamres, “Software Testing”,
Pearson Education Asia, 2002
3. Robert V. Binder, “Testing
Object-Oriented Systems-Models, Patterns and Tools”, Addison Wesley, 1999.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Cem
Kaner, Jack Falk, Nguyen Quoc, “Testing Computer Software”, Second Edition, Van
Nostrand Reinhold, New York, 1993.
2. K.K. Aggarwal & Yogesh Singh,
“Software Engineering”, 2nd Ed., New Age International Publishers,
New Delhi, 2005
3. Boris
Beizer, “Software Testing Techniques”, Second Volume, Second Edition, Van
Nostrand Reinhold, New York, 1990.
4. Boris Beizer, “Black-Box Testing –
Techniques for Functional Testing of Software and Systems”, John Wiley &
Sons Inc., New York, 1995.
Code No. : ETEC
452 L P C
Paper: Embedded
System Lab. 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on Embedded System.
Code No. : ETIT
454 L P C
Paper: Electives 0 2 1
Practical will
be based on ELECTIVES
Code
No. : ETIT 456 L P C
Paper: Major
Project 0 14 7
The
student will submit a synopsis at the beginning of the semester for approval
from the departmental committee in a specified format. The student will have to
present the progress of the work through seminars and progress reports.
source: ipu
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