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You can view excerpts from this interview in our
video link
Dr M S Ananth graduated from the
A C College of Technology with a gold medal in
Chemical Engineering. He obtained his Ph D from
the University of Florida, USA. He has been
consistently rated as a good teacher, having
deep concern for his students. Research has been
close to his heart. He received the R W Fahien
Alumni Award for “Distinguished Professional
Contributions” for the year 2003 by the Chemical
Engineering department of University of Florida.
He is the National Coordinator for a mega
project funded by the MHRD, on Technology
Enhanced Learning involving many technical
institutions in the country.
Chennaionline's
H Ramakrishnan interacted with him on a busy
Saturday morning at the Conference hall of IITM. The
unedited interview in its entirety is given below in
two parts: H Ramakrishnan:
Good morning, Dr Ananth. Can you recall your childhood
days?
M S Ananth: I was born in
Tellichery in Kerala. My maternal grandfather was
Principal of the Government Brennen College. Earlier he
was the Professor of English in the Presidency College,
Chennai. Those days the job was transferable.My
grandmother had visited Sri Anantha Padmanabhaswamy
Temple in Thiruvananthapuram just before I was born and
therefore I was named Ananthapadmanabhan.
Rama: And, your initials M S
stand for...
M S Ananth: Madaboosi
Santhanam. Santhanam is my father's name. Madaboosi is
supposedly a village on the banks of Godavari river. It
is reputed to be one of the villages that Sri Ramanuja
was very fond of. My paternal grandfather hailed from a
village called Teklur, sixty miles from Chennai.
Rama: You had your School
education in....
M S Ananth: My education was
totally in Chennai.
Rama: From 1972, you have been
associated with the IIT in one capacity or the other.
M S Ananth: I joined IITM as
an Asst. Professor. In due course I became Associate
Professor, Professor and Head of the Department. I was
Dean Academic courses and also Dean Research. I took
over as Director in 2001.
Rama: When you were a College
student, what did you want to become?
M S Ananth: This is very hard
to say. Of all the subjects, I liked Physics best. But,
my father had plans of starting a chemical industry. He
felt Chemical engineering was a very exciting area.
Chemical Engineering, despite its name has more Physics
in it than Chemistry. Given the Chemistry, how do you
scale up the processes for industrial production of
Chemicals? That is the basic question. You are supposed
to know some chemistry. But a very large fraction of the
chemical engineers are more knowledgeable in Physics
than in Chemistry.
Rama: So, do you mean to say
that you have no regrets that you didn't do your
physics?
M S Ananth: No regrets. I
thinks these departments are only artificial barriers.
You can pursue what you want to. My Ph D thesis in the
University of Florida in the U S was actually in the
area of Molecular Thermodynamics. It is a borderline
area with Physics. In fact when I published my first
paper, two days earlier a paper by a physicist in New
York appeared on the same topic. Considerable overlap in
the work without neither of us knowing that the other
person was doing it.
Rama: Great minds think alike.
M S Ananth: Thank you.
Rama: What is Molecular
Thermodynamics?
M S Ananth: Thermodynamics is
a classical subject which has only two principles. One,
the total energy of the world is a constant. The second
principle essentially says that losses occur in
conversion of thermal energy to work, due to disorder.
This measures disorder. It says the disorder of the
universe tends to a maximum. So, classical
Thermodynamics on which the entire classical economy is
based, aims at reducing or minimising the losses that
occur when you convert energy to useful work. And,
molecular thermodynamics provides you a mechanism by
which these processes occur. Classical thermodynamics
does not need the existence of molecules. As a theory,
it is independent of the existence of molecules.
Molecular thermodynamics can give you mechanistic
explanations as to why these things happen.
Rama: Does Thermodynamics say
that disorder increases with time?
M S Ananth: That is the
concept theory. Disorder of the universe is a maximum.
But the word disorder has to be carefully interpreted in
science. For example. if you look through a
kaleidoscope, you see those beads arranged. You see
disorder. And when you shake it up, you can see a
different disorder. You need a way by which you can
quantify this disorder and say which is more disorderly
than the other.
Rama: Do you mean to say,
total disorder is total order?
M S Ananth: I think you are
getting into tricky philosophical questions. Not really.
You can measure disorder and at least in many systems
you can quantitatively estimate it. In a sense, it is a
measure of the number of options a system has. If you
have more options, you have less knowledge of which
state the system is in.
Rama: You have also been
interested in Mathematical modeling. What does it mean?
M S Ananth: If you take a real
system in the world, it is very complex.
Rama: I don't get you. Can you
please simplify it?
M S Ananth: Suppose you try to
describe, say the city of Chennai or something like
that. Or, you want to find out as to what changes you
should effect in order to produce other desirable
changes....Yes, I agree, this is too complex a system.
You can even take a much simpler system like a chemical
reactor. These systems are naturally very complex. What
you do is, you simplify these systems by looking at what
you consider as the essential aspects of these systems
that affect the outcomes that you want to influence.
This is what man has been doing in all areas. .
Mathematical modeling is an iterative
process by which you build a simple model and you ask as
to what happens in this simple model- if a certain input
occurs, what will be the output? Meanwhile, you also set
up an experiment and measure the results. If the model
predictions agree with the experiment, then you have a
valid model. If they don't, you go back, change your
assumptions modify the model, improve it, relax your
assumptions, and come back and do the same process.
For example, you can model the
weather conditions in Chennai and ask what are the
conditions under which you can, if at all influence the
weather. You can ask questions like this. This is a very
complex problem. You have to take certain minimum things
into account in order to do the model.
Rama: In effect, it is a kind
of trial and error method.
M S Ananth: Yes, it is.
Rama: You have been into
research for quite some time. Is there any ongoing
project?
M S Ananth: Right now, since I
took over as director, I don't really have the kind of
time that is required. Research requires dedication. I
do have one or two students working, but not for the Ph
D, because I cannot give them the .kind of time that . I
ought to give them. I have some B Tech, M tech students
doing projects.
Rama: Industrial consultancy
is another subject in which you are actively
involved....
M S Ananth: Actually, the
mission of IIT is four-fold. The central mission is
teaching. The second is research. This is blue-sky
research which is driven by curiosity. The third is
sponsored research- sponsored by the industries or
Government laboratories for specific purposes. For
example we work on many projects with ISRO. The Space
people have various problems that arise as part of their
regular mission. These problems are referred to us. They
could be in heat transfer, materials or could be on
various aspects. Those are sponsored projects where the
final results they want are reasonably clear. But you
have to find out how you have to set up the system in
order to achieve that result. Their centres work with us
in the case of ISRO or in the case of Atomic energy. In
many industrial cases, we do the research ourselves.
They send somebody to work with us. They do give us
inputs. We also do consultancy. Here, we already have
the expertise. We are able to troubleshoot problems.
The fourth mission is to improve the
state of technical education in the country. As
Institutions of higher learning, set up with lots of
funds, we have also the obligation to help sister
institutions to improve their quality. So we interact a
lot with the NITs, with other colleges. We also assist
colleges to set up their labs.
We have several MOUs with colleges. .......
Rama: You are a champion of
unlike minds coming togther. How far have you been able
to achieve this? What is the role of IITs in shaping the
future? There is a feeling that IT is given too much
importance, relegating other real sciences to the
background. What do you say? What are the salient
features of IIT vision 2010? Do you believe in
God?.....For these and many more questions, Dr. Ananth
has interesting answers. Please see Part II.....
You can view excerpts from this interview in our
video link
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