Skip to main content

UGC NET. June 2020

National Testing Agency (NTA) will soon release the official notification for UGC- NET June 2020 examination. Candidates can expect the release of official notification by the first week of March.

NTA generally releases the information bulletin and public notice three months before the examination.

Looking at the last year trend, the information bulletin for June 2019 exam was released on March 1, 2019. The online application process had begun on March 1 and concluded on March 30. The UGC NET June 2019 exams was conducted on June 20, 21, 24, 25, 26, 27 and 28.

Moreover, for UGC NET December 2019 exam, the information bulletin was released in the month of September.




NTA conducts the UGC-NET exam for 'Assistant Professor' and for 'Junior Research Fellowship and Assistant Professor . The test consists of two papers. Both the papers will be conducted in a single three hour duration. The exam will be in computer based test mode.

Candidates can register online at the official website of NTA at nta.ac.in or ntanet.nic.in.

Exam Pattern:



Educational Qualification:


Candidates who have secured at least 55% marks (50% for the candidates under reserved category) in Master's Degree from universities/institutions recognized by UGC are eligible for the test


Following candidates are also eligible for the NTA UGC NET 2019 exam:

· Candidates who are appearing for their qualifying Master's degree (final year) examination.

· Candidates whose final exam's results are still awaited.


· Candidates whose qualifying examinations have been delayed.

Such candidates must complete their Masters degree within two years from the date of NET result with required percentage of marks, failing which they shall be treated as disqualified.

For JRF, the candidates should not be more than 30 years old. There is relaxation of age for SC/ST/OBC, transgender, women, candidates having research experience, etc. For assistant professor exam, there is no upper age limit for applying.

Comments

  1. UGC NET is a professional exam, and this exam is also known as NTA-UGC-NET.
    This test is conducted by a national testing agency, UGC NET exam held twice in a year on behalf of the University grants commission that is UGC.
    This test is conducted to test the eligibility at the national-level for Assistant Professor Post or JRF (Junior Research fellowship) in the top Indian universities or colleges.
    The UGC NET exam consists of two papers, Paper I and Paper II, and both papers have the objective type questions or multiple choice questions that the questions have four options with one correct answer.
    UGC NET
    There must be questions that come to the mind of the candidates who are going to appear in UGC NET exam. In the following, there is important information regarding this exam.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Platforms in Remote Sensing

In remote sensing, a platform is the physical structure or vehicle that carries a sensor (camera, scanner, radar, etc.) to observe and collect information about the Earth's surface. Platforms are classified mainly by their altitude and mobility : Ground-Based Platforms Definition : Sensors mounted on the Earth's surface or very close to it. Examples : Tripods, towers, ground vehicles, handheld instruments. Applications : Calibration and validation of satellite data Detailed local studies (e.g., soil properties, vegetation health, air quality) Strength : High spatial detail but limited coverage. Airborne Platforms Definition : Sensors carried by aircraft, balloons, or drones (UAVs). Altitude : A few hundred meters to ~20 km. Examples : Airplanes with multispectral scanners UAVs with high-resolution cameras or LiDAR High-altitude balloons (stratospheric platforms) Applications : Local-to-regional mapping ...

Types of Remote Sensing

Remote Sensing means collecting information about the Earth's surface without touching it , usually using satellites, aircraft, or drones . There are different types of remote sensing based on the energy source and the wavelength region used. ๐Ÿ›ฐ️ 1. Active Remote Sensing ๐Ÿ“˜ Concept: In active remote sensing , the sensor sends out its own energy (like a signal or pulse) to the Earth's surface. The sensor then records the reflected or backscattered energy that comes back from the surface. ⚙️ Key Terminology: Transmitter: sends energy (like a radar pulse or laser beam). Receiver: detects the energy that bounces back. Backscatter: energy that is reflected back to the sensor. ๐Ÿ“Š Examples of Active Sensors: RADAR (Radio Detection and Ranging): Uses microwave signals to detect surface roughness, soil moisture, or ocean waves. LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging): Uses laser light (near-infrared) to measure elevation, vegetation...

Resolution of Sensors in Remote Sensing

Spatial Resolution ๐Ÿ—บ️ Definition : The smallest size of an object on the ground that a sensor can detect. Measured as : The size of a pixel on the ground (in meters). Example : Landsat → 30 m (each pixel = 30 × 30 m on Earth). WorldView-3 → 0.31 m (very detailed, you can see cars). Fact : Higher spatial resolution = finer details, but smaller coverage. Spectral Resolution ๐ŸŒˆ Definition : The ability of a sensor to capture information in different parts (bands) of the electromagnetic spectrum . Measured as : The number and width of spectral bands. Types : Panchromatic (1 broad band, e.g., black & white image). Multispectral (several broad bands, e.g., Landsat with 7–13 bands). Hyperspectral (hundreds of very narrow bands, e.g., AVIRIS). Fact : Higher spectral resolution = better identification of materials (e.g., minerals, vegetation types). Radiometric Resolution ๐Ÿ“Š Definition : The ability of a sensor to ...

Optical Sensors in Remote Sensing

1. What Are Optical Sensors? Optical sensors are remote sensing instruments that detect solar radiation reflected or emitted from the Earth's surface in specific portions of the electromagnetic spectrum (EMS) . They mainly work in: Visible region (0.4–0.7 ยตm) Near-Infrared – NIR (0.7–1.3 ยตm) Shortwave Infrared – SWIR (1.3–3.0 ยตm) Thermal Infrared – TIR (8–14 ยตm) — emitted energy, not reflected Optical sensors capture spectral signatures of surface features. Each object reflects/absorbs energy differently, creating a unique spectral response pattern . a) Electromagnetic Spectrum (EMS) The continuous range of wavelengths. Optical sensing uses solar reflective bands and sometimes thermal bands . b) Spectral Signature The unique pattern of reflectance or absorbance of an object across wavelengths. Example: Vegetation reflects strongly in NIR Water absorbs strongly in NIR and SWIR (appears dark) c) Radiance and Reflectance Radi...

geostationary and sun-synchronous

Orbital characteristics of Remote sensing satellite geostationary and sun-synchronous  Orbits in Remote Sensing Orbit = the path a satellite follows around the Earth. The orbit determines what part of Earth the satellite can see , how often it revisits , and what applications it is good for . Remote sensing satellites mainly use two standard orbits : Geostationary Orbit (GEO) Sun-Synchronous Orbit (SSO)  Geostationary Satellites (GEO) Characteristics Altitude : ~35,786 km above the equator. Period : 24 hours → same as Earth's rotation. Orbit type : Circular, directly above the equator . Appears "stationary" over one fixed point on Earth. Concepts & Terminologies Geosynchronous = orbit period matches Earth's rotation (24h). Geostationary = special type of geosynchronous orbit directly above equator → looks fixed. Continuous coverage : Can monitor the same area all the time. Applications Weather...