A quantum physicist — atomic structure, photoionization dynamics, high-performance computing — who now puts that research energy into one problem: making the syllabus something you can watch happen. Competitive Physics is that idea, made real.
Joint doctorate from Dublin City University and the Military University of Technology, specialising in Statistical Photoionization Theory. Erasmus Mundus EXTATIC fellow.
All India Rank 105 in JAM 2014. Merit-cum-Means scholar, crossing from engineering into pure physics.
The engineering base behind the computational work, mentored by emeritus Prof. O.P. Katyal.
Peer-reviewed work on atomic structure, photoionization dynamics and high-performance computing. ORCID 0000-0002-6032-7959 ↗
Too much of the syllabus gets reduced to memorised formulas. Students learn 1/v − 1/u = 1/f without ever watching an image leap from real to virtual as the object crosses the focus. This hub is built to fix that: to let you drag the object, tune the glass, orbit the bench in 3D, and watch the rays converge exactly where the mathematics predicts.
Every diagram is physically exact — not a cartoon. Every module carries original, competition-grade problems at the depth the toughest entrance exams demand. The goal is simple: after time on the board, the formula sheet should read like a set of things you have already seen happen.
Rays terminate where they truly converge; images sit at the paraxial focus. The picture and the formula never disagree.
Original warm-ups, open benches and question banks written fresh at the depth the toughest entrance exams demand — never lifted from a textbook.
The printable glossary links each result to a simulation you can drag until the number makes sense.
Real outcomes from real students, 2022–2025. Every tile below is one of them.
I don't want you to trust the formula. I want you to have seen it happen so many times that, in the exam hall, the picture is already moving in your head.
Built for the student who wants to see the physics, not just pass it — and taught by someone who's still doing it.