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48 Scientist Vacancy – Indian Meteorological Department,All India

Last Date: 05 Mar,2021
Indian Meteorological Department
All India

Indian Meteorological Department Recruitment 2021 notification regarding filling of Scientist Job Vacancies. The Government organization invites online application from eligible candidates having Engg Graduate qualification. These 54 Scientist Post are in Indian Meteorological Department, Across India.The job applications for Indian Meteorological Department Jobs 2021 will be accepted online on or before 05 Mar 2021.

Employment Notification 48 Scientist Vacancy – Indian Meteorological Department,All India

JOB DETAILS:
Name of the post– Scientist
No of post – 48
Pay Scale – Pay Level13 ,7th CPC

Educational Qualification:
Master’s Degree,Bachelors Degree.

Apply to 48 Scientist Vacancy – Indian Meteorological Department,All India

General Condition:

  • Only Indian nationals are eligible.
  • Relaxation in age and experience for SC/ST/OBC candidates will be as per GOI Rule.
  • Relaxationfor Government servants up to five years in accordance with the instructions or orders issued by the Central Government from time to time.This relaxation of 5 years is admissible to such Govt. servants who are working in posts which are in the same line or allied cadres and where a relationship could be established that the service already rendered in a particular post will be useful for the efficient discharge of the duties of the posts, recruitment to which has been advertised.
  • Applications should be submitted online through www.imd.gov.inin the prescribed format.
  • Applications that are not submitted in the prescribed format will not be considered.
  • The candidate’s age should not exceed the age limit mentioned above as on date of closure of application. Experience will be counted from the date of acquiring the essential academic qualifications.
  • The experience, relevant to the requirement of job or research or teaching will only be considered towards the total period of experience.
  • Doctorate degree in the relevant field will count as 3 years of experience.
  • India Meteorological Department/Ministryof Earth Sciencesreserves the right to cancel the recruitment process without assigning any reason thereof or vary the number of posts to be filled.
  • Travel: No TA will be paid by Ministry for attending the Selection/Interview.
  • IMD will not be responsible for any other arrangements.
  • The names of candidates screened-in for interview before Selection Committee will be displayed at India Meteorological Department website.
  • Scientists appointed shall be liable to serve anywhere in India and outside India.
  • The post being scientific posts and are in grade above the lowest grade in Group ‘A'(Scientist B) of the service and are therefore exempted from the purview of the reservation in terms of DoP&T OM No.9/02/73-Estt(SCT), dated 23rd June, 1975 and DoP&T OM No.36012/27/94-Estt(SCT) dated l3th May, 1994 and approval of Competent Authority has been obtained.

How To Apply:

Vacancy Notice 48 Scientist Vacancy – Indian Meteorological Department,All India

  • The candidates can apply for morethan one post.
  • Application as per the Performa should be submitted within 42 days from the date of publication of Advertisement in Employment News.
  • Copies of certificates (self-attested) in support of educational qualification (10thClassOnwards), date of birth andexperience, if any, should be uploaded with the application.
  • SC/ST/OBC certificate, if applicable, as per the prescribed format, should be uploaded with the application.
  • Applicants are also required to bring original certificates/documents for verification at the time of interview.
  • No correspondence will be entertained from the candidates who are not selected for appointment.
  • The prescribed essential qualifications are minimum requirements and the mere possession of the same does not entitle candidates to be called for interview. If the numbers of applications, received in response to advertisement are large, it will not be convenient or possible to call all candidates for interview. Hence, India Meteorological Department/ Ministry of earth Sciences may restrict the number of candidates to be called for interview before Selection Board to the reasonable limit through screening process.
  • The criteria for screening of the applications will be based on candidates qualifying credentials against:
    i)The essential requirements specified above,
    ii)Date of birth,
    iii)Completeness of the application in terms of providing accurate details and submission of the passport size photograph, and copies of the marks list, academic and experience certificates, signature,
    iv)Essential experience,
    v)Desirable qualification and experience as specified above,
    vi)Consistent academic performance at one or more levels etc. The candidates experience certificates should clearly specify whether they possess the experience / knowledge / skills/ technology / software platform requested in the essential / desirable experience requirements against the post. The benchmark for screening the applications will be set by a committee constituted to screen the applications. The final selection of the Screened in candidate will be based on the candidate’s performance before the Selection Board. No correspondence will be entertained with candidates who are not called for interview/selected for appointment
  • The last date for receipt of online application is 42 days (60 days for those in Assam, Meghalaya, Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram, Manipur, Nagaland, Tripura, Sikkim, LadakhUT, Lahaul and Spiti District, Pangi Sub Division of Chamba District of Himachal Pradesh, Andaman & Nicobar Islands and Lakshadweep) from the date of publication of this advertisementin Employment News.For calculation of age of applicants, last date for receipt of online application is 42 daysfrom the date of publication of this advertisementin Employment News(for all applicants irrespectiveof their place of present residence.

About Us:

  • The beginnings of meteorology in India can be traced to ancient times. Early philosophical writings of the 3000 B.C. era, such as the Upanishadas, contain serious discussion about the processes of cloud formation and rain and the seasonal cycles caused by the movement of earth round the sun. Varahamihira’s classical work, the Brihatsamhita, written around 500 A.D., provides a clear evidence that a deep knowledge of atmospheric processes existed even in those times. It was understood that rains come from the sun (Adityat Jayate Vrishti) and that good rainfall in the rainy season was the key to bountiful agriculture and food for the people. Kautilya’s Arthashastra contains records of scientific measurements of rainfall and its application to the country’s revenue and relief work. Kalidasa in his epic, ‘Meghdoot’, written around the seventh century, even mentions the date of onset of the monsoon over central India and traces the path of the monsoon clouds.
  • Meteorology, as we perceive it now, may be said to have had its firm scientific foundation in the 17th century after the invention of the thermometer and the barometer and the formulation of laws governing the behaviour of atmospheric gases. It was in 1636 that Halley, a British scientist, published his treatise on the Indian summer monsoon, which he attributed to a seasonal reversal of winds due to the differential heating of the Asian land mass and the Indian Ocean.
  • India is fortunate to have some of the oldest meteorological observatories of the world. The British East India Company established several such stations, for example, those at Calcutta in 1785 and Madras (now Chennai) in 1796 for studying the weather and climate of India. The Asiatic Society of Bengal founded in 1784 at Calcutta, and in 1804 at Bombay (now Mumbai), promoted scientific studies in meteorology in India. Captain Harry Piddington at Calcutta published 40 papers during 1835-1855 in the Journal of the Asiatic Society dealing with tropical storms and coined the word “cyclone”, meaning the coil of a snake. In 1842 he published his monumental work on the “Laws of the Storms”. In the first half of the 19th century, several observatories began functioning in India under the provincial governments.
  • A disastrous tropical cyclone struck Calcutta in 1864 and this was followed by failures of the monsoon rains in 1866 and 1871. In the year 1875, the Government of India established the India Meteorological Department, bringing all meteorological work in the country under a central authority. Mr. H. F. Blanford was appointed Meteorological Reporter to the Government of India. The first Director General of Observatories was Sir John Eliot who was appointed in May 1889 at Calcutta headquarters. The headquarters of IMD were later shifted to Shimla, then to Poona (now Pune) and finally to New Delhi.

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