IIT Madras To Launch Two New BTech Programmes In Computational and Biomedical Engineering From 2025 Academic Session
The courses will be offered by the Department of Applied Mechanics and Biomedical Engineering. Students who clear the JEE (Advanced) can choose these two new programmes in the upcoming Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JOSAA) counselling. The courses will have a student strength of 40 each.
IIT Madras | File Photo
New Delhi: IIT, Madras, is launching two new BTech courses in computational engineering and biomedical engineering from the 2025 academic session, officials have said.
The courses will be offered by the Department of Applied Mechanics and Biomedical Engineering.
Students who clear the JEE (Advanced) can choose these two new programmes in the upcoming Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JOSAA) counselling. The courses will have a student strength of 40 each.
ALSO READ

IIT Madras Director's Statement
"As technology witnesses rapid changes, it is extremely important for higher educational institutions to introduce new programmes to bridge the academia-industry gap. These two new state-of-the-art BTech programmes shall address all novel concepts relevant to industry 5.0, health technology and advanced manufacturing areas," said V Kamakoti, Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Madras, director.
About The Courses
The courses are BTech in Computational Engineering and Mechanics (CEM) and BTech in Instrumentation and Biomedical Engineering (iBME).
Both programmes will offer students the opportunity to upgrade to the five-year dual degree (BTech + MTech) through Interdisciplinary Dual Degree (IDDD) programmes, three of which -- computational engineering, biomedical engineering, complex systems and dynamics -- are coordinated by the faculty of Department of Applied Mechanics and Biomedical Engineering.
ALSO READ
"These cutting-edge programmes will equip students with a strong systems approach to problem solving, blending core engineering principles with the latest technological advancements. These programmes will prepare graduates for leadership roles in solving complex real-world challenges both in academia and industry," said Sayan Gupta, the Department of Applied Mechanics and Biomedical Engineering head.
"With a future-focused curriculum, these programmes will redefine engineering education and empower the next generation of innovators and problem-solvers," he added.
(Except for the headline, this article has not been edited by FPJ's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)
RECENT STORIES
-
₹65 Crore Mithi River Desilting Scam: EOW Uncovers Forged Log Sheets Used For Fake BMC Payments -
Maharashtra Minister Bharat Gogawale Holds High-Level Meeting On MGNREGA Reforms, Welfare Demands... -
Indore Scam: EOW Raids IMC Official For Disproportionate Assets; Accused Of Assets Over 12 Times His... -
Rough Landing Of Saudi Airlines Haj Flight In Lucknow Sparks Panic, DGCA Orders Probe -
Mumbai News: MMRCL To Reconstruct Girgaon Road Stretch That Caved In; BMC Finds No Utility Leak