After 61 years under the Faculty of Agriculture, Bangladesh Agricultural University’s (BAU) Department of Physics has been transferred to the Faculty of Agricultural Engineering & Technology.
Confirming the move, Prof. Dr. Md. Khairul Hassan Bhuiyan, Head of the Department, noted that globally, physics departments belong to engineering faculties. Since 1964, however, BAU's Physics Department remained under the Faculty of Agriculture due to administrative hurdles. The shift, effective January 26, 2025, was made possible by the current administration’s efforts.
University sources say physics courses were once integral to the Faculty of Agriculture, but a 1969 ordinance change led to a decline in their importance. However, the courses remained compulsory for Agricultural Engineering students.
In April 2002, BAU formed a high-powered committee to restructure its infrastructure, which provided five key recommendations. One of these-recommendation number three, suggested transferring the Department of Physics to the Faculty of Agricultural Engineering & Technology. While the other four recommendations were implemented, this particular one remained unaddressed.
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The decision to transfer the department was finally made in March 2024 during the 180th meeting of the Faculty of Agriculture. Following this, Prof. Dr. Md. Zainul Abedin, Dean of the Faculty of Agricultural Engineering & Technology, submitted an application to the university registrar during the faculty’s 209th committee meeting, requesting approval for the transfer. Although the proposal was included in the academic council’s meeting agenda in May 2024, it was not formally presented due to procedural complexities. However, during the 210th meeting, the transfer was endorsed, and upon the vice-chancellor’s approval, the department was officially shifted to its new faculty after 61 years.
Prof. Bhuiyan previously served as Head of the Department from June 2010 to August 2017 and resumed the role in August 2019, continuing to the present.
Prof. Bhuiyan emphasized physics’s role in the Fifth Industrial Revolution, where AI, robotics, and big data are revolutionizing agriculture. He highlighted that physics-driven innovations enhance farm efficiency, sustainability, and profitability.