International Conference on Recent Trends in Mathematics and Statistics

(ICRTMS-2025)

Supported by

Pradhan Mantri Uchchatar Shiksha Abhiyan

(PM-USHA)

Ministry of Education, Government of India, New Delhi

About the University

The Kavayitri Bahinabai Chaudhari North Maharashtra University, Jalgaon (formerly known as North Maharashtra University) established on 15th August 1990 under the leadership of founder Vice-Chancellor Hon’ble Prof. N.K. Thakare, a well-known Mathematician. The university is located in the Jalgaon district, which is popularly known as the gold city of Maharashtra state. The campus is spread over 650 acres of land on hilly terrain and developed with beautiful, spacious, academic, administrative and residential buildings that include the University Institute of Chemical Technology and 14 Schools with various Departments.

About the School

The School of Mathematical Sciences (SoMS) includes the three Departments Mathematics, Statistics, and Actuarial Science, offering applied programs like M.Sc. Mathematics with specialization in Computational Mathematics, M.Sc. Statistics with specialization in Industrial Statistics, B.Sc. (Hons.) under NEP-2020 in Statistics and Actuarial Science, and Ph.D. programs. The research areas of faculties are Algebra, Analysis, Integro-Differential Equations, Fuzzy Mathematics, Fixed Point Theory, Industrial and Health Statistics, Actuarial Science, Quality Control, Statistical Inference, Multivariate Analysis, Applied Statistics, Computational Statistics etc.

About Jalgaon city and Surrounding

The city is located in North Maharashtra and is a part of the sub-region of Khandesh. Jalgaon district is colloquially known as the “Banana Hub of India” as the region’s farmers grow approximately two-third of Maharashtra’s banana crop production and more than three percent of world’s banana crop production. Ajanta Caves, which are a UNESCO World Heritage Site, universally regarded as masterpieces of Buddhist religious art, are located 60 km away from the university campus.