3,887 research outputs found
Role of NABARD in financing marine fisheries projects
National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development Is the apex organisation dealing with the policy, planning and operational matters relates
to credit for development of agriculture and allied sectors including marine fisheries. NABARD has been playing a significant role in promoting
marine fisheries development as a refinancing agency as well as developmental agency through conducting training programmes, supporting
innovative type of schemes and funding research projects. NABARD has been extending refinance assistance to schemes for acquiring fishing
vessels, mariculture and for building Infrastructural facilities. The experiences of NABARD in Implementing various fisheries schemes (s discussed
in this paper. The significant features of the pilot credit project Implemented in Orissa with BOBP assistance are highlighted. With view to increasing
the participation of financial institutions in the process of marine fisheries development, suggestions are made to Improve flow of credit to marine
fisherie
Agents in adversarial domains - modelling environments in parallel
We present a model of an environment to evaluate the behavior of an agent trying to hide from a pursuer is presented. The model computes the direction and the amount of protection provided by the environment. The computational complexity of this problem is improved by using a parallel implementation of this algorithm.<br /
Probing energy barriers and quantum confined states of buried semiconductor heterostructures with ballistic carrier injection: An experimental study
A three-terminal spectroscopy that probes both subsurface energy barriers and
interband optical transitions in a semiconductor heterostructure is
demonstrated. A metal-base transistor with a unipolar p-type semiconductor
collector embedding InAs/GaAs quantum dots (QDs) is studied. Using
minority/majority carrier injection, ballistic electron emission spectroscopy
and its related hot-carrier scattering spectroscopy measures barrier heights of
a buried AlxGa1-xAs layer in conduction band and valence band respectively, the
band gap of Al0.4Ga0.6As is therefore determined as 2.037 +/- 0.009 eV at 9 K.
Under forward collector bias, interband electroluminescence is induced by the
injection of minority carriers with sub-bandgap kinetic energies. Three
emission peaks from InAs QDs, InAs wetting layer, and GaAs are observed in
concert with minority carrier injection.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Some aspects of Cold Deformation studies of Al-ZrB2 composites
In the present study Al-ZrB2 composite were made by powder metallurgy route adding different amounts of synthesized ZrB2 powder (2, 4, 6, 8, 10 wt. %). The ZrB2 powder was synthesized by using self-propagating high temperature synthesis (SHS). The samples of different aspect ratios (0.35, 0.5 and 0.65) were made and then sintered at 550oC under continuous argon gas atmosphere in a tubular furnace for 1 hour. The microstructure of the composites had shown that there is no chemical adhesion between Al matrix and ZrB2 reinforcement. Hardness of the composites increased with increase in the amount of ZrB2 reinforcement. The hardness of the composites increased with increase in amount of ZrB2 reinforcement. It was found that the formability stress index increased with the increase of preform fractional density and decreased with the aspect ratio. Relation between various stress ratios, axial strain and relative densities were analyzed. Statistical fitting methods are used on the curve drawn between the axial strain and the stress formability index. The compacts of lower aspect ratio and high initial preform density were found to have a very high fracture strain
Sequence space coverage, entropy of genomes and the potential to detect non-human DNA in human samples
Background: Genomes store information for building and maintaining organisms. Complete sequencing of many genomes provides the opportunity to study and compare global information properties of those genomes.
Results: We have analyzed aspects of the information content of Homo sapiens, Mus musculus, Drosophila melanogaster, Caenorhabditis elegans, Arabidopsis thaliana, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and Escherichia coli (K-12) genomes. Virtually all possible (\u3e 98%) 12 bp oligomers appear in vertebrate genomes while \u3c 2% of 19 bp oligomers are present. Other species showed different ranges of \u3e 98% to \u3c 2% of possible oligomers in D. melanogaster (12-17 bp), C. elegans (11-17 bp), A. thaliana (11-17 bp), S. cerevisiae (10-16 bp) and E. coli (9-15 bp). Frequencies of unique oligomers in the genomes follow similar patterns. We identified a set of 2.6 M 15-mers that are more than 1 nucleotide different from all 15-mers in the human genome and so could be used as probes to detect microbes in human samples. In a human sample, these probes would detect 100% of the 433 currently fully sequenced prokaryotes and 75% of the 3065 fully sequenced viruses. The human genome is significantly more compact in sequence space than a random genome. We identified the most frequent 5- to 20-mers in the human genome, which may prove useful as PCR primers. We also identified a bacterium, Anaeromyxobacter dehalogenans, which has an exceptionally low diversity of oligomers given the size of its genome and its GC content. The entropy of coding regions in the human genome is significantly higher than non-coding regions and chromosomes. However chromosomes 1, 2, 9, 12 and 14 have a relatively high proportion of coding DNA without high entropy, and chromosome 20 is the opposite with a low frequency of coding regions but relatively high entropy.
Conclusion: Measures of the frequency of oligomers are useful for designing PCR assays and for identifying chromosomes and organisms with hidden structure that had not been previously recognized. This information may be used to detect novel microbes in human tissues
Emerging hypothesis verification using function-based geometric models and active vision strategies
This paper describes an investigation into the use of parametric 2D models describing the movement of edges for the determination of possible 3D shape and hence function of an object. An assumption of this research is that the camera can foveate and track particular features. It is argued that simple 2D analytic descriptions of the movement of edges can infer 3D shape while the camera is moved. This uses an advantage of foveation i.e. the problem becomes object centred. The problem of correspondence for numerous edge points is overcome by the use of a tree based representation for the competing hypotheses. Numerous hypothesis are maintained simultaneously and it does not rely on a single kinematic model which assumes constant velocity or acceleration. The numerous advantages of this strategy are described
Effect of Boron Carbide on wear resistance of graphite containing Al7029 Based Hybrid Composites and its Dry Sliding Wear Characterization Through Experimental, Response Surface Method and ANOVA
Composites are often chosen for tribological applications due to its tailored material properties. The development of hybrid metal matrix composites and the study of their wear behavior has been a prominent focus of materials science research. Present paper deals with fabrication of Al-7029/B4C/Gr hybrid composite using stir casting. Particle distribution and material phase are identified by SEM and XRD. Hardness of the composite increased to 101 BHN while base alloy with 63 BHN. Pin-on-disc Tribometer used to carry wear test and the experimentation conducted by considering three input wear control parameters: 15–35 N (load), 1.5–3.5 m/s (speed) and 200–600 m (distance). Addition of 6%B4C/3%Gr, wear rate of hybrid composites reduced. ANOVA confirmed that load as the most influencing parameter on wear rate. RSM results correlates with mean effect plots of ANOVA and experiments and found that the results are in good compliance. SEM graphs of worn surface confirms that more wear occurred with increased load
Atomic Bloch-Zener oscillations for sensitive force measurements in a cavity
Cold atoms in an optical lattice execute Bloch-Zener oscillations when they
are accelerated. We have performed a theoretical investigation into the case
when the optical lattice is the intra-cavity field of a driven Fabry-Perot
resonator. When the atoms oscillate inside the resonator, we find that their
back-action modulates the phase and intensity of the light transmitted through
the cavity. We solve the coupled atom-light equations self-consistently and
show that, remarkably, the Bloch period is unaffected by this back-action. The
transmitted light provides a way to observe the oscillation continuously,
allowing high precision measurements to be made with a small cloud of atoms.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Updated version including cavity heating effect
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