4,535 research outputs found
Brackish water culture fisheries: A comment
Based on the papers and proceedings of The National Workshop on Development of Inland Fishery Resources, sponsored by the Ministry of Agriculture, Govemment of India, and held during November 1-3, 1983 at Ahmedabad under the joint auspices of the Centre for Management in Agriculture, Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, and the Indian Society of Agricultural Economics, Bomba
Aerosol Characteristics at a high-altitude station Nainital during the ISRO-GBP Land Campaign-II
During the second land campaign (LC-II) organised by ISRO-GBP, extensive
ground-based measurements of aerosol characteristics were carried out over
Manora Peak (29.4oN; 79.5oE; 1951 metres above mean sea level), Nainital (a
high altitude station located in the Shivalik ranges of Central Himalayas)
during the dry, winter season (December) of 2004. These measurements included
the spectral aerosol optical depths (AOD), columnar water vapour content (W),
Total Columnar Ozone (TCO), total number concentration (NT) of near surface
aerosols, mass concentration of black carbon (MB), aerosol mass loading (MT),
and Global Solar Radiation. Based on these measured parameters, we present the
results on the near-surface and columnar properties of atmospheric aerosols at
Nainital.Comment: Published in the Proceedings of the ISRO-GBP Land-Campaign-II
meeting, Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmadabad (Inida), March 200
Marine fisheries development - an outlook for 21st century and key policy issues
Marine fisheries will have to play a crucial role in augmenting supplies both. In the domestic as
wall as export markets. Thrust of the development will be on deep-sea and brackishwater resources.
Ths exploitation of these resources, particularly deepsea, will require a rapid transition from charter of
vessels to joint ventures aid owned fleat with modern and sophisticated technology. Creation of sizeable
owned fleet wou'd require massive credit and fiscal aupport. I his thrust for exploitation of deepsea
resources can be sustained with concerted attempts to formulate and implement strategies for product
development and marketing In both domestic as well as export markets. This will also require the
attention to develop the necessary infrastructure to hendle such vessels, onshore processing facilities,
batter management of fishing harbours, cold chiin grid in the domestic markets, development of trensit
and terminal markets at wholesale and retail levels. Boatbuilding yards will have to take up new
challenges. This also throws up challenges for net-marketing industry in this country. All these
developments would also require massive efforts for training and development of manpower. This paper
deals with all these areas in a systems framework and suggests appropriate policy suppoit measures for
strengthening various elements of the system
Velocity of sound in relativistic heavy-ion collisions
We have studied the rapidity distribution of secondary hadrons produced in
nucleus-nucleus collisions at ultra-relativistic energies within the ambit of
the Landau's hydrodynamical model. A reasonable description of the data can
also be obtained by using the Bjorken's hydrodynamical model if the boost
invariance is restricted to a finite rapidity range. The sensitivity of the
hadronic spectra on the equation of state vis- a -vis the velocity of sound has
been discussed. The correlation between the velocity of sound and the
freeze-out temperature has been indicated. The effects of the non-zero widths
of various mesonic and baryonic degrees of freedom up to the mass value ~ 2.5
GeV is seen to be small.Comment: 9 pages and 11 figures. Major changes. To appear in Physical Review
Empirical determination of charm quark energy loss and its consequences for azimuthal anisotropy
We propose an empirical model to determine the form of energy loss of charm
quarks due to multiple scatterings in quark gluon plasma by demanding a good
description of production of D mesons and non-photonic electrons in
relativistic collision of heavy nuclei at RHIC and LHC energies. Best results
are obtained when we approximate the momentum loss per collision , where is a constant depending on the
centrality and the centre of mass energy. Comparing our results with those
obtained earlier for drag coefficients estimated using Langevin equation for
heavy quarks we find that up to half of the energy loss of charm quarks at top
RHIC energy could be due to collisions while that at LHC energy at 2760 GeV/A
the collisional energy loss could be about one third of the total. Estimates
are obtained for azimuthal anisotropy in momentum spectra of heavy mesons, due
to this energy loss. We further suggest that energy loss of charm quarks may
lead to an enhanced production of D-mesons and single electrons at low in
AA collisions.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, Typographical errors corrected, Key-words and
PACS indices added, sequence of figures corrected, references added in
section 3, discussions expande
Cosmic Evolution with Early and Late Acceleration Inspired by Dual Nature of the Ricci Scalar Curvature
In the present paper, it is found that dark energy emerges spontaneously from
the modified gravity. According to cosmological scenario, obtained here, the
universe inflates for sec. in the beginning and late universe
accelerates after 8.58 Gyrs. During the long intermediate period, it
decelerates driven by radiation and subsequently by matter. Emerged
gravitational dark energy mimics quintessence and its density falls by 115
orders from its initial value to its current
value .Comment: 40 pages. To appearin Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Characteristics of black carbon over Delhi and Manora Peak - a comparative study
The characteristics of aerosol black carbon (BC) were studied at two different climatic regimes, i.e. Delhi and Manora Peak during winter and spring of 2007. Spring BC was found to be similar to 59% lower at Delhi and similar to 23% higher at Manora Peak than their corresponding winter BC. Diurnal BC variation showed two enhanced peaks at Delhi (morning and night) whereas a single late afternoon peak at Manora Peak. Delhi BC showed a clear correlation with prevailing winds whereas no correlation was observed at Manora Peak. The major contribution of BC at Manora Peak can be expected from biomass burning while at Delhi fossil fuel dominates
Nutrient Management for Higher Productivity of Swarna Sub1 Under Flash Floods Areas
Two field experiments were conducted at Regional Agricultural Research Station, Tarahara, Nepal during 2012 and 2013 to determine the effect of agronomic management on growth and yield of Swarna Sub1 under flash floods. The first experiment was laid out in a split plot design with three replications; and four different nutrient combinations at nursery as main plots and three age groups of rice seedlings as sub plots. The second experiment was laid out in a randomized complete block design and replicated thrice; with three post flood nutrient doses at six and 12 days after de-submergence (dad). The experiments were complete submerged at 10 days after transplanting for 12 days. The survival percentage, at 21 dad, was significantly higher in plots planted with 35 (90.25%) and 40 (91.58%) days-old seedlings compared to 30 days-old seedlings (81.75%). Plots with 35 days-old seedlings produced 5.15 t ha-1 with advantage of 18.83% over 30 days-old seedlings. Plots with 100-50-50 kg N-P2O5-K2O/ha at nursery recorded the highest grain filling of 79.41% and grain yield of 5.068 t/ha with more benefit. Post flood application of 20-20 N-K20kg/ha at 6 dad resulted in higher plant survival and taller plants, leading to significantly higher grain yield of 5.183 t/ha and straw yield of 5.315 t/ha. Hence, 35-40 days old seedlings raised with 100-50-50 kg N-P2O5-K2O /ha in nursery and the additional application of20-20 kg N-K2O /ha at 6 dad improved plant survival and enhanced yield of Swarna Sub1 under flash flood conditions. The practice has prospects of saving crop loss with getting rice yield above national average yield leading to enhanced food security in the flood prone areas of Nepal
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