609 research outputs found
Trends and Innovations in Value Chain Management of Tropical Fruits
India produced about 97.35 million tons of fruits during 2017-18, of which less than 1% fruits were exported. In India, less than 5% of the total fruits produced are sold by the organized supply chain management and E-commerce companies and 3% of the total produce gets processed, indicating that more than 90% of fruits follow the traditional route of supply chain involving farmers, auctioneers, agents/intermediaries, wholesalers, sub-wholesalers, retailers, cart vendors before they reach the consumers. Post-Harvest (PH) losses occur at each stage of the supply chain and are compounded with each operation. A study on PH loss estimation has shown maximum loss of 15.88% in guava among fruits while other studies have reported much higher PH lossesin fruits. Value of tropical fruits, both in monetary terms and quality reduces during harvesting, handling, transportation from the farmer’s field, packaging, storage, retail and even at the consumer’s level. Important interventions that reduce the PH losses and improve the supply chain management are establishment of pre-cooling facilities and short term storage facilities through evaporative cooling/refrigeration mechanisms at the farm gate, primary processing and packaging provision at the farm gate or nearby collection centres, transportation of fruits in refrigerated/evaporative cooled vans with the use of alternate energy sources and provision for low temperature and high humidity storage at the retail centres. Establishment of a Postharvest management system for sorting, washing, partial drying, edible coating, if required and grading at the collection centres will help in reducing the PH losses in the supply chain and help farmers get a better value for their produce. Formation of farmer clusters or Farmers Producer Organizations (FPOs) provides farmers a better bargaining power because of higher volumes. Educating and bringing awareness among the farmers about the good agricultural practices (GAP), mechanization in field operations, availability of seeds for different seasons, eliminating the problem of seasonality are also important in production of quality output. Transportation of fruits, such as mango, banana and guava in vans/wagons operating through evaporative cooling/cooling mechanism using phase change material will help in improving the shelf life of such fruits. An integrated radio frequency identification (RFID) system along with the sensors for ethylene, temperature and RH monitoring is likely to help in easy tracking and traceability of the fresh produce. Establishment of primary and secondary processing facility at the farmer cluster/ FPO levels will help in transforming the farmers to primary processors
Solar and Heliospheric Physics with the Square Kilometre Array
The fields of solar radiophysics and solar system radio physics, or radio
heliophysics, will benefit immensely from an instrument with the capabilities
projected for SKA. Potential applications include interplanetary scintillation
(IPS), radio-burst tracking, and solar spectral radio imaging with a superior
sensitivity. These will provide breakthrough new insights and results in topics
of fundamental importance, such as the physics of impulsive energy releases,
magnetohydrodynamic oscillations and turbulence, the dynamics of post-eruptive
processes, energetic particle acceleration, the structure of the solar wind and
the development and evolution of solar wind transients at distances up to and
beyond the orbit of the Earth. The combination of the high spectral, time and
spatial resolution and the unprecedented sensitivity of the SKA will radically
advance our understanding of basic physical processes operating in solar and
heliospheric plasmas and provide a solid foundation for the forecasting of
space weather events.Comment: 15 pages, Proceedings of Advancing Astrophysics with the Square
Kilometre Array (AASKA14). 9 -13 June, 2014. Giardini Naxos, Italy. Online at
http://pos.sissa.it/cgi-bin/reader/conf.cgi?confid=215, id.16
First detections of 610 MHz radio emission from hot magnetic stars
We have carried out a study of radio emission from a small sample of magnetic
O- and B-type stars using the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope, with the goal of
investigating their magnetospheres at low frequencies. These are the lowest
frequency radio measurements ever obtained of hot magnetic stars. The
observations were taken at random rotational phases in the 1390 and the 610 MHz
bands. Out of the 8 stars, we detect five B-type stars in both the 1390 and the
610 MHz bands. The O-type stars were observed only in the 1390 MHz band, and no
detections were obtained. We explain this result as a consequence of free-free
absorption by the free-flowing stellar wind exterior to the closed
magnetosphere. We also study the variability of individual stars. One star - HD
133880 - exhibits remarkably strong and rapid variability of its low frequency
flux density. We discuss the possibility of this emission being coherent
emission as reported for CU Vir by Trigilio et al. (2000).Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables, submitted to MNRA
Inside-Out: Representational Ethics and Diverse Communities
© Society for Community Research and Action 2017 The purpose of this paper is to write about insights and special considerations for researchers who are, to some degree, “insiders” to the communities they study by expanding on the concept of representational ethics as applied to research in community psychology with diverse and marginalized groups. Representational ethics refers to the ways that researchers, artists, or corporations represent the identities of the people they portray in their communications. As community psychologists we generate and disseminate knowledge about the communities we work with, and in that process, create narratives about the people who participate in our studies. In preparing a report on psychological issues among Evangelical Christian refugees from the former Soviet Union, Dina Birman struggled with her portrayal of this group and her own status of being both an insider and an outsider to this community. When investigating academic aspirations and psychological distress among Muslim high school students, Ashmeet Oberoi was forced to acknowledge the one-sidedness of the discourse on autonomy and cultural socialization of Muslim adolescents. In her research with Cuban-educated doctors in Miami, Florida, Wendy Moore encountered similar issues as she considered how to represent gender dynamics among her participants
Breeding tomatoes suitable for processing with triple disease resistance to tomato leaf curl disease, bacterial wilt and early blight
India is the second largest producer of tomato with 11 per cent global share and cultivated on an estimated area of 0.76 million hectares with productivity of 24 tonnes per hectare. Less than 1% of the produce is processed when compared to 26% in other major producing countries. Of the estimated more than 41 million tonnes of tomato processed globally, only 130,000 tonnes were processed in India and domestic demand for processed tomato products is expanding at an estimated 30% annually. At present traditional fresh market tomato cultivars are being processed though such cultivars are unsuitable for processing. Processors in India are looking for high yielding tomato cultivars with high total soluble solids (5-6 Âş Brix), acidity not less than 0.4%, pH less than 4.5 and uniform red colour with a/b colour value of at least 2. In addition, firm fruited tomato cultivars with joint less pedicel (j2) which facilitate mechanical harvesting or rapid hand picking. ICAR-Indian Institute of Horticultural Research has recently developed two high yielding F1 hybrids in tomato viz: Arka Apeksha and Arka Vishesh suitable for processing. On evaluation for three years, both the hybrids recorded good level of total soluble solids (4.5-5Âş Brix) and colour value of 2. Further, both the hybrids had high yield potential (80-90 tonnes / hectare) with triple disease resistance to tomato leaf curl disease, bacterial wilt and early blight. Arka Apeksha and Arka Vishesh were also bred with jointless pedicel making them suitable for mechanical harvesting. Our experimental studies on vine storability revealed that all the fruits were intact on plants even 110 days after transplanting in the main field facilitating once over harvest
Value at Risk models with long memory features and their economic performance
We study alternative dynamics for Value at Risk (VaR) that incorporate a slow moving component and information on recent aggregate returns in established quantile (auto) regression models. These models are compared on their economic performance, and also on metrics of first-order importance such as violation ratios. By better economic performance, we mean that changes in the VaR forecasts should have a lower variance to reduce transaction costs and should lead to lower exceedance sizes without raising the average level of the VaR. We find that, in combination with a targeted estimation strategy, our proposed models lead to improved performance in both statistical and economic terms
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