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Co-Authors
- R.Gurumurthi Hegde
- S. S. Hebbar
- K. G. Bhat
- R. Ganesh Hegde
- A. K. Kulshreshtha
- Vibhuti Rai
- Sunit Gupta
- P. Ravikumar
- M. Arima
- A. Mohan
- M. Kavitha
- K. Murugesan
- J. Indumathi
- D. Manjula
- T. Tamizharasan
- B. P. Singh
- U. K. Shukla
- R. Bhatla
- A. S. Naik
- Kuldeep Prakash
- C. K. Singh
- S. Tewari
- P. Chandra Singh
- T. Hokada
- R. S. Kumar
- R. Yadav
- S. K. Rai
- M. K. Yadav
- Pradip K. Singh
- S. Jaiswal
Journals
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z All
Prakash, D.
- Additional Description to Two Newly Recorded Plants from Karnataka
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Indian Forester, Vol 136, No 1 (2010), Pagination: 117-122Abstract
During the floristic survey of Uttara Kannada and Udupi districts of Karnataka, authors came across two herbaceous taxa viz. Ceraeioearpum bennetti (Miq.) Cogn. (Cucurbitaceae) and Gymnostachyum polyanthum Wt. (Acanthaceae). Additional informations noticed in these plants form an amendment in the description of these plants.Keywords
Uttara Kannada and Udupi Districts, New Record, Additional Description, Ceraeioearpum bennetti (Miq.) Cogn., Gymnostaehyum polyanthum Wt.- Eucalyptus - is it a Native of Indian Subcontinent?
Abstract Views :282 |
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Indian Forester, Vol 121, No 5 (1995), Pagination: 433-436Abstract
No abstract- Study of Thermal Comfort in a Room with Windows at Adjacent Walls along with Additional Vents
Abstract Views :389 |
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Authors
D. Prakash
1,
P. Ravikumar
2
Affiliations
1 Arasu Engineering College, Kumbakonam, IN
2 St. Joseph College of Engineering and Technology, Thanjavur, IN
1 Arasu Engineering College, Kumbakonam, IN
2 St. Joseph College of Engineering and Technology, Thanjavur, IN
Source
Indian Journal of Science and Technology, Vol 6, No 6 (2013), Pagination: 4659-4669Abstract
Thermal comfort has become a problem to the occupants of many residential building without air-conditioning system in hot climates. Natural ventilation is the only positive option for those residential buildings to improve their thermal comfort. Hence, present work is focused in analyzing the indoor characteristics of air and thermal comfort prevailed inside the room with windows at their adjacent walls along with the additional vents. Additional openings include a roof vent and a vent in the windward side wall. In this study, Computational Fluid Dynamic technique is employed to study the indoor airflow behavior and the CFD simulation was validated with the network model. 3-Dimensional model was created and k-ε turbulence model was used. Indoor airflow behavior was studied under various locations of the roof vent and best location was identified. Also another additional vent in the windward side wall was provided and analyzed under various shapes like cylindrical and nozzle shape. Air velocity, temperature, low temperature zone, low velocity zone and Predicted mean vote contours are predicted for all the simulated cases. These results are very much useful to study the effectiveness of the additional vent. Finally, the best location for the roof vent and the best shape for additional vent at windward side wall were identified.Keywords
Ventilation, Thermal Comfort, Residential Building, CFD, PMVReferences
- Mochida A, Yoshino H et al. (2005). Methods for controlling airflow in and around a building under cross-ventilation to improve indoor thermal comfort, Journal of Wind Engineering and Industrial Aerodynamics, vol 93(6), 437–449.
- Asfour O S, and Gadi M B (2007). A comparison between CFD and network models for predicting wind-driven ventilation in buildings, Building and Environment, vol 42(12), 4079–4085.
- Awbi H B (2003). Ventilation of Buildings, 2nd Edn, Taylor & Francis, Spon press.
- Chang W R (2006). Effect of porous hedge on cross ventilation of a residential building, Building and Environment, vol 41(5), 549–556.
- Chu C R, Chiu Y H et al. (2010). An experimental study of wind-driven cross ventilation in partitioned buildings, Energy and Buildings, vol 42(5), 667–673.
- Song D, and Kato S (2004). Radiational panel cooling system with continuous natural cross ventilation for hot and humid regions, Energy and Buildings, vol 36(12), 1273–1280.
- Evalo G, and Popov V (2006). Computational analysis of wind driven natural ventilation in buildings, Energy and Buildings, vol 38(5), 491–501.
- Favarolo P A, and Manz H (2005). Temperature-driven single-sided ventilation through a large rectangular opening, Building and Environment, vol 40(5), 689– 699.
- Fisk W J, and Rosenfeld A H (1997). Estimates of improved productivity and health from better indoor environments, Indoor Air, vol 7(3), 158–172.
- Hoang M L, Verboven P et al. (2000). Analysis of the air flow in a cold store by means of computational fluid dynamics, International Journal of Refrigeration, vol 23(2), 127–140.
- Huo Y, Haghighat F et al. (2000). A systematic approach to describe the air terminal device in CFD simulation for room air distribution analysis, Building and Environment, vol 35(1), 563–576.
- Caciolo M, Stabat P et al. (2012). Numerical simulation of single sided ventilation using RANS and LES and comparison with full scale experiments, Building and Environment, vol 50, 202–213.
- Mendell M J, and Fisk W J (1996). Elevated symptom prevalence associated with ventilation type in office buildings, Epidemiology, vol 7(6), 583–589.
- Rouaud O, and Havet M (2002). Computation of the airflow in a pilot scale clean room using k-ε turbulence models, International Journal of Refrigeration, vol 25(3), 351–361.
- Ravikumar P, and Prakash D (2009). Analysis of thermal comfort in an office room by varying the dimensions of the windows on adjacent walls using CFD: a case study based on numerical simulation, Building simulation, vol 2(3), 187–196.
- Stavrakakis G M, Koukou M K et al. (2008). Natural cross-ventilation in buildings: building-scale experiments, numerical simulation and thermal comfort evaluation, Energy and Buildings, vol 40(9), 1666–1681.
- Jiang Y, and Chen Q (2003). Buoyancy driven single sided natural ventilation in buildings with large openings, International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, vol 46(6), 9773–988.
- Colour-coded Compositional Mapping of Orthopyroxene-Plagioclase -: Symplectites in Mafic Granulites from Panrimalai, South India
Abstract Views :205 |
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Authors
Affiliations
1 Departmeont of Geology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi-221005, IN
2 Geological Institute Yokohama National university, 79-7 Tokiwadai, Hodogaya-ku, Yokohama 240-8501, JP
1 Departmeont of Geology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi-221005, IN
2 Geological Institute Yokohama National university, 79-7 Tokiwadai, Hodogaya-ku, Yokohama 240-8501, JP
Source
Journal of Geological Society of India (Online archive from Vol 1 to Vol 78), Vol 69, No 2 (2007), Pagination: 285-290Abstract
Orthopyroxene-plagioclase symplecti tes have been observed in garnet-bearing mafic granulites from Panrirnalai, South India. Symplectites are arrested textures from which one can study diffusional processes. We have used colour-coded compositional mapping for reaction textures from mafic granulites to understand the element mobility pattern. The variable.composition of anorthite in plagioclase supports the interpretation that the orthopyroxene-plagioclase symplectites adjoining embayed garnet blast were formed by open-system diffusion - controlled reaction in the NCFMAS model system.Keywords
Mafic granulites, Symplectites, Diffusion, South India.- New SHRIMP U-Pb Zircon Ages of the Metapelitic Granulites from NW of Madurai, Southern India
Abstract Views :188 |
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Authors
Affiliations
1 Center of Advanced Study in Geology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi - 221 005, IN
1 Center of Advanced Study in Geology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi - 221 005, IN
Source
Journal of Geological Society of India (Online archive from Vol 1 to Vol 78), Vol 76, No 4 (2010), Pagination: 371-383Abstract
Zircon cathodoluminescent imaging and SHRIMP U-Pb dating were carried out for metapelitic rocks (sapphirine-bearing granulites and garnet-cordierite gneisses) from the NW of Madurai, Southern India. The cathodoluminescence images reveal the complex, inhomogeneous internal structure having irregular-shaped core and overgrowths. Zircon grains have obliterated oscillatory zoning. SHRIMP U-Pb chronological results yield ages of 550±15 Ma and 530±50 Ma as a time of metamorphic overprint, and the age of 2509±12 Ma and 2509±30 Ma corresponding to a timing of protolith formation for sapphirine-bearing granulites and garnet-cordierite gneisses respectively. Zircon ages reflect that continental crust in the NW of Madurai region resulted from the recycling of Archaean protolith of an igneous origin similar to the preserved crust in the southern part of Dharwar craton. The present SHRIMP U-Pb zircon ages are in close agreement with earlier published Nd isotopic data which suggest an extended precrustal history of their protoliths. The abraded zircon grains indicate multiple recycling and repeated metamorphism that has ultimately resulted in present day continental crust exposed in Madurai region. These SHRIMP U-Pb zircon ages from metapelitic UHT granulites are also significant to understanding the architecture of the SGT during the amalgamation of Gondwana in Neoproterozoic time.Keywords
Geochronology, SHRIMP, Zircon, Metapelitic Granulites, South India.- Risk-Based Kerberised Service with JINI in Pervasive Environment
Abstract Views :167 |
PDF Views:3
Authors
M. Kavitha
1,
D. Prakash
2
Affiliations
1 Department of Information Technology, SRM University, IN
2 Capgemini, IN
1 Department of Information Technology, SRM University, IN
2 Capgemini, IN
Source
Networking and Communication Engineering, Vol 4, No 9 (2012), Pagination: 525-529Abstract
In pervasive computing environment, interactions are possible among different users and application anytime and anywhere. Pervasive is an open environment which requires strict control over resources. We may not want to offer all available services to every new user who enters the environment. To address the challenges posed in pervasive computing systems a resource discovery with risk is needed to resolve security and privacy issues. A risk evaluation becomes significant when a service request comes from an unknown user. Risk is calculated on the security level of the requested service. Token based approach is followed when the user uses the service. In this paper we discuss the emerging technology of kerberised service discovery with JINI.Keywords
JINI, Kerberos, Pervasive Computing, Risk, Trust.- A Novel Cardiac Attack Prediction and Classification Using Supervised Agent Techniques
Abstract Views :219 |
PDF Views:3
Authors
Affiliations
1 Anna University, Chennai, IN
2 Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Anna University, Chennai, IN
1 Anna University, Chennai, IN
2 Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Anna University, Chennai, IN
Source
Artificial Intelligent Systems and Machine Learning, Vol 1, No 2 (2009), Pagination: 59-65Abstract
In this paper a novel technique is proposed for the prediction of cardiac disease and its classification using intelligent agents. Initially seventy six heart attack symptoms are preprocessed using filter and wrapper based agents .The filter removes the missing or irrelevant symptoms. Wrapper is used to extract the data in the data set according to the expert’s threshold constraints. Dependency of each symptom is identified using dependency checker agent. The classification is based on the prior and posterior probability of the symptoms with the evidence value. As a result classifier agent classify the nature of heart attack patients in to five classes depending on the severity namely absence, starting, mild, moderate, serious. The posterior probability of the class is calculated by the ratio of the product of posterior probability of symptoms and prior probability of the class to the prior probability of the input symptoms. Using the cooperative approach the cardiac problem is solved and verified.Keywords
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), Naive Bayesian Classification (NBC), Bayesian Networks (BN).- Improving the Weld Quality in Gas Welding of Mild Steel Plates : A Taguchi’s Approach
Abstract Views :171 |
PDF Views:0
Authors
Affiliations
1 Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, Anjalai Ammal Mahalingam Engg. College, Kovilvenni - 614 403, Tamil Nadu, IN
2 Dept. of Production Engineering, National Institute of Technology, Trichy-620 015, Tamil Nadu, IN
1 Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, Anjalai Ammal Mahalingam Engg. College, Kovilvenni - 614 403, Tamil Nadu, IN
2 Dept. of Production Engineering, National Institute of Technology, Trichy-620 015, Tamil Nadu, IN
Source
Manufacturing Technology Today, Vol 5, No 11 (2006), Pagination: 13-17Abstract
In this paper, weld quality is improved in the gas welding of mild steel plates by using Taguchi’s Design of Experiment (DOE) technique. The strength of the welded joint is strongly governed by the involving process parameters and filler rod selection. Though many factors affect the weld strength, present paper focuses only on the weld speed, oxygen-acetylene gas pressure, torch angle, gap between weld plate and torch tip and gap between weld plates. These parameters are varied to three levels of values and hence L,g orthogonal array is employed. The sixteen different combinations of experiment are conducted in a special type of pneumatic system designed along with a torch holder to control the process parameters accurately. The weld specimens are tested in the Vickers hardness tester and Universal-testing machine. The best value of the weld process parameters is identified from the S/N curves. A validation experiment is also conducted and it is predicted that, the strength of the welded joint is improved by about 2%. ANOVA calculations are performed to identify the individual effect of process parameters on the weld quality. Finally, empirical models are developed to predict the weld strength on the basis of tensile strength and hardness value. The developed empirical models are having good agreement with the experimental results.- Geology and Geo-Resources of Himalaya and Cratonic Regions of India
Abstract Views :166 |
PDF Views:124
Authors
B. P. Singh
1,
U. K. Shukla
1,
R. Bhatla
2,
D. Prakash
1,
A. S. Naik
1,
Kuldeep Prakash
1,
C. K. Singh
1
Affiliations
1 Centre of Advanced Study in Geology and Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi - 221 005, IN
2 Department of Geophysics, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi- 221 005, IN
1 Centre of Advanced Study in Geology and Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi - 221 005, IN
2 Department of Geophysics, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi- 221 005, IN
Source
Journal of Geological Society of India (Online archive from Vol 1 to Vol 78), Vol 79, No 5 (2012), Pagination: 544-544Abstract
A National Seminar on “Geology and Geo-resources of the Himalaya and the cratonic regions of India” was organised by the Department of Geology, (Centre of Advanced Study), Kumaun University, Nainital during 10-12th March, 2012. The Seminar was co-sponsored under the CAS Programme by the University Grants Commission, New Delhi; Department of Science and Technology, New Delhi; Uttarakhand State Council for Science and Technology, Dehradun; Kumaun University, Nainital; Censico International (P) Ltd., Agra. In all, 125 delegates from all over India actively participated in this national seminar.- Occurrence of kornerupine-bearing granulite from Kunjan locality, Salem district, Tamil Nadu, India
Abstract Views :193 |
PDF Views:79
Authors
D. Prakash
1,
C. K. Singh
1,
R. S. Kumar
2,
R. Yadav
1,
S. K. Rai
1,
M. K. Yadav
3,
Pradip K. Singh
1,
S. Jaiswal
1
Affiliations
1 Centre of Advanced Study in Geology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi 221 005, IN
2 Department of Earth Sciences, Annamalai University, Annamalai Nagar 608 002, IN
3 Centre of Advanced Study in Geology, University of Lucknow, Lucknow 226 007, IN
1 Centre of Advanced Study in Geology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi 221 005, IN
2 Department of Earth Sciences, Annamalai University, Annamalai Nagar 608 002, IN
3 Centre of Advanced Study in Geology, University of Lucknow, Lucknow 226 007, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 121, No 9 (2021), Pagination: 1241-1248Abstract
Kornerupine, although a rare mineral, has been reported from several locations around the world in various types of aluminomagnesian Proterozoic rocks subjected to amphibolite and granulite facies metamorphism. Here we report the occurrence of kornerupine in quartzo-feldspathic gneisses near Kunjan town located in the southwestern part of Salem district, Tamil Nadu, India. These kornerupine granulites show well-preserved retrogression texture, involving hydration reactions which helped develop the various mineral assemblages. The common stable assemblage in these granulites is orthopyroxene–cordierite–kornerupine–biotite–spinel–K-feldspar–plagioclase. The P–T conditions of these granulites have been derived using the winTWQ program, which gives results of ~800°C and ~6 kbar for kornerupine-bearing assemblage. The high P–T assemblage reported from this area bears a significant relationship with the metamorphic history and exhumation of the Salem–Namakkal blockKeywords
Hydration reactions, kornerupine granulites, metamorphic evolution, mineral assemblages, retrogression texture.References
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