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Devi, T.
- Effect of Different Concentration of Gir Cow Urine in Growth and Biochemical Changes to Fresh Water Fish Cirrhinus mrigala Fingerlings (Hamilton)
Abstract Views :182 |
PDF Views:3
Authors
S. S. Padmapriya
1,
T. Devi
1
Affiliations
1 P.G. Research Department of Zoology, Government College for Women (Autonomous), Kumbakonam-612001, Tamil Nadu, IN
1 P.G. Research Department of Zoology, Government College for Women (Autonomous), Kumbakonam-612001, Tamil Nadu, IN
Source
Research Journal of Science and Technology, Vol 8, No 4 (2016), Pagination: 221-224Abstract
Aquaculture is a highly profitable venture in India. Also, it has availability of nutritive food for the growing population. Cows were regarded as wealth and were the backbone of the economy of ancient Indians. Cow urine is considered to be the most effective animal origin substance having intrinsic property of general health improvement. (Gir) Cow urine were used in this present study, to evaluate its efficiency in enhancing growth and improving in mrigala fingerlings, one of the Indian major carps. The control and treated groups were sacrificed on the 30th day post cow urine treatment and the growth and biochemical parameters were analyzed , the results show significant effect of cow urine of the Indian major carp Cirrhinus mrigala. The maximum growth rate of 0.00532 gm/day was observed in the cirrhinus mrigala fingerlings treated with 0.1% of Gir Cow Urine when compared with control.Keywords
Cow Urine, Cirrhinus mrigala, Growth, Gir, Biochemical Composition.- A New Algorithm to Detect the Non-Termination of Triggers in Active Databases
Abstract Views :178 |
PDF Views:0
Authors
Affiliations
1 Department of Computer Science, N G M College (Autonomous), Pollachi, Coimbatore-642001, IN
2 Department of Computer Science & Engineering, Bharathiar University, Coimbatore-641046, IN
1 Department of Computer Science, N G M College (Autonomous), Pollachi, Coimbatore-642001, IN
2 Department of Computer Science & Engineering, Bharathiar University, Coimbatore-641046, IN
Source
International Journal of Advanced Networking and Applications, Vol 3, No 2 (2011), Pagination: 1098-1104Abstract
Active Databases are a combination of traditional static databases and active rules, meant to be automated mechanisms to maintain integrity and facilitate in providing database functionalities. Active database systems can react to the occurrence of some predefined events automatically. In many applications, active rules or triggers may interact in complex and sometimes unpredictable ways, thus possibly yielding infinite rule executions by triggering each other indefinitely causing non-termination. The termination of active rules is an unpredictable problem, except when rule languages with very limited number of rules are used. This paper presents new algorithms for detecting termination/non-termination of rule execution using triggering graph and complex triggering graph, and these algorithms do not pose any limitation on the number of rules.Keywords
Active Rules, Active Databases, Non-Termination, Termination, Triggers.- Semantic data model for knowledge representation and dissemination of cultural heritage site, Poompuhar
Abstract Views :154 |
PDF Views:77
Authors
Affiliations
1 Department of Computer Applications, Bharathiar University, Coimbatore 641 046, India, IN
1 Department of Computer Applications, Bharathiar University, Coimbatore 641 046, India, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 123, No 10 (2022), Pagination: 1237-1245Abstract
Among the ancient cities and ports of Tamil Nadu, India, Poompuhar is a historical and coastal port that emerged with the increasing maritime trade of the early Chola kingdom. The ancient trade town and the busy port of Poompuhar symbolize the Tamil culture and civilization up to 200 ce. The city was destroyed and washed away by big shore waves during ad 500. The submerged parts and scattered destruction remains have been identified in onshore and offshore excavations around the coastal lines of the Bay of Bengal in Tamil Nadu. Information on the port city can be found in various sources, such as archaeological evidence, historical references, coastal erosion data and Sangam Tamil literature. Here, a methodology is presented for a semantic representation of Poompuhar port city, integrating heterogeneous data to create a knowledge base by mapping and associating related entities. The knowledge base has been created using CIDOC CRM to represent Poompuhar events digitally. The experimental results of the ontology are verified exploring the submergence of Poompuhar use cases for onshore and offshore excavations through a knowledge graphKeywords
Archaeological explorations, cultural heritage, knowledge graph, ontology, semantic data.References
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