1,721,717 research outputs found
Gopal Krishna Gokhale - A Liberal Thinker
Gopal Krishna Gokhale was prominent leader of Indian Independence Movement. He was one of the political and social leaders during the Freedom Struggle of India. Gokhale’s political thought revolves around the socio-political issues. He appreciated and welcomed the British rule in India. He was essentially a liberal thinker and preferred constitutional methods for attaining the goal of self government. He supported the idea of strengthening local self government institutions. Gokhale gave more importance to national unity and considered it as the first pre-requisite for the growth and development of Indian nationalism. He also stood for the principle of racial equality and expressed strong resentment against the policy of racial discrimination being pursued by the English. He was favoring in establishing a state based on western ideas. Thus he laid emphasis on the principles of individual liberty and social equality. Gokhale favoured the Swadeshi movement. Now a days, we see the relevance of his political ideas. I, M.VENKATACHALAPATHY, Research Scholor of Sri Krishnadevaraya University(Anantapur), wrote this paper and explain the political ideas of Gopal Krishna Gokhale
Governor of W. B. Mr. Gopal Krishna Gandhi visited IACS during 2007
The governor of W. B. Mr. Gopal Krishna Gandhi visited IACS during 2007. He and the Director Prof. D. Mukherjee had visited IACS library to see an archival exhibition
PMC to preserve Gopal Krishna Gokhale’s house
PUNE: The Deccan house of Gopal Krishna Gokhale, a prominent figure of the Indian national movement, will be preserved and a memorial will be constructed on the same premises.
"The Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) has alloted Rs 25 lakh for preserving the house and making the memorial," said Ashwini Kadam, head of the standing committee.
The memorial will house Gokhale's belongings, writings and awards won by him during his lifetime. It will also be included in the heritage tour.
The year 2015 marks Gokhale's 150th birth year and death centenary. He was born in Ratnagiri in May 1866 and died in Mumbai in 1915.
Gokhale was a senior leader of the Indian National Congress and founder of the Servants of India Society. He is described as one of the founding leaders of India's Independence movement. Mahatma Gandhi referred him as his 'guru'. Following Gokhale's advice, Gandhi toured the country to learn about its realities before taking a plunge into politics.
A number of establishments including streets, auditorium, schools, hostels and colleges have been named after him including the renowned Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics
Are cluster radio relics revived fossil radio cocoons?
A new model for the so called cluster radio relics is presented (see Ensslin and Gopal-Krishna 2001 for more details). Fossil radio cocoons, resulting from the former activity of radio galaxies, should contain a low energy relativistic electron population and magnetic fields. Even electrons with ages as high as 2 Gyr can be re-accelerated adiabatically to radio- emitting energies, if the fossil radio plasma gets compressed in an environmental shock wave. Such a wave can be caused by merging events in galaxy clusters, or by accretion onto clusters. An implication of this model is the existence of a population of diffuse, ultra-steep spectrum, very low-frequency radio sources located inside and possibly outside of clusters of galaxies, tracing the revival of aged fossil radio plasma by the shock waves associated with large-scale structure formation
India: Pre independence budgets based on Gopal Krishna Gokhales speeches in the Imperial Legislative Council
Multidimensional evaluation of scientific inputs and output: A study of Asean / Vignes Gopal Krishna
This thesis analyzed the importance of scientific research through scientific
collaboration, social networking sites and journal impact factors. The rapid growth of
science, technology and innovation has inspired scientific publications with
international collaborators in high impact journals. Social networking sites are useful as
a virtual alternative for expanding research opportunities, though some researchers feel
that it is more for social communications. Diachronous impact factor has gained
attention among diverse agents as a tool to evaluate significance of Institute for
Scientific Information’s indexed journals.
Most productive researchers in Malaysia chose the collaborators who have the
highest number of scientific publications. Significant differences in both rates and
strengths of scientific collaborations were observed among most productive authors
except for most productive institutions through Kruskal-Wallis test. The rates of
scientific collaboration between the local and international institutions have been low
because of poor networking ability among local researchers. Lower research visibility
would reduce the demand for scientific collaboration. Scientific collaboration between
researchers in Malaysia and the ASEAN countries have been low because of limited
talents in writing joint papers.
Socimetrics and Conversational Analysis have reflected significant research
conversations among active participants from Malaysia in Facebook. Researchers from
Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia and the other ASEAN member states preferred
physical instead of virtual medium for research communications. LinkedIn has pointed
out limited research communication between researchers from Singapore and Thailand
via Socimetrics and Conversational Analysis. It neglects Brunei, Indonesia, Laos and
others from the analysis for revealing limited research participations in LinkedIn. There
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were also Intellectual interactions between Malaysia, Pakistan, India, the USA and
Australia in Facebook and LinkedIn through Socimetrics and Conversational Analysis.
The most suitable measure for evaluating performing Malaysian journals both in
the short-term and long-term is diachronous impact factor based on unique citing
sources. It has showed the non-overlapping effects (62 percent) in revealing “true”
scientific performance and fairness of the journals through forward approach in
Malaysia. In Thailand, the diachronous impact factor, based on unique citing subject
categories, took the lead to remove the biasness of classical impact factor. In
Philippines, Diachronous impact factors based on citing organizations and unique citing
sources have removed the biasness of existing impact factors. Diachronous impact
factor based on citation concentration index allows both first-comer and latecomer
journals in Economics to improve their scientific visibility in a fairer way. It removes
the bias in short-term impact factor. The discussions on scientific collaborations, social
networking sites and journal impact factors would allow policymakers to maintain the
effective resource allocations
Gopal Krishna Gokhale Speeches - Part I - Female education in India.(etc): Speeches papers etc
The Physics of E×B-Drifting Jets
Abstract. E×B-drifting jets have been generally ignored for the past 25 years even though they may well describe all the astrophysical jet sources, both on galactic and stellar scales. Here we present closed-form solutions for their joint field-and-particle distribution, argue that the observed jets are near equipartition, with extremely relativistic, monoenergetic e±-pairs of bulk Lorentz factor γ < ∼ 104, and are first-order stable. We describe plausible mechanisms for the jets ’ (i) formation, (ii) propagation, and (iii) termination. Wherever a beam meets with resistance, its frozen-in Poynting flux transforms the delta-shaped energy distribution of the pairs into an almost white power law, E2NE ∼ E− with > ∼ 0, via single-step falls through the huge convected potential. Key words. Jet sources—monoenergetic beams—E × B-drift—unified scheme. 1. Background Pair-plasma jets with ultra-relativistic bulk motion have been proposed twenty-five years ago by one of us (Kundt 1979), then jointly elaborated by us (Kundt & Gopal-Krishna 1980). They were also proposed by Morrison (1981), but have usually no
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