18,529 research outputs found
Interview: Older universities tend to take students for granted, says OP Jindal Global University Vice-Chancellor C. Raj Kumar
Last week, Sonipat-based OP Jindal Global University (JGU) broke into QS Asia University Rankings 2019—the annual publication of university rankings by Quacquarelli Symonds, the British education company. Earlier, JGU found a place in QS BRICS University Rankings 2019, from among 9,000 universities. “Asia rankings—the region has 13,000 universities from over 40 nations—are more competitive than BRICS rankings,” says C Raj Kumar, the vice-chancellor. In an interview with FE’s Vikram Chaudhary, he adds that getting a place among the top 3% in Asia—JGU is ranked in the 400-450 bracket—is an achievement for the nine-year-old university and for Indi
Estimation of Depth to Bottom of Magnetic Sources using Spectral Methods: Application on Iran's Aeromagnetic Data
Aeromagnetic grid of Iran
Tilte:
Estimation of Depth to Bottom of Magnetic Sources using Spectral Methods: Application on Iran’s Aeromagnetic Data.
Authors: Raj Kumar, Abhey Ram Bansal, Abdolreza Ghods
Journal: Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth</p
Interview of Dr. C. Raj Kumar: Private sector can help boost higher education quality in India
With higher education institutions in India, barring a handful struggling to make a mark at the global level, Vice chancellor of O.P. Jindal Global University (JGU) in Sonipat, Haryana, Professor C. Raj Kumar, is vouching for greater engagement from the private sector to improve both quality and access to higher education in India
Careers in Law
Careers360 conducted a live session with Dr. C. Raj Kumar, VC, O.P. Jindal Global University, on April 22 on Facebook and Youtube, to discuss on these interesting topics, as well as on a gamut of other questions posted by students on topics ranging from what it takes to build a global university, internships, different types of exams, scholarships for students, and also the impact of COVID-19, which at the moment has the entire world in its grip, on study abroad prospects. Dr. Raj Kumar also took a lot of questions on the important aspect of careers in law, a major concern among student
Recent advances in drug delivery technology/ Raj K. Keservani, Anil K. Sharma, and Rajesh Kumar Kesharwani [editors].
Includes bibliographical references and index."[This book] is a pivotal reference source for the latest scholarly research on the application of pharmaceutical technology to optimize techniques for drug delivery in patients"--Provided by publisher.Personalized approach in nanomedicine: understanding adverse effects and their risk assessment / Maria Vlasova, Boris V. Smirin -- Drug delivery strategies for tolerogenic therapy for autoimmune diseases in an antigen-specific manner / Kevin J. Peine [and 3 others] -- Cancer drug delivery: pharmacogenetics, biomarkers, and targeted therapies / Jai N. Patel, Jeryl Villadolid -- Genomics and proteomic approach in the treatment of various human diseases: applications of genomics and proteomics / Urmila Jarouliya, Raj K. Keservani -- Bioinformatics and its therapeutic applications / Sarvesh Kumar Gupta, Kamal Kumar Chaudhary, Nidhi Mishra -- An overview and therapeutic applications of nutraceutical and functional foods / Raj K. Keservani, Anil K. Sharma, Rajesh K. Kesharwani -- Phytoparmaceuticals and its applications in therapy / Alejandra Hernández-Ceruelos, Sergio Muñoz-Juarez, Patricia Vázquez-Alvarado -- A perspective on the phytopharmaceuticals responsible for the therapeutic applications / Rajesh K. Joshi -- Phytopharmaceutical applications of nutraceutical and functional foods / Dhan Prakash, Charu Gupta -- Cosmeceuticals: safety, efficacy and potential benefits / Long Chiau Ming [and 5 others] -- Cosmeceuticals: camel and other milk -- natural skin maintenance / Reuven Yagil -- Resealed erythrocytes as drug carriers and its therapeutic applications / Prabhakar Singh, Sudhakar Singh, Rajesh Kumar Kesharwani -- New herbal approaches for the treatment of diabetic kidney diseases and its therapeutic implications / Durgavati Yadav [and 3 others].1 online resource (509 pages)
Interview with Lakshmi Raj Sharma, Author of The Tailor’s Needle
Interview with Indian writer Lakshmi Raj Sharma, author of 'The Tailor's needle
Carta de Pawan Kumar Jain a Ferran Sunyer
Carta de Pawan Kumar Jain del Department of Mathematics del Hans Raj College (University of Delhi, Índia), on li demana "reprints" de tots els seus treballs sobre funcions enteres
Carta de Pawan Kumar Jain a Ferran Sunyer
Carta rebuda de Pawan Kumar Jain, del Department of Mathematics del Hans Raj College (University of Delhi, Índia). Vol saber si el seu treball, escrit conjuntament amb el Dr. Kathman, ha estat acceptat a "Collectanea Mathematica"
Humboldtia ponmudiana E. S. S. Kumar, Shareef et Raj Vikr. 2022, sp.nov.
Humboldtia ponmudiana E.S.S.Kumar, Shareef et Raj Vikr. sp.nov. (Figures 1, 2 & 3B) Type:— INDIA, Kerala, Thiruvananthapuram District, Ponmudi, 800 m., 09.12.2021, E.S. Santhosh Kumar & S.M. Shareef 96319 (holotype TBGT!, isotype TBGT!, MH!, CAL!). Diagnosis:— Humboldtia ponmudiana is closely similar to H. decurrens, but differs in having black coloured bark, densely brown tomentose young shoots, lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate leaflets with densely brown tomentose midribs, sessile or subsessile flowers, fairly large broadly ovate eglandular bracts, connate to middle bracteoles with adaxial glabrous surfaces, fairly large anthers, 1–4 ovuled ovaries and silky tomentose pods with long beak (Table 1). Descripton:—Moderate sized trees, 5–12 m tall; trunk 25–50 cm in diameter, bark black, warty; blaze light crimson; young shoots densely brown tomentose, glabrescent at maturity. Stipules 5.5–6.0 × 1.5–2.0 cm, ovatelanceolate, slightly falcate, acuminate to cuspidate at apex, prominently parallel veined, depressed glandular, densely brown tomentose when young and glabrescent at maturity; appendages 1.0–1.7 × 1.6–2.3 cm, reniform, obtuse or rarely acuminate on one side, densely tomentose when young, glabrescent at maturity. Leaves up to 45 cm long, subsessile, 8–12- foliolate; young leaves pendulous, creamy-white suffused with light pink, densely brown tomentose; rachis obcordately or decurrently winged, wings reticulately veined, densely brown tomentose on both surfaces; petiolules 2–4 mm long, not covered by rachis wings, densely brown tomentose, depressed glandular; leaflets 10.5–37 × 3.0–7.0 cm, lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, subcordate or rounded at base, acuminate to caudate-acuminate at apex, slightly undulate at margins, subcoriaceous, depressed glandular, densely brown tomentose beneath; lateral nerves 10–19 pairs, shallowly depressed above, prominently raised beneath and arching 2.0–3.0 mm away from the margin forming a prominent intramarginal vein. Racemes 5.0–9.0 cm long, pendulous, axillary or cauliflorous, subsessile; rachis terete, brown tomentose, many flowered. Flowers c. 3.5 cm across at anthesis, white, sessile or subsessile; pedicels absent or rarely up to 0.2 cm long, brown villous; bracts 1.0–1.2 × 0.7 cm, broadly ovate, greenish-white, acuminate at apex, brown villous and eglandular without, glabrous within, fugacious; bracteoles 2, 1.0–1.3 × 0.7 cm, ovate, obtuse at apex, greenish-white, connate to middle in cauliflorus flowers or connate to middle on one side and free up to the base on the other side in axillary flowers, silky villous and glandular without, glabrous within. Calyx tube 0.8–1 cm long, obconic, silky villous; lobes 4, 1.2–1.8 × 0.4–0.7 cm, subequal, one larger than the rest, elliptic-oblong or linearoblong, creamy-white, rounded at apex, silky villous on both surfaces. Petals 5, 1.6–2.3 × 0.6–1.0 cm, obovate to oblanceolate, white, clawed at base, acute or slightly acuminate at apex, glabrous or minutely silky pilose along the midrib abaxially. Stamens 5, 3.5–4.0 cm long; filaments filiform, pink, broad and silky pilose at base; anthers 3.5–4.0 mm long, pink, obtuse at both ends. Ovary 0.8–1.0 cm long, stipe 1.0– 1.5mm long, obliquely linear, silky villous, 1–4 ovuled; style filiform, 2.7–3.0 cm long, rarely coiled, glabrous, pink; stigma capitate. Pods 13–15 × 3–4 cm, oblong, silky tomentose; beak 2–2.5 cm long. Seeds 2–3, thick, flat, glabrous. Flowering & Fruiting: —December - February Habitat, Ecology and Conservation status: —This species is found in the evergreen forests of Ponmudi hills between 700–800 m elevations in Agasthyamala Biosphere Reserve (ABR), Kerala. The main associated species are Antidesma montanum Blume (1827:1124), Arenga wightii Griffith (1845:475), Croton malabaricus Beddome (1873: 204 ) , Dimocarpus longan Loureiro (1790: 233), Diospyros paniculata Dalzell (1852:109), Elaeocarpus tuberculatus Roxburgh (1832:594), Pandanus thwaitesii Martelli (1905:369), Pinanga dicksonii (Roxb.) Blume (1839:77), Quisqualis malabarica Beddome (1874:33), Syzygium munronii (Wight) N.P. Balakrishnan (1982:174), Thottea ponmudiana Sivarajan (1985:202), Vateria indica Linnaeaus (1753:515), etc. The present population consists of less than 50 mature trees and several seedlings of various ages occupying an area of less than 5 km 2. Following the IUCN Red List criteria (IUCN 2020), H. ponmudiana is assessed as Critically Endangered (CR) in the category [B2a, b (v)]. Distribution:—Endemic to Kerala Etymology:—The new species is named after the type locality, Ponmudi, an important hills station in south Kerala. Additional Specimens examined:— INDIA, Kerala, Thiruvananthapuram District, Ponmudi, 760 m., 22.12.2021, E.S. Santhosh Kumar & S.M. Shareef 96335; ibid, 10.02.2022, E.S. Santhosh Kumar & S.M. Shareef 96336 (Paratype TBGT!).Published as part of Kumar, Ettickal Sukumaran Santhosh, Shareef, Sainudeen Muhammed & Vikraman, Ramachandrakurup Raj, 2022, Humboldtia ponmudiana (Fabaceae-Detarioideae), a new species from Kerala, India, pp. 115-121 in Phytotaxa 552 (1) on pages 116-119, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.552.1.11, http://zenodo.org/record/667312
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