scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Cochin University of Science and Technology

EducationKochi, Kerala, India
About: Cochin University of Science and Technology is a education organization based out in Kochi, Kerala, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Thin film & Natural rubber. The organization has 5382 authors who have published 7690 publications receiving 103827 citations. The organization is also known as: CUSAT & Cochin University.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The phylogenetic trees constructed using concatenated sequences indicated that they were related to Aeromonas veronii, which exhibited marked cytotoxic and haemolytic activity, which were responsible for the pathogenic potential of the isolates.
Abstract: In the present study, we investigated the involvement of Aeromonas spp. in eliciting disease outbreaks in freshwater ornamental fishes across the state of Kerala, India. We investigated three incidences of disease, in which the moribund fishes exhibited clinical signs such as haemorrhagic septicemia (in gouramy, Trichogaster sp.), dropsy (in Oscar, Astronotus ocellatus) and tail rot/fin rot (in gold fish, Carassius carassius). Pure cultures (n = 20 from each fish; 60 in total) of Aeromonas spp. were recovered from the abdominal fluid as well as from internal organs of affected fishes, although they could not be identified to species level because of the variations in their phenotypic characters. The molecular fingerprinting of the isolates using Enterobacterial Repetitive Intergenic Consensus PCR proved the genetic diversity of the isolates from the three sites. The phylogenetic trees constructed using concatenated sequences (using 16S rRNA, gyrA, gyrB and rpoD genes) indicated that they were related to Aeromonas veronii. They exhibited marked cytotoxic and haemolytic activity, which were responsible for the pathogenic potential of the isolates. The isolates possessed multiple virulence genes such as enterotoxins (act and alt), haemolytic toxins (aerA and hlyA), genes involved in type III secretion system (ascV, aexT and ascF–ascG), glycerophospholipid-cholesterol acyltransferase (gcat) and a type IV pilus (tapA) gene, as determined by PCR. Virulence of representative isolates to goldfish was also tested, and we found LD50 values of 104.07–105.35 cfu/fish. Furthermore, the organisms could be recovered as pure cultures from the lesions as well as from the internal organs.

44 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the presence of dipyrromethene-Cu(II) redox centers on the electrode surface was proved by cyclic voltammetry and Osteryoung square-wave voltammetric determination of paracetamol.
Abstract: Dipyrromethene-Cu(II) derivatives possessing two dodecane alkyl chains have been used for the modification of gold electrodes. Electroactive host molecules have been incorporated into a lipophilic dodecanethiol SAM deposited onto gold electrodes through hydrophobic and van der Waals interactions (embedment technique). The presence of dipyrromethene-Cu(II) redox centers on the electrode surface was proved by cyclic voltammetry and Osteryoung square-wave voltammetry. The Au electrodes incorporating redox active Cu(II)-dipyrromethene SAMs were used for the direct voltammetric determination of paracetamol in human plasma.

44 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 2019
TL;DR: This paper introduces an alternate measure of cumulative Tsallis entropy of order that has some additional features and has simple relationships with other important information and reliability measures.
Abstract: Tsallis entropy of order \(\alpha \) (see Tsallis in J Stat Phys 52(1–2):479–487, 1988) plays an important role in the measurement uncertainty of random variables. Recently, Sati and Gupta (J Probab Stat, doi:10.1155/2015/694203, 2015) introduced a cumulative Tsallis entropy of order \(\alpha \) and studied its various properties in the context of reliability modeling. In this paper, we introduce an alternate measure of cumulative Tsallis entropy of order \(\alpha \) and study its properties. Unlike the cumulative Tsallis entropy due to Sati and Gupta (J Probab Stat, doi:10.1155/2015/694203, 2015), the proposed measure has some additional features and has simple relationships with other important information and reliability measures.

44 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that convection over tropical oceans increases with sea surface temperature (SST) from 26 to 29 °C, and at SSTs above 29 °C it sharply decreases.
Abstract: According to current knowledge, convection over the tropical oceans increases with sea surface temperature (SST) from 26 to 29 °C, and at SSTs above 29 °C, it sharply decreases. Our research shows that it is only over the summer warm pool areas of Indian and west Pacific Oceans (monsoon areas) where the zone of maximum SST is away from the equator that this kind of SST-convection relationship exists. In these areas (1) convection is related to the SST gradient that generates low-level moisture convergence and upward vertical motion in the atmosphere. This has modelling support. Regions of SST maxima have low SST gradients and therefore feeble convection. (2) Convection initiated by SST gradient produces strong wind fields particularly cross-equatorial low-level jetstreams (LLJs) on the equator-ward side of the warm pool and both the convection and LLJ grow through a positive feedback process. Thus, large values of convection are associated with the cyclonic vorticity of the LLJ in the atmospheric boundary layer. In the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ) over the east Pacific Ocean and the south Pacific convergence zone (SPCZ) over the west Pacific Ocean, low-level winds from north and south hemisphere converge in the zone of maximum SST, which lies close to the equator producing there elongated bands of deep convection, where we find that convection increases with SST for the full range of SSTs unlike in the warm pool regions. The low-level wind divergence computed using QuikSCAT winds has large and significant linear correlation with convection in both the warm pool and ITCZ/SPCZ areas. But the linear correlation between SST and convection is large only for the ITCZ/SPCZ. These findings have important implications for the modelling of large-scale atmospheric circulations and the associated convective rainfall over the tropical oceans.

44 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A study on leaching of enzymes showed that 100% enzyme was retained even after 15 cycles of reuse, and covalent binding resisted leaching even at temperatures of 70 � C.

44 citations


Authors

Showing all 5433 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Pulickel M. Ajayan1761223136241
Maxime Dougados134105469979
Sabu Thomas102155451366
Philippe Ravaud10161841409
David P. Salmon9941943935
Jérôme Bertherat8543824794
Luc Mouthon8456426238
Xavier Bertagna7428518738
Alfred Mahr7322922581
Nicolas Roche7262922845
Charles Chapron7137818048
Benoit Terris6123413353
François Goffinet6053214433
Xavier Puéchal6031613240
Pascal Laugier5848210518
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
38.6K papers, 714.5K citations

90% related

Indian Institutes of Technology
40.1K papers, 652.9K citations

90% related

Banaras Hindu University
23.9K papers, 464.6K citations

89% related

University of Delhi
36.4K papers, 666.9K citations

89% related

Panjab University, Chandigarh
18.7K papers, 461K citations

89% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202318
2022106
2021753
2020613
2019503
2018439