Institution
University of North Bengal
Education•Siliguri, West Bengal, India•
About: University of North Bengal is a education organization based out in Siliguri, West Bengal, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Liquid crystal & Population. The organization has 1310 authors who have published 2554 publications receiving 29402 citations. The organization is also known as: NBU.
Topics: Liquid crystal, Population, Catalysis, Viscosity, Aqueous solution
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the Indian mt DNA pool, even when restricted to macrohaplogroup N, harbors at least as many deepest-branching lineages as the western Eurasian mtDNA pool.
Abstract: To resolve the phylogeny of the autochthonous mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups of India and determine the relationship between the Indian and western Eurasian mtDNA pools more precisely, a diverse subset of 75 macrohaplogroup N lineages was chosen for complete sequencing from a collection of >800 control-region sequences sampled across India. We identified five new autochthonous haplogroups (R7, R8, R30, R31, and N5) and fully characterized the autochthonous haplogroups (R5, R6, N1d, U2a, U2b, and U2c) that were previously described only by first hypervariable segment (HVS-I) sequencing and coding-region restriction-fragment–length polymorphism analysis. Our findings demonstrate that the Indian mtDNA pool, even when restricted to macrohaplogroup N, harbors at least as many deepest-branching lineages as the western Eurasian mtDNA pool. Moreover, the distribution of the earliest branches within haplogroups M, N, and R across Eurasia and Oceania provides additional evidence for a three-founder-mtDNA scenario and a single migration route out of Africa.
340 citations
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TL;DR: Investigation of the influence of population density on Covid-19 spread and related mortality in the context of India finds moderate association between Covd-19Spread and population density.
Abstract: The Covid-19 is a highly contagious disease which becomes a serious global health concern. The residents living in areas with high population density, such as big or metropolitan cities, have a higher probability to come into close contact with others and consequently any contagious disease is expected to spread rapidly in dense areas. However, recently, after analyzing Covid-19 cases in the USA researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, London school of economics, and IZA-Institute of Labour Economics conclude that the spread of Covid-19 is not linked with population density. Here, we investigate the influence of population density on Covid-19 spread and related mortality in the context of India. After a detailed correlation and regression analysis of infection and mortality rates due to Covid-19 at the district level, we find moderate association between Covid-19 spread and population density.
210 citations
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TL;DR: Although they contained less TAMB, the non-packaged spices had a higher load of moulds, B. cereus and Enterobacteriaceae than that of polyethylene-packaging ones.
210 citations
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TL;DR: Gravitational lensing by traversable Lorentzian wormholes is analyzed in this paper in the strong field limit. Wormhole solutions are considered in the Einstein minimally coupled theory and in the brane world model.
Abstract: Gravitational lensing by traversable Lorentzian wormholes is a new possibility which is analyzed here in the strong field limit. Wormhole solutions are considered in the Einstein minimally coupled theory and in the brane world model. The observables in both the theories show significant differences from those arising in the Schwarzschild black hole lensing. As a corollary, it follows that wormholes with zero Keplerian mass exhibit lensing properties which are qualitatively (though not quantitatively) the same as those of a Schwarzschild black hole. Some special features of the considered solutions are pointed out.
203 citations
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TL;DR: The assessment of chicken mtDNA data facilitated the understanding about the Austronesian settlement in the Pacific and revealed new complexities of history in chicken domestication because in the phylogeny lineages from the red junglefowl were mingled with those of the domestic chickens.
Abstract: Domestic chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) fulfill various roles ranging from food and entertainment to religion and ornamentation. To survey its genetic diversity and trace the history of domestication, we investigated a total of 4938 mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) fragments including 2843 previously published and 2095 de novo units from 2044 domestic chickens and 51 red junglefowl (Gallus gallus). To obtain the highest possible level of molecular resolution, 50 representative samples were further selected for total mtDNA genome sequencing. A fine-gained mtDNA phylogeny was investigated by defining haplogroups A–I and W–Z. Common haplogroups A–G were shared by domestic chickens and red junglefowl. Rare haplogroups H–I and W–Z were specific to domestic chickens and red junglefowl, respectively. We re-evaluated the global mtDNA profiles of chickens. The geographic distribution for each of major haplogroups was examined. Our results revealed new complexities of history in chicken domestication because in the phylogeny lineages from the red junglefowl were mingled with those of the domestic chickens. Several local domestication events in South Asia, Southwest China and Southeast Asia were identified. The assessment of chicken mtDNA data also facilitated our understanding about the Austronesian settlement in the Pacific.
200 citations
Authors
Showing all 1333 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Swagata Mukherjee | 101 | 1048 | 46234 |
Biswajit Sarkar | 46 | 219 | 6451 |
Arun K. Nandi | 46 | 243 | 7199 |
Smarajit Karmakar | 44 | 286 | 7260 |
Louis S. Tisa | 37 | 165 | 4145 |
Jyoti Prakash Tamang | 36 | 107 | 4250 |
Utpal Sarkar | 34 | 228 | 4468 |
Raja Ghosh | 34 | 164 | 3577 |
Amitava Choudhury | 31 | 173 | 3716 |
Ranjan Sharma | 30 | 98 | 2829 |
Sanjeev K. Srivastava | 30 | 71 | 2481 |
Sujit K. Ghosh | 30 | 161 | 3546 |
Maher Gtari | 29 | 105 | 1963 |
Tapas Kumar Chaudhuri | 29 | 172 | 3996 |
Sekhar C. Ray | 28 | 154 | 4193 |