And the winners are…
The Bangalore Literature Festival and Atta Galatta, the city-based bookstore, have announced the winners of the Atta Galatta-Bangalore Literature Festival Book Prize 2020.
Bengaluru :
The Bangalore Literature Festival and Atta Galatta, the city-based bookstore, have announced the winners of the Atta Galatta-Bangalore Literature Festival Book Prize 2020. The awards carry a prize of Rs 50,000 under the categories of: Best fiction (English), best non-fiction (English), literary achievement award in Kannada, popular choice (English), and a new category introduced this year – best cover design.
For best fiction (English), publishers submitted over 100 books for consideration, and the winner was Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line by Deepa Anappara (Penguin Hamish Hamilton). Best non-fiction (English) was bagged by The Death Script: Dreams and Delusions in Naxal Country by Ashutosh Bhardwaj (4th Estate).
Milind Soman, along with city-based author Roopa Pai, won the prize for the popular choice category, for their book Made in India: A Memoir (Penguin eBury). Vaidehi won the award for achievement in Kannada literature whereas the best cover design prize went to Rising Heat (Penguin Hamish Hamilton). The cover was designed by Gunjan Ahlawat.
The jury was headed by writers Shobhaa De for the fiction category, and Akshaya Mukul for the non-fiction category. The jury for the literary achievement award in Kannada was constituted of the past winners of the award. The prizes will be awarded during a ceremony on Dec. 13, during the ninth edition of The Bangalore Literature Festival.
source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Bengaluru / by Express News Service / December 10th, 2020
10
New device measures rate of evaporation in minutes
Can help farmers, weather stations and botanists, says IISc. team
In what is touted to be a more efficient and inexpensive alternative to existing methods, a team of scientists from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc.) has developed a device that can measure the rate of evaporation within a couple of minutes.
Apart from being an integral process in the water cycle, evaporation plays a major role in regulating water loss in plants through a process called transpiration, an IISc. release explained. “Being able to measure the evaporation rate is useful for farmers to gauge water requirements for their fields and in weather stations to characterise the local atmospheric conditions. It is also widely used by botanists to study the dynamics underlying transpiration by plants,” said IISc. in the release.
Currently, pan evaporimeters – resembling large pans that are filled with water – are the most commonly used devices to measure evaporation rates. The change in water level over a day gives the evaporation rate from that area for that day.
“The disadvantages are that the evaporation rates are for one whole day, and over a large area, one square metre. One needs an open ground to place the device. But we have a simple method of directly measuring evaporation from a small surface – at the order of a couple of centimetres, and over a short period of time. Our method allows you to get a much more realistic measure of transpiration from plants and evaporation from soil,” the release quoted Jaywant H. Arakeri, Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, IISc., and senior author of the study, which was recently published in the Journal of Hydrology, as saying.
The proposed device consists of a filter paper connected to a capillary tube that takes water from a reservoir to the filter paper, wetting it and mimicking an evaporating water surface. By measuring the distance travelled by the lower meniscus in the capillary tube over a couple of minutes, the evaporation rate is estimated. The innovation lies in being able to measure the very small amount (about 1 microlitre) of water that is lost in evaporation from the surface in a minute, the release explained.
As the evaporation rate is affected by a number of factors such as temperature, wind velocity and humidity, the device can show the evaporation rate within a niche environment. It would be useful to scientists studying the physiological process of transpiration in plants because of its ability to measure the evaporation rate over small areas over short periods of time.
The authors also suggest that it could be used in oceans to study changing evaporation patterns in the open sea and in weather stations to estimate evaporation rates in the atmosphere, an important parameter that is currently not measured.
source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Staff Reporter / December 05th, 2020