Has the #WestBengal#COVID19 (partial) lockdown been useful? YES!!! Future prognosis? A thread based on analysis by @cessi_iiserkol team ππΎ
New daily cases have halved since May 15 (beginning of lockdown).
Left @covid19indiaorg data; Right: CESSI model projection versus data 1/n
The pandemic growth rate has dipped below zero during the lockdown and is in the negative which is desirable. The more negative is the growth rate, the faster is the fall in active cases. Negative growth rate needs to be sustained. 2/n
Test positivity (percentage of those who test positive) has almost halved over the #lockdown period and is around 17% as of May 31. Should be sustained below 2.5% to keep the #COVID19 pandemic at a manageable level and ideally should be 0%! 3/n
The effective reproduction number (how many new individuals an infected person infects, on average) fell below 1.0 and was 0.73 on May 31 (based on @cessi_iiserkol empirical calculation). A number well below 1.0 implies lockdown + containment + social distancing is working. 4/n
How should we design our strategy? @cessi_iiserkol model projection provides perspective. If we are in the zone over the model projected red curve we are doing badly and are in danger. Our target should be to continue partial containment to reach safe zone indicated below. 5/n
Until test positivity falls below 2.5%, reproduction number sustains below 0.8, growth rate stays firmly negative for a week or more and observed new active cases reduces to safe zone of model projection, we should not relax partial containment measures. 6/n
In the meantime, there is no alternative to fast vaccination if we are to avoid possibility of significant new #COVID19 growth spurts in the future. And wearing masks anywhere in public (markets, work places, transport) should be made mandatory. This is easy with max benefit 7/n
@cessi_iiserkol IISER Kolkata COVID19 resources based on our modelling and data analysis for West Bengal, other states, Pune City, and all of India are available at our #COVID19 dashboard here cessi.in/coronavirus/
India readies for #Chandrayaan3 launch next week. The primary goal is to test our technical capability of landing a rover on the Moon π The mission costs about $ 82 million and is @isro s second attempt at a successful moon landing. What most people don't know is that...
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#Chandrayaan1 and #Chandrayaan2 have made some cool scientific discoveries about the moon, including mapping its surface. While #Chandrayaan3 is not a science centric mission, its success would enable lunar science and exploration. The moon remains a hot target for humanity.
Today I did something I have never done. I declined a grant. The reduced approval was inadequate to support the human resource and computational power necessary to sustain proposed research. Computational modelers in India suffer because agencies devalue local computing needs +
Supporting globally competitive & transformative modelling efforts from India require establishing local computational facilities. While much more expensive local experimental equipment is funded, computational needs continue to be undervalued = major reason India is held back +
More often than not we buy those expensive experimental equipment from abroad, equipment which has already catalyzed pioneering works from other shores; we become followers of that trend. Computational clusters are not unique in that sense but can sustain super creative work +
This is misleading @xkcd. During solar maximum (when there are more spots on the surface) the total radiation output of the Sun actually increases, implying it is brighter (in common parlance). Because within weeks sunspots break apart giving rise to smaller brighter structures.
These bright structures associated with sunspots are known as faculae (or plage). They end up compensating for the dark spots and increasing the total solar radiation when averaged over weeks to monthly timescale. Here is an βοΈ observational image as evidence.
So bottomline is this was a good joke which people seem to have fallen for given the responses to this comic strip.
Flight 945 took off from Mumbai around 5.00 pm en route to the Kazi Nazrul Islam Airport just North-West of steel city Durgapur (see gmaps ππΎ). Whilst landing around 7.30 pm it was hit by what is being reported as extreme turbulence. Autopilot disengaged, all hell broke lose.
Below are flight tracker map of the Mumbai Durgapur air route taken by Flight 945 + thunderstorm archival data from the weather and radar app roughly corresponding to the time of landing of the aircraft. It flew straight into an intense localised storm, the famous Nor'wester!
Trying to upload documents and submit a Core grant to @IndiaDST@serbonline for an hour or so now. The site is barely crawling, not retaining profile information and biodata info, and simply is unworkable now. Deadline 5 pm. What do we do? @Sandeep_1966
This is what is going on!
Switched from chrome to Microsoft edge. No luck here. The main web portal itself is not loading. And am on same network as this mobile, so network here is not an issue.
Government brings in regulation allowing students to pursue up to 50% courses from institutions other than the one they are enrolled in. Comments in this @ttindia report severely criticize this move. This criticism is 1D and biased in my opinion. Thread + telegraphindia.com/india/iits-iimβ¦
I do not believe the Government is forcing any institution or student to take online courses from other institutions. They are just making this option available which can be taken advantage of by academic organizations and students in certain circumstances +
This will allow IISERs and other organization's to share courses, balance the disproportionate work load of faculty in teaching intensive institutions (especially Universities) allowing them to spend more time in research and development activities +