Wednesday, September 18, 2024
WORLD'S LARGEST BEAR
Tuesday, September 17, 2024
TOKYO'S RYOGUKU DISTRICT
Monday, September 16, 2024
THE GOLDEN FIBRE
Sunday, September 15, 2024
TRIBUTE TO SIR MOKSHAGUNDAM VISVESVARAYA
Engineer's Day
Every year, September 15 is celebrated as Engineer’s Day in India (Sri Lanka and Tanzania too), in honour of Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya, fondly known as Sir MV, whose contributions to public good have left an indelible mark in the history of India’s development, especially Karnataka. His administrative acumen, attention to detail, vision for all-round development, unwavering dedication and above all transparency in public life, have made his life folklore to not only his engineering profession but also to all sections of society. This proud son of Karnataka refused to be constrained by the shackles of poverty of pre-independence India, and went on to become an icon of public administration, shaping the country’s development. His journey from a civil engineer to recipient of India’s highest honour, Bharat Ratna, has a message for all.
Proving his mettle: After a successful tenure in PWD of Bombay Government, Sir MV was invited to join the Indian Irrigation Commission where he proved his mettle by devising innovative floodgates to raise the level of water storage in reservoirs (first in Pune). The same system was installed later in KRS dam, Mysore. Another feat in his early career was to implement a system to prevent sea erosion of Vishakapatnam port. It was the then King of Mysore, Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV, another visionary, who invited Sir MV to lead the development of the then Mysore Kingdom as Diwan. He accepted Sir MV’s philosophy ‘Without Industries India cannot Grow’. Results were spectacular as Sir MV established many institutions for development such as Mysore Soap Factory, Mysore Iron & Steel Works (now named after Visvesvaraya), Sri Jayachamarajendra Polytechnic, State Bank of Mysore, Century Club, Mysore Chamber of Commerce (now FKCCI), University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering (UVCE, Bangalore) and many other industries. KRS dam in Mysore stands testimony to his engineering skills, vision for development and above all an illustrious example for all professions as to how one can contribute to public good and national development.
True patriot: In this regard, Sir MV stands out as a true patriot and no less a nationalist than those who chose to serve India through the struggle for independence. He chose to serve the country as a professional engineer to free India from poverty and take the initial but firm steps to self-reliance. Addressing the Association of Engineers of Mysore (1910) he said, "In the West, expenditure on education is considered a national investment." And promptly followed it up with the establishment of University of Mysore, University of Agriculture, Bangalore, and a Polytechnic in Bangalore. Sir MV also espoused the cause of charity with the purpose of empowerment towards self-reliance rather than supporting individuals, as both the individual and nation grow together productively. Seeds of charity were sown by him early which modern governments have reinvented in the form of PPP. Apart from these widely known facts, Sir MV was an icon of public values. It is known that before accepting the position of Diwan of Mysore, he first obtained the concurrence of his family members not to seek any official favours from him. Many inspirational values he has left for future generations are eternally relevant: transparency, life-long learning, value of time, payback to society, value of planning before execution to prevent wastage and equality.
Sir MV’s birthday should not be limited to engineering profession alone. His life and values in public life and vision to contribute to national development beyond one’s professional field are eternally relevant to all professions. They are the basic ingredients of growth even in the 21st century and beyond, where challenges of the fourth industrial revolution based on knowledge activities hold the key to individual and national success. Sir MV’s messages inspire the youth and convince them about the huge opportunities to contribute to nation-building in whatever profession they choose.
Sir MV was not only an engineering genius, he was also responsible for shaping the country’s development in a big way.
Saturday, September 14, 2024
JULY 21
Friday, September 13, 2024
HOW TIME HAS BEEN KEPT THROUGHOUT HISTORY
From sundials to atomic clocks
The world has come from keeping time with the sun and the moon to atoms and their nuclei. Some physicist have even started work on the next-to-next generation of devices, called nuclear clocks.
Time is an inalienable part of our reality. Scientists don’t understand it fully at the universe’s largest and smallest scales, but fortunately for humans, a panoply of natural philosophers and inventors have allowed us to keep step with its inexorable march — with clocks.
What is a clock?
Clocks are devices that measure the passage of time and display it. Their modern versions have the following parts— a power source, resonator, and counter. A clock measures the amount of time that has passed by tracking something that happens in repeating fashion, at a fixed frequency. In many modern clocks, for example, this is a quartz crystal. More rudimentary devices often depended on natural events instead. The sundials in use in ancient times allowed people to ‘tell’ time by casting shadows of changing lengths against sunlight. In water clocks, water would slowly fill a vessel, with its levels at different times indicating howmuch time had passed.
The hourglass served a similar purpose, using sand instead of water.
How did mechanical clocks work?
Until the Middle Ages, engineers around the world improved the water clock with additional water tanks, gear wheels, pulleys, and even attached musical instruments to the point where they were practically developing rudimentary analog computers.
One of the first major revolutions in timekeeping that paved the way for modern clocks was the invention of the verge escapement mechanism in the 13th century, which first opened the door to mechanical clocks. The fundamental element here was a gear that, through a combination of mechanical arrangements, could only move in fixed intervals. The gear was called an escape wheel if it was circular. A second gear, called the balance wheel, was enmeshed with the first such that when the escape wheel moved forward one gear tooth at a time, the balance wheel would oscillate back and forth. This oscillation would drive the ‘hands’ of a clock on a clock face as long as some force was applied on the balance wheel to keep it moving.
Between the 15th and 18th centuries, clockmakers developed and improved on spring-driven clocks. These devices replaced the suspended weight that applied the force on the balance wheel in the previous designs with a coiled spring. To keep these clocks from becoming inaccurate as the spring unwound, clockmakers also developed mechanisms like the fusee, which ensured the spring always delivered a uniform force. The idea to couple a balance spring with the balance wheel also led to the advent of pocket watches.
After every ‘tick’ motion before the ‘tock’ motion towards the other side, the balance spring would return the balance wheel to its neutral position. As a result, the clocks lost a few minutes a day versus a few hours a day before.
Finally, in the mid 17th century, the Dutch inventor Christiaan Huygens invented the pendulum clock. While the clock itself used the by then familiar escapement mechanism, Huygens made an important contribution by working outa formula to convert the pendulum’s swings to the amount of time passed.
How did clocks change shipping?
The marine chronometer came the next century. For a ship to accurately know where it was on the face of the earth, it needed to know its latitude, longitude, and altitude. The latitude could be computed based on the Sun’s position in the sky and the altitude could be assumed to be sea level, leaving the longitude — which requires an accurate clock onboard each vessel. Pendulum clocks couldn’t serve this purpose because the ship’s rocking motion rendered them inaccurate.
A carpenter named John Harrison built a working marine chronometer in 1761 and delivered it to the British government for its longitude prize, worth GBP 20,000 at the time. This device featured mechanisms to ensure the clock's operation wasn’t affected by the ship's rocking, the force of gravity and some temperature changes.
Thus, time flew until modernity dawned. The better clocks of the 19th century were electric clocks, that is, whose energy source was a battery or an electric motor rather than suspended weights or springs, although the former and latter were attached to improve the efficiency of existing designs. And at long last came the 20th century.
How do quartz clocks work?
Two important types of clocks in operation today are the quartz clock and the atomic clock. The fundamental set up of both these instruments is similar: they have a power source, a resonator and a counter. In quartz clocks, the resonator is a quartz crystal. The power source sends electrical signals to a quartz crystal, whose crystal structure oscillates due to the piezoelectric effect. The signal's energy can be tuned to make the crystal oscillate at its resonant frequency, making it the resonator. The counter counts the number of periodic oscillations and converts them into seconds (depending on the crystal's period). A digital display shows the counter's results.
Such quartz clocks are inexpensive to make and easy to operate, and their invention led to watches and wall clocks becoming very common from mid-20th century.
What are atomic clocks?
An atomic clock may seem futuristic in comparison. The power source is a laser and the resonator is a group of atoms of the same isotope. The laser imparts just enough energy for the atom to jump from its low energy state to a specific higher energy state. And when the atom jumps backdown, it releases radiation with a well established frequency. For example, the caesium atomic clock uses caesium133 atoms as the resonator.
When these atoms excite and then de-excite, they release radiation of frequency 9,192,631,770 Hz. So when the counter detects 9,192,631,770 full waves of the radiation, it will record that one second has passed.
Atomic clocks are distinguished by their resonator; each such clock is called a time standard. For example, India’s time standard is a caesium atomic clock at the National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi, which maintains the Indian Standard Time. Many countries are currently developing nextgeneration optical clocks. This is because the higher the frequency of the radiation emitted in the clock, the more stable the clock will be. That emitted in a caesium atomic clock is in the microwave range (gigahertz), and the resulting clock loses or gains a second only once in 20 million years or so. The radiation in the next generation clocks is in the optical range (hundreds of terahertz) — thus the clocks’ name. These devices use strontium or ytterbium atoms as resonators and don’t miss a second in more than 10 billion years.
Some physicists have even started work on the next to next generation of devices, called nuclear clocks: their resonators are the nuclei of specific atoms rather than the whole atom. Atomic clocks need to make sure the resonator atoms aren’t affected by energy from other sources, like a stray electromagnetic field; an atom’s nucleus, however, is located well within each atom, surrounded by electrons, and thus could be a more stable resonator.
Since April this year, researchers around the world have reported three major developments in building functional nuclear clocks: a laser to excite thorium229 nuclei to a specific higher energy state, a way to link a thorium229 nuclear clock with an optical clock, and a precise estimate of the excitation energy. The nucleus’s deexcitation emission has a frequency of 2,020 terahertz, alluding to an ultra-high precision.
Thursday, September 12, 2024
DO YOU KNOW
How are clothes dry-cleaned?
It is a process used by launderers to remove dirt and stains from clothes using little or no water. The method involves the use of liquid solvents. First the clothes are sorted and put into a large machine which resembles the domestic washing machine. It has a rotating drum that is filled with solvents to which is added a detergent. Once the cleaning is done, the solvents are drained out by the rapid spinning of the drum. Then a machine called a tumbler blows warm air through the clothes to dry them up. Later, the clothes are checked to see if stains have been removed. A device called a steam gun is used to spray water on any stain found. Certain chemicals are applied on the wet spot to remove the stain thoroughly.
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