
Kanjirappally taps technology for disaster preparedness
As part of this initiative, the Wayanad-based Hume Centre for Ecology and Wildlife Biology has begun a preliminary study to identify the most vulnerable zones within the Kanjirappally Block. According to officials, rain gauges will be installed in these areas to monitor rainfall trends and assess the risk of potential landslides and floods.
'The project also includes detailed mapping of the region, dividing it into 2.5-sq.-km grids based on rainfall data. This grid-based approach will help pinpoint disaster-prone areas and support the development of focused mitigation and preparedness plans,' they said.
With precipitation levels regularly exceeding that of neighbouring regions, the Kanjirappaly region is susceptible to climate change-induced hazards. Officials have identified the hill tracts of Vagamon, Kootickal, Enthayar, Elamkadu, Koruthodu and Kanamala as priority zones where the risk of cloudbursts and landslides is especially high.
A couple of weeks ago, the Cochin University of Science and Technology (CUSAT), the Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology (IIST), and the Environmental Resources Research Centre (ERRC) joined forces to deploy an automated landslide warning system in the region. Supported by NewSpace India Limited (NSIL), the commercial arm of ISRO, three Automatic Weather Stations (AWS) have been set up in Theekoy, Poonjar Thekkekara, and Moonnilavu panchayats, all located within the Meenachil river basin.
These AWS units continuously track key environmental parameters such as wind speed, humidity, temperature, rainfall, soil moisture, and soil temperature. The real-time data is transmitted to servers at CUSAT, where it is analysed for early signs of potential disasters.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hindu
4 hours ago
- The Hindu
Skyroot test fires India's largest privately developed rocket stage ahead of maiden flight of Vikram-1
Hyderabad-based space start up firm Skyroot Aerospace has announced that it had successfully static test fired the rocket's stage 1 carbon composite solid fuel booster stage for the country's first privately developed orbital launch vehicle, Vikram-1, ahead of its maiden flight, at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre SHAR in Sriharikota. The static test, conducted at the spaceport under the aegis of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), validated the performance of the 30-tonne booster stage of Skyroot's Vikram-1, which is targeted for its maiden flight later this year, said an official release on Friday night. Named 'Kalam-1200', after former President and rocket scientist APJ Abdul Kalam, the rocket stage is the largest monolithic solid rocket motor developed in India's space sector. At a length of 11 metres, it can generate nearly 1200 kN of peak vacuum thrust, nearly 10 times as much as that of an engine on a Boeing 737 Max. The casting of Kalam-1200 — a complex process of pouring and shaping the bespoke solid fuel propellant inside the carbon composite casing — was accomplished by ISRO's SDSC-SHAR. The static test validated the ballistic performance, burn rate, and thermal protection system of the motor, among other parameters, as well as the composite flex nozzle system. The flex nozzle system is a steering mechanism for the rocket, controlled by Vikram-1's Mission Computer — the onboard command and control computer that runs the algorithm guiding the rocket autonomously from the launchpad to orbit. The rocket stage was fired for around 110 seconds and generated the desired thrust within the estimated lower and upper bounds throughout its burn time. During flight, Kalam-1200 will lift Vikram-1 from the launch pad to an altitude of over 50 km, before a precise and advanced pneumatic system enables seamless stage separation, paving the way for the upper stages of the rocket to continue its flight to Earth's orbit. 'Witnessing Kalam-1200 roar to life at the test stand was an exhilarating yet humbling experience. It is the culmination of years of hard engineering by the young team at Skyroot,' said co-founder and CEO Pawan Kumar Chandana. 'It validates the entire stage as an integrated system — from propulsion performance and flex-nozzle actuation to thermal protection and structural integrity,' pointed out co-founder and COO Naga Bharath Daka. IN-Space chairman Pawan Goenka congratulated Skyroot for 'this landmark achievement' said it 'readies Skyroot to create history with the orbital launch.' Vikram-1 launch vehicle, designed and developed by Skyroot, is poised to be the first privately developed rocket to reach the orbit in the country. The launch vehicle will provide on-demand and customised launches for global small satellite operators — both in India and the world, added the release.


India Today
9 hours ago
- India Today
100-year-long journey: This nanocraft could reach a black hole
Astrophysicist Cosimo Bambi has proposed a groundbreaking concept: sending a spacecraft no heavier than a paperclip to explore a black hole's mysteries up in the journal iScience, Bambi's blueprint envisions a nanocraft propelled by powerful Earth-based lasers, speeding through space at a third of the speed of light to reach a nearby black hole within a sounding like science fiction, Bambi believes such a mission could become feasible within 20 to 30 years as laser and probe technologies advance and costs fall. The craft would weigh just a few grams, comprising a microchip and a light sail pushed by photon This propulsion method would allow the spacecraft to cover the 20 to 25 light-year distance to a potential black hole relatively quickly compared to conventional chemical propulsion, which is far too slow for interstellar a suitable target black hole is crucial yet challenging, as black holes emit no light and remain invisible to traditional telescopes. Instead, astronomers infer their presence by observing gravitational effects on nearby stars or light in detection methods raise hope that a black hole within about 25 light-years of Earth could be identified within the next decade, opening a realistic window for such an ambitious near the black hole, the nanocraft could conduct experiments that might revolutionise physics. Scientists could explore whether black holes truly have event horizons, the points of no return where even light cannot escape, and test if the fundamental laws of physics, especially Einstein's general relativity, hold under such extreme from this mission might challenge or confirm our understanding of space-time and gravity in ways never before acknowledges the enormous present-day cost—laser facilities alone could run to a trillion euros—and technological hurdles. Yet, he draws parallels to historical breakthroughs once considered implausible, such as the detection of gravitational waves and the imaging of black hole shadows decades after Einstein's theories predicted visionary project exemplifies the daring spirit of astrophysics, pushing the boundaries of human knowledge by sending a tiny probe hurtling across the cosmos to unlock the deepest secrets of the foretells a future where humanity can send lightweight explorers to the most enigmatic objects in space, potentially rewriting physics as we know it.- Ends


Indian Express
13 hours ago
- Indian Express
From South America to India, how the humble potato swept the world
In most Indian households, the humble potato is a staple in breakfast, lunch, dinner, and all meals in between. This love for the vegetable is shared across continents. According to the Peru-based research-for-development organisation International Potato Center, the potato is the world's most important food crop for human consumption, after rice and wheat. Interestingly, recent research has revealed that the potato originated through natural interbreeding between a wild tomato plant and a potato-like species in South America about nine million years ago. The two plants, according to a team of biologists and genomic scientists, are said to have shared a common ancestor that lived 14 million years ago. Amidst these new revelations, a look at how the unassuming spud travelled the world. What is the potato, and where is its birthplace? A potato is composed primarily of water (about 79 per cent), followed by carbohydrates and protein. It also contains essential vitamins and minerals. 'Just 100 gm of potato provides nearly half the minimum daily requirement of vitamin C…,' notes author John Reader in Potato: A History of the Propitious Esculent (2009). Potatoes are also rich in B-Complex vitamins, calcium, iron, and potassium. According to Reader, the most primitive living relative of the tuber-bearing potato is a small epiphyte called Solanum morelliforme. The plant has leaves, flowers, and small berries and is found growing on the branches of oak trees in southern Mexico. Scholars suggest that ancestors resembling these wild species were present in the south-west United States and Mexico 40 million years ago, and migrated into South America when the Isthmus of Panama was formed 3.5 million years ago. Reader notes, 'Their history thereafter was one of botanical diversification and geographical expansion as the potato advanced and adapted to thrive in the host of ecological niches that South America had to offer.' Many root plants are still grown commercially in South America, but S. tuberosum, the common potato, is globally known. In Potato: A Global History (2020), academic Andrew F. Smith reckons that the domestication of S. tuberosum began around 10,000 BCE by Andean farmers in the Lake Titicaca basin. 'In one of the world's most inhospitable terrains for agriculture, the potato became the chief food of the people,' says Smith. The potato was well suited to the summer heat, which made possible the growth of the above-ground plant, while cooler nights encouraged the growth of the tuber. Once harvested, potatoes last only a few months before they sprout and eventually succumb to mold. Indigenous South Americans, interestingly, developed a method to preserve them in ways that they can be stored for years. The advent of the Inca Empire around 1430, initially a small tribe living around Cuzco, Peru, changed the fate of the potato. The Inca Empire was conquered by the Spanish around 1532. Smith argues that after the conquest, the Spanish encouraged the cultivation of the potato, and to collect taxes in the form of chuno—a freeze-dried potato—which they used to feed construction workers. Historians such as William H McNeill suggest that potatoes paid for Spain's military conquests and political power in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Smith notes, '…and thus the potato, which fed the workers, had radically changed world history.' Potatoes, consumed by the masses in mid-eighteenth-century Europe, led to massive population growth. 'And it was this massive rise in population [in Northern Europe],' argues Smith, 'that permitted Western European nations to colonize the world.' The potato arrives in Europe The potato arrived in Europe around the 1570s. 'What is unclear is precisely where these potatoes came from,' writes Smith. 'Potatoes were ideal for feeding sailors on long voyages, but when the ships arrived in Spain, excess provisions would have been jettisoned. So it's not surprising that the first record of S. tuberosum outside of South America appears in the Canary Islands [in Spain], a stopping point for ships sailing to and from the Americas,' he adds. Potatoes from Spain were sent to Italy, where they were at first called taratouffli (truffles). When the Spanish engaged in war in the Low Countries (modern-day Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxembourg), they developed a line of supply beginning from Spain through northern Italy, south-western Germany, and south-eastern France. 'The Spanish armies brought potatoes with them, and farmers along the supply line grew potatoes to sell to the military formations and supply trains as they passed by,' Smith notes. He observes that potatoes were grown in Italy by the 1570s, in Germany by 1581, and in Switzerland and France soon after. Smith concludes, 'By the seventeenth century the potato was cultivated as an agricultural crop, especially as a substitute for rye'. However, not all European herbalists were fond of the tuber. Some believed potatoes were poisonous and caused leprosy and other diseases. Some French provincial governments, in fact, forbade their cultivation. Not until the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714) did the potato become an essential item. 'This war produced one of the worst famines in European history, and peasants and soldiers alike adopted the potato without hesitation,' writes Smith. When potatoes reached England is debatable. English explorer Francis Drake is believed to have introduced potatoes from Chile into England in 1578. According to Smith, 'In England, Scotland and Ireland, potatoes were mainly grown in gardens until the late seventeenth century.' Although used as horse fodder in England, Scotland and Ireland grew it for human consumption. When the aloo came to India 'The chronology of the potato's early spread across the Indian subcontinent is no clearer than that of its dissemination across Europe,' writes historian Rebecca Earle in Feeding The People: The Politics Of The Potato (2020). By the mid-sixteenth century, Portuguese vessels were sailing regularly to Indian ports and had established themselves in Cochin on India's western coast. 'Edward Terry, who served as a chaplain for the East India Company in the early seventeenth century, reported seeing 'potatoes excellently well dressed' at a banquet in Rajasthan hosted by the Mughal statesman Asaf Khan in 1615,' Earle adds. Later, the British East India Company sent potatoes along its trade routes into the Himalayas, where Sherpas called them 'English potatoes'. Buddhist monks are said to have begun cultivating potatoes in Bhutan and Nepal in the 1700s. Reader points out that 'just as in Europe, the new and prolific food source set the population rising dramatically.' Earle finds that when nutritionists in Europe were denouncing the potato as inferior to bread, Indian nutritionists such as Baneswar Singha called it superior to rice. She adds, 'Potatoes therefore formed part of a larger programme to strengthen the nationalist movement by strengthening Indian bodies'. The potato that the British viewed as a symbol of superiority, according to Earle, became a symbol of protest for the colonised. While colonialism brought the potato to India, Earle says, '…these forces alone did not determine the roles it now plays in Indian culture'. Today, the potato has become an indispensable part of Indian cuisine, and India is the world's second-largest producer and consumer of the starchy staple. Nikita writes for the Research Section of focusing on the intersections between colonial history and contemporary issues, especially in gender, culture, and sport. For suggestions, feedback, or an insider's guide to exploring Calcutta, feel free to reach out to her at ... Read More