Thursday, July 29, 2010

Friday, May 7, 2010

WED 2010



Celebrate World Environment Day........
Save Our Planet........
MANY SPECIES, ONE PLANET, ONE FUTURE

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Scientific Day/Week/Event

No. Date Scientific Day/Week/Event

1. January 1st Week National Road Safety Week
2. January 1st Week Indian Science Congress
3. January 12 National Youth Day
4. January 30 National Anti Leprosy Day
5. February 28 National Science Day
6. March 8 International Women’s Day
7. March 16 Measles Vaccination Day
8. March 23 World Meteorological Day
9. April 7 World Health Day
10. April 22 Earth Day
11. May 1-7 Malaria Prevention Week
12. May 11 Technology Day
13. May 17 World Telecommunication Day
14. May 31 World No-Tobacco Day
15. June 5 World Environment Day
16. June 26 International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking
17. July 11 World Population Day
18. August 1-7 World Breast-Feeding Week
19. August 9 International Youth Day
20. August 25 – September 8 National Eye Donation Fortnight
21. September 1-7 National Nutrition Week
22. September 8 International Literacy Day
23. September 8 Eye Donation Day
24. September 16 World Ozone Day
25. October 1 International Day for the Elderly
26. October 1 Voluntary Blood Donation Day
27. October 1-7 Wildlife Week
28. October, 1st Monday World Habitat Day
29. October, 1st Monday Universal Children’s Day
30. October, 2nd Wednesday International Day for Natural Disaster Reduction
31. October 9 World Post Day
32. October 16 World Food Day
33. October 24 United Nations Day
34. October 24 World Development Information Day
35. November 10 International Science Day
36. Nov. 19 – Dec. 18 National Environment Month
37. November International Week of Science and Peace
38. December 1 World AIDS Day
39. December 2 World Computer Literacy Day
40. December 2 National Pollution Prevention Day
41. December 14 National Energy Conservation Day
42. December 29 International Day for Biological Diversity
43. December 27-31 National Children’s Science Congress

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

From Philosophy to Physics

The scholars of ancient Greece were the first we know of to attempt a thoroughgoing investigation of the universe--a systematic gathering of knowledge through the activity of human reason alone. Those who attempted this rationalistic search for understanding, without calling in the aid of intuition, inspiration, revelation, or other non-rational sources of information, were the philosophers (from Greek words meaning "lovers of wisdom").



Philosophy could turn within, seeking an understanding of human behavior, of ethics and morality, of motivations and responses. Or it might turn outside to an investigation of the universe beyond the intangible wall of the mind---an investigation, in short of 'nature."



Those philosophers who turned toward the second alternative were the natural philosophers, and for many centuries after the palmy days of Greece the study of the phenomena of nature continued to be called natural philosophy. The modern word that b used in its place-science, from a Latin word meaning "to know" did not come into popular use until well into the nineteenth century. Even today, the highest university degree given for achievement in the sciences is generally that of “Doctor of philosophy."



The word "natural" is of Latin derivation, so the term "natural philosophy" stems half from Latin and half from Greek a combination usually frowned upon by purists. The Greek word for "natural" is physikos, so one might more precisely speak of physical philosophy to describe what we now call science.



The term physics, therefore, is a brief form of physical philosophy or natural philosophy sad, in its original meaning, included all of science.



However, as the field of science broadened and deepened and as the information gathered grew more voluminous natural philosophers had to specialize taking one segment or another of scientific endeavor as their chosen field of work. The specialties received names of their own and were often subtracted from the once universal domain of physics.



Thus, the study of the abstract relationships of form and number became mathematics; the study of the position and movements of the heavenly bodies became astronomy; the study of the physical nature of the earth we live upon became geology; the study of the composition and interaction of substances became chemistry; the study of the structure, function, and interrelationships of living organisms became biology, and so on.



The term physics then came to be used to describe the study of those portions of nature that remained after the above-mentioned specialties were subtracted. For that reason the word has come to cover a rather heterogeneous field and is not as easy to define as it might be.



What has been left over includes such phenomena M motion, heat, light sound, electricity, and magnetism. All these are forms of "energy" (a term about which I shall have considerably more to say later on), so that a study of physics may be said to include, primarily, a consideration of the interrelationships of energy and matter.



This definition can be interpreted either narrowly or broadly. If it is interpreted broadly enough, physics can be expanded to include a great deal of each of its companion sections of science. Indeed, the twentieth century has seen such a situation come about.



The differentiation of science into its specialties is, after all, an artificial and man-made state of affairs. While the level of knowledge was still low, the division was useful and seemed natural. It was possible for a man to study astronomy or biology without reference to chemistry or physics, or for that matter to study either chemistry or physics in isolation. With time and accumulated information, however, the borders of the specialties approached, met, and finally overlapped. The techniques of one science became meaningful and illuminating in another.



In the latter half of the nineteenth century, physical techniques made it possible to determine the chemical constitution and physical structure of stars, and the science of "astrophysics" was born. The study of the vibrations set up in the body of the earth by quakes gave rise to the study of "geophysics." The study of chemical reactions through physical techniques initiated and constantly broadened the field of "physical chemistry." and the latter in turn penetrated the study of biology to produce what we now call "molecular biology."



As for mathematics, that was peculiarly the tool of physicists (at first, much mom so than that of chemists and biologists), and as the search into first principles became more subtle and basic, it became nearly impossible to differentiate between the "pure mathematician" and the "theoretical physicist."

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

അര്‍ജുന്‍ അന്ജിങ്ങള്‍

അര്‍ജുന്‍ ഇന്നലെ നമ്മെ വിട്ടുപിരിഞ്ഞു...


അര്‍ജുന്‍ എനിക്ക് ആരായിരുന്നു...?ബി എഡ്പഠനകാലത്തെ വെറുമൊരു സുഹൃത്തായിരുന്നില്ല...


...അല്ലെങ്കില്‍ പന്ത്രണ്ടു വര്‍ഷത്ത്തിനുശേശവും ഞങ്ങള്‍ സൌഹ്രദം കാത്തു സൂക്ഷിക്കില്ലയിരുന്നല്ലോ....


അര്‍ജുന്‍, നീ എല്ലാവരുടെയും സുഹൃത്ത്തായിരുന്നല്ലോ.....


അന്ന് എല്ലാ ഗ്രൂപ്പുകാരും നിന്നെ ഇഷ്ടപ്പെട്ടു...


നിന്റെ പാട്ടുകള്‍ , നിന്റെ തമാശകള്‍ ....നമ്മള്‍ കളിച്ച നാടകം...


ഒന്നും മറക്കാന്‍ കഴിയുന്നില്ല....


ഇന്നലെ എനിക്ക് ഉറങ്ങാന്‍ കഴിഞ്ഞില്ല....


നിന്റെ ഓര്‍മ്മകള്‍ മാത്രം...


കഴിഞ്ഞ വര്ഷം ലേക്ക്eശോരില്‍ വച്ചും , നിന്റെ വീട്ടില്‍ വച്ചു ninaqqഞങ്ങളെ വിട്ടുപിരിയുമെന്നു ഒട്ടും കരുതിയില്ല....





Friday, January 16, 2009

വിദ്യാലയം

വിദ്യാലയത്തിലെ വളരെയധികം കാര്യങ്ങള് എഴുതണമെന്നു അതിയായ മോഹമുണ്ട്......
പക്ഷേ എങ്ങിനെ തുടങ്ങണം , എന്തെഴുതണം , എന്നറിയല്ല.....
വിദ്യാര്ഥികളെ കുറിച്ചോ അധ്യാപകരെ കുറിച്ചോ സ്കൂളിലെ മൊത്തം സംഭവങ്ങളൊക്കെ
എഴുതാന് വളരെയധികം ആഗ്രഹമുണ്ട് ....
പക്ഷേ .....
എങ്കിലും ഒരിക്കല് ഞാന് എഴുതും.....

Friday, October 3, 2008




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