Facts in News
|
Content Distribution Network (CDN)
|
- Recently, several popular websites were reported to be facing an outage due to a possible glitch with CDN services .
- A Content Distribution Network (CDN) is a network of servers/data centres distributed across the globe that helps highly-trafficked websites keep up with the constant demand for data.
- A CDN does this by offloading some of this load from the website’s primary servers.
- For instance, sending all the images that make up a web page to millions of users can be a demanding task and easily overwhelm a small group of servers.
- A CDN can act as a middle-man, sending these images directly to the user, without the website’s own servers coming into play, thus improving response time.
- This is known as “caching”.
- The CDN can further improve the speed and responsiveness of a website by serving assets (images, videos, JavaScript and other files) from a location closer to the end-user.
- This cuts the amount of cross-continental traffic, as a local server is usually quicker to respond.
|
Brood X
|
- The US President’s first trip abroad was delayed unexpectedly when a swarm of cicadas bombarded the plane of the Air Force .
- Swarms of these insects have been spotted in a number of American states.
- These are part of a group named Brood X, based on their life cycles and periodic appearances.
- The term ‘brood’ refers to a population of cicadas that is isolated from other populations because of differences in their year of emergence or locality.
- Brood X is the largest brood of 17-year cicadas and is found in Pennsylvania, northern Virginia, Indiana and eastern Tennessee, according to the US National Park Service (NPS).
- The cicadas in Brood X number in billions and come out of their underground homes every 17 years.
- When underground, cicada nymphs go through five stages of development.
- Once they become adults, which takes about 17 years for some periodical cicadas, the males emerge from underground
- Last year, another grouping of 17-year cicadas dubbed Brood IX emerged in some states on the east coast of the US.
- The time when they decide to emerge is dependent on weather, specifically when ground temperatures reach about 17-18°C.
- They feed on the roots of trees both underground and above it.
- Cicadas also do not bite or sting, but when the males sing, their collective chorus can reach up to 100 decibels, a noise level that can possibly cause severe damage if you are exposed to it for several hours.
- One hundred decibels is equivalent to a jet flyover at 1000 feet, a motorcycle or a powered lawn mower.
Image Courtesy :guardian.com
|
CAR-T Cell Therapy
|
Recently, the clinical trial of an indigenously developed CAR T-cell therapy for blood cancer treatment has begun at Mumbai’s Tata Memorial Centre.
- Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T-cells are cells that are genetically engineered to produce an artificial T-cell receptor.
- T-cell receptor is widely used in developed nations for immunotherapy during cancer treatment.
- However, the technology is not available in India yet.
- The therapy targets leukaemia and lymphoma, and the team has applied for national and international patents for the research.
- Leukaemia is cancer of blood-forming tissues, including bone marrow.
- Lymphoma is a cancer of the lymphatic system, which is part of the body’s germ-fighting network.
- The researchers of the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay (IIT-B) have now designed and developed the first indigenous CAR T-cell therapy.
- The design developed by IIT-B uses lentiviral technology.
- In gene therapy, this is a method of inserting, modifying, or deleting genes in organisms using lentivirus, a family of viruses responsible for diseases such as AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome).
(Image Courtesy: NCI)
|
Dihing Patkai National Park
|
Recently, the Assam government has notified Dihing Patkai as a National Park.
- It is Assam’s seventh National Park and has been notified four days after creating the Raimona National Park (sixth NP).
- The five older National Parks in the State are Kaziranga, Manas, Nameri, Orang and Dibru-Saikhowa.
- Kaziranga and Manas are UNESCO World Heritage Sites. They are also tiger reserves along with Nameri and Orang.
- Assam now has the third most National Parks after the 12 in Madhya Pradesh and 9 in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
- Area
- 234.26-sq. km covering eastern Assam’s Dibrugarh and Tinsukia districts.
- It encompasses the erstwhile Dehing Patkai Wildlife Sanctuary (notified in 2004), the Jeypore Reserve Forest and the western block of the Upper Dihing Reserve Forest.
- Short stretches of the Dirak and Buri Dihing rivers have been included in the park
- Flora: It covers the last remaining stretches of the Assam Valley tropical wet evergreen forests.
- Fauna: It is a major elephant habitat and 310 species of butterflies have been recorded there. The park has 47 species each of reptiles and mammals, including the tiger and clouded leopard.
- In April 2020, Dehing Patkai was in focus after a series of virtual protests highlighted rampant illegal coal mining in the area.
(Image Courtesy: SNF)
|
Monal Species
|
Recently, local wildlife enthusiasts have sighted two species of monal, a colour pheasant, together in Upper Siang district of central Arunachal Pradesh.
- The birds were seen on Mount Eko Dumbing at 4,173 metres above mean sea level.
- Monal is a bird of genus Lophophorus of the pheasant family, Phasianidae.
- Their diet consists of plants such as roots and bulbs and insects.
- Due to habitat destruction and hunting, they have become rare and their population is endangered.
- Sighting these species of Monal is a good indicator of the ecology of the area.
- Himalayan Monal
- Scientific Name: Lophophorus impejanus
- Habitat: It is more widely distributed from Afghanistan to northeast India.
- In India, it is found in Himalayan hill forest, typically in areas with extensive rhododendron and bamboo-dominated understory.
- The male has all the colors of the rainbow while the female is nowhere near as brightly-colored.
- IUCN Red List: Least Concern.
(Image Courtesy: NG)
- Sclater’s Monal
- Scientific Name: Lophophorus sclateri
- Habitat: Endemic bird of the Eastern Himalaya, mostly recorded from the junction of India, Myanmar, Tibet and Yunnan province of China.
- It is restricted to Arunachal Pradesh on the Indian side.
- It is a high-altitude bird and rarely comes down below 1,500 metres.
- Male is brilliantly colored but oddly vulturine in appearance and the female is streaky brown.
- IUCN Red List: Vulnerable.
- Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Schedule I.
(Image Courtesy: ebird)
|