page 3 - bsmedia.business-standard.com€¦ · title: author: tanu created date: 20200206073527z
Post on 23-Sep-2020
0 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
SIMRANFARMS LIMITE,D1-B, Vikas Rekha Complex, Tower Chouraha,
Khatiwala Tank, Indore - 452 001 (M.P)
Phone : 073I-4255900 Fax : 073I-4255949
E-mail : simrangroup@sancharnet in
Cf N : L0 1222MP|984PLCOO2627
mail lD :-compnance @si mranfarrn s. co!'n
SFL/BSE/6O/2O19-2O Online filing at listing.bseindia.com 6tr Feb,2020
To,
The Secretary,
Corporate Relationship Department,
Bombay Stock Exehange LimitedPhiroze Jeejeebhoy Towers,
Dalal Street, Mumbai-400 001
Dear Sir
Sub: Compliance under Regulation 47 of the SEBI (Listing Obligations and Disclosure
Requirements) Regulations, 2 0 15
Ref: Simran Farms Limited (BSE Scrip Code 519566; ISIN No.INE354D01017)
Dear Sir/Madam, :
Pursuant to Reg. 47 of SEBI (Listing Obligations & Disclosure Requirements) Regulations, 2075,
please find enclosed copies of Extracts of Financial Results for Quarter and Nine Months ended
on 31't December, 2019 publish'ed in Newspaper i.e. Free Press Indore [in English) and Choutha
Sansaar (in Hindi) on 6s Feb,2020.
You are requested to kindly take above information on your records.
Thanking You,
Yours Faithfully,
, SIMRAN FARMS LIMITED
Parmar
& Compliance OfficerM. No. A34769
EncL As above
4*SIi'*oo*u
G-
http://www.chouthasansar.com/ImgView.aspx?ImgUrl=~/NewsImages...
1 of 1 06-02-2020, 11:16
FREEPRESSTHURSDAY | FEBRUARY 6, 2020 | INDORE ETC 7
AGENCIESBarcelona
Ateam of scientists ispreparing to dive deepinto the depths of the
Indian Ocean—into a ‘Mid-night Zone’ where light bare-ly reaches but life stillthrives. Scientists from theBritish-led Nekton Missionplan to survey wildlife andgauge the effects of climatechange in the unexploredarea. Working with the Sey-chelles and Maldives govern-ments, the five-week expedi-tion is targeting seamounts— vast underwater moun-tains that rise thousands ofmeters from the sea floor.
To explore such inhos-pitable depths, Nekton scien-tists will board one of theworld’s most advanced sub-mersibles, called ‘LimitingFactor’.
“What we do know is thatbeneath 1,000 meters (3,280feet), there’s no light downthere, but a lot of animals arebioluminescent. It’s life thatglows,” says Nekton missiondirector Oliver Steeds.
“The area that we’re goingto be researching, it’s one ofthe most bio-diverse parts ofthe world’s oceans. So whatwe’re going to find there isunknown,” Steeds recentlytold. To withstand crushing
pressures, the sub’s two-per-son crew compartment iswrapped in a nine-centimeter(3.5-inch) titanium cocoon.
It also carries up to 96hours’ worth of emergencyoxygen. Using sampling, sen-sor and mapping technology,scientists expect to identifynew species and toweringseamounts, as well as observeman-made impacts, such asclimate change and plasticpollution.
Last May, when ‘LimitingFactor’ descended to the bot-tom of the Pacific Ocean’sMariana Trench, the ocean’sdeepest point, its pilot spotteda plastic bag.
“When we actually think ofthe living space on the planetfor species, over 90% of thatliving space is in the oceanand most of that ocean is un-explored,” says Dan Laffoley,a marine expert for the Inter-national Union for Conserva-tion of Nature.
“So it’s absolutely critical,at this time when we see suchlarge changes occurring, thatwe get people down there, weget eyes in the ocean and wesee what’s happening,” hesaid. Scientists will combinetheir observations with thoseconducted last year during aseven-week Indian Oceanmission. They plan to presenttheir findings in 2022. — AP
Deep dive into ‘Midnight Zone’Using advanced submersibles, scientists plan to conduct research in the
depths of the Indian Ocean where light doesn’t penetrate
Pluto’s icy heartmakes winds blow
AGENCIESWashington
A‘beating heart’ of frozen nitro-gen controls Pluto’s winds andmay explain the unique features
on its surface, according to a new study. Pluto’s famous heart-shaped struc-
ture, named Tombaugh Regio, quicklybecame famous after NASA’s NewHorizons mission captured footage ofthe dwarf planet in 2015 and revealed itisn’t the barren world scientiststhought it was. Now, new researchshows Pluto’s renowned nitrogenheart rules its atmospheric circulation.
Uncovering how Pluto’s atmospherebehaves provides scientists with an-other place to compare to our own plan-et. Such findings can pinpoint bothsimilar and distinctive features be-tween Earth and a dwarf planet bil-lions of miles away. Frozen nitrogencovers part of Pluto’s surface in theshape of a heart.
During the day, a thin layer of this ni-trogen ice warms and turns intovapour. At night, the vapour condensesand once again forms ice. Each se-quence is like a heartbeat, pumping ni-trogen winds around the dwarf planet.
New research suggests this cyclepushes Pluto’s atmosphere to circulatein the opposite direction of its spin, aunique phenomenon called retro-rota-tion. As air whips close to the surface,it transports heat, grains of ice andhaze particles to create dark windstreaks and plains across the north andnorthwestern regions.
“This highlights the fact that Pluto’satmosphere and winds, even if the den-sity of the atmosphere is very low, canimpact the surface,” said TanguyBertrand, an astrophysicist and plane-tary scientist at NASA’s Ames Re-search Center in California and thestudy’s lead author.
AGENCIES/Toronto
Pregnant women who are poor,and have lower access to educa-tion and employment are more
likely to experience a child’s death atdelivery, according to a study whichmapped global patterns of stillbirthrates. The study noted that 2.6 millionstillbirths happen worldwide annual-ly. “Our research offers a better un-derstanding of where stillbirth ratesare higher, and what the social causes
underlying stillbirths are, not justtaking into account the medical fac-tors as most studies do,” said NazeemMuhajarine, from the University ofSaskatchewan (USask) in Canada.
According to the computer modeldeveloped by the researchers, still-births are more likely in countrieswhere gender inequality is high,where women face financial hurdles,and have less access to education andemployment opportunities comparedto men.
Stillbirth rates linkedto gender inequality
Better disasterwarning system
uses dronesAGENCIESNew Delhi
Aresearcher at Queen’sUniversity Belfast hasinvented a low-cost
telecommunication system us-ing drones which provides ear-ly warning on natural disas-ters and acts as a WiFi hotspotwhen phone signal is disrupt-ed during extreme weathersuch as earthquakes, tsunamisor hurricanes. Last year therewere 850 ‘natural catastrophes’across the world, a jump from740 in 2017 and 500 a decadeearlier, according to the Insur-ance Information Institute.Trung Duong, a Reader in theSchool of Electronics, Electri-cal Engineering and ComputerScience, and a researcher atthe Institute of Electronics,Communications and Informa-tion Technology at Queen’sUniversity, has first-hand expe-rience of battling extremeweather conditions. He ex-plains, “Currently warningsystems for natural disastersare very expensive, not alwayseffective and are often easilydamaged.
“In Vietnam, monitoring sta-tions are placed alongside theriver which cover a small area.25 of these stations would takearound six months to buildand cost nearly 0.5 million.They only last four years but ifextreme weather strikes, theyare almost always damaged asthey are so close to the water,” says Duong.
Now, a device thathelps preventfood poisoning
NEW YORK: Researchers have developed a novel portable device that can performchemical tests on food samples to detect harmful bacteria, an advance that may lead toquicker ways of preventing food borne epidemics. The device performs chemical assaysthat produce light, and works with smartphones and laptops to test food samples on-sitefor harmful E. coli bacteria. According to the researchers, including those from PurdueUniversity in the US, the device uses low light from the assay to detect the presence of E.coli. They created an electrical circuit with a signal amplifier, and components that sendthe data to laptops and smartphones via Bluetooth technology.
top related