Academic literature on the topic 'Bhagalpur'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bhagalpur"

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Gouri, Kumari, and Sunil K. Choudhary. "Fluoride Contamination in Groundwater Sources of Bhagalpur Municipal Corporation Area, Bhagalpur, Bihar." IOSR Journal of Environmental Science, Toxicology and Food Technology 11, no. 01 (January 2017): 45–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.9790/2402-1101034549.

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Bajaj, Akshay, Dr Rajeev Chauhan, and Sudhakar Sathiaseelan. "Turtle Rescue Centre, Bhagalpur (Bihar), India." Reptiles & Amphibians 28, no. 2 (July 15, 2021): 363–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/randa.v28i2.15502.

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Sagar, Sarparaj Ramanand. "Child labors in brick kilns industries: A case study of Bhagalpur District." RESEARCH REVIEW International Journal of Multidisciplinary 8, no. 8 (August 14, 2023): 183–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.31305/rrijm.2023.v08.n08.030.

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The presented research paper studies the problems of child laborers working in brick kilns in Bhagalpur district. The main objective of this research paper is to study the future of India which is being ruined in the form of child labor in Bhagalpur district. On the basis of analysis of the data obtained in the presented research study, it has been found that the condition of child laborers working in brick kilns in Bhagalpur district is quite pathetic. His health and nutrition were found to be inadequate. The parents of these children working as child laborers also work in brick kilns all day long and their children also remain engaged in work all day long, due to which these children do not get a chance to study. These children work hard all day and earn very little wages. Apart from this, they also lack of sufficient money and resources, hence these children are moving away from schools. In fact, it is not only the future of these children being ruined as child labors, but the future of India is being ruined.
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Suman, Santosh Kumar, and Sharat Chandra. "Spatial Pattern of Literacy in Bhagalpur District (Bihar)." RESEARCH HUB International Multidisciplinary Research Journal 9, no. 3 (March 25, 2022): 39–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.53573/rhimrj.2022.v09i03.006.

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Literacy is an indicator of social development and quality of human life. It is a metaphor of social development which accelerates the pace of economic development along with social development in an area. Literacy has an important role for the progress of backward society. In the view of population geographers, literacy, despite being the social aspect of the population, is such a qualitative fact that indirectly indicates the changing socio-economic trends on a regional basis. The intent of the present article is to analyze the regional distribution and spatio-temporal trends of literacy in a developing region. Abstract in Hindi Language: साक्षरता सामाजिक विकास एवं मानव जीवन की गुणवत्ता का सूचक है। यह सामाजिक विकास का एक रूपक है जो किसी क्षेत्र में सामाजिक विकास के साथ-साथ आर्थिक विकास की गति में तीव्रता ला देती है। पिछड़े समाज की उन्नति हेतु साक्षरता की महत्वपूर्ण भूमिका है। जनसंख्या भूगोलवेत्ताओं की दृष्टि में साक्षरता जनसंख्या का सामाजिक पक्ष होते हुए भी ऐसा गुणात्मक तथ्य है जो क्षेत्रीय आधार पर परिवत्र्तनशील सामाजिक-आर्थिक प्रवृत्तियों की ओर अप्रत्यक्ष रूप में संकेत करता है। प्रस्तुत आलेख का अभीष्ट एक विकासशील प्रदेश में साक्षरता के क्षेत्रीय वितरण तथा स्थानिक-कालिक प्रवृत्तियों का विश्लेषण है।Keywords: सूचक, रूपक, अभीष्ट, स्थानिक-कालिक
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Saha, L. C., and S. Kumar. "Comparative Quality of Potable Waters at Bhagalpur, India." Acta Hydrochimica et Hydrobiologica 18, no. 4 (1990): 459–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/aheh.19900180410.

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Verma, R. K., H. N. P. Singh, A. K. Thakur, and S. J. Kohli. "Ethnobotanical Survey of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants of Bhagalpur Region." International Journal of Applied Sciences and Biotechnology 8, no. 2 (June 25, 2020): 216–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/ijasbt.v8i2.29577.

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Medicinal and aromatic plants have been used since the time immortal in different parts on the world including India. Ayurveda provides a detailed insight of different medicinal plants and their use. Different regions of India have a array of different types of medicinal and aromatic herbs. Depending upon climate and soil they may have different degree of pharmacological importance. Lower Gangetic plane present at around eastern part of the Bihar has some sort of Medicinal and Aromatic plants common to Bhagalpur and nearby region. These plants were surveyed on non-agricultural fields of four different localities of Bhagalpur by using quardat method. Abundance, Counts, Cover, Frequency and relative importance were calculated as a whole. About 14 plants were recorded having either well known medicinal or aromatic properties in a total survey area of 1000m2. Int. J. Appl. Sci. Biotechnol. Vol 8(2): 216-222
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VIJAY, K. V., S. M. RAHAMAN, M. K. WADHWANI, S. KUMARI, M. KUMARI, S. KUMAR, F. HOMA, S. SENGUPTA, and S. L. BAIRWA. "Growing mango: a profitable livelihood option for Bhagalpur farmers." Journal of Crop and Weed 15, no. 3 (January 1, 2019): 25–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.22271/09746315.2019.v15.i3.1231.

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Mahto, Dipo, Amresh Kumar Singh, Kumari Vineeta, and Ashok Kumar. "Change in Entropy of the Spinning Black Holes." International Letters of Chemistry, Physics and Astronomy 32 (April 2014): 95–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.18052/www.scipress.com/ilcpa.32.95.

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Aims: To derive an expression for change in entropy of spinning black holes on the basis of the model for the energy of spinning black holes ( Mahto et al. 2011a) & the model for entropy change ( Mahto et al. 2011b) and then calculate their values for different test spinning black holes. Study Design: Data for the mass of black holes have collected from the research paper entitled :Super massive Black Holes in Galactic Nuclei: Past Present & Future Research(2005), Space Science Reviews by L. Ferrarese & H. Ford and Black holes in Astrophysics(2005), New Journal Physics by R. Narayan. The data for black hole constant for spinning black holes () is taken from the paper entitled: Study of Schwarzschild radius with reference to the spinning black holes. Bulletin of Pure and Applied Sciences (2011a). Place and Duration of Study: Department of Physics, Marwari College Bhagalpur and University Department of Physics, T.M.B.U. Bhagalpur, between December 2013 and March 2014. Methodology: A theoretical based work using Laptop to calculate the calculation for change in entropy of different test spinning black holes at Marwari College Bhagalpur and the residential research chamber of the first author. Results: The calculation shows that the change in entropy of spinning black holes of the rest masses for stellar – mass black holes (M ~ 5 ­ 20 Mʘ) in X-ray binaries is to J/K and for the super massive black holes (M ~ 106 – 109.5 Mʘ) in active galactic nuclei is to J/K. The nature of the graph for XRBs is the same to the Hawking entropy with the event horizon and straight line for AGN which confirms the validity of equations and . Conclusion: The change in energy and entropy of black holes are mainly dependent on the mass and independent of their event horizons.
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Mahto, Dipo, Amresh Kumar Singh, Kumari Vineeta, and Ashok Kumar. "Change in Entropy of the Spinning Black Holes." International Letters of Chemistry, Physics and Astronomy 32 (April 22, 2014): 95–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.56431/p-60i6ib.

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Aims: To derive an expression for change in entropy of spinning black holes on the basis of the model for the energy of spinning black holes ( Mahto et al. 2011a) & the model for entropy change ( Mahto et al. 2011b) and then calculate their values for different test spinning black holes. Study Design: Data for the mass of black holes have collected from the research paper entitled :Super massive Black Holes in Galactic Nuclei: Past Present & Future Research(2005), Space Science Reviews by L. Ferrarese & H. Ford and Black holes in Astrophysics(2005), New Journal Physics by R. Narayan. The data for black hole constant for spinning black holes () is taken from the paper entitled: Study of Schwarzschild radius with reference to the spinning black holes. Bulletin of Pure and Applied Sciences (2011a). Place and Duration of Study: Department of Physics, Marwari College Bhagalpur and University Department of Physics, T.M.B.U. Bhagalpur, between December 2013 and March 2014. Methodology: A theoretical based work using Laptop to calculate the calculation for change in entropy of different test spinning black holes at Marwari College Bhagalpur and the residential research chamber of the first author. Results: The calculation shows that the change in entropy of spinning black holes of the rest masses for stellar – mass black holes (M ~ 5 ­ 20 Mʘ) in X-ray binaries is to J/K and for the super massive black holes (M ~ 106 – 109.5 Mʘ) in active galactic nuclei is to J/K. The nature of the graph for XRBs is the same to the Hawking entropy with the event horizon and straight line for AGN which confirms the validity of equations and . Conclusion: The change in energy and entropy of black holes are mainly dependent on the mass and independent of their event horizons.
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JHA, GYANA. "Effect of wrapping and packaging materials on fruit rot of guava (Psidium guajava Linn.)." Annals of Plant and Soil Research 23, no. 2 (April 30, 2021): 186–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.47815/apsr.2021.10054.

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In the present study, wrapping and packaging materials were evaluated for their capacity to decrease the decay losses of guava fruits during storage under ambient conditions (18-22OC and 75-80% RH) at Tej Narayan Banaili College, T.M. Bhagalpur University, Bhagalpur during the year 2014-2016. Results revealed that post-harvest decay loss can be minimized significantly through proper wrapping or packaging of fruits for storage. Fruits wrapped with heat-shrinkable low density polyethylene film (LDPE, 25 µm thick), or packed up to 30 days of storage in corrugated fibre board (CFB) boxes exhibited low decay losses of 11.9 and 22.8 per cent, respectively. In general, the fruit loss due to fungal attack increased with increasing duration of storage. Altogether 7 fungal species were found associated with rotten fruits during the storge. Botryodiplodia theobromae, was the most prominent post-harvest rotting agent causing 37.5% fruit loss. Colletotrichum gloeosporioides, Pestalotia psidii and Alternaria alternata showed 30.8, 25.5 and 16.8% fruit decay losses, respectively. Aspergillus niger (10.6%) Penicillium expansum (7.0%) and Rhizopus stolonifer (4.5%) caused least per cent decay losses of guava fruits.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bhagalpur"

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Kumar, Rajiv. "Bhagalpur in the 17th and 18th centuries." Thesis, Patna University, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1593.

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Raj, Rajesh. "Six inches from above : violence and resistance among Gangotas of Bhagalpur (India)." Phd thesis, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/123820.

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The present thesis is an attempt to study the social practice of Gangotas of Bhagalpur (North India). Like that of many other subordinate agrarian communities (Dorns, Dharhis, Binds, etc.) of Gangetic Bihar, there has not been anything positive in the representation of Gangotas in the contemporary discourses. Both national media and administrative sources depict members of this community as criminals. Although the post-colonial state in India, unlike its predecessor, does not acknowledge the occurrence of crime on a communal basis, the administrative practice indicates otherwise. With its official identity as ‘diara criminals’, the community of Gangotas is considered a menace to public peace and order Despite the enforcement of strict measures to contain the activities of this community, the district administration of Bhagalpur has been criticised by the local law-abiding citizenry for doing too little to eliminate the criminal threat to public life and property. The criminal image of Gangotas is periodically reinforced by the news of Gangota violence the form and content of which defies the imagination of even those who have become somewhat accustomed to the insecurity of life and property in rural Bihar The reports of Gangota violence cannot be questioned for their authenticity, nor can the violation of law contained in such incidents of violence be doubted. Yet, the representation of this violence as mere acts of crime can, at best, be called partial, especially analysed against the specific structure of the agrarian society of Bhagalpur.
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Books on the topic "Bhagalpur"

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1972-, Sinha Mukesh Kumar, ed. Eminent Muslims of Bhagalpur. Bhagalpur: Indian Book Market, 2008.

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Bengal district gazetteers: Bhagalpur. New Delhi: Logos Press, 2011.

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Farasat, Warisha. Splintered justice: Living the horror of mass communal violence in Bhagalpur and Gujarat. Gurgaon, India: Three Essays Collective, 2016.

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Roy, Pankaj Kumar. The Quit India movement in Bihar: The special reference to the old division of Bhagalpur. Delhi: Capital Pub. House, 1991.

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Yogendra, Kādarī Saphadara Imāma, and Gaṅgā Mukti Āndolana (Bhagalpur, India), eds. Gaṅgā ko avirala bahane do. Bhāgalapura, Bihāra: Gaṅgā Mukti Āndolana, 1990.

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Gobind, K. B. Reformative law and social justice in Indian society: A sociological study with special reference to weaker classes of Bhagalpur District. New Delhi: Regency Publications, 1995.

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Choudhury, Sunil K. Sighting storks: Status and distribution of greater adjutant storks (Leptoptilos dubius) in the Ganga and Kosi river floodplains near Bhagalpur, Bihar. New Delhi: Wildlife Trust of India, 2007.

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Sighting storks: Status and distribution of greater adjutant storks (Leptoptilos dubius) in the Ganga and Kosi river floodplains near Bhagalpur, Bihar. New Delhi: Wildlife Trust of India, 2007.

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Beglar, J. D. Report of a Tour Through the Bengal Provinces of Patna, Gaya, Mongir, and Bhagalpur, the Santal Parganas, Manbhum, Singhbhum, & Birbhum, Bankura, Raniganj, Bardwan and Hughli in 1872-73. Franklin Classics Trade Press, 2018.

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Report of a Tour Through the Bengal Provinces of Patna, Gaya, Mongir, and Bhagalpur, the Santal Parganas, Manbhum, Singhbhum, & Birbhum, Bankura, Raniganj, Bardwan and Hughli In 1872-73. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2022.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bhagalpur"

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Kumar, Sarvottam. "A Geographical Analysis of Rural Male Out-Migration: A Case Study of Bhagalpur District." In Population Dynamics in Contemporary South Asia, 331–55. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-1668-9_14.

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Vimal, Binod Kumar, Neeraj Bagoria, Rajkishore Kumar, Y. K. Singh, and Ragini Kumari. "RS-GIS Based Constructive Measures for Flood Prone Agricultural Land of Sabour Block of Bhagalpur District, Bihar." In Earth and Environmental Sciences Library, 121–34. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-76116-5_8.

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Raj, Chandan, and Vivekanand Singh. "Shifting of Main Course of River Ganga Within the Reach Bhagalpur to Kahalgaon Using Remote Sensing and GIS." In River Hydraulics, 217–27. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-81768-8_18.

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Kumar, Pankaj, Ram Avtar, Alok Kumar, Chander Kumar Singh, and AL Ramanathan. "Assessment of Subsurface Lithology by Resistivity Survey Coupled with Hydrochemical Study to Identify Arsenic Distribution Pattern in Central Gangetic Plain: A Case Study of Bhagalpur District, Bihar, India." In Safe and Sustainable Use of Arsenic-Contaminated Aquifers in the Gangetic Plain, 17–31. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-16124-2_2.

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"bhagalpuri." In The Fairchild Books Dictionary of Textiles. Fairchild Books, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781501365072.1456.

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Noble, Allen G., and Ramesh Dhussa. "Ethnic Neighborhoods in Indian Cities: the Paras of Dumka and the Bengali Tola of Bhagalpur." In India: Cultural Patterns and Processes, 81–103. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429048678-5.

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Bose, N., S. Chaudhary, and A. Ghosh. "Geogenic arsenic contamination in the groundwater of Bhagalpur district in Bihar, India: A challenge for sustainable development." In Arsenic in the Environment - Proceedings, 615–17. CRC Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/b20466-284.

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Choudhary, D. N. "Nesting and Breeding Behaviors of Greater Adjutant Stork (Leptoptilos dubios), a Globally Threatened Stork in District Bhagalpur, Bihar, India." In Emerging Issues in Environment, Geography and Earth Science Vol. 2, 1–19. B P International (a part of SCIENCEDOMAIN International), 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.9734/bpi/eieges/v2/7396a.

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Colopy, Cheryl. "Beyond Barrages and Boundaries." In Dirty, Sacred Rivers. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199845019.003.0022.

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A low dam girdles the Ganga about sixty miles beyond Bhagalpur. More than a mile and a half across, the structure is the longest barrage in the world. It has 109 gates, almost twice as many as the Koshi barrage I traveled over near the Nepal-India border. Its name, Farakka, is anathema to people throughout Bangladesh. In India mainly fishermen on the Ganga know much about it. The barrage, which sits just eleven miles from the international border that separates the tiny nation from its big neighbor, has poisoned relations between the two governments for forty years. The story of Farakka is one of the thorniest river disputes on the subcontinent. Whole books have been written about it on both sides of the border as well as by international commentators, not to mention the technical treatises it has engendered. The barrage did not accomplish the task for which it was built and has harmed people in both India and Bangladesh. Farakka offers a warning about how not to handle transboundary rivers to prevent complex subcontinental watersharing problems from becoming crises in the future. Borders fragment the river system in the Ganges basin, creating unique transboundary water management challenges. To visualize the Indian subcontinent’s river-sharing problems, imagine a slice of pizza. Take a bite out of the middle of the bumpy top crust. That’s Nepal. Then take a small bite out of the right, or eastern edge, just below the crust. That’s Bangladesh. The rest of the slice is India. These three nations share the greater Ganges basin. The river spills into the Bay of Bengal in Bangladesh after flowing across the wide top part of India. Many of the river’s major tributaries come from Nepal. The smaller slice of pizza to the west would include Pakistan and the Indus River, but that’s another complicated story. Now move the piece of pizza to North America and pretend the United States is the majority of the slice.
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Colopy, Cheryl. "Susu." In Dirty, Sacred Rivers. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199845019.003.0021.

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“You’ll never get a dolphin with a digital camera,” Sushant Dey said, as we floated with the current on the Ganga. “They’re only on the surface for a second. By the time the shutter clicks, it’s already gone.” Early one morning in April 2007 I walked down to the bottom of a wide concrete stairway just outside Bhagalpur in the Indian state of Bihar to board an old fishing boat. Where the stairs met the river, the prow of the twenty-foot-long boat rested on the riverbank. A narrow plank, its ends positioned on the bank and the edge of the prow, allowed me to board. Sushant Dey and his brother Subhasis were taking me out to look for dolphins before the heat built up, when the dolphins might still be looking for food. Dolphins jump out of the water when they’re hunting, which they typically do early in the morning and again in the evening. The boatman tried repeatedly to start the wooden boat’s old diesel engine. Finally it coughed and caught; we chugged upriver a short way. He turned off the engine and we floated. After a few minutes, I heard a swish of water. A slick muscular body slipped back into the river before I could get a good look. A few minutes passed: another swish. I was looking in the wrong place and missed him. In spite of Sushant’s warning that my effort would be in vain, I tried again and again to catch a dolphin, pointing my camera to a likely spot on the opaque graygreen water where the animal might surface after I had missed a breach. Then I missed again. The Ganga flowed smoothly. It was about a half mile wide now, in the dry season. In the monsoon it grows to three miles wide and can be twenty-five feet higher in some places. The boatman took us to places where the dolphins were known to rest in the deep waters. I got half a dozen good glimpses as a dolphin surfaced briefly to breathe: an arc of dark gray, a shiny comma.
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Conference papers on the topic "Bhagalpur"

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Prakash, Amitesh, Srishti, Pinkee Kumari, Naziya Iqbal, Kajal Kumari, and Madhu Singh. "Study on Performance of 100KW Grid-Connected Rooftop Solar Power Generation at BCE Bhagalpur, India." In 2023 5th International Conference on Energy, Power and Environment: Towards Flexible Green Energy Technologies (ICEPE). IEEE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icepe57949.2023.10201520.

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