Joy Mukherjee
Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre
41 Papers
279 Citations
Joy Mukherjee is an academic researcher from Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ion & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 30 publications. Previous affiliations of Joy Mukherjee include Sheffield Hallam University & University of Hong Kong.
Chat about Author
Papers
Photoionization and photodissociation rates in solar and blackbody radiation fields
W. F. Huebner,Joy Mukherjee +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the rate coefficients for ionization and dissociation in the radiation fields of the quiet and the active Sun at 1 AU heliocentric distance and blackbodies at four selected temperatures in the range from T = 1000 K to 1,000,000 K without factors for radiation dilution with distance from the source were calculated.
217
“Biofilmology”: a multidisciplinary review of the study of microbial biofilms
TL;DR: Techniques from different disciplines are highlighted that have been used to successfully describe the extracellular, surface and intracellular elements that are predominant in understanding biofilm formation to attain a global understanding of the processes involved in the formation of biofilms.
115
Magnetic-Silk Core–Shell Nanoparticles as Potential Carriers for Targeted Delivery of Curcumin into Human Breast Cancer Cells
TL;DR: Curcumin loaded magnetic silk fibroin core-shell nanoparticles showed enhanced cytotoxicity and higher cellular uptake in the human Caucasian breast adenocarcinoma cell line (MDA-MB-231cells) evidenced by MTT and cellular uptake assays.
Subcellular Distribution of Tail‐Anchored Proteins in Arabidopsis
Verena Kriechbaumer,Rowena Shaw,Joy Mukherjee,Caroline G. Bowsher,Anne-Marie Harrison,Benjamin Abell +5 more
TL;DR: By analysing the tail anchor sequences of characterized proteins, a tool for predicting localization is developed and it is estimated that 138 TA proteins are localized to plastids.
74
Optimization of lipid production for algal biodiesel in nitrogen stressed cells of Dunaliella salina using FTIR analysis
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the rates of growth and lipid accumulation in Dunaliella salina using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) under several combinations of temperatures and cell densities.
73