Step 1: Define cotton maturity. Fiber maturity refers to the degree of thickening of the secondary cell wall of the cotton fiber. A mature fiber has a thick, well-developed secondary wall, while an immature fiber has a very thin one.
Step 2: Differentiate between direct and indirect methods.
- Direct methods involve microscopic examination of the fiber's physical structure to directly observe the cell wall thickness. - Indirect methods measure a property that is known to change with maturity, rather than observing the cell wall itself.
Step 3: Analyze each method.
- A. Polarised light method: This is a microscopic (direct) method. It observes the interference colors produced by mature (thick-walled) fibers under polarized light.
- B. Causticare method: This is a reference method based on the Micronaire principle. It measures the airflow resistance of a cotton sample before and after swelling in caustic soda. The difference is used to calculate maturity. This is considered a direct measurement of fineness and maturity.
- C. Differential dyeing method: This is an indirect method. It uses a special blend of two dyes (typically a red and a green). Mature fibers, having more available cellulose, preferentially absorb the red dye, while immature fibers absorb the green dye. The overall color of the dyed sample gives a visual indication of the average maturity. It measures a dyeing property, not the wall thickness itself.
- D. Caustic Soda swelling method: This is a classic direct microscopic method. Fibers are swollen in caustic soda, and the degree of swelling and the shape they take (e.g., convolutions, rod-like appearance) are observed under a microscope to classify them as mature, half-mature, or immature.
Re-evaluation: Let's reconsider the definition. A direct method measures a dimensional property related to maturity. An indirect method measures a secondary property.
- (A) Polarized light and (D) Caustic soda swelling are direct microscopic observations.
- (C) Differential dyeing relies on dye uptake, a secondary property. This is indirect.
- (B) Causticare method is based on airflow resistance, which is an indirect measure, though it is calibrated to give maturity values.
There might be ambiguity in the classification of the Causticare method. However, the most unequivocally indirect method is differential dyeing. The Caustic Soda swelling method is a classic direct microscopic test. Let's reconsider. The question might consider any non-microscopic method as "indirect". In that case:
- A & D are microscopic (direct).
- C (dyeing) and B (airflow) are non-microscopic (indirect).
Therefore, B and C would be the indirect methods. This is not an option.
Let's stick to the most common classification. Direct methods physically assess the cell wall.
- D. Caustic soda swelling method (microscopic view) is the primary direct method.
- A. Polarized light method is also a direct microscopic observation of optical properties related to wall thickness.
- C. Differential dyeing is clearly indirect as it depends on dye absorption.
- B. Causticare is an instrumental test based on airflow, which is an indirect measurement of the specific surface area, which in turn relates to maturity.
Perhaps the question considers both Causticare (B) and Differential dyeing (C) as indirect. Let's check the options again.
Option C is "Only C and D". This would mean differential dyeing is indirect and caustic soda swelling is also indirect, which contradicts its status as a classic direct microscopic method. There seems to be a significant error in the question or options.
Let's re-read sources. In many classifications:
- Direct: Microscopic observation of swelling (e.g. Caustic Soda swelling).
- Indirect: All others that measure a property that correlates with maturity. This includes Airflow methods (Micronaire, Causticare), Dyeing methods, and optical methods (Polarized light).
If we use this broader definition of "indirect", then A, B, and C are all indirect. This is option (B). However, let's try another interpretation. The most common "direct" method is the microscopic swelling test. Other instrumental methods that give a quantitative value are often separated. The differential dyeing is more of a qualitative assessment.
Let's assume the provided answer (C) is correct and work backwards. This would imply that Differential dyeing (C) and Caustic Soda swelling method (D) are considered indirect. This is contradictory, as the swelling method is the definition of a direct visual assessment.
Let's assume there is a typo in the key and that "Indirect" refers to methods that do not involve a microscope.
- Involve microscope: A, D.
- Do not involve microscope: B, C.
So B and C are indirect. This is option B.
Given the high likelihood of an error in the question/options, let's pick the most plausible interpretation. Differential Dyeing (C) is definitely indirect. The Caustic Soda swelling method (D) is definitely direct. Therefore, any option including D as indirect is incorrect. This eliminates A, C, and D. This leaves option B (A, B, C) as the only possibility, assuming that the polarized light and Causticare methods are also considered indirect. This is a reasonable interpretation in many contexts.
Let's re-examine option C, the given answer. "Only C and D". This is highly problematic. Let's assume D is a typo and should be something else. What if D means "Differential Dyeing" and C means "Causticare"? No, the lettering is fixed. The question is flawed. However, if forced to choose based on common knowledge:
- C (Differential Dyeing) is definitely indirect.
- D (Caustic Soda Swelling) is definitely direct.
- A (Polarized Light) is direct (microscopic).
- B (Causticare) is based on airflow, which is an indirect physical principle.
So the truly indirect methods are B and C. Since this is not an option, and the provided correct answer is likely wrong, no logical solution can be reached. For the purpose of providing an answer, we will follow the most common academic classification where only direct visual measurement of the lumen/wall is "direct". In this case, A, B, and C would be considered "indirect".
Match the LIST-I (Spectroscopy) with LIST-II (Application)
LIST-I | LIST-II |
---|---|
A. Visible light spectroscopy | III. Identification on the basis of color |
B. Fluorescence spectroscopy | IV. Identification on the basis of fluorophore present |
C. FTIR spectroscopy | I. Identification on the basis of absorption in infrared region |
D. Mass Spectroscopy | II. Identification on the basis of m/z ion |
Match the LIST-I with LIST-II
LIST-I | LIST-II |
---|---|
A. Forensic Psychiatry | III. Behavioural pattern of criminal |
B. Forensic Engineering | IV. Origin of metallic fracture |
C. Forensic Odontology | I. Bite marks analysis |
D. Computer Forensics | II. Information derived from digital devices |
Match the LIST-I with LIST-II
LIST-I | LIST-II |
---|---|
A. Calvin Goddard | II. Forensic Ballistics |
B. Karl Landsteiner | III. Blood Grouping |
C. Albert Osborn | IV. Document examination |
D. Mathieu Orfila | I. Forensic Toxicology |
Match the LIST-I (Evidence, etc.) with LIST-II (Example, Construction etc.)
LIST-I | LIST-II |
---|---|
A. Biological evidence | IV. Blood |
B. Latent print evidence | III. Fingerprints |
C. Trace evidence | II. Soil |
D. Digital evidence | I. Cell phone records |
Match the LIST-I with LIST-II
LIST-I | LIST-II |
---|---|
A. Ridges | III. The raised portion of the friction skin of the fingers |
B. Type Lines | I. Two most inner ridges which start parallel, diverge and surround or tend to surround the pattern area |
C. Delta | IV. The ridge characteristics nearest to the point of divergence of type lines |
D. Enclosure | II. A single ridge bifurcates and reunites to enclose some space |