123 research outputs found
Glueball Production in Peripheral Heavy-Ion Collisions
The method of equivalent quanta is applied both to photon-photon and, by
analogy, to double pomeron exchange in heavy-ion collisions. This
Weizs\"acker-Williams approach is used to calculate production cross sections
for the glueball candidate meson via photon-photon and
pomeron-pomeron fusion in peripheral heavy-ion collisions at both RHIC and LHC
energies. The impact-parameter dependence for total and elastic cross sections
are presented, and are compared to results for proton-proton collisions.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Erratum
Genetic characterization of grape (Vitis vinifera L.) germplasm from Southeast Anatolia by SSR markersVitis 50 (3), 99-106 (2011
Comments on glueballinos (R0 particles) and R0 searches
We propose a search strategy for the light R0 (glueballino) particle
suggested by G.Farrar in connection with the light gluino scenario. The basic
idea is to moderate and stop the R0 particles and then observe their decay to
almost monochromatic pions - at an appropriate time delay relative to a primary
collision event, where a gluino jet, likely to fragment into the R0, was
produced. This technique is optimized at colliders and depends on qualitative
features of the R0 hadronic interactions which we discuss in detail.Comment: LaTeX, 28 page
Genetic characterization of grape (Vitis vinifera L.) germplasm from Southeast Anatolia by SSR markers
Southeast Anatolia is located in close proximity to the center of origin of grapes and is an important grape producing area of Turkey. The important location of this region for grape genetic diversity together with its diverse ecological conditions may have led to the development of grape germplasm that is unique to this region. However, so far little has been done to genetically analyze this grape germplasm. In this study, we genetically analyzed 55 grape cultivars originating from six different provinces of this region using 14 simple sequence repeat (SSR) loci and a number of ampeolographic characteristics. Based on these analyses, one case of synonymous and four cases of homonymous grape cultivars were identified. The contribution of our results to better characterization of the grape germplasm of the region as well as future germplasm management and breeding efforts is discussed.
Glueballs: Charmonium Decay and Annihilation
The vector glueball , made of 3 valence gluons, is expected to be
``clean": it mixes less with quarkonia, but mediates OZI violations. The recent
glueball candidate and the persistence of the puzzle suggest , with mixing angle , hence , , MeV, few keV,
few eV. Lower and upper bounds on can be argued from energy scan data and the condition . dominance may explain the ``large" OZI violation in vs. .Comment: 12 pages REVTeX, 3 PS figure
The protective effects of osajin on ischemia/reperfusion injury to rat ovaries: biochemical and histopathological evaluation
Asperities and barriers on the seismogenic zone in North Chile: state-of-the-art after the 2007 Mw 7.7 Tocopilla earthquake inferred by GPS and InSAR data
The Mw 7.7 2007 November 14 earthquake had an epicentre located close to the city of Tocopilla, at the southern end of a known seismic gap in North Chile. Through modelling of Global Positioning System (GPS) and radar interferometry (InSAR) data, we show that this event ruptured the deeper part of the seismogenic interface (30–50 km) and did not reach the surface. The earthquake initiated at the hypocentre and was arrested ~150 km south, beneath the Mejillones Peninsula, an area already identified as an important structural barrier between two segments of the Peru–Chile subduction zone. Our preferred models for the Tocopilla main shock show slip concentrated in two main asperities, consistent with previous inversions of seismological data. Slip appears to have propagated towards relatively shallow depths at its southern extremity, under the Mejillones Peninsula. Our analysis of post-seismic deformation suggests that small but still significant post-seismic slip occurred within the first 10 d after the main shock, and that it was mostly concentrated at the southern end of the rupture. The post-seismic deformation occurring in this period represents ~12–19 per cent of the coseismic deformation, of which ~30–55 per cent has been released aseismically. Post-seismic slip appears to concentrate within regions that exhibit low coseismic slip, suggesting that the afterslip distribution during the first month of the post-seismic interval complements the coseismic slip. The 2007 Tocopilla earthquake released only ~2.5 per cent of the moment deficit accumulated on the interface during the past 130 yr and may be regarded as a possible precursor of a larger subduction earthquake rupturing partially or completely the 500-km-long North Chile seismic gap
Application of the Hybrid-Maize model for limits to maize productivity analysis in a semiarid environment
Molecular Characterization of a Strawberry FaASR Gene in Relation to Fruit Ripening
BACKGROUND: ABA-, stress- and ripening-induced (ASR) proteins have been reported to act as a downstream component involved in ABA signal transduction. Although much attention has been paid to the roles of ASR in plant development and stress responses, the mechanisms by which ABA regulate fruit ripening at the molecular level are not fully understood. In the present work, a strawberry ASR gene was isolated and characterized (FaASR), and a polyclonal antibody against FaASR protein was prepared. Furthermore, the effects of ABA, applied to two different developmental stages of strawberry, on fruit ripening and the expression of FaASR at transcriptional and translational levels were investigated. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: FaASR, localized in the cytoplasm and nucleus, contained 193 amino acids and shared common features with other plant ASRs. It also functioned as a transcriptional activator in yeast with trans-activation activity in the N-terminus. During strawberry fruit development, endogenous ABA content, levels of FaASR mRNA and protein increased significantly at the initiation of ripening at a white (W) fruit developmental stage. More importantly, application of exogenous ABA to large green (LG) fruit and W fruit markedly increased endogenous ABA content, accelerated fruit ripening, and greatly enhanced the expression of FaASR transcripts and the accumulation of FaASR protein simultaneously. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that FaASR may be involved in strawberry fruit ripening. The observed increase in endogenous ABA content, and enhanced FaASR expression at transcriptional and translational levels in response to ABA treatment might partially contribute to the acceleration of strawberry fruit ripening
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