951 research outputs found
ETHNO BOTANICAL STUDY OF MEDICINAL PLANTS USED BY TRADITIONAL HEALERS IN THE MANAGEMENT OF DIABETES MELLITUS IN SANKHUWASABHA, NEPAL
Objective: To collect and document information of anti-diabetic plants traditionally used in the treatment of Diabetes Mellitus in Sankhuwasabha district of Nepal as ethno medicines are important part of treatment in this area and such information are considered as valuable sources of information to find new potential drugs.Methods: Direct observation and interview method with 46 traditional healers along with gathering herbarium specimens mentioned plants in site.Results: There were 40 medicinal plants from 30 families for the treatment of Diabetes Mellitus. The family with most plant was Fabaceae 5 (16.67 %). Herbal medicines are often used in the form of decoction (45%) and dried powder (33%). It was found that Momordica charantia Linn. (42.5%) and Syzygium jambos Lam. (40%) were two most frequently used plants among traditional healers for the treatment of Diabetes.Conclusions: Based on the current findings many of the mentioned plants could have potential active ingredients to influence Diabetes Mellitus and could provide preliminary data for further phytochemical investigations which could possibly lead in the development of novel drugs with little or no side effects and transferring it to future generation. Furthermore, such practical ethno botanical knowledge which is generated based on their intimate experience accumulated over many generations could be helpful in rescuing disappearing knowledge and invention of new drugs of many diseases.
Local impurity effects in superconducting graphene
We study the effect of impurities in superconducting graphene and discuss
their influence on the local electronic properties. In particular, we consider
the case of magnetic and non-magnetic impurities being either strongly
localized or acting as a potential averaged over one unit cell. The spin
dependent local density of states is calculated and possibilities for
visualizing impurities by means of scanning tunneling experiments is pointed
out. A possibility of identifying magnetic scatters even by non spin-polarized
scanning tunneling spectroscopy is explained.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Impurity assisted nanoscale localization of plasmonic excitations in graphene
The plasmon modes of pristine and impurity doped graphene are calculated,
using a real-space theory which determines the non-local dielectric response
within the random phase approximation. A full diagonalization of the
polarization operator is performed, allowing the extraction of all its poles.
It is demonstrated how impurities induce the formation of localized modes which
are absent in pristine graphene. The dependence of the spatial modulations over
few lattice sites and frequencies of the localized plasmons on the electronic
filling and impurity strength is discussed. Furthermore, it is shown that the
chemical potential and impurity strength can be tuned to control target
features of the localized modes. These predictions can be tested by scanning
tunneling microscopy experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Incommensurate spin resonance in URu2Si2
We focus on inelastic neutron scattering in and argue that
observed gap in the fermion spectrum naturally leads to the spin feature
observed at energies at momenta at \bQ^* = (1\pm 0.4,
0,0). We discuss how spin features seen in can indeed be thought
of in terms of {\em spin resonance} that develops in HO state and is {\em not
related} to superconducting transition at 1.5K. In our analysis we assume that
the HO gap is due to a particle-hole condensate that connects nested parts of
the Fermi surface with nesting vector . Within this approach we can
predicted the behavior of the spin susceptibility at \bQ^* and find it to be
is strikingly similar to the phenomenology of resonance peaks in high-T and
heavy fermion superconductors. The energy of the resonance peak scales with
. We discuss observable consequences
spin resonance will have on neutron scattering and local density of states.Comment: 8 pgaes latex, 4 fig
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