553 research outputs found
Evaluation of some important physicochemical properties of starch free grewia gum
Gums obtained by extraction from the inner bark of stems can be found in association with starch, which must be digested in order to obtain a refined polysaccharide isolate. In the present study, grewia gum obtained from the inner bark of the stems of Grewia mollis was shown to co-exist with starch and the effect of starch digestion on the physicochemical properties of the resultant polysaccharide was evaluated.
The gum was extracted by maceration of the inner bark in deionized water and isolated by a combination of filtration, centrifugation and finally precipitation with absolute ethanol to produce the crude grewia gum extract (GG). The presence and content of starch in the gum sample was determined followed by enzymatic digestion of the starch using α-amylase (Termamyl 120L) to give a starch-free extract (GGDS). Physicochemical properties of the extracts such as total carbohydrates, total protein, differential sugar composition, NMR, intrinsic viscosity and rheological behaviour of the samples were evaluated.
The GG extract had total carbohydrate content of ∼ 60 % out of which 11.8 % was starch, and a protein content of 2.3 %. Samples also contained galacturonic and glucuronic acid which were highly acetylated. Both samples had a higher proportion of galacturonic acid than glucuronic acid and contained rhamnose, arabinose, galactose, glucose and xylose as neutral sugars in varying proportions. Rheological measurements on 2 %w/w dispersions of the extracts show minor differences between both the original extract and the de-starched material but were influenced by changes in pH
Closed string tachyons, flips and conifolds
Following the analysis of tachyons and orbifold flips described in
hep-th/0412337, we study nonsupersymmetric analogs of the supersymmetric
conifold singularity and show using their toric geometry description that they
are nonsupersymmetric orbifolds of the latter. Using linear sigma models, we
see that these are unstable to localized closed string tachyon condensation and
exhibit flip transitions between their two small resolutions (involving
2-cycles), in the process mediating mild dynamical topology change. Our
analysis shows that the structure of these nonsupersymmetric conifolds as
quotients of the supersymmetric conifold obstructs the 3-cycle deformation of
such singularities, suggesting that these nonsupersymmetric conifolds decay by
evolving towards their stable small resolutions.Comment: Latex, 22 pgs, 2 figs. v4: matches JHEP version, 29 pgs, 3 figures,
more elaborate Introduction, various clarifications adde
An Inflationary Scenario in Intersecting Brane Models
We propose a new scenario for D-term inflation which appears quite
straightforwardly in the open string sector of intersecting brane models. We
take the inflaton to be a chiral field in a bifundamental representation of the
hidden sector and we argue that a sufficiently flat potential can be brane
engineered. This type of model generically predicts a near gaussian red
spectrum with negligible tensor modes. We note that this model can very
naturally generate a baryon asymmetry at the end of inflation via the recently
proposed hidden sector baryogenesis mechanism. We also discuss the possibility
that Majorana masses for the neutrinos can be simultaneously generated by the
tachyon condensation which ends inflation. Our proposed scenario is viable for
both high and low scale supersymmetry breaking.Comment: 30 pages, 2 figures; v2 references and comments adde
The Self Model and the Conception of Biological Identity in Immunology
The self/non-self model, first proposed by F.M. Burnet, has dominated immunology for sixty years now. According to this model, any foreign element will trigger an immune reaction in an organism, whereas endogenous elements will not, in normal circumstances, induce an immune reaction. In this paper we show that the self/non-self model is no longer an appropriate explanation of experimental data in immunology, and that this inadequacy may be rooted in an excessively strong metaphysical conception of biological identity. We suggest that another hypothesis, one based on the notion of continuity, gives a better account of immune phenomena. Finally, we underscore the mapping between this metaphysical deflation from self to continuity in immunology and the philosophical debate between substantialism and empiricism about identity
De Sitter Holography and the Cosmic Microwave Background
We interpret cosmological evolution holographically as a renormalisation
group flow in a dual Euclidean field theory, as suggested by the conjectured
dS/CFT correspondence. Inflation is described by perturbing around the
infra-red fixed point of the dual field theory. The spectrum of the cosmic
microwave background radiation is determined in terms of scaling violations in
the field theory. The dark energy allows similar, albeit less predictive,
considerations. We discuss the cosmological fine-tuning problems from the
holographic perspective.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures, uses JHEP style files; corrected and added
reference
New Supersymmetric String Compactifications
We describe a new class of supersymmetric string compactifications to 4d
Minkowski space. These solutions involve type II strings propagating on
(orientifolds of) non Calabi-Yau spaces in the presence of background NS and RR
fluxes. The simplest examples have descriptions as cosets, generalizing the
three-dimensional nilmanifold. They can also be thought of as twisted tori. We
derive a formula for the (super)potential governing the light fields, which is
generated by the fluxes and certain ``twists'' in the geometry. Detailed
consideration of an example also gives strong evidence that in some cases,
these exotic geometries are related by smooth transitions to standard
Calabi-Yau or G2 compactifications of M-theory.Comment: 43 pages, harvmac bi
Radiotherapy after mastectomy for screen-detected ductal carcinoma in situ
Background. A role for radiotherapy after mastectomy for ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is unclear. Using a prospective audit of DCIS detected through the NHS Breast Screening Programme we sought to determine a rationale for the use of postmastectomy radiotherapy for DCIS. Methods. Over a nine year period, from 9,972 patients with screen-detected DCIS and complete surgical, pathology, radiotherapy and follow up data, 2,944 women underwent mastectomy for DCIS of whom 33 (1.12%) received radiotherapy. Results. Use of post mastectomy radiotherapy was significantly associated with a close (<1mm) pathology margin, particularly (χ2(1) 95.81; p<0.00001), DCIS size (χ2 (3) 16.96; p<0.001) and the presence of microinvasion (χ2(1) 3.92; p<0.05). At median follow up 61 months, no woman who received radiotherapy had an ipsilateral further event, and only 1/33 women (3.0%) had a contralateral event. Of the women known not to have had radiotherapy post mastectomy, 45/2,894 (1.6%) had an ipsilateral further event and 83 (2.9%) had a contralateral event. Conclusion: For DCIS treated by mastectomy, a close (<1mm) margin, large tumour size and microinvasion, may merit radiotherapy to reduce ipsilateral recurrence
Surveying Standard Model Flux Vacua on
We consider the SU(2)LxSU(2)R Standard Model brane embedding in an
orientifold of T6/Z2xZ2. Within defined limits, we construct all such Standard
Model brane embeddings and determine the relative number of flux vacua for each
construction. Supersymmetry preserving brane recombination in the hidden sector
enables us to identify many solutions with high flux. We discuss in detail the
phenomenology of one model which is likely to dominate the counting of vacua.
While Kahler moduli stabilization remains to be fully understood, we define the
criteria necessary for generic constructions to have fixed moduli.Comment: 30 pages, LaTeX, v2: added reference
Observation of hard scattering in photoproduction events with a large rapidity gap at HERA
Events with a large rapidity gap and total transverse energy greater than 5
GeV have been observed in quasi-real photoproduction at HERA with the ZEUS
detector. The distribution of these events as a function of the
centre of mass energy is consistent with diffractive scattering. For total
transverse energies above 12 GeV, the hadronic final states show predominantly
a two-jet structure with each jet having a transverse energy greater than 4
GeV. For the two-jet events, little energy flow is found outside the jets. This
observation is consistent with the hard scattering of a quasi-real photon with
a colourless object in the proton.Comment: 19 pages, latex, 4 figures appended as uuencoded fil
Search for direct production of charginos and neutralinos in events with three leptons and missing transverse momentum in √s = 7 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector
A search for the direct production of charginos and neutralinos in final states with three electrons or muons and missing transverse momentum is presented. The analysis is based on 4.7 fb−1 of proton–proton collision data delivered by the Large Hadron Collider and recorded with the ATLAS detector. Observations are consistent with Standard Model expectations in three signal regions that are either depleted or enriched in Z-boson decays. Upper limits at 95% confidence level are set in R-parity conserving phenomenological minimal supersymmetric models and in simplified models, significantly extending previous results
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