39 research outputs found

    Differential Cross Section of DP-Elastic Scattering at Intermediate Energies

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    The deuteron-proton elastic scattering is studied in the multiple scattering expansion formalism. The contributions of the one-nucleon-exchange, single- and double scattering are taken into account. The Love and Franey parameterization of the nucleon-nucleon tt-matrix is used, that gives an opportunity to include the off-energy-shell effects into calculations. Differential cross sections are considered at four energies, Td=390,500,880,1200T_d=390, 500, 880, 1200 MeV. The obtained results are compared with the experimental data

    Perspectives of marine biodiversity studies in Argentina

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    This paper provides an overview of the research being carried out at the moment by a group of Argentinean scientists working on the subjects of marine biodiversity and oceanography. When the idea of the Census of Marine Life (CoML)was proposed following the Symposium held during the IAPSO-IABO conference in Mar del Plata in October 2001, there was a wide response from the marine scientific community. Information about current research projects, as well as plans for future work in the context of the CoML, were then obtained from about 70 scientists (Appendix I) belonging to 12 institutions located along the Argentinean coast (Appendix II, Figure 1). This has been used to illustrate what is currently being pursued in marine biodiversity in Argentina and which subjects are considered as priority for future research in the area. This paper is, thus, not an historical update of the knowledge of marine biodiversity, but it attempts to give an idea of the current situation and what is planned for the future. The development of an extensive database of what is known on marine biodiversity in the region is considered to be a necessity, but it constitutes a complete project on its own; as such it is included in the proposals for future work (see Future Work in this paper). It is emphasised that this synthesis is not exhaustive in the content of the topics being studied or in the number of researchers working in marine biodiversity in the country. It is, though, considered to be a representative sample of the knowledge in marine science in Argentina today. This is a starting point for the CoML project in South America and it is hoped that, as it develops, it will be improved by the active participation, advice and experience of many other scientists in the region

    Studying Amphiphilic Self-assembly with Soft Coarse-Grained Models

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    Morphological variability, spatial distribution and abundance of Helicostomella species (Ciliophora: Tintinnina) in relation to environmental factors (Argentine shelf; 40-55°S)

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    For the first time a taxonomic and ecological study of species belonging to Helicostomella was performed over a mesoscale spatial distribution by examining ca. 3000 loricae collected in Argentine shelf waters during the austral autumn. Microscopic and statistical analysis revealed that the general shape and the oral diameter remained practically constant in the whole area surveyed, despite a continuous length fluctuation of ca. 300 μm, which includes the entire range present in eight previously reported species. Consequently, we consider that the genus may be represented only by H. subulata, whose strong fluctuations in length (mostly attributed to an increase in the collar length), density and biomass seem to respond to temperature, food availability and front-related processes. In Buenos Aires coastal waters associated with a quasi permanent estuarine front (40-40.5°S), mixed conditions would favour moderate abundances of long loricae, whereas in northern (42.5-45.5°S) and southern (46-54.5°S) Patagonian waters, high (103 ind. L-1) and low (<5 ind. L-1) densities of short loricae seem to be a consequence of stratification and encystment, respectively. The non-occurrence of the species at 41-42°S, together with a three-fold reduction in length-related parameters between specimens from Buenos Aires and Patagonian waters, suggests a disjunct distribution.Fil:Santoferrara, L.F. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.Fil:Alder, V.A. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina

    Bathymetric, latitudinal and vertical distribution of protozooplankton in a cold-temperate shelf (southern Patagonian waters) during winter

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    Although there have been many ecological field studies on the key components of planktonic food webs, there are still gaps in knowledge on some groups, environments and seasons. This is the first report on the spatial distribution of the density and biomass of almost all the taxonomic groups and size fractions of protozooplankton across a cold-temperate shelf during winter. Twenty-eight stations (two or three depths) were sampled on four cross-shelf transects in Patagonian waters (south-western Atlantic; 47-55°S, 60-69°W) during September 2006. Loricate ciliates, radiolarians and foraminiferans showed the lowest densities, and were distributed mainly in coastal, slope or the whole shelf waters, respectively. The density and biomass of aloricate ciliates and heterotrophic nanoflagellates and dinoflagellates were low and homogeneous both vertically and across the shelf south of 51°S, but peaked in the upper 40 m in offshore waters at 47°S. Microplanktonic aloricate ciliates, which represented 53% of the total protozooplankton biomass, reached values as high as 16 μg CL-1 on the last transect. Consequently, both protozooplankton biomass and its ratio to chlorophyll a concentration were significantly higher in the northern offshore waters. These trends were linked to higher subsurface temperature and chlorophyll a concentration, and lower copepod nauplii biomass. Our results probably reflect changes in both the availability of food resources and predators and the physical structure of the water column, which are a consequence of the different environmental conditions that coexist over the large latitudinal and longitudinal gradients covered during late winter. © The Author 2010.Fil:Santoferrara, L.F. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.Fil:Gómez, M.I. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.Fil:Alder, V.A. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina

    First record of a brackish radiolarian (Polycystina): Lophophaena rioplatensis n. sp. in the Río de la Plata estuary

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    Vertically stratified bottle plankton samples collected in the Río de La Plata estuary (Atlantic coast of South America at ∼35° S) and in coastal waters off Mar del Plata (∼38° S) in December 1999 and November 2001 yielded up to 394 live cells l-1 of a single new nassellarian species: Lophophaena rioplatensis n. sp. (family Plagoniidae). In estuarine waters, the species was recorded at salinities as low as 15.4 p.s.u.; densities in excess of 100 cells l-1 were found at salinities ranging from 16. 9 p.s.u. These extremely high concentrations (the highest ever reported in the literature), as well as the fact that &gt;90% of the individuals recorded contain cytoplasm, indicate that these are self-sustaining populations which thrive in the estuary (and in nearshore coastal waters), probably due to plentiful dissolved silica and an abundant food supply. Lophophaena rioplatensis is the first polycystine brackish-water species described. This finding shows that radiolarian fossils are not unequivocally associated with open-ocean conditions, but may also be useful indicators of coastal and brackish estuarine paleoenvironments.Fil:Boltovskoy, D. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.Fil:Kogan, M. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.Fil:Alder, V.A. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina

    Oxygen distribution and consumption in rat lower incisor pulp

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    The aim was to determine the oxygen tension (PO2) and rate of oxygen consumption in the pulp. Twelve rats were anaesthetised and artificially ventilated. Under an operating microscope, a recessed oxygen-sensitive microelectrode was inserted into the pulp through a small saline-covered cavity on the labial surface of the lower incisor. PO2 was measured as a function of the transverse distance from the saline medium through to the middle of the pulp. Oxygen profiles were characterised by a decline of oxygen tension outside the pulp in the saline medium and a steeper gradient across the interface, before a localised oxygen consuming region corresponding to the odontoblasts. A plateau with some localised fluctuations was then followed by an increase in oxygen tension in the middle of the pulp. The average oxygen tension in the plateau region was 23.2 mmHg ± 2.1 mmHg (n = 12). A mathematical model was used to extract oxygen consumption data from PO2 profiles recorded from non-perfused pulp (created by reducing systemic blood pressure). The analysis revealed that there was a distinct oxygen consumption zone in the outer pulp, which anatomically corresponded to the odontoblast layer. The average oxygen consumption rate of the odontoblasts was 3.2±0.2 ml O2/min per 100 g pulp tissue. The zone of high oxygen consumption was 68.7 μm ± 6.9 μm (n = 24) thick. It is concluded that pulpal oxygen distribution is heterogeneous and that the odontoblast could be a major oxygen consumer within the rat incisor pulp

    Tissue oxygen tension and blood-flow changes in rat incisor pulp with graded systemic hyperoxia

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    The role of oxygen in the regulation of the pulpal microcirculation is unknown. This investigation is aimed to measure tissue oxygen tension and blood-flow changes in the pulp of rat lower incisors during graded systemic hyperoxia, and to determine the response of the pulpal vasculature to various oxygen tensions. Twenty-four Sprague-Dawley rats were anaesthetized and artificially ventilated with the appropriate gas mixture. Recessed oxygen-sensitive microelectrodes were used to measure pulpal tissue oxygen tension via a small access cavity filled with saline on the labial surface of the incisor. A laser Doppler flowmeter was used to record pulpal blood-flow. Inspired oxygen was increased stepwise from 20 to 100% in 20% steps. Systemic blood-gas concentrations were measured at each step. Systemic arterial oxygen tension at 100% oxygen ventilation reached 481.2 ± 30.7% of the baseline at 20% oxygen breathing (n = 21). Pulpal tissue oxygen tension did not change significantly whereas pulpal blood-flow fell dose-dependently to 74.6 ± 5.0% at 100% oxygen ventilation (n = 21). Systemic hyperoxia, therefore, induces a significant reduction in pulpal blood-flow whereas pulpal tissue oxygen tension remains relatively stable, indicating an oxygen-dependent local regulatory mechanism

    An in vivo and in vitro comparison of the effects of vasoactive mediators on pulpal blood vessels in rat incisors

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    The effects of endogenous vasoactive substances were evaluated in anaesthetized rats using a laser Doppler flowmeter to monitor changes in pulpal blood flow, as well as directly in isolated pulpal arteriole preparations utilising a microperfusion and monitoring system to observe changes in vessel diameter. In anaesthetized rats, while systemic arterial blood pressure remained relatively stable, intra-arterial delivery of adrenaline (epinephrine) (A), noradrenaline (norepinephrine) (NA), phenylephrine (PHE), dopamine (DOPA), 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), or endothelin-1 (ET-1) produced a dose-dependent reduction in pulpal blood flow (order of potency: ET-1 ≫ A = NA > PHE = DOPA = 5-HT); acetylcholine induced a dose-dependent increase in pulpal blood flow; histamine, isoproterenol and adenosine produced no significant changes. In isolated arteriole preparations, intraluminal delivery of A, NA, PHE, DOPA or 5-HT produced dose-dependent vasoconstriction (A = NA > PHE = DOPA = 5-HT). Acetylcholine relaxed NA-precontracted vessels dose-dependently. Histamine and isoproterenol produced a small vasodilatation. Intraluminal ET-1 produced a small vasoconstriction at 10-8 M, whereas extraluminal ET-1 produced a dose-dependent vasoconstriction from 10-10 M and above. Intraluminal adenosine failed to dilate vessels precontracted with ET-1, whereas extraluminal adenosine caused a complete relaxation. These combined in vivo and in vitro data suggest that, in the rat incisor, the pulpal microcirculation is capable of functional regulation and that pulpal blood flow may be modulated by endothelium-related factors, metabolic (tissue-related) factors, as well as humoral (blood-borne) factors
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