336 research outputs found
Reaction of Zn^+ with NO_2. The gas-phase thermochemistry of ZnO
The homolytic bond dissociation energies of ZnO and ZnO^+ have been determined by using guided ion‐beam mass spectrometry to measure the kinetic‐energy dependence of the endothermic reactions of Zn^+ with nitrogen dioxide. The data are interpreted to yield the bond energy for ZnO, D^0_0=1.61±0.04 eV, a value considerably lower than previous experimental values, but in much better agreement with theoretical calculations. We also obtain D^0_0(ZnO^+)=1.67±0.05 eV, in good agreement with previous results. Other thermochemistry derived in this study is D^0_0(Zn^+–NO)=0.79±0.10 eV and the ionization energies, IE(ZnO)=9.34±0.02 eV and IE(NO_2)=9.57±0.04 eV
Integrated stratigraphy of the Waitakian-Otaian Stage boundary stratotype, Early Miocene, New Zealand
The base of the type section of the Otaian Stage at Bluecliffs, South Canterbury, is recognised as the stratotype for the boundary between the Waitakian and Otaian Stages. Principal problems with the boundary are the restriction of existing bioevent proxies to shelf and upper slope environments and its uncertain age. These topics are addressed by a multidisplinary study of a 125 m section about the boundary, which examines its lithostratigraphy, depositional setting, biostratigraphy, correlation, and geochronology.
The lower siltstone lithofacies (0-38.5 m) was deposited at upper bathyal depths (200-600 m) in a marginal basin which was partially sheltered from fully oceanic circulation by a submarine high and islands. The site was covered by cool-temperate water and was probably adjacent to the Subtropical Convergence. This unit is succeeded by the banded lithofacies (38.5-106 m) and the upper siltstone lithofacies (basal 19 m studied). Paleodepth probably declined up-sequence, but deposition at shelf depths is not definitely indicated. A cyclic pattern of abundance spikes in benthic and planktonic foraminifera commences 9 m above base and extends to 73 m in the banded lithofacies. Oxygen isotope excursions (up to 2.08%) in Euuvigerina miozea and Cibicides novozelandicus are greatest within the interval containing the abundance spikes. The stage boundary occurs in the banded lithofacies at the highest abundance spike (73 m). Although condensed intervals might affect the completeness of the section, they are not associated with sedimentary discontinuities, and we consider that the section is suitable as a biostratigraphic reference.
Spores, pollens, dinoflagellates, calcareous nannofossils, foraminifera, bryozoans, and ostracods are preserved near the boundary, but molluscs principally occur higher, in the shallower upper siltstone lithofacies. Siliceous microfossils are rare. There is considerable scope for further biostratigraphic research.
The primary event marking the boundary at 73 m is the appearance of the benthic foraminifer Ehrenbergina marwicki. This is a distinctive and widely distributed event but is restricted to shelf and upper bathyal environments. Supplementary events in planktonic foraminifera and calcareous nannofossils were researched. Highest occurrences of Globigerina brazieri and G. euapertura are recorded at 47 and 58 m. There is a marked decline in relative abundance of Paragloborotalia spp. at 62 m. Helicosphaera carteri becomes more abundant than H. euphratis between 56 and 87 m. These events are not exact proxies for the boundary but they may usefully indicate proximity to it. They occur in the interval of prominent spikes in foraminiferal abundance.
The Waitakian-Otaian boundary is dated at 21.7 Ma by strontium isotopes. Stable primary remanence could not be determined in a pilot paleomagnetic study of Bluecliffs specimens. However, specimens trended towards reversed polarity, and remagnetisation great circle analysis will allow directions to be calculated in future collections
Decoding the Molecular Universe -- Workshop Report
On August 9-10, 2023, a workshop was convened at the Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory (PNNL) in Richland, WA that brought together a group of
internationally recognized experts in metabolomics, natural products discovery,
chemical ecology, chemical and biological threat assessment, cheminformatics,
computational chemistry, cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and novel
technology development. These experts were invited to assess the value and
feasibility of a grand-scale project to create new technologies that would
allow the identification and quantification of all small molecules, or to
decode the molecular universe. The Decoding the Molecular Universe project
would extend and complement the success of the Human Genome Project by
developing new capabilities and technologies to measure small molecules
(defined as non-protein, non-polymer molecules less than 1500 Daltons) of any
origin and generated in biological systems or produced abiotically. Workshop
attendees 1) explored what new understanding of biological and environmental
systems could be revealed through the lens of small molecules; 2) characterized
the similarities in current needs and technical challenges between each science
or mission area for unambiguous and comprehensive determination of the
composition and quantities of small molecules of any sample; 3) determined the
extent to which technologies or methods currently exist for unambiguously and
comprehensively determining the small molecule composition of any sample and in
a reasonable time; and 4) identified the attributes of the ideal technology or
approach for universal small molecule measurement and identification. The
workshop concluded with a discussion of how a project of this scale could be
undertaken, possible thrusts for the project, early proof-of-principle
applications, and similar efforts upon which the project could be modeled
Retuning of Inferior Colliculus Neurons Following Spiral Ganglion Lesions: A Single-Neuron Model of Converging Inputs
Lesions of spiral ganglion cells, representing a restricted sector of the auditory nerve array, produce immediate changes in the frequency tuning of inferior colliculus (IC) neurons. There is a loss of excitation at the lesion frequencies, yet responses to adjacent frequencies remain intact and new regions of activity appear. This leads to immediate changes in tuning and in tonotopic progression. Similar effects are seen after different methods of peripheral damage and in auditory neurons in other nuclei. The mechanisms that underlie these postlesion changes are unknown, but the acute effects seen in IC strongly suggest the “unmasking” of latent inputs by the removal of inhibition. In this study, we explore computational models of single neurons with a convergence of excitatory and inhibitory inputs from a range of characteristic frequencies (CFs), which can simulate the narrow prelesion tuning of IC neurons, and account for the changes in CF tuning after a lesion. The models can reproduce the data if inputs are aligned relative to one another in a precise order along the dendrites of model IC neurons. Frequency tuning in these neurons approximates that seen physiologically. Removal of inputs representing a narrow range of frequencies leads to unmasking of previously subthreshold excitatory inputs, which causes changes in CF. Conversely, if all of the inputs converge at the same point on the cell body, receptive fields are broad and unmasking rarely results in CF changes. However, if the inhibition is tonic with no stimulus-driven component, then unmasking can still produce changes in CF
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