35 research outputs found

    Chemical characterization of ambient aerosol collected during the northeast monsoon season over the Arabian Sea: Anions and cations

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    Ambient aerosol samples were collected over the Arabian Sea during the month of March 1997, aboard the German R/V Sonne, as part of the German JGOFS project (Joint Global Ocean Flux Study). This is the third study in a series of analogous measurements taken over the Arabian Sea during different seasons of the monsoon. Dichotomous high volume collector samples were analyzed for anions and cations upon return to the laboratory. Anthropogenic pollutant concentrations were larger during the first part of the cruise, when air masses originated over the Indian subcontinent. Total NSS‐SO42− concentrations amounted to 2.94 ± 1.06 μg m−3 of which 92.1 ± 4.5% was present in the fine fraction. NSS‐SO42− source apportionment analysis with multivariate linear regression models revealed that in the coarse fraction half is biogenically and half anthropogenically derived, while in the fine fraction only 6% seemed of biogenic origin and 84% anthropogenic and 10% crustal in nature. Chloride deficits up to 99.1% in the fine fraction were observed. The average Cl− deficit in the fine fraction was 89.0 ± 9.4%, potentially related to NSS‐SO42− acid displacement and Cl reactive species formation, while in the coarse fraction it was 25.6 ± 21.3%, with NO3− being the preferred species for acid displacement

    Hot or cold ablation - that's the question: A special simulation tool includes thermal effects for the optimization of ultrafast laser applications in material processing

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    A new generation of ultrafast lasers with high average powers and high repetition rates is coming to the market. Those systems in principle bring together high precision processing and high throughput. But with high average power thermal effects show up the demand for a careful process planning. A new simulation tool from Fraunhofer ILT incorporates such effects and allows for precise process optimization even at high average laser power

    Migrating Charters into the TEI P5

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    Abstract and poster of paper 0339 presented at the Digital Humanities Conference 2019 (DH2019), Utrecht , the Netherlands 9-12 July, 2019

    Investigation of the Origanum onites L. essential oil using the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) assay

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    The in vivo test on the chorioallantoic membrane of the fertilized hen's egg (CAM assay) is a current method to determine antiangiogenic, antiinflammatory activity and toxic effects of individual compounds or complex plant extracts. The method is used for testing natural compounds in small amounts for revealing various modes of action and the complex mechanisms related to angiogenesis and inflammation. Furthermore, possible side effects such as membrane irritation, toxic, and anticoagulant properties of the investigated material in question can be detected. For the evaluation, the essential oil obtained by hydrodistillation of the aerial parts of Origanum onites L., a common spice and medicinal plant, was tested for its effect in the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) assay. The essential oil composition was revealed by means of gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Eighty three components were identified, representing 99.1% of the total oil. Carvacrol, thymol, p-cymene, and gamma-terpinene were found as major components and were also individually tested in the CAM assay. Along with the monoterpenes carvacrol and thymol, their methyl ether derivatives were also examined for comparison of their physiological action. Neither the essential oil nor its components showed any pronounced antiinflammatory or antiangiogenic property in the CAM assay, at 10-250 microg/pellet. However, the irritant effect of the essential oil was linked to thymol in a dose-response fashion, up to 10 microg/pellet, where it was still showing irritation
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