224 research outputs found

    Homochiral growth through enantiomeric cross-inhibition

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    The stability and conservation properties of a recently proposed polymerization model are studied. The achiral (racemic) solution is linearly unstable once the relevant control parameter (here the fidelity of the catalyst) exceeds a critical value. The growth rate is calculated for different fidelity parameters and cross-inhibition rates. A chirality parameter is defined and shown to be conserved by the nonlinear terms of the model. Finally, a truncated version of the model is used to derive a set of two ordinary differential equations and it is argued that these equations are more realistic than those used in earlier models of that form.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, Orig. Life Evol. Biosph. (accepted

    Long term time variability of cosmic rays and possible relevance to the development of life on Earth

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    An analysis is made of the manner in which the cosmic ray intensity at Earth has varied over its existence and its possible relevance to both the origin and the evolution of life. Much of the analysis relates to the 'high energy' cosmic rays (E>1014eV;=0.1PeVE>10^{14}eV;=0.1PeV) and their variability due to the changing proximity of the solar system to supernova remnants which are generally believed to be responsible for most cosmic rays up to PeV energies. It is pointed out that, on a statistical basis, there will have been considerable variations in the likely 100 My between the Earth's biosphere reaching reasonable stability and the onset of very elementary life. Interestingly, there is the increasingly strong possibility that PeV cosmic rays are responsible for the initiation of terrestrial lightning strokes and the possibility arises of considerable increases in the frequency of lightnings and thereby the formation of some of the complex molecules which are the 'building blocks of life'. Attention is also given to the well known generation of the oxides of nitrogen by lightning strokes which are poisonous to animal life but helpful to plant growth; here, too, the violent swings of cosmic ray intensities may have had relevance to evolutionary changes. A particular variant of the cosmic ray acceleration model, put forward by us, predicts an increase in lightning rate in the past and this has been sought in Korean historical records. Finally, the time dependence of the overall cosmic ray intensity, which manifests itself mainly at sub-10 GeV energies, has been examined. The relevance of cosmic rays to the 'global electrical circuit' points to the importance of this concept.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, accepted by 'Surveys in Geophysics

    Body weight and its effect on other morphometric characters in White Leghorn pullets l33

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    El objetivo del presente estudio fue determinar el efecto del peso corporal sobre otros caracteres morfométricos en pollitas White Leghorn L33. Se trabajó con 300 pollitas por seis semanas a partir de la semana 11 de edad. La mitad (grupo I) tenían el peso esperado para su edad (865.6 ± 13.3 g) y la otra mitad (grupo II) estaban con sobrepeso (920.1 ± 37.3 g). Se registró semanalmente el peso corporal, largo del tarso, y distancias entre pubis y de quilla a pubis. Se utilizó la prueba U de Mann-Whitney (p<0.05) para comparar las medias entre grupos. La uniformidad en el peso corporal de ambos grupos fue considerada como excelente (2.6 y 4.8% para el grupo I y II, respectivamente). Se observó diferencia significativa entre grupos en el largo del tarso y la distancia de quilla a pubis (p<0.0001), pero no en la distancia entre pubis. Asimismo, se observó correlación positiva entre el peso corporal y las otras variables morfométricas, aunque solo el 25.2% del largo del tarso estuvo determinado por el peso corporal. Se concluye que el peso corporal tiene un efecto directo sobre el largo del tarso en pollitas White Leghorn L33 en desarrollo, el que se potencializa en aves con sobrepeso.The aim of this study was to determine the effect of body weight on other morphometric characters in White Leghorn pullets L33. The study lasted for 6 weeks using 300 pullets (11-16 weeks old) equally distributed in two experimental groups: I: expected body weight (865.6 ± 13.3 g); II: overweighed (920.1 ± 37.3 g). Body weight, tarsus length and distances between pubic bones and from keel to pubis were determined weekly. The Mann-Whitney U test (p<0.05) was used to compare means between groups. Degree of uniformity in body weight in both groups was considered excellent (2.6 and 4.8% for group I and II, respectively). Significant difference between groups was observed in the tarsus length and distance from keel to pubis (p<0.0001), but not on the distance between pubic bones. Also, positive correlation between body weight and other morphometric variables was observed, although only 25.2% of the tarsus length was determined by body weight. It is concluded that body weight has a direct effect on tarsus length in White Leghorn pullets L33, which is potentiated in overweight birds

    Probing Tectonic Topography in the Aftermath of Continental Convergence in Central Europe

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    Continental topography is at the interface of processes taking place at depth in the Earth,at its surface,and above it.Topography influences society, not only in terms of slow processes of landscape change and earthquakes,but also in terms of how it affects climate.The Pannonian Basin–Carpathian Orogen System in Central and Eastern Europe represents a key natural laboratory for the development of a new generation of models for ongoing orogeny and its effect on continental topography development (Figure 1).This system comprises some of the best documented sedimentary basins in the world,located within the Alpine orogenic belt, at the transition between the western European lithosphere and the East European Craton. It includes one of the most active seismic zones in Europe,with intermediate depth (50–220 km) mantle earthquakes of significant magnitude occurring in a geographically restricted area in the Vrancea zone of southeastern Romania

    Earthquake source parameters and scaling relationships in Hungary (central Pannonian basin)

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    Abstract Fifty earthquakes that occurred in Hungary (central part of the Pannonian basin) with local magnitude ML ranging from 0.8 to 4.5 have been analyzed. The digital seismograms used in this study were recorded by six permanent broad-band stations and twenty short-period ones at hypocentral distances between 10 and 327 km. The displacement spectra for P- and SH-waves were analyzed according to Brune’s source model. Observed spectra were corrected for path-dependent attenuation effects using an independent regional estimate of the quality factor QS. To correct spectra for near-surface attenuation, the k parameterwas calculated, obtaining it fromwaveforms recorded at short epicentral distances. The values of the k parameter vary between 0.01 to 0.06 s with a mean of 0.03 s for P-waves and between 0.01 to 0.09 s with a mean of 0.04 s for SH-waves. After correction for attenuation effects, spectral parameters (corner frequency and low-frequency spectral level) were estimated by a grid search algorithm. The obtained seismic moments range from4.21×1011 to 3.41×1015 Nm (1.7≤Mw ≤4.3). The source radii are between 125 and 1343 m. Stress drop values vary between 0.14 and 32.4 bars with a logarithmic mean of 2.59 bars (1 bar = 105 Pa). From the results, a linear relationship between local andmomentmagnitudes has been established. The obtained scaling relations show slight evidence of self-similarity violation. However, due to the high scatter of our data, the existence of self-similarity cannot be excluded

    Developing Ontologies withing Decentralized Settings

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    This chapter addresses two research questions: “How should a well-engineered methodology facilitate the development of ontologies within communities of practice?” and “What methodology should be used?” If ontologies are to be developed by communities then the ontology development life cycle should be better understood within this context. This chapter presents the Melting Point (MP), a proposed new methodology for developing ontologies within decentralised settings. It describes how MP was developed by taking best practices from other methodologies, provides details on recommended steps and recommended processes, and compares MP with alternatives. The methodology presented here is the product of direct first-hand experience and observation of biological communities of practice in which some of the authors have been involved. The Melting Point is a methodology engineered for decentralised communities of practice for which the designers of technology and the users may be the same group. As such, MP provides a potential foundation for the establishment of standard practices for ontology engineering

    Energetic Selection of Topology in Ferredoxins

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    Models of early protein evolution posit the existence of short peptides that bound metals and ions and served as transporters, membranes or catalysts. The Cys-X-X-Cys-X-X-Cys heptapeptide located within bacterial ferredoxins, enclosing an Fe4S4 metal center, is an attractive candidate for such an early peptide. Ferredoxins are ancient proteins and the simple α+β fold is found alone or as a domain in larger proteins throughout all three kingdoms of life. Previous analyses of the heptapeptide conformation in experimentally determined ferredoxin structures revealed a pervasive right-handed topology, despite the fact that the Fe4S4 cluster is achiral. Conformational enumeration of a model CGGCGGC heptapeptide bound to a cubane iron-sulfur cluster indicates both left-handed and right-handed folds could exist and have comparable stabilities. However, only the natural ferredoxin topology provides a significant network of backbone-to-cluster hydrogen bonds that would stabilize the metal-peptide complex. The optimal peptide configuration (alternating αL,αR) is that of an α-sheet, providing an additional mechanism where oligomerization could stabilize the peptide and facilitate iron-sulfur cluster binding
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