84 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Two-dimensional pixel array image sensor for protein crystallography
A 2D pixel array image sensor module has been designed for time resolved Protein Crystallography. This smart pixels detector significantly enhances time resolved Laue Protein crystallography by two to three orders of magnitude compared to existing sensors like films or phosphor screens coupled to CCDs. The resolution in time and dynamic range of this type of detector will allow one to study the evolution of structural changes that occur within the protein as a function of time. This detector will also considerably accelerate data collection in static Laue or monochromatic crystallography and make better use of the intense beam delivered by synchrotron light sources. The event driven pixel array detectors, based on the column Architecture, can provide multiparameter information (energy discrimination, time), with sparse and frameless readout without significant dead time. The prototype module consists of a 16x16 pixel diode array bump-bonded to the integrated circuit. The detection area is 150x150 square microns
Respostas de enzimas antioxidantes a bioativador em plântulas de milho sob estresse hídrico.
Edição Especial contendo os Anais do XVIII Congresso Brasileiro de Sementes, Florianópolis, set. 2013
Habitat filtering determines spatial variation of macroinvertebrate community traits in northern headwater streams
Although our knowledge of the spatial distribution of stream organisms has been increasing rapidly in the last decades, there is still little consensus about trait-based variability of macroinvertebrate communities within and between catchments in near-pristine systems. Our aim was to examine the taxonomic and trait based stability vs. variability of stream macroinvertebrates in three high-latitude catchments in Finland. The collected taxa were assigned to unique trait combinations (UTCs) using biological traits. We found that only a single or a highly limited number of taxa formed a single UTC, suggesting a low degree of redundancy. Our analyses revealed significant differences in the environmental conditions of the streams among the three catchments. Linear models, rarefaction curves and beta-diversity measures showed that the catchments differed in both alpha and beta diversity. Taxon- and trait-based multivariate analyses also indicated that the three catchments were significantly different in terms of macroinvertebrate communities. All these findings suggest that habitat filtering, i.e., environmental differences among catchments, determines the variability of macroinvertebrate communities, thereby contributing to the significant biological differences among the catchments. The main implications of our study is that the sensitivity of trait-based analyses to natural environmental variation should be carefully incorporated in the assessment of environmental degradation, and that further studies are needed for a deeper understanding of trait-based community patterns across near-pristine streams
Recommended from our members
Initial test results of an ionization chamber shower detector for a LHC luminosity monitor
A novel, segmented, multi-gap, pressurized gas ionization chamber is being developed for optimization of the luminosity of the LHC. The ionization chambers are to be installed in the front quadrupole and zero degree neutral particle absorbers in the high luminosity IRs and sample the energy deposited near the maxima of the hadronic/electromagnetic showers in these absorbers. The ionization chambers are instrumented with low noise, fast, pulse shaping electronics to be capable of resolving individual bunch crossings at 40 MHz. In this paper we report the initial results of our second test of this instrumentation in an SPS external proton beam. Single 300 GeV protons are used to simulate the hadronic/electromagnetic shower produced by the forward collision products from the interaction regions of the LHC. The capability of instrumentations to measure the luminosity of individual bunches in a 40 MHz bunch train is demonstrated
Measurement of the CP properties of Higgs boson interactions with τ-leptons with the ATLAS detector
A study of the charge conjugation and parity (CP
) properties of the interaction between the Higgs boson and τ
-leptons is presented. The study is based on a measurement of CP
-sensitive angular observables defined by the visible decay products of τ
-leptons produced in Higgs boson decays. The analysis uses 139 fb−1
of proton–proton collision data recorded at a centre-of-mass energy of √s=13
TeV with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. Contributions from CP
-violating interactions between the Higgs boson and τ
-leptons are described by a single mixing angle parameter ϕτ
in the generalised Yukawa interaction. Without constraining the H→ττ
signal strength to its expected value under the Standard Model hypothesis, the mixing angle ϕτ
is measured to be 9∘±16∘
, with an expected value of 0∘±28∘
at the 68% confidence level. The pure CP
-odd hypothesis is disfavoured at a level of 3.4 standard deviations. The results are compatible with the predictions for the Higgs boson in the Standard Model
- …