1,923 research outputs found
The Effect of Storage, Processing and Enzyme Treatment on the Microstructure of Cloudy Spartan Apple Juice Particulate
The effect of blanching, post-harvest refrigerated (4C) storage and enzyme treatment with poly-galacturonase on the microstructure of Spartan apple juice was examined by thin sectioning and negative staining transmission electron microscopy. Particles were categrized as granules (3-54 nm), spheres (20-368 nm) and aggregates (12-2519 nm). Enzyme treatment with polygalacturonase significantly decreased granule size (P \u3c 0.01). Storage of apples significantly decreased both granule size (p \u3c 0.01) and aggregate length (p \u3c 0.05) and also resulted in a web-like aspect in the microscopic appearance of juice particulate. The web-like aspect of the particulate was removed either through enzyme treatment with polygalacturonase or by blanching. Blanching of puree significantly increased granule (p \u3c 0.05) and sphere size (p \u3c 0.01) while significantly decreasing aggregate length (p \u3c 0.01). In addition, blanching stabilized suspended particulate by what appeared to be the formation of a protective colloid which prevented particle aggregation through electrostatic repulsion
UAV mapping of rhizoctonia bare patch for targeted treatment
Rhizoctonia patches can be easily identified on both normal (RGB) and NDVI images captured by UAV. Mapping shows the pattern of patch distribution across a paddock, highlighting areas of crop with high and low levels of rhizoctonia patches
Cryogenic and room temperature strength of sapphire jointed by hydroxide-catalysis bonding
Hydroxide-catalysis bonding is a precision technique used for jointing components in opto-mechanical systems and has been implemented in the construction of quasi-monolithic silica suspensions in gravitational wave detectors. Future detectors are likely to operate at cryogenic temperatures which will lead to a change in test mass and suspension material. One candidate material is mono-crystalline sapphire. Here results are presented showing the influence of various bonding solutions on the strength of the hydroxide-catalysis bonds formed between sapphire samples, measured both at room temperature and at 77 K, and it is demonstrated that sodium silicate solution is the most promising in terms of strength, producing bonds with a mean strength of 63 MPa. In addition the results show that the strengths of bonds were undiminished when tested at cryogenic temperatures
New evidence on Allyn Young's style and influence as a teacher
This paper publishes the hitherto unpublished correspondence between Allyn Abbott Young's biographer Charles Blitch and 17 of Young's former students or associates. Together with related biographical and archival material, the paper shows the way in which this adds to our knowledge of Young's considerable influence as a teacher upon some of the twentieth century's greatest economists. The correspondents are as follows: James W Angell, Colin Clark, Arthur H Cole, Lauchlin Currie, Melvin G de Chazeau, Eleanor Lansing Dulles, Howard S Ellis, Frank W Fetter, Earl J Hamilton, Seymour S Harris, Richard S Howey, Nicholas Kaldor, Melvin M Knight, Bertil Ohlin, Geoffrey Shepherd, Overton H Taylor, and Gilbert Walker
HD 11397 and HD 14282 - Two new barium stars?
We have performed a detailed abundance analysis of the content of s-process
elements of two dwarf stars with suspected overabundace of those elements. Such
stars belong to a special kinematic sample of the solar neighborhood, with
peculiar kinematics and different chemical abundances when compared to "normal"
disk stars. We aim to define if those stars can be identified as barium stars,
based on their s-process elements abundances, and their classification, i.e.,
if they share their chemical profile with strong or mild barium stars. We also
intend to shed light on the possible origins of the different kinds of barium
stars. Spectra have been taken by using the FEROS spectrograph at the 1.52m
telescope of ESO, La Silla. Abundances have been derived for 18 elements, by
matching the synthetic profile with the observed spectrum. We have found that
HD 11397 shows a mild enhancement for most of the s-process elements as well as
for some r-process elements. This star seems to share its abundance profile
with the mild Ba-stars. Although showing some slight chemical anomalies for Y,
Sr, Mo, and Pb, HD 14282 depicts a chemical pattern similar to the normal stars
with slight s-process enhancements.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Lesioning of the Striatum Reverses Motor Asymmetry in the 6-Hydroxydopamine Rodent Model of Parkinsonism
In the rat several paradigms of grafting of adrenal
medulla into the striatum were studied following the
induction of a parkinsonian model, using a unilateral
6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) lesion of the substantia nigra
. Direct autologous grafting of adrenal medulla
into the caudate-putamen complex, a radiofrequency
lesion of the striatum alone, and a radiofrequency
lesion followed by delayed grafting of adrenal medulla
were compared by analyzing rotational behavior.
Direct grafting of adrenal medulla produced an
overall reduction in apomorphine induced turning
behavior by 43.5% when compared with controls.
Radiofrequency lesioning of the striatum without
graft showed the best improvement over control
animals with a 92% reduction in the total number of
rotations induced by apomorphine. Delayed grafting
into the caudate lesion cavity also produced a
dramatic reduction in motor asymmetry but did not
improve the behavioral outcome over that of the
lesion alone. Animals receiving only radiofrequency
lesions exhibited a band of increased tyrosine
hydroxylase like immunoreactivity bordering the
lesion cavity. Graft survival was limited in the nonlesioned
animals but appeared enhanced in the
animals whose striatum was previously lesioned.
Lesion location within the striatum influenced the
behavioral outcome. Large reductions in
apomorphine-induced rotations could result from
small lesions of the dorso-lateral striatum. These
findings indicate that selective destruction of the
caudate-putamen complex without tissue
transplantation produces a dramatic reduction in the
motor asymmetry of 6-OHDA treated rats. Suggested
explanations for the decrease in induced rotational
behavior with radiofrequency lesions include a
decrease in the number of striatal dopamine
receptors following cell destruction and lesioninduced
recovery of host dopaminergic afferents.
Striatal damage in critical areas can reverse some of
the motor behavior associated with the 6-OHDA
model and needs to be considered when evaluating
the effects of neural grafting in this model
Microalgae production in fresh market wastewater and its utilization as a protein substitute in formulated fish feed for oreochromis spp.
Rapid growing of human population has led to increasing demand of aquaculture production. Oreochromis niloticus or known as tilapia is one of the most globally cultured freshwater fish due to its great adaptation towards extreme environment. Besides, farming of tilapia not only involves small scales farming for local consumption but also larger scales for international market which contributes to a foreign currency earning. Extensive use of fishmeal as feed for fish and for other animals indirectly caused an increasing depletion of the natural resource and may consequently cause economic and environmental unstable. Microalgae biomass seems to be a promising feedstock in aquaculture industry. It can be used for many purposes such as live food for fish larvae and dried microalgae to substitute protein material in fish feed. The microalgae replacement in fish feed formulation as protein alternative seem potentially beneficial for long term aqua-business sustainability. The present chapter discussed the potential of microalgae as an alternative nutrition in fish feed formulations, specifically Tilapia
Primary recovery factor as a function of production rate: implications for conventional reservoirs with different drive mechanisms
This study evaluates the dependency of production rate on the recovery of hydrocarbon from conventional reservoirs using MBAL simulator. The results indicated that the recoveries are sensitive to the production rate in almost all hydrocarbon reservoirs. It was also found that the recovery of volumetric gas drive reservoirs is not impacted by the production rate. In fact, any increase in the production rate improves gas recovery in weak and strong water drive reservoirs. Moreover, increasing the production rate in oil reservoirs decreases the recovery with a significant effect observed in the weak water drive reservoirs. The results of this study demonstrate the need for implementing an effective reservoir management in order to obtain a maximum recovery
Examining the Impact of Imputation Errors on Fine-Mapping Using DNA Methylation QTL as a Model Trait
Genetic variants disrupting DNA methylation at CpG dinucleotides (CpG-SNP) provide a set of known causal variants to serve as models for testing fine-mapping methodology. We use 1716 CpG-SNPs to test three fine-mapping approaches (BIMBAM, BSLMM, and the J-test), assessing the impact of imputation errors and the choice of reference panel by using both whole-genome sequence (WGS), and genotype array data on the same individuals (n=1166). The choice of imputation reference panel had a strong effect on imputation accuracy, with the 1000 Genomes Phase 3 (1000G) reference panel (n=2504 from 26 populations) giving a mean non-reference discordance rate between imputed and sequenced genotypes of 3.2% compared to 1.6% when using the Haplotype Reference Consortium (HRC) reference panel (n=32470 Europeans). These imputation errors impacted on whether the CpG-SNP was included in the 95% credible set, with a difference of ∼ 23% and ∼ 7% between the WGS and the 1000G and HRC imputed datasets respectively. All of the fine-mapping methods failed to reach the expected 95% coverage of the CpG-SNP. This is attributed to secondary cis genetic effects that are unable to be statistically separated from the CpG-SNP, and through a masking mechanism where the effect of the methylation disrupting allele at the CpG-SNP is hidden by the effect of a nearby SNP that has strong LD with the CpG-SNP. The reduced accuracy in fine-mapping a known causal variant in a low level biological trait with imputed genetic data has implications for the study of higher order complex traits and disease
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