501 research outputs found
Accretion and photodesorption of CO ice as a function of the incident angle of deposition
Non-thermal desorption of inter- and circum-stellar ice mantles on dust
grains, in particular ultraviolet photon-induced desorption, has gained
importance in recent years. These processes may account for the observed gas
phase abundances of molecules like CO toward cold interstellar clouds. Ice
mantle growth results from gas molecules impinging on the dust from all
directions and incidence angles. Nevertheless, the effect of the incident angle
for deposition on ice photo-desorption rate has not been studied. This work
explores the impact on the accretion and photodesorption rates of the incidence
angle of CO gas molecules with the cold surface during deposition of a CO ice
layer. Infrared spectroscopy monitored CO ice upon deposition at different
angles, ultraviolet-irradiation, and subsequent warm-up. Vacuum-ultraviolet
spectroscopy and a Ni-mesh measured the emission of the ultraviolet lamp.
Molecules ejected from the ice to the gas during irradiation or warm-up were
characterized by a quadrupole mass spectrometer. The photodesorption rate of CO
ice deposited at 11 K and different incident angles was rather stable between 0
and 45. A maximum in the CO photodesorption rate appeared around
70-incidence deposition angle. The same deposition angle leads to the
maximum surface area of water ice. Although this study of the surface area
could not be performed for CO ice, the similar angle dependence in the
photodesorption and the ice surface area suggests that they are closely
related. Further evidence for a dependence of CO ice morphology on deposition
angle is provided by thermal desorption of CO ice experiments
Combinatorial Assortment Optimization
Assortment optimization refers to the problem of designing a slate of
products to offer potential customers, such as stocking the shelves in a
convenience store. The price of each product is fixed in advance, and a
probabilistic choice function describes which product a customer will choose
from any given subset. We introduce the combinatorial assortment problem, where
each customer may select a bundle of products. We consider a model of consumer
choice where the relative value of different bundles is described by a
valuation function, while individual customers may differ in their absolute
willingness to pay, and study the complexity of the resulting optimization
problem. We show that any sub-polynomial approximation to the problem requires
exponentially many demand queries when the valuation function is XOS, and that
no FPTAS exists even for succinctly-representable submodular valuations. On the
positive side, we show how to obtain constant approximations under a
"well-priced" condition, where each product's price is sufficiently high. We
also provide an exact algorithm for -additive valuations, and show how to
extend our results to a learning setting where the seller must infer the
customers' preferences from their purchasing behavior
Confluence via strong normalisation in an algebraic \lambda-calculus with rewriting
The linear-algebraic lambda-calculus and the algebraic lambda-calculus are
untyped lambda-calculi extended with arbitrary linear combinations of terms.
The former presents the axioms of linear algebra in the form of a rewrite
system, while the latter uses equalities. When given by rewrites, algebraic
lambda-calculi are not confluent unless further restrictions are added. We
provide a type system for the linear-algebraic lambda-calculus enforcing strong
normalisation, which gives back confluence. The type system allows an abstract
interpretation in System F.Comment: In Proceedings LSFA 2011, arXiv:1203.542
Characterization, conservation and loss of dignity at the end-of- life in the emergency department. A qualitative protocol
Aims: to explore and understand the experiences of terminally-ill patients and their relatives regarding dignity during end-of-life care in the emergency department.
Background: the respect given to the concept of dignity is significantly modifying the clinical relationship and the care framework involving the end-of-life patient in palliative care units, critical care units, hospices and their own homes. This situation is applicable to in-hospital emergency departments, where there is a lack of research which takes the experiences of end-of-life patients and their relatives into account.
Design: a phenomenological qualitative study.
Methods: the protocol was approved in December 2016 and will be carried out from December 2016 to December 2020. The Gadamer's philosophical underpinnings will be used in the design and development of the study. The data collection will include participant observation techniques in the Emergency Department, in-depth interviews with terminally-ill patients and focus groups with their relatives. For the data analysis, the field notes and verbatim transcriptions will be read and codified using ATLAS.ti software to search for emerging themes.
Discussion: emerging themes that contribute to comprehending the phenomenon of dignity in end-of-life care in the Emergency Department are expected to be found. This study's results could have important implications in the implementation of new interventions in Emergency Departments. These interventions would be focused on improving: the social acceptance of death, environmental conditions, promotion of autonomy and accompaniment, and assumption (takeover) of dignified actions and attitudes (respect for human rights)
Discovery and Synthesis of Caracolamide A, an Ion Channel Modulating Dichlorovinylidene Containing Phenethylamide from a Panamanian Marine Cyanobacterium cf. Symploca Species
A recent untargeted metabolomics investigation into the chemical profile of 10 organic extracts from cf. Symploca spp. revealed several interesting chemical leads for further natural product drug discovery. Subsequent targetdirected isolation efforts with one of these, a Panamanian marine cyanobacterium cf. Symploca sp., yielded a phenethylamide metabolite that terminates in a relatively rare gemdichlorovinylidene moiety, caracolamide A (1), along with a known isotactic polymethoxy-1-alkene (2). Detailed NMR and HRESIMS analyses were used to determine the structures of these molecules, and compound 1 was confirmed by a threestep synthesis. Pure compound 1 was shown to have in vitro calcium influx and calcium channel oscillation modulatory activity when tested as low as 10 pM using cultured murine cortical neurons, but was not cytotoxic to NCI-H460 human non-small-cell lung cancer cells in vitro (IC50 > 10 μM).A recent untargeted metabolomics investigation into the chemical profile of 10 organic extracts from cf. Symploca spp. revealed several interesting chemical leads for further natural product drug discovery. Subsequent targetdirected isolation efforts with one of these, a Panamanian marine cyanobacterium cf. Symploca sp., yielded a phenethylamide metabolite that terminates in a relatively rare gemdichlorovinylidene moiety, caracolamide A (1), along with a known isotactic polymethoxy-1-alkene (2). Detailed NMR and HRESIMS analyses were used to determine the structures of these molecules, and compound 1 was confirmed by a threestep synthesis. Pure compound 1 was shown to have in vitro calcium influx and calcium channel oscillation modulatory activity when tested as low as 10 pM using cultured murine cortical neurons, but was not cytotoxic to NCI-H460 human non-small-cell lung cancer cells in vitro (IC50 > 10 μM)
Classically time-controlled quantum automata
In this paper we introduce classically time-controlled quantum automata or CTQA, which is a slight but reasonable modification of Moore-Crutchfield quantum finite automata that uses time-dependent evolution operators and a scheduler defining how long each operator will run. Surprisingly enough, time-dependent evolutions provide a significant change in the computational power of quantum automata with respect to a discrete quantum model. Furthermore, CTQA presents itself as a new model of computation that provides a different approach to a formal study of “classical control, quantum data” schemes in quantum computing.CONACYT – Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y TecnologíaPROCIENCI
Thermal conductivity measurements of macroscopic frozen salt ice analogues of Jovian icy moons in support of the planned JUICE mission
14 páginas, 16 figuras, 2 tablascThe study of thermal properties of frozen salt solutions representative of ice layers in Jovian moons is crucial to support the
JUpiter ICy moons Explorer (JUICE) (ESA) and Europa Clipper (NASA) missions, which will be launched in the upcoming
years to make detailed observations of the giant gaseous planet Jupiter and three of its largest moons (Ganymede, Europa, and
Callisto), due to the scarcity of experimental measurements. Therefore, we have conducted a set of experiments to measure
and study the thermal conductivity of macroscopic frozen salt solutions of particular interest in these regions, including sodium
chloride (NaCl), magnesium sulphate (MgSO4 ), sodium sulphate (Na2 SO4 ), and magnesium chloride (MgCl2 ). Measurements
were performed at atmospheric pressure and temperatures from 0 to −70 ◦C in a climatic chamber. Temperature and calorimetry
were measured during the course of the experiments. An interesting side effect of these measurements is that they served to
spot phase changes in the frozen salt solutions, even for very low salt concentrations. A small sample of the liquid salt-water
solution was set aside for the calorimetry measurements. These experiments and the measurements of thermal conductivity
and calorimetry will be valuable to constrain the chemical composition, physical state, and temperature of the icy crusts of
Ganymede, Europa, and Callisto.This project received financial support of The European Space
Agency (ESA) contracts No.: RFP/3-15589/18/ES/CM and
4000126441/19/ES/CM: ‘Measurements of thermal and dielectric
properties of ices in support to future radar measurements
of Jovian Icy moons’, The Unidad de Excelencia ‘Mar ́ıa de
Maeztu’ MDM-2017-0737– Centro de Astrobiolog ́ıa (INTA-CSIC),
The Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities
AYA2017-85322-R and PID2020-118974GB-C21 (AEI/FEDER,
UE), Retos Investigaci ́on BIA2016-77992-R (AEI/FEDER, UE),
and ‘Explora Ciencia y Explora Tecnolog ́ıa’ [AYA2017-91062-
EXP]. We are grateful to Anezina Solomonidou for assistance in the
project proposal. The view expressed in this article can in no way be
taken to reflect the official opinion of the European Space Agency.
We thank the reviewer of this article for his constructive comments.Peer reviewe
Charge separation relative to the reaction plane in Pb-Pb collisions at TeV
Measurements of charge dependent azimuthal correlations with the ALICE
detector at the LHC are reported for Pb-Pb collisions at TeV. Two- and three-particle charge-dependent azimuthal correlations in
the pseudo-rapidity range are presented as a function of the
collision centrality, particle separation in pseudo-rapidity, and transverse
momentum. A clear signal compatible with a charge-dependent separation relative
to the reaction plane is observed, which shows little or no collision energy
dependence when compared to measurements at RHIC energies. This provides a new
insight for understanding the nature of the charge dependent azimuthal
correlations observed at RHIC and LHC energies.Comment: 12 pages, 3 captioned figures, authors from page 2 to 6, published
version, figures at http://aliceinfo.cern.ch/ArtSubmission/node/286
A note on comonotonicity and positivity of the control components of decoupled quadratic FBSDE
In this small note we are concerned with the solution of Forward-Backward
Stochastic Differential Equations (FBSDE) with drivers that grow quadratically
in the control component (quadratic growth FBSDE or qgFBSDE). The main theorem
is a comparison result that allows comparing componentwise the signs of the
control processes of two different qgFBSDE. As a byproduct one obtains
conditions that allow establishing the positivity of the control process.Comment: accepted for publicatio
- …