4,099 research outputs found
Tolerance of Penaeus monodon larvae to cupric sulfate added in bath
Copper is used to deter the growth of bacterial, fungal and protozoan disease organism in fishes. Zoeae (Z SUB-1 ), myses (M SUB-1 ) and postlarvae (P SUB-1 ) were exposed to copper sulfate at concentrations of 0 . 025, 0 . 05, 0 . 75, 0 . 1 and 0 . 2 ppm from 24 to 96 hours. The number of surviving larvae were counted at the end of each 24-hour period and the percentage of survival is determined for each dose level. The LC SUB-50 for each of the larval stages was interpolated from the data whenever possible. Three trials with 2 replicates per trial were conducted. The physico-chemical characteristics of the bath taken before and at the end of the experimental period show insignificant differences between initial and final values in each trial. Results indicate that mortality rates of all larval stages increased with exposure time and that mortality rates of the experimental group is higher than the control. Interpolation of the LC SUB-50 is possible only for the 48-h and 72-h exposure times for both zoeae and myses and for the 48-h exposure time for the postlarvae. This is due to the high survival percentage of the 24-h group and the low survival percentage (below 50%) of the larvae exposed for 96 hours. The 48-hour LC SUB-50 for Z SUB-1 , M SUB-1 and P SUB-1 are 0 . 225, 0 . 350 and 0 . 125 ppm respectively. Postlarvae seem to be more sensitive than either of the 2 larval stages having a lower 48-h LC SUB-50 and a low survival rate after 72 hours. The larvae were observed to lose their balance and were lethargic, producing few swimming movements so that they were mostly confined to the bottom of the aquaria. Moribund larvae observed under the microscope had a faster but weak heartbeat compared to healthy larvae. Slight or complete loss of feeding ability indicated by empty guts and delayed molting of Z SUB-1 to Z SUB-2 were also noted
A comparative study of various extenders of milkfish, Chanos chanos (Forsskal) sperm preservation
Four chemical extenders in 7 different concentrations (potassium chloride, sodium chloride, glucose, sodium citrate, Ringer s solution, cow serum and milkfish (Chanos chanos) serum) were compared in the preservation of milkfish sperm. Results showed milkfish serum to be the most suitable of the various extenders tested. This may be attributed to suitable osmotic potential and/or presence of proteins which may have directly or indirectly influenced sperm viability. The effects of milkfish serum on the motility and fertilizing capacity of sperm at different durations of storage however need to be investigated
Complete Fusion Enhancement and Suppression of Weakly Bound Nuclei at Near Barrier Energies
We consider the influence of breakup channels on the complete fusion of
weakly bound systems in terms of dynamic polarization potentials. It is argued
that the enhancement of the cross section at sub-barrier energies may be
consistent with recent experimental observations that nucleon transfer, often
leading to breakup, is dominant compared to direct breakup. The main trends of
the experimental complete fusion cross section for Li + Bi are
analyzed in the framework of the DPP approach.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
Large Scale Flows from Orion-South
Multiple optical outflows are known to exist in the vicinity of the active
star formation region called Orion-South (Orion-S). We have mapped the velocity
of low ionization features in the brightest part of the Orion Nebula, including
Orion-S, and imaged the entire nebula with the Hubble Space Telescope. These
new data, combined with recent high resolution radio maps of outflows from the
Orion-S region, allow us to trace the origin of the optical outflows. It is
confirmed that HH 625 arises from the blueshifted lobe of the CO outflow from
136-359 in Orion-S while it is likely that HH 507 arises from the blueshifted
lobe of the SiO outflow from the nearby source 135-356. It is likely that
redshifted lobes are deflected within the photon dominated region behind the
optical nebula. This leads to a possible identification of a new large shock to
the southwest from Orion-S as being driven by the redshifted CO outflow arising
from 137-408. The distant object HH 400 is seen to have two even further
components and these all are probably linked to either HH 203, HH 204, or HH
528. Distant shocks on the west side of the nebula may be related to HH 269.
The sources of multiple bright blueshifted Herbig-Haro objects (HH 202, HH 203,
HH 204, HH 269, HH 528) remain unidentified, in spite of earlier claimed
identifications. Some of this lack of identification may arise from the fact
that deflection in radial velocity can also produce a change in direction in
the plane of the sky. The best way to resolve this open question is through
improved tangential velocities of low ionization features arising where the
outflows first break out into the ionized nebula.Comment: Astronomical Journal, in press. Some figures are shown at reduced
resolution. A full-resolution version is available at
http://ifront.org/wiki/Orion_South_Outflows_Pape
Four-body effects on 9Be + 208Pb scattering and fusion around the Coulomb barrier
We investigate the 9Be + 208Pb elastic scattering and fusion at energies
around the Coulomb barrier. The Be nucleus is described in a \alpha +
\alpha + n three-body model, using the hyperspherical coordinate method. The
scattering with Pb is then studied with the Continuum Discretized
Coupled Channel (CDCC) method, where the \alpha + \alpha + n continuum is
approximated by a discrete number of pseudostates. Optical potentials for the
Pb and Pb systems are taken from the literature. We
present elastic-scattering and fusion cross sections at different energies, and
investigate the convergence with respect to the truncation of the \alpha +
\alpha + n continuum. A good agreement with experiment is obtained, considering
that there is no parameter fitting. We show that continuum effects increase at
low energies.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to the proceedings of the "NUBA
Conference Series -1: Nuclear Physics and Astrophysics" Adrasan-Antalya,
Turkey, September 15-21, 201
Effective Widths and Effective Number of Phonons of Multiphonon Giant Resonances
We discuss the origin of the difference between the harmonic value of the
width of the multiphonon giant resonances and the smaller observed value.
Analytical expressions are derived for both the effective width and the average
cross-section. The contribution of the Brink-Axel mechanism in resolving the
discrepancy is pointed out.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
The Coulomb phase shift revisited
We investigate the Coulomb phase shift, and derive and analyze new and more
precise analytical formulae. We consider next to leading order terms to the
Stirling approximation, and show that they are important at small values of the
angular momentum and other regimes. We employ the uniform approximation.
The use of our expressions in low energy scattering of charged particles is
discussed and some comparisons are made with other approximation methods.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Quark Delocalization, Color Screening, and Nuclear Intermediate Range Attraction
We consider the effect of including quark delocalization and color screening,
in the nonrelativistic quark cluster model, on baryon-baryon potentials and
phase shifts. We find that the inclusion of these additional effects allows a
good qualitative description of both.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, 4 figures in PostScript after text, LA-UR-91-215
Avaliação holística do doente com ferida: boas práticas no serviço de Cirurgia C
Formação dada ao grupo de enfermeiros, no contexto das boas práticas na abordagem do doente com feridaN/
Accretion Disks Around Young Objects. II. Tests of Well-Mixed Models with Ism Dust
We construct detailed vertical structure models of irradiated accretion disks
around T Tauri stars with interstellar medium dust uniformly mixed with gas.
The dependence of the structure and emission properties on mass accretion rate,
viscosity parameter, and disk radius is explored using these models. The
theoretical spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and images for all
inclinations are compared with observations of the entire population of
Classical T Tauri stars (CTTS) and Class I objects in Taurus. In particular, we
find that the median near-infrared fluxes can be explained within the errors
with the most recent values for the median accretion rates for CTTS. We further
show that the majority of the Class I sources in Taurus cannot be Class II
sources viewed edge-on because they are too luminous and their colors would be
consistent with disks seen only in a narrow range of inclinations. Our models
appear to be too geometrically thick at large radii, as suggested by: (a)
larger far-infrared disk emission than in the typical SEDs of T Tauri stars;
(b) wider dark dust lanes in the model images than in the images of HH30 and HK
Tau/c; and (c) larger predicted number of stars extincted by edge-on disks than
consistent with current surveys. The large thickness of the model is a
consequence of the assumption that dust and gas are well-mixed, suggesting that
some degree of dust settling may be required to explain the observations.Comment: 41 pages, 13 figures, accepted in Ap
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