3,702 research outputs found
Influence of yeast strain on odor-active compounds in fiano wine
The type of yeast strain used for wine alcoholic fermentation dramatically affects its final volatile composition and, therefore, its sensory properties. In this study, the influence of four oenological Saccharomyces strains (three S. cerevisiae and one S. bayanus) on wine volatile composition was determined on the Fiano variety, a typical cultivar from the Campania region (Italy), fermented in oak barrique. Fiano wines were analyzed by means of gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) and gas chromatography/olfactometry (GC/O). The results showed that the four selected yeast strains had a significant impact on the majority of volatile compounds as shown by the concentration of volatile compounds and based on the Aroma Extract Dilution Analysis (AEDA) values for many of the odor volatile compounds. This resulted in a dramatic change of the odor impact of the wines, such as the “fruity” attribute, which was higher compared to the control, and caused some changes of other odor attributes, particularly “floral”, “phenolic” and “honey”. This research demonstrates the potential of using these selected yeast strains and this technological approach of oak fermentation for this typical white wine grape variety
Gauge-Invariant Resummation Formalism and Unitarity in Non-Commutative QED
We re-examine the perturbative properties of four-dimensional non-commutative
QED by extending the pinch techniques to the theta-deformed case. The explicit
independence of the pinched gluon self-energy from gauge-fixing parameters, and
the absence of unphysical thresholds in the resummed propagators permits a
complete check of the optical theorem for the off-shell two-point function. The
known anomalous (tachyonic) dispersion relations are recovered within this
framework, as well as their improved version in the (softly broken) SUSY case.
These applications should be considered as a first step in constructing
gauge-invariant truncations of the Schwinger-Dyson equations in the
non-commutative case. An interesting result of our formalism appears when
considering the theory in two dimensions: we observe a finite gauge-invariant
contribution to the photon mass because of a novel incarnation of IR/UV mixing,
which survives the commutative limit when matter is present.Comment: 30 pages, 2 eps figure, uses axodraw. Citations adde
Instanton on toric singularities and black hole countings
We compute the instanton partition function for U(N) gauge
theories living on toric varieties, mainly of type
including or O_{\PP_1}(-p) surfaces. The results provide
microscopic formulas for the partition functions of black holes made out of
D4-D2-D0 bound states wrapping four-dimensional toric varieties inside a
Calabi-Yau. The partition function gets contributions from regular and
fractional instantons. Regular instantons are described in terms of symmetric
products of the four-dimensional variety. Fractional instantons are built out
of elementary self-dual connections with no moduli carrying non-trivial fluxes
along the exceptional cycles of the variety. The fractional instanton
contribution agrees with recent results based on 2d SYM analysis. The partition
function, in the large charge limit, reproduces the supergravity macroscopic
formulae for the D4-D2-D0 black hole entropy.Comment: 29 pages, 3 fig Section 5 is improved by the inclusion of a detailed
comparison between the instanton partition function and the D4-D2-D0 black
hole entropy formula coming from supergravit
Stable divisorial gonality is in NP
Divisorial gonality and stable divisorial gonality are graph parameters,
which have an origin in algebraic geometry. Divisorial gonality of a connected
graph can be defined with help of a chip firing game on . The stable
divisorial gonality of is the minimum divisorial gonality over all
subdivisions of edges of .
In this paper we prove that deciding whether a given connected graph has
stable divisorial gonality at most a given integer belongs to the class NP.
Combined with the result that (stable) divisorial gonality is NP-hard by
Gijswijt, we obtain that stable divisorial gonality is NP-complete. The proof
consist of a partial certificate that can be verified by solving an Integer
Linear Programming instance. As a corollary, we have that the number of
subdivisions needed for minimum stable divisorial gonality of a graph with
vertices is bounded by for a polynomial
SitePainter: a tool for exploring biogeographical patterns
As microbial ecologists take advantage of high-throughput analytical techniques to describe microbial communities across ever-increasing numbers of samples, the need for new analysis tools that reveal the intrinsic spatial patterns and structures of these populations is crucial. Here we present SitePainter, an interactive graphical tool that allows investigators to create or upload pictures of their study site, load diversity analyses data and display both diversity and taxonomy results in a spatial context. Features of SitePainter include: visualizing α -diversity, using taxonomic summaries; visualizing β -diversity, using results from multidimensional scaling methods; and animating relationships among microbial taxa or pathways overtime. SitePainter thus increases the visual power and ability to explore spatially explicit studies
Black-holes, topological strings and large N phase transitions
The counting of microstates of BPS black-holes on local Calabi-Yau of the
form is explored
by computing the partition function of q-deformed Yang-Mills theory on .
We obtain, at finite , the instanton expansion of the gauge theory. It can
be written exactly as the partition function for U(N) Chern-Simons gauge theory
on a Lens space, summed over all non-trivial vacua, plus a tower of
non-perturbative instanton contributions. In the large limit we find a
peculiar phase structure in the model. At weak string coupling the theory
reduces to the trivial sector and the topological string partition function on
the resolved conifold is reproduced in this regime. At a certain critical
point, instantons are enhanced and the theory undergoes a phase transition into
a strong coupling regime. The transition from the strong coupling phase to the
weak coupling phase is of third order.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures; Invited talk given at QG05, Cala Gonone (Italy),
September 200
Factors Associated with the Diversification of the Gut Microbial Communities within Chimpanzees from Gombe National Park.
The gastrointestinal tract harbors large and diverse populations of bacteria that vary among individuals and within individuals over time. Numerous internal and external factors can influence the contents of these microbial communities, including diet, geography, physiology, and the extent of contact among hosts. To investigate the contributions of such factors to the variation and changes in gut microbial communities, we analyzed the distal gut microbiota of individual chimpanzees from two communities in Gombe National Park, Tanzania. These samples, which were derived from 35 chimpanzees, many of whom have been monitored for multiple years, provide an unusually comprehensive longitudinal depth for individuals of known genetic relationships. Although the composition of the great-ape microbiota has been shown to codiversify with host species, indicating that host genetics and phylogeny have played a major role in its differentiation over evolutionary timescales, the geneaological relationships of individual chimpanzees did not coincide with the similarity in their gut microbial communities. However, the inhabitants from adjacent chimpanzee communities could be distinguished based on the contents of their gut microbiota. Despite the broad similarity of community members, as would be expected from shared diet or interactions, long-term immigrants to a community often harbored the most distinctive gut microbiota, suggesting that individuals retain hallmarks of their previous gut microbial communities for extended periods. This pattern was reinforced in several chimpanzees sampled over long temporal scales, in which the major constituents of the gut microbiota were maintained for nearly a decade
Geography and Location Are the Primary Drivers of Office Microbiome Composition.
In the United States, humans spend the majority of their time indoors, where they are exposed to the microbiome of the built environment (BE) they inhabit. Despite the ubiquity of microbes in BEs and their potential impacts on health and building materials, basic questions about the microbiology of these environments remain unanswered. We present a study on the impacts of geography, material type, human interaction, location in a room, seasonal variation, and indoor and microenvironmental parameters on bacterial communities in offices. Our data elucidate several important features of microbial communities in BEs. First, under normal office environmental conditions, bacterial communities do not differ on the basis of surface material (e.g., ceiling tile or carpet) but do differ on the basis of the location in a room (e.g., ceiling or floor), two features that are often conflated but that we are able to separate here. We suspect that previous work showing differences in bacterial composition with surface material was likely detecting differences based on different usage patterns. Next, we find that offices have city-specific bacterial communities, such that we can accurately predict which city an office microbiome sample is derived from, but office-specific bacterial communities are less apparent. This differs from previous work, which has suggested office-specific compositions of bacterial communities. We again suspect that the difference from prior work arises from different usage patterns. As has been previously shown, we observe that human skin contributes heavily to the composition of BE surfaces. IMPORTANCE Our study highlights several points that should impact the design of future studies of the microbiology of BEs. First, projects tracking changes in BE bacterial communities should focus sampling efforts on surveying different locations in offices and in different cities but not necessarily different materials or different offices in the same city. Next, disturbance due to repeated sampling, though detectable, is small compared to that due to other variables, opening up a range of longitudinal study designs in the BE. Next, studies requiring more samples than can be sequenced on a single sequencing run (which is increasingly common) must control for run effects by including some of the same samples in all of the sequencing runs as technical replicates. Finally, detailed tracking of indoor and material environment covariates is likely not essential for BE microbiome studies, as the normal range of indoor environmental conditions is likely not large enough to impact bacterial communities
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