847 research outputs found
Enabling Future Sustainability Transitions: An Urban Metabolism Approach to Los Angeles Pincetl et al. Enabling Future Sustainability Transitions
Summary: This synthesis article presents an overview of an urban metabolism (UM) approach using mixed methods and multiple sources of data for Los Angeles, California. We examine electric energy use in buildings and greenhouse gas emissions from electricity, and calculate embedded infrastructure life cycle effects, water use and solid waste streams in an attempt to better understand the urban flows and sinks in the Los Angeles region (city and county). This quantification is being conducted to help policy-makers better target energy conservation and efficiency programs, pinpoint best locations for distributed solar generation, and support the development of policies for greater environmental sustainability. It provides a framework to which many more UM flows can be added to create greater understanding of the study area's resource dependencies. Going forward, together with policy analysis, UM can help untangle the complex intertwined resource dependencies that cities must address as they attempt to increase their environmental sustainability
A simulation code to assist designing space missions of the Airwatch type
The design of an Airwatch type space mission can greatly benefit from a flexible simulation code for establishing the values of the main parameters of the experiment. We present here a code written for this purpose. The cosmic ray primary spectrum at very high energies, the atmosphere modelling, the fluorescence yield, the photon propagation and the detector response are taken into account in order to optimize the fundamental design parameters of the experiment, namely orbit height, field of view, mirror radius, number of pixels of the focal plane, threshold of photo-detection. The optimization criterion will be to maximize counting rates versus mission cost, which imposes limits both on weight and power consumption. Preliminary results on signals with changing energy and zenith angle of incident particles are shown
Minimal inhibitory and Mutant prevention concentrations of enrofloxacin for Pasteurella multocida from rabbits affected by pasteurellosis
Pasteurella multocida is the agent of one of the most significant diseases in rabbits and it is associated
with a heterogeneous clinical picture. Drugs belonging to the fluoroquinolones class are useful to
control pasteurellosis. Among them, enrofloxacin is one of the most used molecules in rabbit industry
and it is the only one fluoroquinolone registered for this species in Italy.
Enrofloxacin adopted dosages are currently based on Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC).
Nevertheless, MIC is not effective against possible pathogen sub-populations with lower susceptibility
that may be selectively amplified, leading to possible problems of antibiotic resistance. Mutant
Prevention Concentration (MPC) could represent an approach to minimize the risk of resistance
selection in pathogens. The aim of this work was to test the sensitivity to enrofloxacin of P. multocida
strains isolated from rabbits affected by pasteurellosis to evaluate if MPC-based dosages can represent
a valid option.
The study was performed on ten strains of P. multocida isolated from rabbits from two industrial
farms of Puglia, South Italy. The sensitivity to enrofloxacin has been evaluated by MIC tests by
microdilution method and MPC tests performed according to Marcusson et al. (2005) with minor
modifications.
The results of MIC and MPC tests have revealed that MPC dosages are on average 8,4 times higher
than MIC dosages. This data highlight that, although MPC-based dosages are useful to prevent the
selection of potential mutant, they could be higher than MIC-based ones, leading to possible issues
related to their application in field, for example the potential risk of possible toxicity for animals and
residues in meat
Measurement of the flux of atmospheric muons with the CAPRICE94 apparatus
A new measurement of the momentum spectra of both positive and negative muons
as function of atmospheric depth was made by the balloon-borne experiment
CAPRICE94. The data were collected during ground runs in Lynn Lake on the
19-20th of July 1994 and during the balloon flight on the 8-9th of August 1994.
We present results that cover the momentum intervals 0.3-40 GeV/c for negative
muons and 0.3-2 GeV/c for positive muons, for atmospheric depths from 3.3 to
1000 g/cm**2, respectively. Good agreement is found with previous measurements
for high momenta, while at momenta below 1 GeV/c we find latitude dependent
geomagnetic effects. These measurements are important cross-checks for the
simulations carried out to calculate the atmospheric neutrino fluxes and to
understand the observed atmospheric neutrino anomaly.Comment: 28 pages, 13 Postscript figures, uses revtex.sty, to appear in Phys.
Rev.
A Review on the Marek’s Disease Outbreak and Its Virulence-Related meq Genovariation in Asia between 2011 and 2021
Marek’s disease is an infectious disease in poultry that usually appears in neural and visceral tumors. This disease is caused by Gallid alphaherpesvirus 2 infection in lymphocytes, and its meq gene is commonly used in virulent studies for coding the key protein functional in oncogenic transformation of the lymphocytes. Although vaccines have been introduced in many countries to control its spread and are proven to be efficient, recent records show a decline of such efficiency due to viral evolution. In this study, we reviewed the outbreak of Marek’s disease in Asia for the last 10 years, together with associated meq sequences, finding a total of 36 studies recording outbreaks with 132 viral strains in 12 countries. The visceral type is the most common (13 in 16 studies) form of Marek’s disease, but additional unobserved neural changes may exist. MD induces liver lymphoma most frequently (11 in 14 studies), and tumors were also found in spleen, kidney, heart, gizzard, skin, intestine, lung, and sciatic nerve. Twelve viral strains distributed in China have been reported to escape the CVI988 vaccine, reaching a mortality rate of more than 30%. Phylogenetic analyses show the internal connection between the Middle East (Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia), South Asia (India, Indonesia), and East Asia (China and Japan), while external viral communications might occasionally occur. In 18 strains with both sequential and mortality data, amino acid alignment showed several point substitutions that may be related to its virulence. We suggest more behavioral monitoring in Marek’s disease-endemic regions and further studies on strain virulence, together with its Meq protein structural changes
The Cosmic-Ray Proton and Helium Spectra measured with the CAPRICE98 balloon experiment
A new measurement of the primary cosmic-ray proton and helium fluxes from 3
to 350 GeV was carried out by the balloon-borne CAPRICE experiment in 1998.
This experimental setup combines different detector techniques and has
excellent particle discrimination capabilities allowing clear particle
identification. Our experiment has the capability to determine accurately
detector selection efficiencies and systematic errors associated with them.
Furthermore, it can check for the first time the energy determined by the
magnet spectrometer by using the Cherenkov angle measured by the RICH detector
well above 20 GeV/n. The analysis of the primary proton and helium components
is described here and the results are compared with other recent measurements
using other magnet spectrometers. The observed energy spectra at the top of the
atmosphere can be represented by (1.27+-0.09)x10^4 E^(-2.75+-0.02) particles
(m^2 GeV sr s)^-1, where E is the kinetic energy, for protons between 20 and
350 GeV and (4.8+-0.8)x10^2 E^(-2.67+-0.06) particles (m^2 GeV nucleon^-1 sr
s)^-1, where E is the kinetic energy per nucleon, for helium nuclei between 15
and 150 GeV nucleon^-1.Comment: To be published on Astroparticle Physics (44 pages, 13 figures, 5
tables
Guaranteed and Prospective Galactic TeV Neutrino Sources
Recent observations, particularly from the HESS Collaboration, have revealed
rich Galactic populations of TeV gamma-ray sources, including a collection
unseen in other wavelengths. Many of these gamma-ray spectra are well measured
up to ~10 TeV, where low statistics make observations by air Cerenkov
telescopes difficult. To understand these mysterious sources, especially at
much higher energies--where a cutoff should eventually appear--new techniques
are needed. We point out the following: (1) For a number of sources, it is very
likely that pions, and hence TeV neutrinos, are produced; (2) As a general
point, neutrinos should be a better probe of the highest energies than gamma
rays, due to increasing detector efficiency; and (3) For several specific
sources, the detection prospects for km^3 neutrino telescopes are very good,
about 1-10 events/year, with low atmospheric neutrino background rates above
reasonable energy thresholds. Such signal rates, as small as they may seem,
will allow neutrino telescopes to powerfully discriminate between models for
the Galactic TeV sources, with important consequences for our understanding of
cosmic-ray production.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures; minor changes to match published versio
Draw me a Neutrino: the first KM3NeT art contest
[EN] While the KM3NeT neutrino detector is being deployed in the Mediterranean Sea, the Collaboration
launched a contest searching for illustrations of the neutrinos it will detect. The participants
in the contest were invited to submit their interpretation of a neutrino, using any technique. More
than 500 drawings were submitted from sixteen different countries. The winners were selected
by a jury of scientists, artists and science communicators based on the originality and creativity
of the drawings, as well as the harmony with the properties and origin of the neutrinos. After
announcing the results in an online ceremony with a large international audience, the winning
drawings have been put on display in a dedicated KM3NeT Virtual Neutrino Art Centre. In this
contribution, we will explain the motivation for the contest and will describe how it was organized.
We will also show the winning drawings and present the results of an impact study carried out
during the contest.We thank Angelo Ceres of Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN), Sezione di Bari, for
setting up the contest website. The contest was supported in France from Centre National de la
Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) and LabEx UnivEarthS (ANR-10-LABX-0023 and ANR-18-IDEX0001). G. de Wasseige acknowledges support from the European UnionÂżs Horizon 2020 research
and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 844138.Circella, M.; Ardid RamĂrez, M.; Bendahman, M.; Bozza, C.; Coyle, P.; Wasseige, G.; Distefano, C.... (2022). Draw me a Neutrino: the first KM3NeT art contest. PoS. Proceedings of Science. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.22323/1.395.140011
- …