394 research outputs found
Experimental analysis of the effect of taxes and subsides on calories purchased in an on-line supermarket
Taxes and subsidies are a public health approach to improving nutrient quality of food purchases. While taxes or subsidies influence purchasing, it is unclear whether they influence total energy or overall diet quality of foods purchased. Using a within subjects design, selected low nutrient dense foods (e.g. sweetened beverages, candy, salty snacks) were taxed, and fruits and vegetables and bottled water were subsidized by 12.5% or 25% in comparison to a usual price condition for 199 female shoppers in an experimental store. Results showed taxes reduced calories purchased of taxed foods (coefficient = -6.61, Cl = -11.94 to -1.28) and subsidies increased calories purchased of subsidized foods (coefficient = 13.74, Cl = 8.51 to 18.97). However, no overall effect was observed on total calories purchased. Both taxes and subsidies were associated with a reduction in calories purchased for grains (taxes: coefficient = -6.58, Cl = -11.91 to -1.24, subsidies: coefficient = -12.86, Cl = -18.08 to -7.63) and subsidies were associated with a reduction in calories purchased for miscellaneous foods (coefficient = -7.40, CI = -12.62 to -2.17) (mostly fats, oils and sugars). Subsidies improved the nutrient quality of foods purchased (coefficient = 0.14, Cl = 0.07 to 0.21). These results suggest that taxes and subsidies can influence energy purchased for products taxed or subsidized, but not total energy purchased. However, the improvement in nutrient quality with subsidies indicates that pricing can shift nutritional quality of foods purchased. Research is needed to evaluate if differential pricing strategies based on nutrient quality are associated with reduction in calories and improvement in nutrient quality of foods purchased
LOOKING INTO THE ENERGY LANDSCAPE OF MYOGLOBIN
Using the haem group of myoglobin as a probe in optical experiments makes it possible to study its conformational fluctuations in real time. Results of these experiments can be directly interpreted in terms of the structure of the potential energy surface of the protein. The current view is that proteins have rough energy landscapes comprising a large number of minima which represent conformational substates, and that these substates are hierarchically organized. Here, we show that the energy landscape is characterized by a number of discrete distributions of;barrier heights each representing a tier within a hierarchy of conformational substates. Furthermore, we provide evidence that the energy surface is self-similar and offer suggestions for a characterization of the protein fluctuations
High-Intensity and High-Brightness Source of Moderated Positrons Using a Brilliant gamma Beam
Presently large efforts are conducted towards the development of highly
brilliant gamma beams via Compton back scattering of photons from a
high-brilliance electron beam, either on the basis of a normal-conducting
electron linac or a (superconducting) Energy Recovery Linac (ERL). Particularly
ERL's provide an extremely brilliant electron beam, thus enabling to generate
highest-quality gamma beams. A 2.5 MeV gamma beam with an envisaged intensity
of 10^15 s^-1, as ultimately envisaged for an ERL-based gamma-beam facility,
narrow band width (10^-3), and extremely low emittance (10^-4 mm^2 mrad^2)
offers the possibility to produce a high-intensity bright polarized positron
beam. Pair production in a face-on irradiated W converter foil (200 micron
thick, 10 mm long) would lead to the emission of 2 x 10^13 (fast) positrons per
second, which is four orders of magnitude higher compared to strong radioactive
^22Na sources conventionally used in the laboratory.Using a stack of converter
foils and subsequent positron moderation, a high-intensity low-energy beam of
moderated positrons can be produced. Two different source setups are presented:
a high-brightness positron beam with a diameter as low as 0.2 mm, and a
high-intensity beam of 3 x 10^11 moderated positrons per second. Hence,
profiting from an improved moderation efficiency, the envisaged positron
intensity would exceed that of present high-intensity positron sources by a
factor of 100.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Conformational studies of stereoisomeric tetraols serived form syn- and anti-dibenzo [a,l]pyrene diolepoxides
An understanding of the conformational behavior of the stereoisomeric tetrols at the 11,12,13,14-positions of dibenzo[a,l]pyrene (DB[a,l]P) is essential for the spectroscopic identification of DNA adducts derived from the biologically highly active fjord region syn- and anti-DB[a,l]P-11,12- diol 13,14-epoxides. Conformational effects are expected to play an important role in DNA-DB[a,l]P diol epoxide reactivity, base-sequence specificity, and conformation dependent repair. The results of conformational studies on trans-anti-, cis-anti-, and cis-syn-DB[a,l]P tetrol isomers are presented and compared to the results obtained previously for trans-syn-DB[a,l]P tetrol (Carcinogenesis 17, 829-837, 1996). Molecular mechanics, dynamical simulations, and semiempirical calculations of electronic transitions are used to interpret the low-temperature fluorescence spectra an
Jet Substructure at the Tevatron and LHC: New results, new tools, new benchmarks
In this report we review recent theoretical progress and the latest
experimental results in jet substructure from the Tevatron and the LHC. We
review the status of and outlook for calculation and simulation tools for
studying jet substructure. Following up on the report of the Boost 2010
workshop, we present a new set of benchmark comparisons of substructure
techniques, focusing on the set of variables and grooming methods that are
collectively known as "top taggers". To facilitate further exploration, we have
attempted to collect, harmonise, and publish software implementations of these
techniques.Comment: 53 pages, 17 figures. L. Asquith, S. Rappoccio, C. K. Vermilion,
editors; v2: minor edits from journal revision
Jet Dipolarity: Top Tagging with Color Flow
A new jet observable, dipolarity, is introduced that can distinguish whether
a pair of subjets arises from a color singlet source. This observable is
incorporated into the HEPTopTagger and is shown to improve discrimination
between top jets and QCD jets for moderate to high pT.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures (updated to JHEP version
Measurements of 12C(→Îł,pp) photon asymmetries for EÎł= 200–450 MeV
The 12C (→γ ,pp) reaction has been studied in the photon energy range 200-450 MeV at the Mainz microtron MAMI-C, where linearly polarised photons were energy-tagged using the Glasgow-Mainz Tagged Photon Spectrometer and protons were detected in the Crystal Ball detector. The photon asymmetry ÎŁ has been measured over a wider EÎł range than previous measurements. The strongest asymmetries were found at low missing energies where direct emission of nucleon pairs is expected. Cuts on the difference in azimuthal angles of the two ejected protons increased the magnitude of the observed asymmetries. At low missing energies the ÎŁ data exhibit a strong angular dependence, similar to deuteron photodisintegration
Torsion-balance tests of the weak equivalence principle
We briefly summarize motivations for testing the weak equivalence principle
and then review recent torsion-balance results that compare the differential
accelerations of beryllium-aluminum and beryllium-titanium test body pairs with
precisions at the part in level. We discuss some implications of
these results for the gravitational properties of antimatter and dark matter,
and speculate about the prospects for further improvements in experimental
sensitivity.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures (in press Classical Quantum Gravity 2012
Structure of Fat Jets at the Tevatron and Beyond
Boosted resonances is a highly probable and enthusiastic scenario in any
process probing the electroweak scale. Such objects when decaying into jets can
easily blend with the cornucopia of jets from hard relative light QCD states.
We review jet observables and algorithms that can contribute to the
identification of highly boosted heavy jets and the possible searches that can
make use of such substructure information. We also review previous studies by
CDF on boosted jets and its measurements on specific jet shapes.Comment: invited review for a special "Top and flavour physics in the LHC era"
issue of The European Physical Journal C, we invite comments regarding
contents of the review; v2 added references and institutional preprint
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