47,678 research outputs found
Oxygen complexes formed at 4 K
Storage stability of oxygen complexes at 4
Assessment of ultraviolet radiation exposures in photobiological experiments
The interfering effect of ultraviolet (UV) radiation on the natural function of biological processes is wavelength specific and the UV spectrum must be weighted with the action spectrum for the process. The UV spectral irradiance may be measured with calibrated spectroradiometers. Alternatively, the biologically effective UV may be measured with broadband devices. This paper reviews the techniques for assessing biologically effective exposures in photobiological experiments.
UV meters, such as the Robertson-Berger (RB) meter, or passive dosimeters, such as polysulphone, that possess a spectral response approximating the human erythemal response can be used to estimate erythemally effective exposure or actinic exposure due to solar UV. The sensitivity of the RB meter is about 0.56 uW cm-2 and polysulphone can record an exposure of about 2mJ cm-2. For photobiological processes other than erythema these devices are not suitable to determine the exposure. In terms of these applications, a spectrum evaluator consisting of four different types of dosimeter material can be employed to evaluate the UV spectrum of the source. This method can be useful both for solar UV studies and research with UV lamps that possess radiation wavelengths shorter than 295nm. The device can be used to measure exposures where the actinic and erythemal action spectra differ significantly. It can also be used to assess exposure due to low levels of UV (about 0.01uW cm-2) caused by radiation filtered through glasses or plastic
Effect of cloud on UVA and exposure to humans
The daily autumn and winter UVA exposures and 6-minute UVA irradiance data for a Southern Hemisphere, subtropical site (Toowoomba, Australia, 27.6 S, 151.9 E) are presented. This data is used to quantify the effect of cloud on UVA using an integrated sky-camera and radiation system. Additionally, an estimate of the effect of enhanced UVA exposure on humans is made. The measurement system consisted of broadband visible-infrared and UVA sensors together with a sun tracking, wide-angle video camera. The mean daily June exposure was found to be 409 kJm-2. Under the constraints of the uncertainty of both the UVA measurement system and clear-sky model, one case of enhanced UVA irradiance was found. Three cases of cloud enhancement of daily UVA exposure, approaching clear-sky levels, were also determined using a calculated clear-sky envelope. It was also determined that for a fulltime outdoor worker, the additional UVA exposure could approach approximately that of one third of a full winter's day. For indoor workers with an outside lunch break of noon to 1 pm, the additional UVA exposure was on average 6.9 kJm-2 over three cloud enhanced days. To the authors' knowledge this is the first paper to present some evidence of cloud enhanced UVA human exposure
Interferometry signatures for QCD first-order phase transition in heavy ion collisions at GSI-FAIR energies
Using the technique of quantum transport of the interfering pair we examine
the Hanbury-Brown-Twiss (HBT) interferometry signatures for the
particle-emitting sources of pions and kaons produced in the heavy ion
collisions at GSI-FAIR energies. The evolution of the sources is described by
relativistic hydrodynamics with the system equation of state of the first-order
phase transition from quark-gluon plasma (QGP) to hadronic matter. We use
quantum probability amplitudes in a path-integral formalism to calculate the
two-particle correlation functions, where the effects of particle decay and
multiple scattering are taken into consideration. We find that the HBT radii of
kaons are smaller than those of pions for the same initial conditions. Both the
HBT radii of pions and kaons increase with the system initial energy density.
The HBT lifetimes of the pion and kaon sources are sensitive to the initial
energy density. They are significantly prolonged when the initial energy
density is tuned to the phase boundary between the QGP and mixed phase. This
prolongations of the HBT lifetimes of pions and kaons may likely be observed in
the heavy ion collisions with an incident energy in the GSI-FAIR energy range.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Color mixing in high-energy hadron collisions
The color mixing of mesons propagating in a nucleus is studied with the help
of a color-octet Pomeron partner present in the two-gluon model of the Pomeron.
For a simple model with four meson-nucleon channels, color mixings are found to
be absent for pointlike mesons and very small for small mesons. These results
seem to validate the absorption model with two independent color components
used in recent analyses of the nuclear absorption of mesons produced
in nuclear reactions.Comment: 3 journal-style page
Heavy Quarkonia and Quark Drip Lines in Quark-Gluon Plasma
Using the potential model and thermodynamical quantities obtained in lattice
gauge calculations, we determine the spontaneous dissociation temperatures of
color-singlet quarkonia and the `quark drip lines' which separate the region of
bound states from the unbound region. The dissociation temperatures
of and in quenched QCD are found to be 1.62 and
respectively, in good agreement with spectral function analyses. The
dissociation temperature of in full QCD with 2 flavors is found to be
1.42. For possible bound quarkonium states with light quarks, the
characteristics of the quark drip lines severely limit the stable region close
to the phase transition temperature. Bound color-singlet quarkonia with light
quarks may exist very near the phase transition temperature if their effective
quark mass is of the order of 300-400 MeV and higher.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, in LaTex, invited talk presented at the
International Conference on Strangeness in Quark Matter, UCLA, March 26-31,
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