1,871 research outputs found

    ZOOBENTHOS EFFECT AND THE ROLE OF ZOOBENTHOS IN THE NITROGEN METABOLISM IN A SHALLOW EUTROPHIC LAKE.

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    Effects of zoobenthos, especially chironomid larvae and tubificid worms, usually dominated in eutrophic lakes, on sediment-water interface of lake bottom were discussed with special reference to the role of zoobenthos in nitrogen metabolism in a shallow eutrophic lake, Lake Suwa, Japan. Zoobenthos effect was categorized as five mechanisms; biopumping, nest-making, mixing and buring, excretion and particle redistribution. A highly significant correlation was obtained between nitrogen release rates and total biomass of Chironomus plumosus and Limnodrilus spp. The rates of release accelerated by zoobenthos were compared with some metabolic rates such as sedimentation, primary production, excretion, mineralization.Article信州大学理学部付属諏訪臨湖実験所報告 7: 113-120(1991)departmental bulletin pape

    Active recombination of pKD1 derived vectors with resident pKD1 in Kluyveromyces lactis transformation

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    The host specificity of the 2 u-like circular plasmid pKD1 is such that this plasmid replicates stably in several species of Kluyveromyces yeasts, but not in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, pKD1-derived plasmids containing various parts of the pKD1 sequence were capable of transforming Kluyveromyces lactis with high efficiency. When such vectors were introduced into host strains that contained resident pKD1 plasmid, the input DNA frequently recombined with it to produce high proportions of additive recombinant molecules that replicate stably. Recombination events were shown to occur with vectors differing for the presence or absence of the putative origin of replication and of the inverted repeats. Structure, stability and copy number of the recombination products were analyzed for various types of vectors

    Room-temperature Coulomb oscillation of Ni-Nb-Zr-H glassy alloys with nanoscale size clusters

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    Two-color photoassociation spectroscopy of ytterbium atoms and the precise determinations of s-wave scattering lengths

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    By performing high-resolution two-color photoassociation spectroscopy, we have successfully determined the binding energies of several of the last bound states of the homonuclear dimers of six different isotopes of ytterbium. These spectroscopic data are in excellent agreement with theoretical calculations based on a simple model potential, which very precisely predicts the s-wave scattering lengths of all 28 pairs of the seven stable isotopes. The s-wave scattering lengths for collision of two atoms of the same isotopic species are 13.33(18) nm for ^{168}Yb, 3.38(11) nm for ^{170}Yb, -0.15(19) nm for ^{171}Yb, -31.7(3.4) nm for ^{172}Yb, 10.55(11) nm for ^{173}Yb, 5.55(8) nm for ^{174}Yb, and -1.28(23) nm for ^{176}Yb. The coefficient of the lead term of the long-range van der Waals potential of the Yb_2 molecule is C_6=1932(30) atomic units (Eha069.573×1026(E_h a_0^6 \approx 9.573\times 10^{-26} J nm^6).Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure

    Host range of the pKD1-derived plasmids in yeast

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    pKD1 is a 2u-like circular plasmid found in the yeast Kluyveromyces drosophilarum that can also stably replicate in Kluyveromyces lactis. We have found a short intergenic region in this genome that appears to be functionally neutral; that is, the introduction of foreign sequences into the single EcoRI restriction site located near one of the inverted repeats did not affect the high stability of the natural plasmid. By introducing a G418 resistance gene at this site, we constructed an autonomous recombinant plasmid. Since this vector did not require cir+ hosts for its stable maintenance, it could be used to examine the transformation host range of pKD1 among all the species belonging to the genus Kluyveromyces. Both species closely related to K. drosophilarum as well as a few other species that are very different in chromosomal GC % could be transformed to yield highly stable transformant clones

    Evidence for unconventional superconducting fluctuations in heavy-fermion compound CeNi2Ge2

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    We present evidence for unconventional superconducting fluctuations in a heavy-fermion compound CeNi2_2Ge2_2. The temperature dependence of the 73^{73}Ge nuclear-spin-lattice-relaxation rate 1/T11/T_1 indicates the development of magnetic correlations and the formation of a Fermi-liquid state at temperatures lower than TFL=0.4T_{\rm FL}=0.4 K, where 1/T1T1/T_1T is constant. The resistance and 1/T1T1/T_1T measured on an as-grown sample decrease below Tconset=0.2T_{\rm c}^{\rm onset} = 0.2 K and TcNQR=0.1T_{\rm c}^{\rm NQR} = 0.1 K, respectively; these are indicative of the onset of superconductivity. However, after annealing the sample to improve its quality, these superconducting signatures disappear. These results are consistent with the emergence of unconventional superconducting fluctuations in close proximity to a quantum critical point from the superconducting to the normal phase in CeNi2_2Ge2_2.Comment: 4pages,5figures,to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jp

    Specific Heat Study of Non-Fermi Liquid Behavior in CeNi_2Ge_2: Anomalous Peak in Quasi-Particle Density-of-States

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    To investigate the non-Fermi liquid (NFL) behavior in a nonalloyed system CeNi_2Ge_2, we have measured the temperature and field dependences of the specific heat C on a CeNi_2Ge_2 single crystal. The distinctive temperature dependence of C/T (~a-b*T^(1/2)) is destroyed in almost the same manner for both field directions of B//c-axis and B//a-axis. The overall behavior of C(T,B) and the low-temperature upturn in magnetic susceptibility can be reproduced, assuming an anomalous peak of the quasi-particle-band density-of-states (DOS) at the Fermi energy possessing (epsilon)^(1/2) energy dependence. Absence of residual entropy around T=0 K in B~0 T has been confirmed by the magnetocaloric effect measurements, which are consistent with the present model. The present model can also be applied to the NFL behavior in CeCu_{5.9}Au_{0.1} using a ln(epsilon)-dependent peak in the DOS. Possible origins of the peak in the DOS are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX, using jpsj.sty, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 66 No. 10 (1997), 7 figures available at http://494-475.phys.metro-u.ac.jp/ao/ceni2ge2.htm
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