15 research outputs found
Total Hadronic Cross Section Data and the Froissart-Martin Bound
The energy dependence of the total hadronic cross section at high energies is
investigated with focus on the recent experimental result by the TOTEM
Collaboration at 7 TeV and the Froissart-Martin bound. On the basis of a class
of analytical parametrization with the exponent in the leading
logarithm contribution as a free parameter, different variants of fits to
and total cross section data above 5 GeV are developed. Two
ensembles are considered, the first comprising data up to 1.8 TeV, the second
also including the data collected at 7 TeV. We shown that in all fit variants
applied to the first ensemble the exponent is statistically consistent with
= 2. Applied to the second ensemble, however, the same variants yield
's above 2, a result already obtained in two other analysis, by U.
Amaldi \textit{et al}. and by the UA4/2 Collaboration. As recently discussed by
Ya. I. Azimov, this faster-than-squared-logarithm rise does not necessarily
violate unitarity. Our results suggest that the energy dependence of the
hadronic total cross section at high energies still constitute an open problem.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, introduction extended and general references
added to match editorial style, to appear in the Brazilian Journal of Physic
Cytotoxicity of Active Ingredients Extracted from Plants of the Brazilian "Cerrado"
Cytotoxicity assays arc needed for the screening of natural products with potential anti-inflammatory. The purpose of this study was to compare the basal cytotoxicity of active ingredients extracted from plants of the Brazilian "cerrado". The viability was assayed with the neutral red uptake assay in Mac Coy cells after 24h of exposition. The dose evaluated was 50 mu g/mu L. The test substances were: cinnamic acid, p-coumaric acid, chlorogenic acid, syringic acid, vannilic acid, homogentisic acid, scandenin, palustric acid, diosgenin, cabraleone. Studies of cytotoxicity demonstrated that all active compounds evaluated have low toxicity in vitro. The substances showed cell viability above 60% for the concentration used. However, the cinnamic acid, sacandenin and palustric acid showed highest toxicity with a 50% reduction in cell viability for the dose of 50 mu g/mu L. Cytotoxic screening results are useful to estimate the best concentrations of those compounds with potential anti-inflammatory without their cause cell death.Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq