9,790 research outputs found
The Master Gauge String
A string background, which is in some precise sense {\em universal} (i.e.,
incorporating all orders in the Feynman diagram expansion), is proposed to
represent pure gauge theories. S-duality at the level of the string metric is
considered as well as the vacuum expectation values of 't Hooft and Wilson
loops in semiclassical approximation.Comment: LaTeX, 7 pages. Shortened and improve
Interactive effects of solar UV radiation and ammonium on the biomass andnutritional compound production in tank cultivated Hydropuntia corne (Rhodophyta)
Figueroa et al. (2016) Acta Aquaculture 16, 331-332Introduction
Hydropuntia cornea is a red alga species cultivated in tanks under nitrogen enrichment with high biomass production and content of high value bioactive compounds (Figueroa et al., 2012; Robledo et al, 2014). In this study, the combined effects (2 × 2 factorial design) of solar radiation (in door (I), green house cutting off the UV radiation and out-door (O) with UV radiation) and nitrogen (ammonium) under high (HN) and low (LN) levels on biomass production (g DW m-2 d-1), biofiltration as Nitrogen uptake efficiency (NUE, %) and Nitrogen uptake rate (NUR, mmol N m-2 h-1), photosynthetic activity as maximal electron transport rate (ETRmax), starch content and antioxidant activity were analyzed in H.cornea grown in tanks for 35 days in the above mentioned conditions.
Material and methods
The red seaweed Hydropuntia cornea was cultivated in cylindrical tanks of 90 L (0.17 m2 superficial area) with open flow-through N and P-enrichment (5 NH4Cl: 1 KHPO4, in a concentration ranges between 50 - 250 µM). Seaweed density assayed in tanks was 9 g FW L-1. Turnover rates were 64 and 6.4 vol d-1 in high and low flow rate, respectively. Photosynthetic activity was measured by using in vivo chlorophyll a fluorescence associated to photosystem II i.e. Electron transport rate (ETR) expressed as μmol electrons m-2 s-1. Starch (%) was determined according to anthrone method (Brooks et al. 1986) and antioxidant activity was evaluated following ABTS method (Ree et al., 1999) and expressed as Trolox equivalent (μM TEAC g-1 DW).
Results
Maximal photosynthetic production (ETRmax) increased throughout the culture time. (Fig. 1.A). After 35 d culture, ETRmax was higher under HN than that under LN both under in door and out door conditions (Fig.1A). However, biomass production expressed as g DW m-2 d-1 decreased throughout the experimental time (Fig 1.B). After 35d culture the highest biomass production was reached under HN-O and the lowest under LN-O although the differences were not so high (Fig.1B). The maximal efficiency of N assimilation (NUE %) was greater under LN (98%) than that under HN treatment (72%). NUE decreased throughout the time although after 35 d a clear increase was observed (Table 1). In contrast, the maximal nitrogen uptake rate (NUR) was higher under HN (45.5 mmol N m-2 h-1) than that under LN (25.8 mmol N m-2 h-1). The highest values of both NUE and NUR were obtained under solar radiation (outdoor treatments). Starch ranged from 25.1% (LN-I, 21 d) to 49.6 % (LN-O, 28 d) whereas the highest antioxidant activity was reached under LN-O after 21 d culture (68.5 μM TEAC g-1 DW). After 35d the highest level was again under LN-O (65.2 μM TEAC g-1 DW) followed by HN-O treatment (57.3 μM TEAC g-1 DW).Discussion and conclusions
Ammonium supply, simulating fishpond effluents, and full solar irradiation (presence of UV radiation) have a positive effect on photosynthetic rate as ETRmax. The decrease in biomass production in spite of the increase of photosynthetic activity and nitrogen uptake rate is explained because the algae through the time could inverse more energy for the accumulation of metabolites (starch and antioxidant compounds) that that for growth. In any case the highest accumulation of starch and antioxidant activity were observed in the treatments associated to the greatest stress conditions i.e LN and outdoor culture due to UVR can negatively affect biological processes related to growth. As expected, under HN supply NUE was lower than that under LN but NUR was the reverse. H. cornea grown in simulated fishpond effluents displays a high biofiltration rate of inorganic N and accumulates commercially N compounds, as the photoprotector-antioxidant substances, mycosporine-like aminoacids (Figueroa et al., 2012) and C-compounds for nutritional uses or bioethanol production. In this study, the antioxidant activity was much higher than that reported in other seaweeds (Matanjun et al., 2008). H. cornea can be cultured and used to remove nutrient-rich fishpond effluents from aquaculture industries and besides, this biomass provides compounds of high added value for the biotechnology industry.
References
Brooks, J.R., Griffin, V.K., Kattan, M.W. 1986.A modified method for total carbohydrate analysisof glucose syrups, maltodextrins and other starch hydrolysis products. Cereal Chem 63:465-466.
Figueroa, F. L., Korbee, N., Abdala, R., Jerez, C. G., López-de la Torre, M., Güenaga, L., Gómez-Pinchetti, J. L. 2012. Biofiltration of fishpond effluents and accumulation of N-compounds (phycobiliproteins and mycosporine-like amino acids) versus C-compounds (polysaccharides) in Hydropuntia cornea (Rhodophyta). Marine Pollution Bulletin, 64(2), 310-318.
Matanjun, P., Mohamed, S., Mustapha, N.M., Ming, C.H. 2008. Antioxidant activities and phenolics content of eight species of seaweeds from north Borneo. J Appl Phycol 20:367–373.
Re, R., Pellegrini, N., Proteggente, A., Pannala, A.,Yang,M., Rice-Evans, C. 1999. Antioxidant activity applying an improved ABTS radical cation decolorization assay. Free Radic Biol Med 26:1231–1237.
Robledo, D., Navarro‐Angulo, L., Valdes Lozano, D., Freile‐Pelegrín, Y. 2014. Nutrient removal efficiency of Hydropuntia cornea in an integrated closed recirculation system with pink shrimp Farfantepenaeus brasiliensis. Aquaculture Research, 45(10), 1648-1658Universidad de Málaga.Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucia Tech
One loop calculations on the Wess-Zumino-Witten anomalous functional at finite temperature
We analyze the finite temperature (T) extension of the Wess-Zumino- Witten
functional, discussed in a previous work, to one loop in chiral perturbation
theory. As a phenomenological application, we calculate finite temperature
corrections to the amplitude of the decay into two photons. This
calculation is performed in three limits : i), ii)the chiral
limit at finite T and iii) ( being the pion mass). The
-corrections tend to vanish in the chiral limit, where only the kaon
contribution remains (although it is exponentially suppressed).Comment: Latex, 13 pages and 3 figures avalaible upon reques
Chiral Symmetry restoration in the massive Thirring model at finite T and : Dimensional reduction and the Coulomb gas
We show that in certain limits the (1+1)-dimensional massive Thirring model
at finite temperature is equivalent to a one-dimensional Coulomb gas of
charged particles at the same . This equivalence is then used to explore the
phase structure of the massive Thirring model. For strong coupling and
(the fermion mass) the system is shown to behave as a free gas of "molecules"
(charge pairs in the Coulomb gas terminology) made of pairs of chiral
condensates. This binding of chiral condensates is responsible for the
restoration of chiral symmetry as . In addition, when a fermion
chemical potential is included, the analogy with a Coulomb gas
still holds with playing the role of a purely imaginary external electric
field. For small and we find a typical massive Fermi gas behaviour
for the fermion density, whereas for large it shows chiral restoration by
means of a vanishing effective fermion mass. Some similarities with the chiral
properties of low-energy QCD at finite and baryon chemical potential are
discussed.Comment: 28 pages, 6 figures, better resolution figures are available upon
reques
Faíscas de cinema direto: prelúdio para uma narrativa do cinema cubano
Using as the core of discourse the partial analysis of PM, acuban documentary film which was censored at the beginning of the 60s, but that until now remains almost unknown by the Brazilian scholars. I intend to make a reflection about the enunciations and common places of the official discourse, while at the same time, will sketch a wider panorama of the cuban cinema
Non-Critical Confining Strings and the Renormalization Group
String vacua for non critical strings satisfying the requirements of Zig-Zag
invariance are constructed. The Liouville mode is shown to play the r\^ole of
scale in the Renormalization Group operation. Differences and similarities with
the D-brane near horizon approach to non supersymmetric gauge theories are
discussed as well.Comment: LaTeX, 19 Pages, one reference adde
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