204 research outputs found

    Ochratoxin A-induced cytotoxicity in liver (HepG2) cells: Impact of serum concentration, dietary antioxidants and glutathione-modulating compounds

    Get PDF
    Abbrevations: BSO, buthionine sulfoximine; CAT, catechin; DMSO, dimethyl sulfoxide; DTNB, dithio-bis-nitrobenzoic acid; EGCG, epigallocatechin gallate; FCS, foetal calf serum; GSH, glutathione; IARC, international agency for research on cancer; NAC, N-acetylcysteine; NO, nitric oxide; NR, neutral red; OATP, organic anion-transporting polypeptide; OTA, ochratoxin A; PBS, phosphate buffered saline; QUE, quercetin; ROS, reactive oxygen species; ROSAC, rosmarinic acid; RPMI, roswell park memorial institute; α-TOC, α-tocopherol; α-TOC-P, α-tocopherol phosphat

    CH4 emission estimates from an active landfill site inferred from a combined approach of CFD modelling and in situ FTIR measurements

    Get PDF
    Globally, the waste sector contributes to nearly a fifth of anthropogenic methane emitted to the atmosphere and is the second largest source of methane in the UK. In recent years great improvements to reduce those emissions have been achieved by installation of methane recovery systems at landfill sites and subsequently methane emissions reported in national emission inventories have been reduced. Nevertheless, methane emissions of landfills remain uncertain and quantification of emission fluxes is essential to verify reported emission inventories and to monitor changes in emissions. Here we present a new approach for methane emission quantification from a complex source like a landfill site by applying a Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) model to calibrated in situ measurements of methane as part of a field campaign at a landfill site near Ipswich, UK, in August 2014. The methane distribution for different meteorological scenarios is calculated with the CFD model and compared to methane mole fractions measured by an in situ Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectrometer downwind of the prevailing wind direction. Assuming emissions only from the active site, a mean daytime flux of 0.83 mg m−2 s−1, corresponding to 53.26 kg h−1, was estimated. The addition of a secondary source area adjacent to the active site, where some methane hotspots were observed, improved the agreement between the simulated and measured methane distribution. As a result, the flux from the active site was reduced slightly to 0.71 mg m−2 s−1 (45.56 kg h−1), at the same time an additional flux of 0.32 mg m−2 s−1 (30.41 kg h−1) was found from the secondary source area. This highlights the capability of our method to distinguish between different emission areas of the landfill site, which can provide more detailed information about emission source apportionment compared to other methods deriving bulk emissions

    Photonuclear Reactions of Three-Nucleon Systems

    Get PDF
    We discuss the available data for the differential and the total cross section for the photodisintegration of 3^3He and 3^3H and the corresponding inverse reactions below Eγ=100E_\gamma = 100 MeV by comparing with our calculations using realistic NNNN interactions. The theoretical results agree within the errorbars with the data for the total cross sections. Excellent agreement is achieved for the angular distribution in case of 3^3He, whereas for 3^3H a discrepancy between theory and experiment is found.Comment: 11 pages (twocolumn), 12 postscript figures included, uses psfig, RevTe

    A social role for churches and cultural demarcation:how German MEPs represent religion in the European Parliament

    Get PDF
    This study deals with the question of how German members of the European Parliament (MEPs) represent the German model of religion–state relations at the European level. Based on a survey and interviews with German MEPs as well as a content-analysis of German MEPs’ speeches, motions and parliamentary questions during the seventh term of the European Parliament (EP), our study demonstrates that this model is represented in three dimensions. First, German MEPs reflect the close cooperation between the churches and the state in Germany, primarily on social issues, through largely church- and religion-friendly attitudes and relatively frequent contacts with religious interest-groups. Second, by referring to religious freedoms and minorities primarily outside the EU and by placing Islam in considerably more critical contexts than Christianity, German MEPs create a cultural demarcation line between Islam and Christianity through their parliamentary activities, which is similar to, though less politicised than, cultural boundaries often produced in public debates in Germany. Third, our study illustrates similar patterns of religious affiliation and subjective religiosity among German parliamentarians in both the EP and the national Parliament, which to some degree also reflect societal trends in Germany. Yet our data also suggest that European political elites are more religious than the average German population. If the presence of religion in terms of religious interest-groups and arguments is included, the EP appears to be more secularist than the German Parliament

    The ACOS CO_2 retrieval algorithm – Part 1: Description and validation against synthetic observations

    Get PDF
    This work describes the NASA Atmospheric CO_2 Observations from Space (ACOS) X_(CO_2) retrieval algorithm, and its performance on highly realistic, simulated observations. These tests, restricted to observations over land, are used to evaluate retrieval errors in the face of realistic clouds and aerosols, polarized non-Lambertian surfaces, imperfect meteorology, and uncorrelated instrument noise. We find that post-retrieval filters are essential to eliminate the poorest retrievals, which arise primarily due to imperfect cloud screening. The remaining retrievals have RMS errors of approximately 1 ppm. Modeled instrument noise, based on the Greenhouse Gases Observing SATellite (GOSAT) in-flight performance, accounts for less than half the total error in these retrievals. A small fraction of unfiltered clouds, particularly thin cirrus, lead to a small positive bias of ~0.3 ppm. Overall, systematic errors due to imperfect characterization of clouds and aerosols dominate the error budget, while errors due to other simplifying assumptions, in particular those related to the prior meteorological fields, appear small

    Emergence of qualia from brain activity or from an interaction of proto-consciousness with the brain: which one is the weirder? Available evidence and a research agenda

    Get PDF
    This contribution to the science of consciousness aims at comparing how two different theories can explain the emergence of different qualia experiences, meta-awareness, meta-cognition, the placebo effect, out-of-body experiences, cognitive therapy and meditation-induced brain changes, etc. The first theory postulates that qualia experiences derive from specific neural patterns, the second one, that qualia experiences derive from the interaction of a proto-consciousness with the brain\u2019s neural activity. From this comparison it will be possible to judge which one seems to better explain the different qualia experiences and to offer a more promising research agenda

    Rate-Dependent Nucleation and Growth of NaO2 in Na-O2 Batteries

    Get PDF
    Understanding the oxygen reduction reaction kinetics in the presence of Na ions and the formation mechanism of discharge product(s) is key to enhancing Na–O2 battery performance. Here we show NaO2 as the only discharge product from Na–O2 cells with carbon nanotubes in 1,2-dimethoxyethane from X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. Sodium peroxide dihydrate was not detected in the discharged electrode with up to 6000 ppm of H2O added to the electrolyte, but it was detected with ambient air exposure. In addition, we show that the sizes and distributions of NaO2 can be highly dependent on the discharge rate, and we discuss the formation mechanisms responsible for this rate dependence. Micron-sized (∼500 nm) and nanometer-scale (∼50 nm) cubes were found on the top and bottom of a carbon nanotube (CNT) carpet electrode and along CNT sidewalls at 10 mA/g, while only micron-scale cubes (∼2 μm) were found on the top and bottom of the CNT carpet at 1000 mA/g, respectively.Seventh Framework Programme (European Commission) (Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship, 2007-2013))National Science Foundation (U.S.) (MRSEC Program, award number DMR-0819762)Robert Bosch GmbH (Bosch Energy Research Network (BERN) Grant)China Clean Energy Research Center-Clean Vehicles Consortium (CERC-CVC) (award number DE-PI0000012)Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech-MIT Center for Electochemical Energy Storage

    Strengthening the Security of Encrypted Databases: Non-Transitive JOINs

    Get PDF
    Database management systems operating over encrypted data are gaining significant commercial interest. CryptDB is one such notable system supporting a variety SQL queries over encrypted data (Popa et al., SOSP \u2711). It is a practical system obtained by utilizing a number of encryption schemes, together with a new cryptographic primitive for supporting SQL\u27s join operator. This new primitive, an adjustable join scheme, is an encoding scheme that enables to generate tokens corresponding to any two database columns for computing their join given only their encodings. Popa et al. presented a framework for modeling the security of adjustable join schemes, but it is not completely clear what types of potential adversarial behavior it captures. Most notably, CryptDB\u27s join operator is transitive, and this may reveal a significant amount of sensitive information. In this work we put forward a strong and intuitive notion of security for adjustable join schemes, and argue that it indeed captures the security of such schemes: We introduce, in addition, natural simulation-based and indistinguishability-based notions (capturing the ``minimal leakage\u27\u27 of such schemes), and prove that our notion is positioned between their adaptive and non-adaptive variants. Then, we construct an adjustable join scheme that satisfies our notion of security based on the linear assumption (or on the seemingly stronger matrix-DDH assumption for improved efficiency) in bilinear groups. Instantiating CryptDB with our scheme strengthens its security by providing a non-transitive join operator, while increasing the size of CryptDB\u27s encodings from one group element to four group elements based on the linear assumption (or two group elements based on the matrix-DDH assumption), and increasing the running time of the adjustment operation from that of computing one group exponentiation to that of computing four bilinear maps based on the linear assumption (or two bilinear maps based on the matrix-DDH assumption). Most importantly, however, the most critical and frequent operation underlying our scheme is comparison of single group elements as in CryptDB\u27s join scheme
    • …
    corecore