2,220 research outputs found
Influence of zinc on distiller’s yeast:cellular accumulation of zinc and impact on spirit congeners
Accumulation of zinc by a whisky distilling yeast strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was studied during fermentation of malt wort and synthetic defined medium. Zinc uptake by yeast cells was very rapid in malt wort, as zinc (0.32 μg/mL) was completely removed from the fermentation medium within one hour. The type of fermentable carbohydrate had an impact on the kinetics of zinc accumulation, with maltose most effective at enhancing metal uptake at zinc concentrations above 3.2 μg/mL. Enriching yeast cells with zinc by “preconditioning” impacted on the production of flavour congeners in the distillates produced from fermented cultures. Such distillates were characterized by an altered flavour and aroma profile. In particular, the production of some higher alcohols increased when yeast cells were preconditioned with zinc. This phenomenon is yeast strain related. Industrial fermentation processes, including brewing and distilling, may benefit from optimization of zinc bioavailability in yeast cultures resulting in more efficient fermentations and improved product quality
Wilson line approach to gravity in the high energy limit
We examine the high energy (Regge) limit of gravitational scattering using a
Wilson line approach previously used in the context of non-Abelian gauge
theories. Our aim is to clarify the nature of the Reggeization of the graviton
and the interplay between this Reggeization and the so-called eikonal phase
which determines the spectrum of gravitational bound states. Furthermore, we
discuss finite corrections to this picture. Our results are of relevance to
various supergravity theories, and also help to clarify the relationship
between gauge and gravity theories.Comment: 33 pages, 5 figure
See a Black Hole on a Shoestring
The modes of vibration of hanging and partially supported strings provide
useful analogies to scalar fields travelling through spacetimes that admit
conformally flat spatial sections. This wide class of spacetimes includes
static, spherically symmetric spacetimes. The modes of a spacetime where the
scale factor depends as a power-law on one of the coordinates provide a useful
starting point and yield a new classification of these spacetimes on the basis
of the shape of the string analogue. The family of corresponding strings follow
a family of curves related to the cycloid, denoted here as hypercycloids (for
reasons that will become apparent). Like the spacetimes that they emulate these
strings exhibit horizons, typically at their bottommost points where the string
tension vanishes; therefore, hanging strings may provide a new avenue for the
exploration of the quantum mechanics of horizons.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, extensive changes to refect version accepted to
PR
Stochastic model of hysteresis
The methods of the probability theory have been used in order to build up a
new model of hysteresis. It turns out that the reversal points of the control
parameter (e. g., the magnetic field) are Markov points which determine the
stochastic evolution of the process. It has been shown that the branches of the
hysteresis loop are converging to fixed limit curves when the number of cyclic
back-and-forth variations of the control parameter between two consecutive
reversal points is large enough. This convergence to limit curves gives a clear
explanation of the accommodation process. The accommodated minor loops show the
return-point memory property but this property is obviously absent in the case
of non-accommodated minor loops which are not congruent and generally not
closed. In contrast to the traditional Preisach model the reversal point
susceptibilities are non-zero finite values. The stochastic model can provide a
good approximation of the Raylaigh quadratic law when the external parameter
varies between two sufficiently small values.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figure
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