2,747 research outputs found
Effect of Martian Suspended Dust on Albedo Measurements from the MGS-TES Data
Suspended dust on Mars influences albedo measurements by orbiting instruments, but not necessary the real surface albedo. The aim of this study is to characterize the role of suspended aerosols on albedo measurement by remote sensing instruments
aluminum honeycomb sandwich for protective structures of earth moving machines
Abstract The design and the assembly of the vehicles subjected to the risk of crushing from falling objects have to consider such danger and provide the operators with suitable safety systems. Generally, falling object protective structures for earth moving machines consist of vertical elements, connected by transversal elements, covered by a roof. The latter has the aim to protect the operators from falling objects and it is usually made of a steel skeleton with a metal plate. In this study, sandwich panels were proposed as technical solution for the impact protection from falling objects in earth moving machines. A very light and cheap aluminum honeycomb core (AA3003 alloy and cell size = 19 mm) was considered as design solution and was subjected to static and dynamic full-scale tests. The results were analysed according to the performance requirements of ISO 3449 standard. The experimental results confirmed that the honeycomb structures are well suitable for designing absorber devices in vehicles protective structures in order to ensure occupant safety
Tomato ionomic approach for food fortification and safety.
Food fortification is an issue of paramount of importance for people living both in developed
and in developing countries. Among substances listed as "nutriceuticals", essential minerals have
been recognised for their involvement in several healthy issues, involving all ages. In this frame,
food plants are playing a pivotal role since their capability to compartmentalise ions and proteinmetal
complexes in edible organs. Conversely, the accumulation of high metal levels in those
organs may lead to safety problems. In the recent years, thanks to the availability of new and
improved analytical apparatus in both ionic and genomic/transcrittomics areas, it is became feasible
to couple data coming from plant physiology and genetics. Ionomics is the discipline that studies
the cross-analysis of both data sets. Our group, in the frame of GenoPom project granted by MiUR,
is interested to study the ionomics of tomatoes cultivars derived by breeding programmes in which
wild relatives have been used to transfer several useful traits, such as resistance to biotic or abiotic
stresses, fruit composition and textiture, etc. The introgression of the wild genome into the
cultivated one produces new gene combinations. They might lead to the expression of some traits,
such as increased or reduced adsorption of some metals and their exclusion or loading into edible
organs, thus strongly involving the nutritional food value. Our final goal is to put together data
coming from ions homeostasis and gene expression analyses, thus obtaining an ionomic tomato
map related to ions absorption, translocation and accumulation in various plant organs, fruits
included. To follow our hypothesis, we are studying the ionome of Solanum lycopersicum cv. M82
along with 76 Introgression Lines (ILs) produced by interspecific crosses between this cultivar and
the wild species S. pennellii. These ILs are homozygous for small portions of the wild species
genome introgressed into the domesticated M82 one. They are used as a useful tool for mapping
QTL associated with many traits of interest. It is worthy to note that, until now, little information is
available on QTL for ions accumulation in tomato. Moreover, as our knowledge, effects of new
gene combinations in introgressed lines on ions uptake related to food safety have not been
extensively studied. In this presentation we show results coming from the ionome analysis, carried
out on S . lycopersicum M82 and several ILs. Plants were grown in pots in a greenhouse and
watered with deionised water Thirty day-old plants were left to grow for 15 days in the presence of
non-toxic concentration of Cd, Pb, As, Cr and Zn given combined. Leaves of all plants were then
harvested and stored at -80°C for ionome and gene expression analyses. Preliminary results of
ionome analysis of S. lycopersicum M82 and several ILs, carried out using an ICP-MS, showed that
traits correlated to toxic metals and micronutrients accumulation in apical leaves were significantly
modified in response to specific genetic backgrounds. Those results are perhaps due to the
introgression of traits linked to uptake, translocation and accumulation of useful and/or toxic metal
into plant apical leaves and to interactions of the wild type introgressed genomic regions with the
cultivated genome. Also, data are shown on the identification and isolation of Solanum gene
sequences related to ions uptake, translocation and accumulation, useful for further real-time gene
expression evaluation in both cultivated and ILs during the treatments with the above-mentioned
metals
Functional polymeric coatings for csi(Tl) scintillators
The handling of inorganic scintillators (e.g., alkali metal halides) can benefit from the availability of polymeric materials able to adhere to their surface. Polymeric materials, such as epoxy resins, can act as protective coatings, as adhesives for photodiodes to be connected with the scintillator surface, and as a matrix for functional fillers to improve the optical properties of scintillators. Here, the optical properties of two epoxy resins (E-30 by Prochima, and Technovit Epox by Heraeus Kulzer) deposited on the surface of a scintillator crystal made of CsI(Tl) were investigated, in order to improve the detection of high-energy radiation. It is found that these resins are capable of adhering to the surface of alkali metal halides. Adhesion, active at the epoxy–CsI(Tl) interface, can be explained on the basis of Coulomb forces acting between the ionic solid surface and an ionic intermediate of synthesis generated during the epoxy setting reaction. Technovit Epox showed higher transparency, and it was also functionalized by embedding white powdered pigments (PTFE or BaSO4) to achieve an optically reflective coating on the scintillator surface
Ultrasound delivery of Surface Enhanced InfraRed Absorption active gold-nanoprobes into fibroblast cells: a biological study via Synchrotron-based InfraRed microanalysis at single cell level
Ultrasound (US) induced transient membrane permeabilisation has emerged as a hugely promising tool for the delivery of exogenous vectors through the cytoplasmic membrane, paving the way to
the design of novel anticancer strategies by targeting functional nanomaterials to specific biological sites. An essential step towards this end is the detailed recognition of suitably marked nanoparticles in sonoporated cells and the investigation of the potential related biological effects. By taking advantage of Synchrotron Radiation fourier transform infrared micro-spectroscopy (SR-microftiR) in providing highly sensitive analysis at the single cell level, we studied the internalisation of a nanoprobe within fibroblasts (NIH-3T3) promoted by low-intensity US. To this aim we employed 20 nm gold nanoparticles conjugated with the IR marker 4-aminothiophenol. The significant Surface Enhanced Infrared Absorption provided by the nanoprobes, with an absorbance increase up to two orders of magnitude, allowed us to efficiently recognise their inclusion within cells. Notably, the selective and stable SR- microftiR detection from single cells that have internalised the nanoprobe exhibited clear changes in both shape and intensity of the spectral profile, highlighting the occurrence of biological effects. Flow cytometry, immunofluorescence and murine cytokinesis-block micronucleus assays confirmed the presence of slight but significant cytotoxic and genotoxic events associated with the US-nanoprobe combined treatments. our results can provide novel hints towards US and nanomedicine combined strategies for cell spectral imaging as well as drug delivery-based therapies
A new data analysis framework for the search of continuous gravitational wave signals
Continuous gravitational wave signals, like those expected by asymmetric
spinning neutron stars, are among the most promising targets for LIGO and Virgo
detectors. The development of fast and robust data analysis methods is crucial
to increase the chances of a detection. We have developed a new and flexible
general data analysis framework for the search of this kind of signals, which
allows to reduce the computational cost of the analysis by about two orders of
magnitude with respect to current procedures. This can correspond, at fixed
computing cost, to a sensitivity gain of up to 10%-20%, depending on the search
parameter space. Some possible applications are discussed, with a particular
focus on a directed search for sources in the Galactic center. Validation
through the injection of artificial signals in the data of Advanced LIGO first
observational science run is also shown.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figure
An improved algorithm for narrow-band searches of continuous gravitational waves
Continuous gravitational waves signals, emitted by asymmetric spinning
neutron stars, are among the main targets of current detectors like Advanced
LIGO and Virgo. In the case of sources, like pulsars, which rotational
parameters are measured through electromagnetic observations, typical searches
assume that the gravitational wave frequency is at a given known fixed ratio
with respect to the star rotational frequency. For instance, for a neutron star
rotating around one of its principal axis of inertia the gravitational signal
frequency would be exactly two times the rotational frequency of the star. It
is possible, however, that this assumption is wrong. This is why search
algorithms able to take into account a possible small mismatch between the
gravitational waves frequency and the frequency inferred from electromagnetic
observations have been developed. In this paper we present an improved pipeline
to perform such narrow-band searches for continuous gravitational waves from
neutron stars, about three orders of magnitude faster than previous
implementations. The algorithm that we have developed is based on the {\it
5-vectors} framework and is able to perform a fully coherent search over a
frequency band of width (Hertz) and for hundreds of spin-down
values running a few hours on a standard workstation. This new algorithm opens
the possibility of long coherence time searches for objects which rotational
parameters are highly uncertain.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, 6 tables, submitted to CQ
Genetic and Phenotypic Analysis of Meat Quality Traits in Buffalo Beef and Correlations to Carcass Composition
Abstract: Meat quality traits in buffalo beef were examined and their genetic parameters and genetic correlations to carcass composition were estimated. Dissection was performed on 40 buffalo beef carcasses and all traits recorded for each animal, as well as the weight on muscle lungissimus dorsi (LD). The temperature and pH were recorded at 1 and 48h post-slaughter. Intramuscular fat, protein, dry matter, meat colour (redness, a*, yellowness b* and lightness L*) were recorded. Hereditability estimates ranged from 0.12 and 0.99 for dissection traits and 0.61 and 0.68 for meat quality traits, which was significant for all traits except for ultimate pH and b*. Genetic correlation with L* were negative for a* and high and positive for b*. Intramuscular fat was moderate to highly genetically correlated to the a*, b* and half hot carcass weight. The not significant genetic correlation found between several of the meat quality traits, and between meat quality traits and carcasses composition traits, suggests that the meat quality traits analyzed should be implemented into breeding programme with care since their full effect on the other traits under selection cannot be accurately estimated. For more accurate estimates, further studies that especially include a large number of records for colour meat measures are needed
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