4,196 research outputs found

    Editorial. The sustainability challenge. New perspectives on the use of microbial approaches and their impact on food and feed

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    Building a more resilient food chain, reducing food loss and waste, improving food production practices and increasing plant-based food consumption are some of the fundamental actions suggested in The Sustainable Development Goals adopted by the United Nations Member States in 20151. The objective of this special issue was to explore how the use of microorganisms as direct or indirect sources of transformation could contribute to these sustainability practices. In this context, the following strategies have been presented: (i) valorization of side-streams and underutilized food resources via fermentation, (ii) improvement of the efficiency of bioprocesses for the food and feed industry, and (iii) understanding and applying the microbiome as a resource to improve the agro-food system

    Characterization and Performance of PADME's Cherenkov-Based Small-Angle Calorimeter

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    The PADME experiment, at the Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati (LNF), in Italy, will search for invisible decays of the hypothetical dark photon via the process e+eγAe^+e^-\rightarrow \gamma A', where the AA' escapes detection. The dark photon mass range sensitivity in a first phase will be 1 to 24 MeV. We report here on measurement and simulation studies of the performance of the Small-Angle Calorimeter, a component of PADME's detector dedicated to rejecting 2- and 3-gamma backgrounds. The crucial requirement is a timing resolution of less than 200 ps, which is satisfied by the choice of PbF2_2 crystals and the newly released Hamamatsu R13478UV photomultiplier tubes (PMTs). We find a timing resolution of 81 ps (with double-peak separation resolution of 1.8 ns) and a single-crystal energy resolution of 5.7%/E\sqrt{E} with light yield of 2.07 photo-electrons per MeV, using 100 to 400 MeV electrons at the Beam Test Facility of LNF. We also propose the investigation of a two-PMT solution coupled to a single PbF2_2 crystal for higher-energy applications, which has potentially attractive features.Comment: 12 pages, 19 figures. v2: added section on radiation damage studie

    Status and Plans for the Array Control and Data Acquisition System of the Cherenkov Telescope Array

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    The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) is the next-generation atmospheric Cherenkov gamma-ray observatory. CTA will consist of two installations, one in the northern, and the other in the southern hemisphere, containing tens of telescopes of different sizes. The CTA performance requirements and the inherent complexity associated with the operation, control and monitoring of such a large distributed multi-telescope array leads to new challenges in the field of the gamma-ray astronomy. The ACTL (array control and data acquisition) system will consist of the hardware and software that is necessary to control and monitor the CTA arrays, as well as to time-stamp, read-out, filter and store -at aggregated rates of few GB/s- the scientific data. The ACTL system must be flexible enough to permit the simultaneous automatic operation of multiple sub-arrays of telescopes with a minimum personnel effort on site. One of the challenges of the system is to provide a reliable integration of the control of a large and heterogeneous set of devices. Moreover, the system is required to be ready to adapt the observation schedule, on timescales of a few tens of seconds, to account for changing environmental conditions or to prioritize incoming scientific alerts from time-critical transient phenomena such as gamma ray bursts. This contribution provides a summary of the main design choices and plans for building the ACTL system.Comment: In Proceedings of the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC2015), The Hague, The Netherlands. All CTA contributions at arXiv:1508.0589

    Effects of the littlest Higgs model with T-parity on Higgs boson production at high energy e+ee^{+}e^{-} colliders

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    The Higgs boson production processes e+eZHe^{+}e^{-}\to ZH, e+eνeˉνeHe^{+}e^{-}\to \bar{\nu_{e}}\nu_{e}H, and e+ettˉHe^{+}e^{-}\to t\bar{t}H are very important for studying Higgs boson properties and further testing new physics beyond the standard model(SMSM) in the high energy linear e+ee^{+}e^{-} collider(ILCILC). We estimate the contributions of the littlest Higgs model with T-parity(LHTLHT model) to these processes and find that the LHTLHT model can generate significantly corrections to the production cross sections of these processes. We expect the possible signals of the LHTLHT model can be detected via these processes in the future ILCILC experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, references adde

    Production of Scalar Higgs Bosons Associated with Z0Z^0 Boson at the CERN LHC in the MSSM

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    We investigate the associated production of a scalar Higgs boson (h0h^0 or H0H^0) with Z0Z^0 boson in the minimal supersymmetric extension of the standard model (MSSM) at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC), including the contributions from bbˉb\bar{b} annihilation at the tree level and gluon fusion via quark and squark loops. We quantitatively analyze the total cross sections in the mSUGRA scenario. For the production of h0h^0 associated with Z0Z^0, we find that in most of the parameter regions, the contributions from initial bbˉb\bar{b} and gggg are at a level of one percent of the total cross section and therefore almost insignificant. For the production of H0H^0 associated with Z0Z^0, the contributions from bbˉb\bar{b} channel can be much larger than those from light quark initial states. Especially for large tanβ\tan\beta, the increment can reach about one order of magnitude. Thus, when considering the associated production of H0H^0 and Z0Z^0 at the LHC, the contributions from bbˉb\bar{b} annihilation should be taken into account seriously.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, RevTeX4; one reference added, minor changes, conclusion unchanged; Journal-ref adde
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