118 research outputs found

    1863-03-21 James D. Maxfield requests promotion

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    https://digitalmaine.com/cw_me_16th_regiment_corr/1204/thumbnail.jp

    Glycerol and Glycerol/water Gasification for the Decarbonisation of Industrial Heat

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    This research is aimed at using Gaseq equilibrium flame chemistry modelling, to demonstrate that wet waste crude glycerol could be air gasified to produce a Biomass Gasification Gas (BGG) for direct applications as a burner fuel for the decarbonisation of industrial heat. Glycerol is a typical biomass fuel in its composition and it is similar to the distillery waste pot ale (PA), which is about 87% water and 13% pot ale syrup (PAS). Both of these low-cost waste bio-fuels are not easy to burn in conventional burners due to their high viscosity, high boiling point and high water content. There is much agricultural waste and other industrial bio-liquid wastes that are also high in water content, including distillery waste draff, spent grains from the barley malting process and farming manure. Draff is typically 75% water. Consequently, this work investigated the influence of water on BGG composition for wet bio-waste, using glycerol/water mixtures as the demonstration of wet bio-waste. Gasification of biomass can be aided by adding steam to the air gasifier, due to the water gas shift reaction that reacts with steam and CO to produce more hydrogen. However, if the steam generator is a separate plant there are energy efficiency problems. In the present work, the gasifier is heated directly by an inline burner operating very lean and this will vaporise the water in the biomass and produce steam. The burner temperature controls the gasifier operating temperature and the yield of CO and H2, as well as moving the peak energy content of the BGG to richer gasification equivalence ratio. Water in the fuel up to 60% was predicted to still achieve gasification, but the impact on equilibrium hydrogen was only a small increase with a larger decrease in CO. With BGG gas combustion in a boiler it would be possible to recover the heat of vaporisation of water through flue gas condensation and recovery of the heat using burner inlet air cooling

    Renewable Energy from Whisky Distillery By-products

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    Whisky distillery by-products draff and pot ale (PA) have an energy content that potentially can be used to decarbonize distillery heating. Draff consists of wet grains which are the residue of the first stage of whisky production. PA is the liquid residue that results from the first stage of the distillation at malt distilleries. The yearly production of distillery by-products was estimated to have increased by 27,000 tonnes (dry) in 2014. It is not feasible to store distillery by-products because of their bio-chemical nature and high volumes. Therefore, distillery by-products need to be removed from the site as they are produced. The most economical way to dispose of distillery by-products is by using them as feed stock for bioenergy. Some distilleries send draff and pot ale to AD plants, but to be useful they have to be dried and the use of fossil fuels for this makes the process uneconomical and the carbon emissions have to be deducted from any green biogas that is produced. This work showed for the first time that distillery draff could be air-gasified. The restricted ventilation Cone calorimeter method was used. An FTIR that was calibrated for 60 species was used to carry out the speciation of the product gases. The experimentally determined optimum gasification equivalence ratio (Ø) and gasification thermal efficiency for the gasification of draff were 4.5 and 90% respectively. Keywords : Draff, gasification, decarbonisation, equivalence ratio

    Measurement of the production of a W boson in association with a charm quark in pp collisions at √s = 7 TeV with the ATLAS detector

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    The production of a W boson in association with a single charm quark is studied using 4.6 fb−1 of pp collision data at s√ = 7 TeV collected with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. In events in which a W boson decays to an electron or muon, the charm quark is tagged either by its semileptonic decay to a muon or by the presence of a charmed meson. The integrated and differential cross sections as a function of the pseudorapidity of the lepton from the W-boson decay are measured. Results are compared to the predictions of next-to-leading-order QCD calculations obtained from various parton distribution function parameterisations. The ratio of the strange-to-down sea-quark distributions is determined to be 0.96+0.26−0.30 at Q 2 = 1.9 GeV2, which supports the hypothesis of an SU(3)-symmetric composition of the light-quark sea. Additionally, the cross-section ratio σ(W + +cÂŻÂŻ)/σ(W − + c) is compared to the predictions obtained using parton distribution function parameterisations with different assumptions about the s−sÂŻÂŻÂŻ quark asymmetry

    Felony Murder and Capital Punishment: an Examination of the Deterrence Question

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    A proper test of the deterrent effect of the death penalty must consider capital homicides. However, the criterion variable in most investigations has been total homicides—most of which bear no legal or theoretical relationship to capital punishment. To address this fundamental data problem, this investigation used Federal Bureau of Investigation data for 1976–1987 to examine the relationship between capital punishment and felony murder, the most common type of capital homicide. We conducted time series analyses of monthly felony murder rates, the frequency of executions, and the amount and type of television coverage of executions over the period. The analyses revealed occasional departures (for vehicle theft and narcotics killings) from the null hypotheses. However, on balance, and in line with the vast majority of capital punishment studies, this investigation found no consistent evidence that executions and the television coverage they receive are associated significantly with rates for total, index, or different types of felony murder

    High-Throughput Screening of Australian Marine Organism Extracts for Bioactive Molecules Affecting the Cellular Storage of Neutral Lipids

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    Mammalian cells store excess fatty acids as neutral lipids in specialised organelles called lipid droplets (LDs). Using a simple cell-based assay and open-source software we established a high throughput screen for LD formation in A431 cells in order to identify small bioactive molecules affecting lipid storage. Screening an n-butanol extract library from Australian marine organisms we identified 114 extracts that produced either an increase or a decrease in LD formation in fatty acid-treated A431 cells with varying degrees of cytotoxicity. We selected for further analysis a non-cytotoxic extract derived from the genus Spongia (Heterofibria). Solvent partitioning, HPLC fractionation and spectroscopic analysis (NMR, MS) identified a family of related molecules within this extract with unique structural features, a subset of which reduced LD formation. We selected one of these molecules, heterofibrin A1, for more detailed cellular analysis. Inhibition of LD biogenesis by heterofibrin A1 was observed in both A431 cells and AML12 hepatocytes. The activity of heterofibrin A1 was dose dependent with 20 ”M inhibiting LD formation and triglyceride accumulation by ∌50% in the presence of 50 ”M oleic acid. Using a fluorescent fatty acid analogue we found that heterofibrin A1 significantly reduces the intracellular accumulation of fatty acids and results in the formation of distinct fatty acid metabolites in both cultured cells and in embryos of the zebrafish Danio rerio. In summary we have shown using readily accessible software and a relatively simple assay system that we can identify and isolate bioactive molecules from marine extracts, which affect the formation of LDs and the metabolism of fatty acids both in vitro and in vivo

    Actin Polymerization Controls the Organization of WASH Domains at the Surface of Endosomes

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    Sorting of cargoes in endosomes occurs through their selective enrichment into sorting platforms, where transport intermediates are generated. The WASH complex, which directly binds to lipids, activates the Arp2/3 complex and hence actin polymerization onto such sorting platforms. Here, we analyzed the role of actin polymerization in the physiology of endosomal domains containing WASH using quantitative image analysis. Actin depolymerization is known to enlarge endosomes. Using a novel colocalization method that is insensitive to the heterogeneity of size and shape of endosomes, we further show that preventing the generation of branched actin networks induces endosomal accumulation of the WASH complex. Moreover, we found that actin depolymerization induces a dramatic decrease in the recovery of endosomal WASH after photobleaching. This result suggests a built-in turnover, where the actin network, i.e. the product of the WASH complex, contributes to the dynamic exchange of the WASH complex by promoting its detachment from endosomes. Our experiments also provide evidence for a role of actin polymerization in the lateral compartmentalization of endosomes: several WASH domains exist at the surface of enlarged endosomes, however, the WASH domains coalesce upon actin depolymerization or Arp2/3 depletion. Branched actin networks are thus involved in the regulation of the size of WASH domains. The potential role of this regulation in membrane scission are discussed

    Measurements of branching fraction ratios and CP asymmetries in B+/- ->D_CP K+/- decays in hadron collisions

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    We reconstruct B+/- -> D K+/- decays in a data sample collected by the CDF II detector at the Tevatron collider corresponding to 1 fb-1 of integrated luminosity. We select decay modes where the D meson decays to either K- pi+ (flavor eigenstate) or K- K+, pi- pi+ (CP-even eigenstates), and measure the direct CP asymmetry A_CP+ = 0.39 +/- 0.17(stat) +/- 0.04(syst), and the double ratio of CP-even to flavor eigenstate branching fractions R_CP+ = 1.30 +/- 0.24(stat) +/- 0.12(syst). These measurements will improve the determination of the CKM angle gamma. They are performed here for the first time using data from hadron collisions.We reconstruct B±→DK± decays in a data sample collected by the CDF II detector at the Tevatron collider corresponding to 1  fb-1 of integrated luminosity. We select decay modes where the D meson decays to either K-π+ (flavor eigenstate) or K-K+, π-π+ (CP-even eigenstates), and measure the direct CP asymmetry ACP+=0.39±0.17(stat)±0.04(syst), and the double ratio of CP-even to flavor eigenstate branching fractions RCP+=1.30±0.24(stat)±0.12(syst). These measurements will improve the determination of the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa angle Îł. They are performed here for the first time using data from hadron collisions.Peer reviewe

    Search for Supersymmetry with Gauge-Mediated Breaking in Diphoton Events with Missing Transverse Energy at CDF II

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    accepted to Phys. Rev. LettWe present the results of a search for supersymmetry with gauge-mediated breaking and \NONE\to\gamma\Gravitino in the γγ\gamma\gamma+missing transverse energy final state. In 2.6±\pm0.2 \invfb of ppˉp{\bar p} collisions at s\sqrt{s}==1.96 TeV recorded by the CDF II detector we observe no candidate events, consistent with a standard model background expectation of 1.4±\pm0.4 events. We set limits on the cross section at the 95% C.L. and place the world's best limit of 149\gevc on the \none mass at τχ~10\tau_{\tilde{\chi}_1^0}$We present the results of a search for supersymmetry with gauge-mediated breaking and χ˜10→γG˜ in the γγ+missing transverse energy final state. In 2.6±0.2  fb-1 of pp̅ collisions at √s=1.96  TeV recorded by the CDF II detector we observe no candidate events, consistent with a standard model background expectation of 1.4±0.4 events. We set limits on the cross section at the 95% C.L. and place the world’s best limit of 149  GeV/c2 on the χ˜10 mass at τχ˜10â‰Ș1  ns. We also exclude regions in the χ˜10 mass-lifetime plane for τχ˜10â‰Č2  ns.Peer reviewe

    Measurement of the angular coefficients in Z-boson events using electron and muon pairs from data taken at √s=8 TeV with the ATLAS detector

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    The angular distributions of Drell-Yan charged lepton pairs in the vicinity of the Z-boson mass peak probe the underlying QCD dynamics of Z-boson production. This paper presents a measurement of the complete set of angular coefficients A0−7 describing these distributions in the Z-boson Collins-Soper frame. The data analysed correspond to 20.3 fb−1 of pp collisions at s√=8s=8 TeV, collected by the ATLAS detector at the CERN LHC. The measurements are compared to the most precise fixed-order calculations currently available (O(α2s))(O(αs2)) and with theoretical predictions embedded in Monte Carlo generators. The measurements are precise enough to probe QCD corrections beyond the formal accuracy of these calculations and to provide discrimination between different parton-shower models. A significant deviation from the (O(α2s))(O(αs2)) predictions is observed for A0 − A2. Evidence is found for non-zero A5,6,7, consistent with expectations
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