312 research outputs found

    Review of Pioneers of Quantum Chemistry

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    There is little doubt that reading books other than textbooks represents an important component of maintaining knowledge for many chemistry educators. Nonetheless, with 30 or more books a year being produced by the ACS Symposium Series alone, how can choices be made about what merits reading time? Certainly, the presentation of current research trends that might influence the chemistry taught in courses represents one metric, but there are many additional worthy books. In terms of potential teaching treasures to be mined, time spent reading history of science presents a strong possibility

    Metodologia para infestação artificial de ovos de Diatraea saccharalis(Fabr., 1794) em cana-de-açĂșcar visando estudos com Trichogramma spp

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    Techniques were carried out for sugarcane artificial infestation with Diatraea saccharalis (Fabr., 1794) eggs for Trichogramma studies purposes. Tests were conducted under greenhouse conditions to evaluate a suitable method to obtain D. saccharalis eggs on sugarcane leaves, in order to get maximum parasitism by Trichogramma distinctum Zucchi, 1988 and T. galloi Zucchi, 1988. Two different methods were tested for each Trichogramma species: a) pin attachment of small pieces of paper containing D. saccharalis eggs to sugarcane leaves and b) D. saccharalis couples maintained in cages on the sugarcane plants for direct oviposition on the leaves. Meanwhile, a technique was developed to estimate the number of D. saccharalis eggs obtained from artificial infestations, which consisted of placing a translucid and reticulum printed plastic sheet on the cluster surface area. Thus, the number of eggs per cluster was estimated through regression models developed according to the cluster size. A reduction in parasitism (%) was observed for both Trichogramma species being studied when eggs of D. saccharalis were offered on paper. Therefore, confinement of D. saccharalis couples on the plant was the most suitable method to infest sugarcane with eggs for Trichogramma studies. The technique developed to count eggs of D. saccharalis has proved to be useful for artificial infestations under field conditions.A presente pesquisa teve por objetivo desenvolver tĂ©cnicas para infestação artificial de cana-de-açĂșcar com ovos de Diatraea saccharalis (Fabr.,1794) visando aos estudos com Trichogramma spp. Avaliou-se a forma mais adequada de obtenção de ovos de D. saccharalis na planta, estudando-se o parasitismo por Trichogramma distinctum Zucchi, 1988 e T. galloi Zucchi, 1988 sobre ovos colocados em papel sulfite e sobre ovos obtidos na propria folha de cana-de-açĂșcar, atravĂ©s do confinamento de casais de broca sobre a mesma. Paralelamente, desenvolveu-se uma tĂ©cnica para se estimar o nĂșmero de ovos obtidos nas infestaçÔes artificiais, que consistia na colocação de uma folha transparente e quadriculada sobre a postura, avaliando-se o nĂșmero de "quadrados" correspondentes Ă  ĂĄrea da mesma. 0 numero de ovos era entĂŁo estimado atravĂ©s de equaçÔes de regressĂŁo obtidas em função do tamanho da postura. A utilização de papel sulfite na infestação de ovos de D. saccharalis diminuiu o parasitismo por T. galloi e T. distinctum, sendo o confinamento de casais da broca-da-cana sobre a folha de cana-de-açĂșcar, a forma mais adequada para obtenção dos ovos desta praga, nos estudos com estes parasitĂłides. A metodologia desenvolvida para contagem de ovos de D. saccharalis mostrou-se valida para as infestaçÔes artificiais em campo

    Meissner effect, Spin Meissner effect and charge expulsion in superconductors

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    The Meissner effect and the Spin Meissner effect are the spontaneous generation of charge and spin current respectively near the surface of a metal making a transition to the superconducting state. The Meissner effect is well known but, I argue, not explained by the conventional theory, the Spin Meissner effect has yet to be detected. I propose that both effects take place in all superconductors, the first one in the presence of an applied magnetostatic field, the second one even in the absence of applied external fields. Both effects can be understood under the assumption that electrons expand their orbits and thereby lower their quantum kinetic energy in the transition to superconductivity. Associated with this process, the metal expels negative charge from the interior to the surface and an electric field is generated in the interior. The resulting charge current can be understood as arising from the magnetic Lorentz force on radially outgoing electrons, and the resulting spin current can be understood as arising from a spin Hall effect originating in the Rashba-like coupling of the electron magnetic moment to the internal electric field. The associated electrodynamics is qualitatively different from London electrodynamics, yet can be described by a small modification of the conventional London equations. The stability of the superconducting state and its macroscopic phase coherence hinge on the fact that the orbital angular momentum of the carriers of the spin current is found to be exactly ℏ/2\hbar/2, indicating a topological origin. The simplicity and universality of our theory argue for its validity, and the occurrence of superconductivity in many classes of materials can be understood within our theory.Comment: Submitted to SLAFES XX Proceeding

    Elucidating the Influence of the Activation Energy on Reaction Rates by Simulations Based on a Simple Particle Model

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    An application for visualizing the dynamic properties of an equimolar binary mixture of isotropic reactive particles is presented. By introducing a user selectable choice for the activation energy, the application is useful to demonstrate qualitatively that the reaction rate depends on the above choice and on temperature. The application is based on a 2D realistic dynamic model where atoms move because of their thermal energies and the trajectories are determined by solving numerically Newton’s laws according to a Molecular Dynamics (MD) scheme. Collisions are monitored as time progresses, and every time the collision energy is larger than the selected activation energy, a reactive event occurs. By examining the time evolution of the configurations, it is possible to observe that the number of reactive collisions is always smaller than the total number of collisions. However, the number of reactive events increases on raising the temperature and/or by decreasing the activation energy. The above observations, as well as more quantitative analyses of the simulation data, are useful in elucidating the connections existing among particle kinetic energy, temperature, and activation energy of the reaction. The application can be used at different levels of detail and in different instruction levels. Qualitative visual observations of the progress of the reaction are suitable at all levels of instruction. Systematic investigations on the effect of changes of temperature and activation energy, suitable for senior high school and college courses and useful to gain insight into kinetic models and Arrhenius’ law, are also reported

    Phylogenomics reveals the history of host use in mosquitoes

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    Mosquitoes have profoundly affected human history and continue to threaten human health through the transmission of a diverse array of pathogens. The phylogeny of mosquitoes has remained poorly characterized due to difficulty in taxonomic sampling and limited availability of genomic data beyond the most important vector species. Here, we used phylogenomic analysis of 709 single copy ortholog groups from 256 mosquito species to produce a strongly supported phylogeny that resolves the position of the major disease vector species and the major mosquito lineages. Our analyses support an origin of mosquitoes in the early Triassic (217 MYA [highest posterior density region: 188–250 MYA]), considerably older than previous estimates. Moreover, we utilize an extensive database of host associations for mosquitoes to show that mosquitoes have shifted to feeding upon the blood of mammals numerous times, and that mosquito diversification and host-use patterns within major lineages appear to coincide in earth history both with major continental drift events and with the diversification of vertebrate classes. © 2023, Springer Nature Limited

    Thermoelectric effect in very thin film Pt∕Au thermocouples

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    The thickness dependence of the thermoelectric power of Pt films of variable thickness on a reference Au film has been determined for the case when the Pt film thickness, t, is not large compared to the charge carrier mean free path, {ell}, that is, t/{ell}. Pt film thicknesses down to 2.2 nm were investigated. We find that {Delta}S{sub F} = S{sub B}-S{sub F} (where S{sub B} and S{sub F} are the thermopowers of the Pt bulk and film, respectively) does not vary linearly as 1/t as is the case for thin film thermocouples when the film thickness is large compared to the charge carrier mean free path
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