157 research outputs found

    Aristotle’s scientific contributions to the classification, nomenclature and distribution of marine organisms

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    The biological works of the Greek philosopher Aristotle include a significant amount of information on marine animals. This study is an overview of Aristotle’s scientific contribution to the knowledge of marine biodiversity and specifically to taxonomic classification, nomenclature and distribution of marine species. Our results show that Aristotle’s approach looks remarkably familiar to present day marine biologists since: (i) although not directly aiming at it, he gave a taxonomic classification of marine animals, which includes physical groups ranked on three levels at least; (ii) most of Aristotle’s marine “major groups” correspond to taxa of the order rank in Linnaeus’s classification and to taxa of the class rank in the current classification; (iii) a positive correlation was found between the number of taxa per group identified in Aristotle’s writings and those described by Linnaeus; (iv) Aristotle’s classification system exhibits similarities with the current one regarding the way taxa are distributed to higher categories; (v) a considerable number of Aristotle’s marine animal names have been used for the creation of the scientific names currently in use; (vi) he was the first to give an account of Mediterranean marine fauna, focusing on the Aegean Sea and adjacent areas. In view of the above, we suggest that the foundations of marine taxonomy as laid down by Aristotle are still echoing today

    Pressure screening in the interior of primary shells in double-wall carbon nanotubes

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    The pressure response of double-wall carbon nanotubes has been investigated by means of Raman spectroscopy up to 10 GPa. The intensity of the radial breathing modes of the outer tubes decreases rapidly but remain observable up to 9 GPa, exhibiting a behavior similar (but less pronounced) to that of single-wall carbon nanotubes, which undergo a shape distortion at higher pressures. In addition, the tangential band of the external tubes broadens and decreases in amplitude. The corresponding Raman features of the internal tubes appear to be considerably less sensitive to pressure. All findings lead to the conclusion that the outer tubes act as a protection shield for the inner tubes whereas the latter increase the structural stability of the outer tubes upon pressure application.Comment: PDF with 15 pages, 3 figures, 1 table; submitted to Physical Review

    Raman spectra of MgB2 at high pressure and topological electronic transition

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    Raman spectra of the MgB2 ceramic samples were measured as a function of pressure up to 32 GPa at room temperature. The spectrum at normal conditions contains a very broad peak at ~590 cm-1 related to the E2g phonon mode. The frequency of this mode exhibits a strong linear dependence in the pressure region from 5 to 18 GPa, whereas beyond this region the slope of the pressure-induced frequency shift is reduced by about a factor of two. The pressure dependence of the phonon mode up to ~ 5GPa exhibits a change in the slope as well as a "hysteresis" effect in the frequency vs. pressure behavior. These singularities in the E2g mode behavior under pressure support the suggestion that MgB2 may undergo a pressure-induced topological electronic transition.Comment: 2 figure

    Genetic vs community diversity patterns of macrobenthic species: preliminary results from the lagoonal ecosystem

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    1 - The use of molecular data derived from multispecies assemblages in order to test ecological theory has only recently been introduced in the scientific literature.2 - As a first step, we compared patterns of abiotic environment, polychaeta distribution and their genetic diversity in five lagoon ecosystems in Greece. Our results confirm the hypothesis that higher genetic diversity is expected in the populations of the species occurring in the transitional waters rather than of those occurring in the marine environment.3 - Patterns derived from the polychaete community level and from the mitochondrial DNA (16S rRNA) obtained from Nephtys hombergii and Hediste diversicolor showed convergence, indicating the potential use of molecular matrices as surrogates in community analysis.4 - Finally, the high correlation between the genetic diversity pattern of H. diversicolor and the phosphorus concentration in the sediments may imply the broadening of the hierarchic-response-tostress hypothesis towards lower than species level

    muSR study of carbon-doped MgB2 superconductors

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    The evolution of the superconducting properties of the carbon-doped MgB2 superconductors, MgB(2-x)Cx (x= 0.02, 0.04, 0.06) have been investigated by the transverse-field muon spin rotation (TF-muSR) technique. The low-temperature depolarisation rate, sigma(0) at 0.6 T which is proportional to the second moment of the field distribution of the vortex lattice decreases monotonically with increasing electron doping and decreasing Tc. In addition, the temperature dependence of sigma(T) has been analysed in terms of a two-gap model. The size of the two superconducting gaps decreases linearly as the carbon content increases, while the doping effect is more pronounced for the smaller gap related to the 3D pi-sheets of the Fermi surface.Comment: 7 pages, 2 Figures, 1 Table, Europhys. Lett. in pres

    Elucidation of One Step Synthesis of PEGylated CuFe Bimetallic Nanoparticles. Antimicrobial Activity of CuFe@PEG vs Cu@PEG

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    There is a growing field of research on the physicochemical properties of bimetallic nanoparticles (BMNPs) and their potential use in different applications. Meanwhile, their antimicrobial activity is scarcely reported, although BMNPs can potentially achieve unique chemical transformations and synergetic effects can be presented. Towards this direction a reproducible simple hybrid polyol process under moderate temperature solvothermal conditions has been applied for the isolation of non-oxide contaminated bimetallic CuFe nanoparticles (NPs). 1,2-propylene glycol (PG), tetraethylene glycol (TEG) and polyethylene glycol (PEG 8000), that exhibit different physicochemical properties, have been utilized to regulate the size, structure, composition and the surface chemistry of NPs. The BMNPs were found to be of small crystalline size, 30–45 nm, and high hydrophilicity, different wt% percentage of organic coating and variable hydrodynamic size and surface charge. The antimicrobial activity of the BMNPs was evaluated against the bacterial strains B. subtilis, E. coli and fungus S. cerevisiae. The IC50 values for CuFe NPs were found significantly lower compared with Cu NPs of the same size, revealing an enhancement in the antimicrobial activity when iron and copper coexist in the crystal structure. The reactive oxygen species (ROS) production was measured intracellularly and extracellularly by the nitroblue tetrazolium assay in the fungal cultures. No extracellular ROS were measured suggesting that both CuFe and Cu NPs enter the fungal cells during the incubation, also verified by optical imaging of the fungal cells in the presence of NPs. Higher ROS concentrations were generated intracellularly for CuFe NPs supporting different red/ox reaction mechanisms
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