10,267 research outputs found

    Studies on the oxidation of hexamethylbenzene 1: Oxidation of hexamethylbenzene with nitric acid

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    The oxidative reaction of hexamethylbenzene (HMB) with nitric acid was studied, and the hitherto unknown polymethylbenzenepolycarboxylic acids were isolated: tetramethylphthalic anhydride, tetramethylisophthalic acid, 1,3,5-, 1,2,4- and 1,2,3-trimethylbenzenetricarboxylic acids. When HMB was warmed with 50% nitric acid at about 80 C, tetramethylphthalic anhydride and tetramethylisophthalic acid were initially produced. The continued reaction led to the production of trimethylbenzenetricarboxylic acids, but only slight amounts of dimethylbenzenetetracarboxylic acids were detected in the reaction mixture. Whereas tetramethylphthalic anydride and tetramethylisophthalic acid were obtained, pentamethylbenzoic acid, a possible precursor of them, was scarcely produced. On the other hand, a yellow material extracted with ether from the initial reaction mixture contained bis-(nitromethyl)prehnitene (CH3)4C6(CH2NO2)2, which was easily converted into the phthalic anhydride

    Gene expression profiles of hybrid necrosis in synthetic hexaploid wheat

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    The optical counterpart of an Ultra-luminous X-Ray Source in NGC 5204

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    Ultra-luminous X-Ray sources are extra-nuclear point sources in external galaxies with LX=1039L_X=10^{39}--104110^{41} erg/s and are among the most poorly understood X-ray sources. To help understand their nature, we are trying to identify their optical counterparts by combining images from the Hubble Space Telescope and the Chandra Observatory. Here we report upon the optical counterpart for the ULX in NGC 5204, which has average X-ray luminosity of 3×1039\sim3\times10^{39} erg/s and has varied by a factor of 50% over the last 10 years. A unique optical counterpart to this ULX is found by carefully comparing the Chandra ACIS images and HST WFPC2 and ACS/HRC images. The spectral energy distribution and the HST/STIS FUV spectrum of this object show that it is a B0 Ib supergiant star with peculiarities, including the λ\lambda1240 N V emission line that is uncommon in B stellar spectra but has been predicted for X-ray illuminated accretion disks and seen in some X-ray binaries. Study of its FUV spectrum leads to a binary model for this ULX in which the B0 Ib supergiant is overflowing its Roche Lobe and accreting onto the compact primary, probably a black hole. This picture predicts an orbital period of 10\sim10 days for different black hole mass, which can be tested by future observations
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