687 research outputs found
Behaviour of surface-active substances at the dropping mercury electrode
It is found that the differential capacity of the dropping mercury electrode is affected mainly in two ways by added surface-active substances. At about the electrocapillary zero there is a strong lowering of the capacity due to adsorption of surface-active substances. At some higher cathodic potential there is enormous increase in differential capacity leading to a maximum and is followed by a sharp fall in the capacity; the latter is due to the desorption taking place more or less sharply at the higher cathodic potentials. The theory of the phenomenon has been formulated
Kinetics of inactivation of invertase
This article does not have an abstract
Aging of surfaces of solutions. Part VI. Surface aging of casein solutions
This article does not have an abstract
Fragment Flow and the Nuclear Equation of State
We use the Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck model with a momentum-dependent
nuclear mean field to simulate the dynamical evolution of heavy ion collisions.
We re-examine the azimuthal anisotropy observable, proposed as sensitive to the
equation of state of nuclear matter. We obtain that this sensitivity is maximal
when the azimuthal anisotropy is calculated for nuclear composite fragments, in
agreement with some previous calculations. As a test case we concentrate on
semi-central collisions at 400 MeV.Comment: 12 pages, ReVTeX 3.0. 12 Postscript figures, uuencoded and appende
Spreading of casein and derivatives
1. Casein has been spread from its aqueous solutions by different methods and it has been found that the modified band method is the most suitable for the study of protein films. 2. Effect of salts on the spreading of casein has been studied. The results obtained can be explained on the basis that two different factors, solubility and the electric charge of the protein molecule influence spreading. 3. Treatment of the protein with formaldehyde causes a decrease in spreading. Change in pH affects spreading of formolised casein to a smaller degree. 4. Sodium metaphosphate diminishes markedly the spreading of casein. Trichloracetic acid, however, has no effect. 5. Deaminisation of casein alters the spreading properties and gives unstable films on acidulated water. No films can be got on distilled water. 6. The spreading properties of an isodisperse fraction of casein have been studied. The limiting area of this fraction has been found to be of the same order as that of the original material
Neutrons from multiplicity-selected La-La and Nb-Nb collisions at 400A MeV and La-La collisions at 250A MeV
Triple-differential cross sections for neutrons from high-multiplicity La-La
collisions at 250 and 400 MeV per nucleon and Nb-Nb collisions at 400 MeV per
nucleon were measured at several polar angles as a function of the azimuthal
angle with respect to the reaction plane of the collision. The reaction plane
was determined by a transverse-velocity method with the capability of
identifying charged-particles with Z=1, Z=2, and Z > 2. The flow of neutrons
was extracted from the slope at mid-rapidity of the curve of the average
in-plane momentum vs the center-of-mass rapidity. The squeeze-out of the
participant neutrons was observed in a direction normal to the reaction plane
in the normalized momentum coordinates in the center-of-mass system.
Experimental results of the neutron squeeze-out were compared with BUU
calculations. The polar-angle dependence of the maximum azimuthal anisotropy
ratio was found to be insensitive to the mass of the colliding
nuclei and the beam energy. Comparison of the observed polar-angle dependence
of the maximum azimuthal anisotropy ratio with BUU calculations for
free neutrons revealed that is insensitive also to the
incompressibility modulus in the nuclear equation of state.Comment: ReVTeX, 16 pages, 17 figures. To be published in Physical Review
Radial Flow in Au+Au Collisions at E=0.25-1.15 A GeV
A systematic study of energy spectra for light particles emitted at
midrapidity from Au+Au collisions at E=0.25-1.15 A GeV reveals a significant
non-thermal component consistent with a collective radial flow. This component
is evaluated as a function of bombarding energy and event centrality.
Comparisons to Quantum Molecular Dynamics (QMD) and Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck
(BUU) models are made for different equations of state.Comment: 10 pages of text and 4 figures (all ps files in a uuencoded package)
Quadratic optimal functional quantization of stochastic processes and numerical applications
In this paper, we present an overview of the recent developments of
functional quantization of stochastic processes, with an emphasis on the
quadratic case. Functional quantization is a way to approximate a process,
viewed as a Hilbert-valued random variable, using a nearest neighbour
projection on a finite codebook. A special emphasis is made on the
computational aspects and the numerical applications, in particular the pricing
of some path-dependent European options.Comment: 41 page
The importance of initial-final state correlations for the formation of fragments in heavy ion collisions
Using quantum molecular dynamics simulations, we investigate the formation of
fragments in symmetric reactions between beam energies of E=30AMeV and 600AMeV.
After a comparison with existing data we investigate some observables relevant
to tackle equilibration: dsigma/dErat, the double differential cross section
dsigma/pt.dpz.dpt,... Apart maybe from very energetic E>400AMeV and very
central reactions, none of our simulations gives evidence that the system
passes through a state of equilibrium. Later, we address the production
mechanisms and find that, whatever the energy, nucleons finally entrained in a
fragment exhibit strong initial-final state correlations, in coordinate as well
as in momentum space. At high energy those correlations resemble the ones
obtained in the participant-spectator model. At low energy the correlations are
equally strong, but more complicated; they are a consequence of the Pauli
blocking of the nucleon-nucleon collisions, the geometry, and the excitation
energy. Studying a second set of time-dependent variables (radii,
densities,...), we investigate in details how those correlations survive the
reaction especially in central reactions where the nucleons have to pass
through the whole system. It appears that some fragments are made of nucleons
which were initially correlated, whereas others are formed by nucleons
scattered during the reaction into the vicinity of a group of previously
correlated nucleons.Comment: 45 pages text + 20 postscript figures Accepted for publication in
Physical Review
The Acute Effects of the Atypical Dissociative Hallucinogen Salvinorin A on Functional Connectivity in the Human Brain
Salvinorin A (SA) is a Îş-opioid receptor agonist and atypical dissociative hallucinogen found in Salvia divinorum. Despite the resurgence of hallucinogen studies, the effects of Îş-opioid agonists on human brain function are not well-understood. This placebo-controlled, within-subject study used functional magnetic resonance imaging for the first time to explore the effects of inhaled SA on strength, variability, and entropy of functional connectivity (static, dynamic, and entropic functional connectivity, respectively, or sFC, dFC, and eFC). SA tended to decrease within-network sFC but increase between-network sFC, with the most prominent effect being attenuation of the default mode network (DMN) during the first half of a 20-min scan (i.e., during peak effects). SA reduced brainwide dFC but increased brainwide eFC, though only the former effect survived multiple comparison corrections. Finally, using connectome-based classification, most models trained on dFC network interactions could accurately classify the first half of SA scans. In contrast, few models trained on within- or between-network sFC and eFC performed above chance. Notably, models trained on within-DMN sFC and eFC performed better than models trained on other network interactions. This pattern of SA effects on human brain function is strikingly similar to that of other hallucinogens, necessitating studies of direct comparisons
- …