19,609 research outputs found
Development of a mass spectrometer system for the measurement of inert gases in meteorites
The study of the inert gases in meteorites has provided many clues as to the origin and evolution of the solar system. Particularly crucial and complex are the gases krypton and xenon. To accurately measure the isotopic compositions of these gases requires a mass spectrometer of high sensitivity and resolution. A previously unused and largely untested mass spectrometer system was brought to the point where it was ready for routine sample analyses. This involved, among other things, focusing the ion beam for optimal peak shape and sensitivity, documenting the instrument's response to a series of characteristic tests such as multplier gain checks, and interfacing the instrument to a computer to run the sample analyses. Following this testing and setting up, three iron meteorite samples were to be analyzed for argon, krypton, and xenon. The three samples were shown in prior work to possibly contain primordial heavy inert gases. Although these analyses have not yet been carried out, it is anticipated that they will be completed in the near future
Numerical Computation of the Effective Potential and Renormalization
We present a novel way to compute the one-loop ring-improved effective
potential numerically, which avoids the spurious appearence of complex
expressions and at the same time is free from the renormalization ambiguities
of the self-consistent approaches, based on the direct application of
Schwinger-Dyson type equations to the masses.Comment: 8 pages, LATEX, 2 postscript figures available. e-mail :
[email protected] , submitted to Mod. Phys. Letter
Gauge-Higgs unification on the brane
From the quantum field theory point of view, matter and gauge fields are
generally expected to be localised around branes or topological defects
occurring in extra dimensions. Here I discuss a simple scenario where, by
starting with a five dimensional SU(3) gauge theory, we end up with several 4-D
parallel branes with localised "chiral" fermions and gauge fields to them. I
will show that it is possible to reproduce the electroweak model confined to a
single brane, allowing a simple and geometrical approach to the fermion
hierarchy problem. Some nice results of this construction are: Gauge and Higgs
fields are unified at the 5-D level; and new particles are predicted: a
left-handed neutrino of zero hypercharge, and a massive vector field coupling
together the new neutrino to other left-handed leptons.Comment: Contribution to the proceedings of the RTN workshop "The Quest for
Unification: Theory Confronts Experiment", Corfu, Greece, Sept 11-18, 200
nZVI particles production for the remediation of soil and water polluted by inorganic Lead
The present study deals with experiments of Pb removal by
nano-Zero Valent Iron (nZVI) in aqueous solution and in
soil. Synthetic Pb aqueous solutions were treated by nZVI,
at a fixed Pb concentration of 100 mg L-1
, varying
nanoparticles initial concentration in the range between 27
and 270 mg nZVI L-1
. A kinetic study was carried out: Pb
adsorption followed a first order kinetic, and half life times
between 11 and 26.66 min were determined. Soil samples
were first characterized, and Pb speciation and
concentration by sequential extractions was determined.
Adsorption tests were then carried out at three selected
amounts of nZVI, to allow Pb stabilization in the soil
matrix. To evaluate the treatment efficiency, sequential
extractions were also performed on the treated samples
Hexavalent chromium reduction in manganese-rich soils by ZVI nanoparticles: the influence of natural organic matter and manganese oxides
Hexavalent chromium reduction by nano Zero-Valent Iron
(nZVI) has been proved fast and efficient, mainly due to
nanoparticles large specific surface area and high chemical
reactivity. In this work the influence of natural organic
matter and manganese oxide was investigated, through a
set of experimental tests carried out on a real polluted soils
naturally rich in manganese. Soil samples were
characterized in terms of initial concentration of Cr,
Cr(VI), Mn, pH, and TOC and three different nZVI
solutions were used (120, 360 and 600 mg nZVI L-1
) for
the treatment. At selected interval times (0, 5, 10, 15, 30,
60, 120 min) a slurry sample was filtered and Cr(VI)
residual concentration and pH were measured. The same
procedure was carried out on an artificial spiked soil,
characterized by a similar TOC and poor of Mn.
Furthermore the two soils were mixed with different
amounts of leonardite, to evaluate the influence of NOM
on treatment efficiency
Continuous production of KNO3 nanosalts for the fertilization of soil by means of a Spinning Disk Reactor
In this study the production of high soluble material
nanoparticles was successfully performed by means of a
spinning disk reactor (SDR). This result was possible due
to the use of a potassium nitrate saturated solution, which
was continuously recycled back to the reactor after
removal of the produced solid nanoparticles.
Several process configurations were checked. It appears to
be mandatory that the recycled saturated solution must be
free of residual nanoparticles since their presence would
lead to heterogeneous nucleation. In this respect, a small
amount of nitric acid was added to the stream to permit the
residual nanoparticle dissolution. Moreover, a spiral
wounded piping system was developed in order to increase
both the contact time and the mixing condition of the
saturated solution with the added acid before entering the
SD
Normal form decomposition for Gaussian-to-Gaussian superoperators
In this paper we explore the set of linear maps sending the set of quantum
Gaussian states into itself. These maps are in general not positive, a feature
which can be exploited as a test to check whether a given quantum state belongs
to the convex hull of Gaussian states (if one of the considered maps sends it
into a non positive operator, the above state is certified not to belong to the
set). Generalizing a result known to be valid under the assumption of complete
positivity, we provide a characterization of these Gaussian-to-Gaussian (not
necessarily positive) superoperators in terms of their action on the
characteristic function of the inputs. For the special case of one-mode
mappings we also show that any Gaussian-to-Gaussian superoperator can be
expressed as a concatenation of a phase-space dilatation, followed by the
action of a completely positive Gaussian channel, possibly composed with a
transposition. While a similar decomposition is shown to fail in the multi-mode
scenario, we prove that it still holds at least under the further hypothesis of
homogeneous action on the covariance matrix
Quantum synchronization as a local signature of super- and subradiance
We study the relationship between the collective phenomena of super and
subradiance and spontaneous synchronization of quantum systems. To this aim we
revisit the case of two detuned qubits interacting through a pure dissipative
bosonic environment, which contains the minimal ingredients for our analysis.
By using the Liouville formalism, we are able to find analytically the ultimate
connection between these phenomena. We find that dynamical synchronization is
due to the presence of long standing coherence between the ground state of the
system and the subradiant state. We finally show that, under pure dissipation,
the emergence of spontaneous synchronization and of subradiant emission occur
on the same time scale. This reciprocity is broken in the presence of dephasing
noise.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
On the origin of <i>Halipeurus heraldicus</i> on Round Island petrels: cophylogenetic relationships between petrels and their chewing lice
Lice phylogenetic relationships have often been used to elucidate host relationships and vice versa. In this study, we investigate the louse genus Halipeurus which parasitizes bird hosts in the families Procellariidae, Hydrobatidae and Pelecanoididae. The presence of two lice species on Pterodroma arminjoniana in different breeding grounds (Halipeurus heraldicus on Round Island, off Mauritius in the Indian Ocean and Halipeurus kermadecensis on Trindade Island in the Atlantic Ocean) has led to some confusion in the distribution of Pt. arminjoniana and its close relatives Pt. heraldica and Pt. neglecta. By using a cophylogenetic approach that incorporates uncertainties in phylogenetic reconstructions, we show significant overall coevolution between Halipeurus lice and their hosts. However, the study also indicates that the presence of H. heraldicus on Pt. arminjoniana and Pt. neglecta on Round Island and on Pt. heraldica on Gambier Island are the result of a host switch whereas H. kermadecensis is the ancestral parasite of Pt. arminjoniana. This suggests that H. kermadecensis was lost during or after colonisation of Round Island by Pt. arminjoniana. We conclude that cophylogenetic analyses are central to inferring the evolutionary history and biogeographical patterns of hosts and their parasites
About the limits of microfiltration for the purification of wastewaters
In the past, microfiltration was widely used as a
pretreatment step for wastewater stream purification
purposes. Experiences performed during the last years
shows that microfiltration fails to maintain its
performances for longer period of times. Many case studies
demonstrate that the adoption of microfiltration leads to
the failure of the overall process; the severe fouling of the
microfiltration membranes leads to high operating costs
with the consequence to make the treatment of the
wastewater economically unfeasible. The boundary flux
concept is a profitable tool to analyze fouling issues in
membrane processes. The boundary flux value separates an
operating region characterized by reversible fouling
formation from irreversible one. Boundary flux values are
not content, but function of time, as calculated by the subboundary
fouling rate value. The knowledge of both
parameters may fully describe the membrane performances
in sub-boundary operating regimes. Many times, for
wastewater purification purposes, ultrafiltration
membranes appear to be suits better to the needs, even they
exhibit lower permeate fluxes compared to microfiltration.
Key to this choice is that ultrafiltration appears to resist
better to fouling issues, with a limited reduction of the
performances as a function of time. In other words, it
appears that ultrafiltration exhibit higher boundary flux
values and lower sub-boundary fouling rates. In this work,
after a brief introduction to the boundary flux concept, for
many different wastewater streams (more than 20,
produced by the most relevant industries in food,
agriculture, manufacture, pharmaceutics), the boundary
flux and sub-boundary fouling rate values of different
microfiltration and ultrafiltration membranes will be
discussed and compared. The possibility to successfully
use microfiltration as a pretreatment step strongly depends
on the feedstock characteristics and, in detail, on the
particle size of the suspended matter. In most cases,
microfiltration demonstrates to be technically unsuitable
for pretreatment purposes of many wastewater streams; as
a consequence, the adoption of microfiltration pushes
operators to exceed boundary flux conditions, therefore
triggering severe fouling, that leads to economic
unfeasibility of the process in long terms
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