882 research outputs found
Effect of mineral fertilizer, pig manure, and Azospirillum rugosum on growth and nutrient contents of Lactuca sativa L
Benefits from the application of plant growth-promoting bacteria in agriculture largely depend on the complex interactions between several factors including the nature of fertilizers selected. This study was designed to determine the fine tuning between the inoculated bacteria and different fertilizers and their effect on the growth of lettuce plants (Lactuca sativa L.). Plant growth promotion by a novel species of the genus Azospirillum, namely A. rugosum IMMIB AFH-6, was tested by biochemical, bioassay, and greenhouse studies. The treatments used in the greenhouse study were; unfertilized control (Blank), half recommended dose of chemical fertilizer (1/2CF), full recommended dose of chemical fertilizer (1CF), pig manure fertilizer (PMF), pig manure fertilizer + half recommended dose of chemical fertilizer (PMF + 1/2CF), and pig manure fertilizer + full recommended dose of chemical fertilizer (PMF + 1CF). All these treatments when inoculated with A. rugosum IMMIB AFH-6 inoculation were, respectively, In-Blank, In-1/2CF, In-1CF, In-PMF, In-PMF + 1/2CF, and In-PMF + 1CF. Significant increase in plant biomass and shoot N, P, Ca, and Fe was shown in the In-Blank treatment. Plant growth in soil amended with PMF and A. rugosum IMMIB AFH-6 was significantly lower than in soil treated with the chemical fertilizer, but inoculation combined with chemical fertilizer significantly elevated the plant biomass. The In-PMF + 1/2CF treatment showed the highest yield. A. rugosum IMMIB AFH-6 facilitated the accumulation of trace minerals in higher concentrations when PMF was combined with 1CF. To examine the benefits of inoculation by A. rugosum IMMIB AFH-6, we have proposed a new type of data analysis which considers both biomass and nutrient content of plants. This new type of analysis has shown the importance of the mineral content of plant
Deinococcus ficus sp nov., isolated from the rhizosphere of Ficus religiosa L
A pale-pink strain (CC-FR2-10(T)) from the rhizosphere of the sacred tree Ficus religiosa L. in Taiwan was investigated by using a polyphasic taxonomic approach. The cells were Gram-positive, rod-shaped and non-spore-forming. Phylogenetic analyses using the 16S rRNA gene sequence of the isolate indicated that the organism belongs to the genus Deinococcus, the highest sequence similarities being found with Deinococcus grandis (96.1%), Deinococcus radiodurans (94.3%),Deinococcus radiopugnans (93.2%), Deinococcus indicus (93.0%), Deinococcus proteolyticus (92.5%), Deinococcus murrayi (92.4%) and Deinococcus geothermalis (90.7%). The DNA-DNA relatedness with respect to D. grandis DSM 3963(T) was 17.9%. Chemotaxonomic data revealed that strain CC-FR2-10(T) contains only menaquinone MK-8 as the respiratory quinone, unknown phosphoglycolipids as the predominant polar lipids and 16:1 omega 7c, 17:1 omega 8c and 17:1 omega 9c iso as the predominant fatty acids. The biochemical and chemotaxonomic properties demonstrate that strain CC-FR2-10(T) represents a novel species, for which the name Deinococcus ficus sp. nov. is proposed. The type strain is CC-FR2-10(T) (= CCUG 53391(T) = CIP 108832(T))
Transfer of Flexibacter sancti, Flexibacter filiformis, Flexibacter japonensis and Cytophaga arvensicola to the genus Chitinophaga and description of Chitinophaga skermanii sp nov
Analysis of the 16S rRNA gene sequences of species currently assigned to the genus Flexibacter has shown extensive intrageneric phylogenetic heterogeneity. It has been shown in previous studies that the species [Flexibacter] sancti, [Flexibacter] filiformis and [Flexibacter] japonensis were most closely related to Chitinophaga pinensis. In addition, [Cytophaga] arvensicola and species of the genus Terrimonas also clustered into this phylogenetic group. Although the similarities of 16S rRNA gene sequences were low (88.5-96.4%), there is no evidence for clear phenotypic differences between these organisms that justify assignment to different genera. A proposal is made to transfer these species to the genus Chitinophaga as Chitinophaga sancti comb. nov., Chitinophaga filiformis comb. nov., Chitinophaga japonenis comb. nov. and Chitinophaga arvensicola comb. nov. on the basis of phylogenetic and phenotypic data. Furthermore, a novel species is described within this genus, Chitinophaga skermanii sp. nov., with strain CC-SG1B(T) (=CCUG 52510(T)=CIP 109140(T)) as the type strain
Weak-Localization in Chaotic Versus Non-Chaotic Cavities: A Striking Difference in the Line Shape
We report experimental evidence that chaotic and non-chaotic scattering
through ballistic cavities display distinct signatures in quantum transport. In
the case of non-chaotic cavities, we observe a linear decrease in the average
resistance with magnetic field which contrasts markedly with a Lorentzian
behavior for a chaotic cavity. This difference in line-shape of the
weak-localization peak is related to the differing distribution of areas
enclosed by electron trajectories. In addition, periodic oscillations are
observed which are probably associated with the Aharonov-Bohm effect through a
periodic orbit within the cavities.Comment: 4 pages revtex + 4 figures on request; amc.hub.94.
Phases of QCD, Thermal Quasiparticles and Dilepton Radiation from a Fireball
We calculate dilepton production rates from a fireball adapted to the
kinematical conditions realized in ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions over
a broad range of beam energies. The freeze-out state of the fireball is fixed
by hadronic observables. We use this information combined with the initial
geometry of the collision region to follow the space-time evolution of the
fireball. Assuming entropy conservation, its bulk thermodynamic properties can
then be uniquely obtained once the equation of state (EoS) is specified. The
high-temperature (QGP) phase is modelled by a non-perturbative quasiparticle
model that incorporates a phenomenological confinement description, adapted to
lattice QCD results. For the hadronic phase, we interpolate the EoS into the
region where a resonance gas approach seems applicable, keeping track of a
possible overpopulation of the pion phase space. In this way, the fireball
evolution is specified without reference to dilepton data, thus eliminating it
as an adjustable parameter in the rate calculations. Dilepton emission in the
QGP phase is then calculated within the quasiparticle model. In the hadronic
phase, both temperature and finite baryon density effects on the photon
spectral function are incorporated. Existing dilepton data from CERES at 158
and 40 AGeV Pb-Au collisions are well described, and a prediction for the
PHENIX setup at RHIC for sqrt(s) = 200 AGeV is given.Comment: 31 pages, 15 figures, final versio
The Surprising Transparency of the sQGP at LHC
We present parameter-free predictions of the nuclear modification factor,
R_{AA}^pi(p_T,s), of high p_T pions produced in Pb+Pb collisions at
sqrt{s}_{NN}=2.76 and 5.5 ATeV based on the WHDG/DGLV
(radiative+elastic+geometric fluctuation) jet energy loss model. The initial
quark gluon plasma (QGP) density at LHC is constrained from a rigorous
statistical analysis of PHENIX/RHIC pi^0 quenching data at sqrt{s}_{NN}=0.2
ATeV and the charged particle multiplicity at ALICE/LHC at 2.76 ATeV. Our
perturbative QCD tomographic theory predicts significant differences between
jet quenching at RHIC and LHC energies, which are qualitatively consistent with
the p_T-dependence and normalization---within the large systematic
uncertainty---of the first charged hadron nuclear modification factor,
R^{ch}_{AA}, data measured by ALICE. However, our constrained prediction of the
central to peripheral pion modification, R^pi_{cp}(p_T), for which large
systematic uncertainties associated with unmeasured p+p reference data cancel,
is found to be over-quenched relative to the charged hadron ALICE R^{ch}_{cp}
data in the range 5<p_T<20 GeV/c. The discrepancy challenges the two most basic
jet tomographic assumptions: (1) that the energy loss scales linearly with the
initial local comoving QGP density, rho_0, and (2) that \rho_0 \propto
dN^{ch}(s,C)/dy is proportional to the observed global charged particle
multiplicity per unit rapidity as a function of sqrt{s} and centrality class,
C. Future LHC identified (h=pi,K,p) hadron R^h_{AA} data (together with precise
p+p, p+Pb, and Z boson and direct photon Pb+Pb control data) are needed to
assess if the QGP produced at LHC is indeed less opaque to jets than predicted
by constrained extrapolations from RHIC.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Single Top Production as a Window to Physics Beyond the Standard Model
Production of single top quarks at a high energy hadron collider is studied
as a means to identify physics beyond the standard model related to the
electroweak symmetry breaking. The sensitivity of the -channel mode,
the -channel -gluon fusion mode, and the \tw mode to various possible
forms of new physics is assessed, and it is found that the three modes are
sensitive to different forms of new physics, indicating that they provide
complimentary information about the properties of the top quark. Polarization
observables are also considered, and found to provide potentially useful
information about the structure of the interactions of top.Comment: References added and minor discussion improvements; results
unchanged; Version to be published in PR
Electroweak Radiative Corrections to Neutral-Current Drell-Yan Processes at Hadron Colliders
We calculate the complete electroweak O(alpha) corrections to pp, pbar p ->
l+l- X (l=e, mu) in the Standard Model of electroweak interactions. They
comprise weak and photonic virtual one-loop corrections as well as real photon
radiation to the parton-level processes q bar q -> gamma,Z -> l+l-. We study in
detail the effect of the radiative corrections on the l+l- invariant mass
distribution, the cross section in the Z boson resonance region, and on the
forward-backward asymmetry, A_FB, at the Fermilab Tevatron and the CERN Large
Hadron Collider. The weak corrections are found to increase the Z boson cross
section by about 1%, but have little effect on the forward-backward asymmetry
in the Z peak region. Threshold effects of the W box diagrams lead to
pronounced effects in A_FB at m(l+l-) approx 160 GeV which, however, will be
difficult to observe experimentally. At high di-lepton invariant masses, the
non-factorizable weak corrections are found to become large.Comment: Revtex3 file, 39 pages, 2 tables, 12 figure
Asteroseismology of Eclipsing Binary Stars in the Kepler Era
Eclipsing binary stars have long served as benchmark systems to measure
fundamental stellar properties. In the past few decades, asteroseismology - the
study of stellar pulsations - has emerged as a new powerful tool to study the
structure and evolution of stars across the HR diagram. Pulsating stars in
eclipsing binary systems are particularly valuable since fundamental properties
(such as radii and masses) can determined using two independent techniques.
Furthermore, independently measured properties from binary orbits can be used
to improve asteroseismic modeling for pulsating stars in which mode
identifications are not straightforward. This contribution provides a review of
asteroseismic detections in eclipsing binary stars, with a focus on space-based
missions such as CoRoT and Kepler, and empirical tests of asteroseismic scaling
relations for stochastic ("solar-like") oscillations.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables; Proceedings of the AAS topical
conference "Giants of Eclipse" (AASTCS-3), July 28 - August 2 2013, Monterey,
C
ZMapp reinforces the airway mucosal barrier against ebola virus
Filoviruses, including Ebola, have the potential to be transmitted via virus-laden droplets deposited onto mucus membranes. Protecting against such emerging pathogens will require understanding how they may transmit at mucosal surfaces and developing strategies to reinforce the airway mucus barrier. Here, we prepared Ebola pseudovirus (with Zaire strain glycoproteins) and used high-resolution multiple-particle tracking to track the motions of hundreds of individual pseudoviruses in fresh and undiluted human airway mucus isolated from extubated endotracheal tubes. We found that Ebola pseudovirus readily penetrates human airway mucus. Addition of ZMapp, a cocktail of Ebola-binding immunoglobulin G antibodies, effectively reduced mobility of Ebola pseudovirus in the same mucus secretions. Topical delivery of ZMapp to the mouse airways also facilitated rapid elimination of Ebola pseudovirus. Our work demonstrates that antibodies can immobilize virions in airway mucus and reduce access to the airway epithelium, highlighting topical delivery of pathogen-specific antibodies to the lungs as a potential prophylactic or therapeutic approach against emerging viruses or biowarfare agents
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