9,013 research outputs found

    Photosynthetic Gas Exchange in the Closed Ecosystem for Space. Phase II, Part III. Screening for Thermophilic Algae and Mutation Studies

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    An algal screening and mutation study was undertaken to obtain algae superior to Chlorella 71105 for use in a photosynthetic gas exchanger. Of the forty-four thermophilic algae studied, eighteen appeared to have growth rates as great as Chlorella 71105. Optimization of the physical and chemical environments of these strains is recommended as a way to further improve growth rates and concomitant oxygen production. The mutation study revealed that Chlorella 71105 is relatively resistant to germicidal ultraviolet radiation. No high temperature mutants of Chlorella 71105 were found

    A Sunyaev-Zel'dovich map of the massive core in the luminous X-ray cluster RXJ1347-1145

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    We have mapped the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich decrement (hereafter SZ) in the direction of the most luminous X-ray cluster known to date, RXJ1347-1145, at z=0.451. This has been achieved with an angular resolution of about 23'' using the Diabolo photometer running on the IRAM 30 meter radio telescope. We present here a map of the cluster central region at 2.1mm. The Comptonization parameter towards the cluster center, \yc=(12.7^{+2.9}_{-3.1})\times 10^{-4}, corresponds to the deepest SZ decrement ever observed. Using the gas density distribution derived from X-ray data, this measurement implies a gas temperature \te=16.2 \pm 3.8 keV. The resulting total mass of the cluster is, under hydrostatic equilibrium, M(r<1Mpc)=(1.0±0.3)×1015M⊙M(r<1 Mpc)=(1.0 \pm 0.3) \times 10^{15} M_\odot for a corresponding gas fraction fgas(r<1Mpc)=(19.5±5.8)f_{gas}(r<1 Mpc)=(19.5 \pm 5.8)%.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter

    Can Economic Crises Be Good for Your Diet?

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    With fortuitously timed data – collected before, during and after a major macro-financial crisis in Bulgaria – we revisit several hypotheses in the economics and nutritional literature related to the tendency of households to smooth their nutritional status over time. We explore the dietary impact of both falling real incomes in the context of hyperinflation and crisis and changing relative prices and the changing responsiveness of different groups of people to these incomes and prices over six year of fundamental structural reforms of the economy. Our results highlight large and dramatically changing food and nutrient elasticities, which challenge the perception of household ability to smooth their nutrient stream during economic crises and transitions.crisis, diet, fluctuation, health, nutrition

    Understanding of matrix embedding: a theoretical spectroscopic study of CO interacting with Ar clusters, surfaces and matrices

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    Through benchmark studies, we explore the performance of PBE density functional theory, with and without Grimme's dispersion correction (DFT-D3), in predicting spectroscopic properties for molecules interacting with rare gas matrices. Here, a periodic-dispersion corrected model of matrix embedding is used for the first time. We use PBE-D3 to determine the equilibrium structures and harmonic vibrational frequencies of carbon monoxide in interaction with small Ar clusters (CO–Arn, n = 1, 2, 3), with an Ar surface and embedded in an Ar matrix. Our results show a converging trend for both the vibrational frequencies and binding energies when going from the gas-phase to a fully periodic approach describing CO embedding in Ar. This trend is explained in terms of solvation effects, as CO is expected to alter the structure of the Ar matrix. Due to a competition between CO–Ar interactions and Ar–Ar interactions, perturbations caused by the presence of CO are found to extend over several Å in the matrix. Accordingly, it is mandatory to fully relax rare gas matrices when studying their interaction with embedded molecules. Moreover, we show that the binding energy per Ar is almost constant (∌−130 cm−1 atom−1) regardless of the environment of the CO molecule. Finally, we show that the concentration of the solute into the cold matrix influences the spectroscopic parameters of molecules embedded into cold matrices. We suggest hence that several cautions should be taken before comparing these parameters to gas phase measurements and to theoretical data of isolated species

    Formulas for Continued Fractions. An Automated Guess and Prove Approach

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    We describe a simple method that produces automatically closed forms for the coefficients of continued fractions expansions of a large number of special functions. The function is specified by a non-linear differential equation and initial conditions. This is used to generate the first few coefficients and from there a conjectured formula. This formula is then proved automatically thanks to a linear recurrence satisfied by some remainder terms. Extensive experiments show that this simple approach and its straightforward generalization to difference and qq-difference equations capture a large part of the formulas in the literature on continued fractions.Comment: Maple worksheet attache

    The vibrational dynamics of vitreous silica: Classical force fields vs. first-principles

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    We compare the vibrational properties of model SiO_2 glasses generated by molecular-dynamics simulations using the effective force field of van Beest et al. (BKS) with those obtained when the BKS structure is relaxed using an ab initio calculation in the framework of the density functional theory. We find that this relaxation significantly improves the agreement of the density of states with the experimental result. For frequencies between 14 and 26 THz the nature of the vibrational modes as determined from the BKS model is very different from the one from the ab initio calculation, showing that the interpretation of the vibrational spectra in terms of calculations using effective potentials can be very misleading.Comment: 7 pages of Latex, 4 figure

    Simulation of guard ring influence on the performance of ATLAS pixel detectors for inner layer replacement

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    Electric field magnitude and depletion in the bulk of silicon pixel detectors, which influence its breakdown behaviour, was studied using finite-element method to solve the drift-diffusion equation coupled to Poisson's equation in a simplified two dimensional model of the ATLAS pixel sensor. Based on this model, the number of guard rings and dead edges width were modified to investigate their influence on the detector's depletion at the edge and on its internal electrical field distribution. Final ly, the 3 level model was implemented into the simulation to study the behaviour of such detector under different level of irradiation
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