2,349 research outputs found
Microbial activity affects sulphur in biogenic aragonite
Carbonates that exhibit obvious diagenetic alteration are usually excluded as archives in palaeoenvironmental studies. However, the potential impact of microbial alteration during early diagenesis is still poorly explored. To investigate the sensitivity of sulphur concentration, distribution, oxidation state and isotopic composition in marine aragonite to microbial alteration, Arctica islandica bivalves and Porites sp. corals were experimentally exposed to anaerobic microbial activity. The anoxic incubation media included a benthic bacterial strain Shewanella sediminis and a natural anoxic sediment slurry with a natural microbial community of unknown species. Combined fluorescence microscopy and synchrotronâbased analysis of the sulphur distribution and oxidation state enabled a comparison of organic matter and sulphur content in the two materials. Results revealed a higher proportion of reduced sulphur species and locally stronger fluorescence within the pristine bivalve shell compared to the pristine coral skeleton. Within the pristine bivalve specimen, reduced sulphur was enriched in layers along the inner shell margin. After incubation in the anoxic sediment slurry, this region revealed rustâbrown staining and a patchy S2â distribution pattern rather than S2ââlayers. Another effect on sulphur distribution was rustâbrown coloured fibres along one growth line, revealing a locally higher proportion of sulphur. The ÎŽ34S value of carbonateâassociated sulphate remained largely unaffected by both incubation media, but a lower ÎŽ34S value of waterâsoluble sulphate reflected the degradation of insoluble organic matter by microbes in both experiments. No significant alteration was detected in the coral samples exposed to microbial alteration. The data clearly identified a distinct sensitivity of organically bound sulphur in biogenic aragonite to microbial alteration even when âtraditionalâ geochemical proxies such as ÎŽ18OCARB or ÎŽ13CCARB in the carbonate didnât show any effect. Differences in the intensity of microbial alteration documented are likely due to inherent variations in the concentration and nature of original organic compositions in the samples
Measurement of the Eta Production in Proton Proton Collisions with the COSY Time of Flight Spectrometer
The reaction pp -> pp eta was measured at excess energies of 15 and 41 MeV at
an external target of the Juelich Cooler Synchrotron COSY with the Time of
Flight Spectrometer. About 25000 events were measured for the excess energy of
15 MeV and about 8000 for 41 MeV. Both protons of the process pp eta were
detected with an acceptance of nearly 100% and the eta was reconstructed by the
missing mass technique. For both excess energies the angular distributions are
found to be nearly isotropic. In the invariant mass distributions strong
deviations from the pure phase space distributions are seen.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, 4 table
Single \pi^- production in np collisions for excess energies up to 90 MeV
The quasifree reaction np\to pp\pim was studied in a kinematically complete
experiment by bombarding a liquid hydrogen target with a deuteron beam of
momentum 1.85 GeV/c and analyzing the data along the lines of the spectator
model. In addition to the three charged ejectiles the spectator proton was also
detected in the large-acceptance time-of-flight spectrometer COSY-TOF. It was
identified by its momentum and flight direction thus yielding access to the
Fermi motion of the bound neutron and to the effective neutron 4-momentum
vector which differed from event to event. A range of almost 90
MeV excess energy above threshold was covered. Energy dependent angular
distributions, invariant mass spectra as well as fully covered Dalitz plots
were deduced. Sizeable FSI effects were found as were contributions of
and partial waves. The behavior of the elementary cross section
close to threshold is discussed in view of new cross section
data. In comparison with existing literature data the results provide a
sensitive test of the spectator model.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables, submitted to EPJ
Interactions and potential implications of Plasmodium falciparum-hookworm coinfection in different age groups in south-central CĂŽte d'Ivoire
BACKGROUND: Given the widespread distribution of Plasmodium and helminth infections, and similarities of ecological requirements for disease transmission, coinfection is a common phenomenon in sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere in the tropics. Interactions of Plasmodium falciparum and soil-transmitted helminths, including immunological responses and clinical outcomes of the host, need further scientific inquiry. Understanding the complex interactions between these parasitic infections is of public health relevance considering that control measures targeting malaria and helminthiases are going to scale.METHODOLOGY: A cross-sectional survey was carried out in April 2010 in infants, young school-aged children, and young non-pregnant women in south-central CĂŽte d'Ivoire. Stool, urine, and blood samples were collected and subjected to standardized, quality-controlled methods. Soil-transmitted helminth infections were identified and quantified in stool. Finger-prick blood samples were used to determine Plasmodium spp. infection, parasitemia, and hemoglobin concentrations. Iron, vitamin A, riboflavin, and inflammation status were measured in venous blood samples.PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Multivariate regression analysis revealed specific association between infection and demographic, socioeconomic, host inflammatory and nutritional factors. Non-pregnant women infected with P. falciparum had significantly lower odds of hookworm infection, whilst a significant positive association was found between both parasitic infections in 6- to 8-year-old children. Coinfected children had lower odds of anemia and iron deficiency than their counterparts infected with P. falciparum alone.CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our findings suggest that interaction between P. falciparum and light-intensity hookworm infections vary with age and, in school-aged children, may benefit the host through preventing iron deficiency anemia. This observation warrants additional investigation to elucidate the mechanisms and consequences of coinfections, as this information could have important implications when implementing integrated control measures against malaria and helminthiases
Improved study of a possible Theta+ production in the pp -> p K0 sigma+ reaction with the COSY-TOF spectrometer
The pp -> p K0 Sigma+ reaction was investigated with the TOF spectrometer at
COSY at 3.059 GeV/c incident beam momentum. The main objective was to clarify
whether or not a narrow exotic S = +1 resnance, the Theta+ pentaquark, is
populated at 1.53 GeV/c2 in the K0 p subsystem with a data sample of much
higher statistical significance compared to the previously reported data in
this channel. An analysis of these data does not confirm the existence of the
Theta+ pentaquark. This is expressed as an upper limit for the cross section
sigma (pp -> p K0 Sigma+) < 0.15 microbarn at the 95 percent confidence level.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Women on boards and firm performance
This study investigates the financial performance of Dutch companies both with and without women on their boards. The analysis extends earlier methods used in research by Catalyst (The bottom line: corporate performance and women's representation on boards, 2007) and McKinsey (Women matter. Gender diversity, a corporate performance driver. McKinsey & Company, USA, 2007), two studies that are often cited in the literature, although, each has a number of methodological shortcomings. This article adds to the international debate, which is often normative, through examining 99 listed companies in the Dutch Female Board Index. Our results show that firms with women directors perform better than those without women on their boards
Systematic study of the pp -> pp omega reaction
A systematic study of the production of omega-mesons in
proton-proton-collisions was carried out in a kinematically complete experiment
at three excess energies(epsilon= 92, 128, 173MeV). Both protons were detected
using the large-acceptance COSY-TOF spectrometer at an external beam line at
the Cooler Synchrotron COSY at Forschungszentrum J\"ulich. The total cross
section, angular distributions of both omega-mesons and protons were measured
and presented in various reference frames such as the overall CMS, helicity and
Jackson frame. In addition, the orientation of the omega-spin and invariant
mass spectra were determined. We observe omega-production to take place
dominantly in Ss and Sp final states at epsilon = 92, 128 MeV and,
additionally, in Sd at epsilon= 173 MeV. No obvious indication of resonant
omega-production via N^*-resonances was found, as proton angular distributions
are almost isotropic and invariant mass spectra are compatible with phase space
distributions. A dominant role of ^3P_1 and ^1S_0 initial partial waves for
omega-production was concluded from the orientation of the decay plane of the
omega-meson. Although the Jackson angle distributions in the omega-p-Jackson
frame are anisotropic we argue that this is not an indication of a resonance
but rather a kinematical effect reflecting the anisotropy of the omega angular
distribution. The helicity angle distribution in the omega-p-helicity frame
shows an anisotropy which probably reflects effects of the omega angular
momenta in the final state; this observable may be, in addition to the
orientation of the omega decay plane, the most sensitive one to judge the
validity of theoretical descriptions of the production process.Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in EPJ
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