1,088 research outputs found
Relation between TMAOase activity and content of formaldehyde in fillet minces and bellyflap minces from gadoid fishes
Minced fish is a significant component of a number of frozen fishery products like fish fingers, cakes and patties. Predominately minced fish is produced from gadoid species (Alaska pollack, cod, saithe, hake and others) possessing the enzyme trimethylamine oxide demethylase (TMAOase, E.C. 4.1.2.32) (Rehbein and Schreiber 1984). TMAOase catalyses the degradation of trimethylamine oxide (TMAO) to formaldehyde (FA) and dimethylamine (DMA), preferentially during frozen storage of products (Hultin 1992). In most gadoid species light muscle contains only low
activity of TMAOase, the activity of red muscle and bellyflaps being somewhat higher. In contrast, the TMAOase
activity in blood, kidney and other tissues, residues of which may contaminate minced fish flesh, may be higher for
several orders of magnitude (Rehbein and Schreiber 1984)
Molecular Networks and Macromolecular Molar Mass Distributions for Preliminary Characterization of Danish Craft Beers
Beer is one of the most widely consumed beverages containing up to 200,000 unique small molecules and a largely uncharacterized macromolecular and particulate space. The chemical profiling of beer is difficult due to its complex nature. To address this issue, we have used various state-of-the-art methods to determine the physicochemical characteristics of beer. Specifically, we have successfully generated an LC-MS-based molecular network with minimal sample preparation to profile indoles in beer and confirmed their presence using 1H-NMR. In addition, we have identified different macromolecular signatures in beer of different colors by utilizing AF4-MALS. These preliminary findings lay the foundation for further research on the physicochemical nature of beer
Adsorbate-induced surface stress, surface strain and surface reconstruction : S on Cu(100) and Ni(100)
Density functional theory (DFT) calculations have been applied to investigate the known difference in behaviour of S adsorption on Cu(100) and Ni(100). Both surfaces form a 0.25 ML (2 × 2) adsorption phase, but while at higher coverage a 0.5 ML c(2 × 2) phase forms on Ni(100), on Cu(100) only a reconstructed 0.47 ML (√17 × √17)R14° structure occurs. Calculations of the energy, structure, and surface stress of (2 × 2) and c(2 × 2) phases on both substrates show there is an energy advantage on both surfaces to form the higher coverage phase, but that both surfaces show local surface strain around the S atoms in the (2 × 2) phase, a phenomenon previously investigated only on Cu(100). More than forty different structural models of the Cu(100)(√17 × √17)R14°-S phase have been investigated. The pseudo-(100)c(2 × 2) structure previously proposed, containing 16 Cu adatoms per unit mesh in the reconstructed layer, is found to be less energetically favourable than many other possible structures, even after taking account of local structural relaxations. Significantly more favourable is a structure with 12 Cu adatoms per (√17 × √17)R14° unit mesh, previously proposed on the basis of scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM), and found to yield simulated STM images in good agreement with experiment. This model has all S atoms in local 4-fold coordinated hollows relative to the Cu atoms below, half being located above Cu adatoms with the remainder lying above the underlying outermost substrate layer. However, an alternative model with only 4 Cu adatoms and with half the S atoms at 3-fold coordinated sites on the periphery of the Cu adatom cluster, has an even lower energy and gives simulated STM images in excellent agreement with experiment
An interpretation for the entropy of a black hole
We investigate the meaning of the entropy carried away by Hawking radiations
from a black hole. We propose that the entropy for a black hole measures the
uncertainty of the information about the black hole forming matter's
precollapsed configurations, self-collapsed configurations, and inter-collapsed
configurations. We find that gravitational wave or gravitational radiation
alone cannot carry all information about the processes of black hole
coalescence and collapse, while the total information locked in the hole could
be carried away completely by Hawking radiation as tunneling
Thermodynamic gauge-theory cascade
It is proposed that the cooling of a thermalized SU() gauge theory can be
formulated in terms of a cascade involving three effective theories with
successively reduced (and spontaneously broken) gauge symmetries, SU()
U(1) Z. The approach is based on the assumption that away
from a phase transition the bulk of the quantum interaction inherent to the
system is implicitly encoded in the (incomplete) classical dynamics of a
collective part made of low-energy condensed degrees of freedom. The properties
of (some of the) statistically fluctuating fields are determined by these
condensate(s). This leads to a quasi-particle description at tree-level. It
appears that radiative corrections, which are sizable at large gauge coupling,
do not change the tree-level picture qualitatively. The thermodynamic
self-consistency of the quasi-particle approach implies nonperturbative
evolution equations for the associated masses. The temperature dependence of
these masses, in turn, determine the evolution of the gauge coupling(s). The
hot gauge system approaches the behavior of an ideal gas of massless gluons at
asymptotically large temperature. A negative equation of state is possible at a
stage where the system is about to settle into the phase of the (spontaneously
broken) Z symmetry.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures, 1 reference added, minor corrections in text,
errors in Sec. 3.2 corrected, PRD versio
BPS String Solutions in Non-Abelian Yang-Mills Theories and Confinement
Starting from the bosonic part of N=2 Super QCD with a 'Seiberg-Witten' N=2
breaking mass term, we obtain string BPS conditions for arbitrary semi-simple
gauge groups. We show that the vacuum structure is compatible with a symmetry
breaking scheme which allows the existence of Z_k-strings and which has
Spin(10) -> SU(5) x Z_2 as a particular case. We obtain BPS Z_k-string
solutions and show that they satisfy the same first order differential
equations as the BPS string for the U(1) case. We also show that the string
tension is constant, which may cause a confining potential between monopoles
increasing linearly with their distance.Comment: 11 pages, Latex. Minor changes to the text. Final version to appear
in Phys. Rev.
Abnormal number of Nambu-Goldstone bosons in the color-asymmetric 2SC phase of an NJL-type model
We consider an extended Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model including both (q \bar q)-
and (qq)-interactions with two light-quark flavors in the presence of a single
(quark density) chemical potential. In the color superconducting phase of the
quark matter the color SU(3) symmetry is spontaneously broken down to SU(2). If
the usual counting of Goldstone bosons would apply, five Nambu-Goldstone (NG)
bosons corresponding to the five broken color generators should appear in the
mass spectrum. Unlike that expectation, we find only three gapless diquark
excitations of quark matter. One of them is an SU(2)-singlet, the remaining two
form an SU(2)-(anti)doublet and have a quadratic dispersion law in the small
momentum limit. These results are in agreement with the Nielsen-Chadha theorem,
according to which NG-bosons in Lorentz-noninvariant systems, having a
quadratic dispersion law, must be counted differently. The origin of the
abnormal number of NG-bosons is shown to be related to a nonvanishing
expectation value of the color charge operator Q_8 reflecting the lack of color
neutrality of the ground state. Finally, by requiring color neutrality, two
massive diquarks are argued to become massless, resulting in a normal number of
five NG-bosons with usual linear dispersion laws.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, revtex
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