6,841 research outputs found
Spectroscopic observations of comet Kohoutek (1973f), 2
Spectroscopic observations of comet Kohoutek at the Asiago Astrophysical Observatory are described. Spectra cover six nights before perihelion and five nights after perihelion. The spectra of the coma and tail of comet Kohoutek are characterized by fairly strong, asymmetric H2O(+) emissions in the red and the near infrared spectral regions and by the appearance of the 01 forbidden lines at 6300-6364 A, already at heliocentric distance r=1.55 A.U. These peculiarities suggest that some differences in chemical abundances or in physical conditions exist between comet Kohoutek and other comets
Pumping characteristics of the St707 non-evaporable getter (Zr 70-V 24.6-Fe 5.4 wt%)
The room temperature pumping speeds of the St707 Non-Evaporable Getter (NEG) have been measured both for individual gases and for gas mixtures as a function of the quantities of gas pumped. The interesting feature of this NEG consists in its moderately low activation temperature. Therefore particular attention has been devoted to defining the optimum temperature and duration of the activation process to obtain the highest possible pumping speed in a given practical situation. It has been found that heating at 400° C for about one hour or at 350° C for one day, results in pumping speeds of about 1000 ls-1m-1 for H2 , 2000 ls-1m-1 for CO and 450 ls-1m-1 for N2, values very close to those obtained after activation at the higher temperature of 740° C. The St707 NEG is therefore particularly suitable for passive activation during bakeout of stainless steel vacuum systems, avoiding the need of electrical insulation and feedthroughs which are mandatory when activation is carried out by resistive heating
The peculiar behaviour of the 5780 and 5797 DIBs in HD25137
The interstellar environment close to the high latitude molecular cloud Lynds 1569 (L1569, Lynds 1962), also known as MBM 18 (Magnani, Blitz and Mundy, 1985), has been analyzed by Penrase et al. (1990) and Penrase (1993). Their observations of the CH, CH(sup+), and CN molecular features, are consistent with a region having a high molecular and reduced dust content. They also observed the background star HD 24263- located 8 degrees far from the center of L1569 - reporting a CH rich line of sight and the presence of two intervening clouds from a sodium lines spectra. The infrared excess which has been revealed by the IRAS survey at 12 microns might suggest the presence of PAH's molecules, the well know candidate for the Unidentified Infrared Bands and Diffuse Interstellar Bands. This interesting scenario led to the investigation of the behavior of the diffuse interstellar bands toward HD 25137, which is supposed to be a background object for L1569 (Penrase et al., 1990); as well as the field star HD 24263. As part of a wider observational program devoted to study the HLC's special environments, the observations of the diffuse interstellar bands (DIB's) at 5780 and 5797 lambda lambda in the direction of the two above mentioned stars, HD 24263 and HD 25137 are presented here
A brittle fracture criterion for PMMA V-notches tensile specimens based on a length-enriched eXtended Finite Element approach
A criterion for the prediction of the static failure loads in tensile PMMA specimens with sharp notches is presented. The proposed criterion is based on a regularized version of the eXtended Finite Element Method (XFEM), which has been previously applied to concrete-like materials. The main feature of the proposed approach is that the cracking process is not treated as a local process, but it is modeled by assuming that macro-cracks stem from the interaction of micro-cracks within a finite width process zone. The case of a brittle materials with thin process zone is tackled by assuming one layer of enriched finite elements. Preliminary results concerning PMMA specimens subjected to mode-one loading are presented
Properties of some conformal field theories with M-theory duals
By studying classes of supersymmetric solutions of D=11 supergravity with
AdS_5 factors, we determine some properties of the dual four-dimensional N=1
superconformal field theories. For some explicit solutions we calculate the
central charges and also the conformal dimensions of certain chiral primary
operators arising from wrapped membranes. For the most general class of
solutions we show that there is a consistent Kaluza-Klein truncation to minimal
D=5 gauged supergravity. This latter result allows us to study some aspects of
the dual strongly coupled thermal plasma with a non-zero R-charge chemical
potential and, in particular, we show that the ratio of the shear viscosity to
the entropy density has the universal value of 1/4 pi.Comment: Consistent truncation extended to include fermions. Reference added.
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Protein kinase CK2 is widely expressed in follicular, Burkitt and diffuse large B-cell lymphomas and propels malignant B-cell growth.
Serine-threonine kinase CK2 is highly expressed and pivotal for survival and proliferation in multiple myeloma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia and mantle cell lymphoma. Here, we investigated the expression of \u3b1 catalytic and \u3b2 regulatory CK2 subunits by immunohistochemistry in 57 follicular (FL), 18 Burkitt (BL), 52 diffuse large B-cell (DLBCL) non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL) and in normal reactive follicles. In silico evaluation of available Gene Expression Profile (GEP) data sets from patients and Western blot (WB) analysis in NHL cell-lines were also performed. Moreover, the novel, clinical-grade, ATP-competitive CK2-inhibitor CX-4945 (Silmitasertib) was assayed on lymphoma cells. CK2 was detected in 98.4% of cases with a trend towards a stronger CK2\u3b1 immunostain in BL compared to FL and DLBCL. No significant differences were observed between Germinal Center B (GCB) and non-GCB DLBCL types. GEP data and WB confirmed elevated CK2 mRNA and protein levels as well as active phosphorylation of specific targets in NHL cells. CX-4945 caused a dose-dependent growth-arresting effect on GCB, non-GCB DLBCL and BL cell-lines and it efficiently shut off phosphorylation of NF-\u3baB RelA and CDC37 on CK2 target sites. Thus, CK2 is highly expressed and could represent a suitable therapeutic target in BL, FL and DLBCL NHL
Baryonic Generating Functions
We show how it is possible to use the plethystic program in order to compute
baryonic generating functions that count BPS operators in the chiral ring of
quiver gauge theories living on the world volume of D branes probing a non
compact CY manifold. Special attention is given to the conifold theory and the
orbifold C^2/Z_2 times C, where exact expressions for generating functions are
given in detail. This paper solves a long standing problem for the
combinatorics of quiver gauge theories with baryonic moduli spaces. It opens
the way to a statistical analysis of quiver theories on baryonic branches.
Surprisingly, the baryonic charge turns out to be the quantized Kahler modulus
of the geometry.Comment: 44 pages, 7 figures; fonts change
Weeds for weed control: Asteraceae essential oils as natural herbicides.
The aim of this study was to test the botanical family of
Asteraceae as a source of natural herbicides. Twenty
Asteraceae species were collected during flowering time
and evaluated in terms of the yield and quality of essential
oils (germination inhibition and growth of weeds).
Half the species showed a sufficient yield of essential oil
(from about 0.1% to 1.43%) when testing these phytochemicals
in vitro as germination inhibitors of two typical
weeds, Amaranthus retroflexus and Setaria viridis.
Despite the higher tolerance of S. viridis, the concentration
of 100 lg L
1 of essential oils of the two Artemisia
species and Xanthium strumarium could totally inhibit
germination. In addition, at 10 lg L
1, the same essential
oils showed full inhibition of A. retroflexus seeds. A
comparison of their effectiveness at suboptimal doses
led to a further selection of the most promising sources
of essential oils. After their chemical characterisation,
the essential oils were tested as post-emergence herbicides
on seedlings of the above-cited weeds. After spraying
the weeds at different concentrations (10, 100 and
1000 mg L
1) during two different phenological stages
of weed seedlings (cotyledons and the third true leaf),
the essential oils of Artemisia annua and X. strumarium
showed the best performance. The essential oils of
X. strumarium were then tested again on both weeds to
monitor the dynamics of plant injury. A reduction in
plant fresh weight (about 20%–30% after 10 days) and
chlorophyll content (destroyed, after the same amount
of time) was found, thus confirming the total and rapid
effectiveness of these essential oils. In summary, A. annua
and X. strumarium have elicited considerable agronomic
interest and appear to be suitable as a source of
essential oils to act as natural herbicides
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