337 research outputs found
Sophorolipids: A review on production and perspectives of application in agriculture
Sophorolipids are bioactive molecules that have gained a lot of attention in the recent decades due to their unique functional properties of reducing surface and interfacial tension, emulsification and solubilization. They are mainly produced by the yeast Candida bombicola and are composed of a sugar moiety linked to a fatty acid chain. Sophorolipids are non-toxic, highly efficient and stable at extreme conditions and possess environmentally friendly characteristics over the chemical surfactants. This review is focused on the main characteristics of sophorolipids, fermentation processes, and their utilization in the agricultural field. In this context, sophorolipids are very suitable for use in agriculture, as enhancers of solubility and mobility of plant nutrients, which could result in increased plant biomass, root size and fruit yield. In addition, they could be used for biodegradation of oils, bioremediation of heavy metals in contaminated soils, and as potential biopesticides, to control phytopathogenic microorganisms in agriculture. The extensive use of chemical pesticides has led to widespread insecticide resistance and to hazards to human health and the environment due to their high toxicity. Thus, the introduction of a new biomolecule to control plant diseases and increase crop yield has become an interesting alternative. As a result of the demonstrated antimicrobial activity towards phytopathogenic bacteria and fungi, sophorolipids could be extensively explored in the agriculture field, as a sustainable and natural multifunctional agent for plant crops and soils
antagonistic activity in vitro of some meso thermo and keratinophilic fungi of wheat rice maize field soils
En suelos de cultivo de centeno, arroz y maíz, se realizaron estudios "in vitro" para observar antagonismo fúngico de 123 cepas aisladas ,que comprenden 50 especies representativas de hongos mesotermo y queratinofílicos frecuentemente presentes en estos terrenos. Este fue visualizado por el método de cultivos duales en agar contra cepas de B. subtilli
A road to hydrogenating graphene by a reactive ion etching plasma
We report the hydrogenation of single and bilayer graphene by an
argon-hydrogen plasma produced in a reactive ion etching (RIE) system.
Electronic transport measurements in combination with Raman spectroscopy are
used to link the electric mean free path to the optically extracted defect
concentration. We emphasize the role of the self-bias of the graphene in
suppressing the erosion of the akes during plasma processing. We show that
under the chosen plasma conditions the process does not introduce considerable
damage to the graphene sheet and that hydrogenation occurs primarily due to the
hydrogen ions from the plasma and not due to fragmentation of water adsorbates
on the graphene surface by highly accelerated plasma electrons. For this reason
the hydrogenation level can be precisely controlled. The hydrogenation process
presented here can be easily implemented in any RIE plasma system.Comment: 7 page
Production of serine chymotrypsin - like elastase by aspergillus fumigatus strains
Thirty-four Aspergillus fumigatus strains isolated from air, horse-hair; agricultural soil and human samples were screened to evaluate the production of elastase. Aspergillus fumigatus strains were grown in elastin solid medium, showing a widespread elastin solubilization. However, isolates from human and agricultural soil samples were found to be the highest elastase producers. Then, eight out of 34 strains were grown in four different liquid media, on wich we investigated total and specific proteolytic activity. Results from this experiments suggest that the elastase production is induced by the presence of elastin as a substrate and that the elastase is a chymotrypsin like enzyme. Inhibitory profile showed that the A.fumigatus elastase is a serine proteinase
Long period variables in 47 Tuc: direct evidence for lost mass
We have identified 22 new variable red giants in 47 Tuc and determined
periods for another 8 previously known variables. All red giants redder than
V-I_c=1.8 are variable at the limits of our detection threshold, which
corresponds to delta V ~ 0.1 mag. This colour limit corresponds to a luminosity
log L/L_sun=3.15 and it is considerably below the tip of the RGB at log
L/L_sun=3.35. Linear non-adiabatic models without mass loss on the giant branch
can not reproduce the observed PL laws for the low amplitude pulsators. Models
that have undergone mass loss do reproduce the observed PL relations and they
show that mass loss of the order of 0.3 M_sun occurs along the RGB and AGB. The
linear pulsation periods do not agree well with the observed periods of the
large amplitude Mira variables, which pulsate in the fundamental mode. The
solution to this problem appears to be that the nonlinear pulsation periods in
these low mass stars are considerably shorter than the linear pulsation periods
due to a rearrangement of stellar structure caused by the pulsation. Both
observations and theory show that stars evolve up the RGB and first part of the
AGB pulsating in low order overtone modes, then switch to fundamental mode at
high luminosities.Comment: 11 pages, accepted for publication in A&
A Quantitative Evaluation of the Galaxy Component of COSMOS and APM Catalogs
We have carried out an independent quantitative evaluation of the galaxy
component of the "COSMOS/UKST Southern Sky Object Catalogue" (SSC) and the
"APM/UKST J Catalogue" (APM). Using CCD observations our results corroborate
the accuracy of the photometry of both catalogs, which have an overall
dispersion of about 0.2 mag in the range 17 <= b_J <= 21.5. The SSC presents
externally calibrated galaxy magnitudes that follow a linear relation, while
the APM instrumental magnitudes of galaxies, only internally calibrated by the
use of stellar profiles, require second-order corrections. The completeness of
both catalogs in a general field falls rapidly fainter than b_J = 20.0, being
slightly better for APM. The 90% completeness level of the SSC is reached
between b_J = 19.5 and 20.0, while for APM this happens between b_J = 20.5 and
21.0. Both SSC and APM are found to be less complete in a galaxy cluster field.
Galaxies misclassified as stars in the SSC receive an incorrect magnitude
because the stellar ones take saturation into account besides using a different
calibration curve. In both cases, the misclassified galaxies show a large
diversity of colors that range from typical colors of early-types to those of
blue star-forming galaxies. A possible explanation for this effect is that it
results from the combination of low sampling resolutions with properties of the
image classifier for objects with characteristic sizes close to the
instrumental resolution. We find that the overall contamination by stars
misclassified as galaxies is < 5% to b_J = 20.5, as originally estimated for
both catalogs. Although our results come from small areas of the sky, they are
extracted from two different plates and are based on the comparison with two
independent datasets.Comment: 14 pages of text and tables, 8 figures; to be published in the
Astronomical Journal; for a single postscript version file see
ftp://danw.on.br/outgoing/caretta/caretta.p
A Very Intense Neutrino Super Beam Experiment for Leptonic CP Violation Discovery based on the European Spallation Source Linac: A Snowmass 2013 White Paper
Very intense neutrino beams and large neutrino detectors will be needed in
order to enable the discovery of CP violation in the leptonic sector. We
propose to use the proton linac of the European Spallation Source currently
under construction in Lund, Sweden to deliver, in parallel with the spallation
neutron production, a very intense, cost effective and high performance
neutrino beam. The baseline program for the European Spallation Source linac is
that it will be fully operational at 5 MW average power by 2022, producing 2
GeV 2.86 ms long proton pulses at a rate of 14 Hz. Our proposal is to upgrade
the linac to 10 MW average power and 28 Hz, producing 14 pulses/s for neutron
production and 14 pulses/s for neutrino production. Furthermore, because of the
high current required in the pulsed neutrino horn, the length of the pulses
used for neutrino production needs to be compressed to a few s with the
aid of an accumulator ring. A long baseline experiment using this Super Beam
and a megaton underground Water Cherenkov detector located in existing mines
300-600 km from Lund will make it possible to discover leptonic CP violation at
5 significance level in up to 50% of the leptonic Dirac CP-violating
phase range. This experiment could also determine the neutrino mass hierarchy
at a significance level of more than 3 if this issue will not already
have been settled by other experiments by then. The mass hierarchy performance
could be increased by combining the neutrino beam results with those obtained
from atmospheric neutrinos detected by the same large volume detector. This
detector will also be used to measure the proton lifetime, detect cosmological
neutrinos and neutrinos from supernova explosions. Results on the sensitivity
to leptonic CP violation and the neutrino mass hierarchy are presented.Comment: 28 page
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