43 research outputs found
Combined Effects of LED Lights and chicken manure on Neochloris oleoabundans Growth
In this study a photobioreactor prototype is presented for the culture growth of microalgae
model organism Neochloris oleoabundans by using chicken manure waste as feedstock
along with the optimum combination of led light wavelengths and light intensity.
Particularly interesting results are observed on the strains fed by chicken manure medium
under the proper combination of red and blue LED light illumination, the microalgal
growth resulted comparable with the strains fed by the costly commercial microalgal
growth medium (BG 11 medium). Cell concentration, optical density, growth rate, cell
size, total lipid and photosynthetic pigment content have been monitored during a
time-course experiment. The data suggest that there are difficulties due to white light
diffusion into the dark chicken medium, which leads to a generally lower intensity
scattered along all wavelengths; blue or combined red and blue lights resulted in a higher
irradiation density, affecting microalgae cell growth
Nanovesicular Mediation of the GutâBrain Axis by Probiotics: Insights into Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Background: Dysbiosis, influenced by poor diet or stress, is associated with various
systemic diseases. Probiotic supplements are recognized for stabilizing gut microbiota and alleviating gastrointestinal issues, like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). This study focused on the tryptophan pathways, which are important for the regulation of serotonin levels, and on host physiology and behavior regulation. Methods: Nanovesicles were isolated from the plasma of subjects with chronic diarrhea, both before and after 60 days of consuming a probiotic mix (AcronelleÂź, Bromatech S.r.l., Milan, Italy). These nanovesicles were assessed for the presence of Tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase 2 (TDO 2). Furthermore, the probiotics mix, in combination with H2O2, was used to treat HT29 cells to explore its cytoprotective and anti-stress effect. Results: In vivo, levels of TDO 2 in nanovesicles were enhanced in the blood after probiotic treatment, suggesting a role in the gutâbrain axis. In the in vitro model, a typical H2O2-induced stress effect occurred, which the probiotics mix was able to recover, showing a cytoprotective effect. The probiotics mix treatment significantly reduced the heat shock protein 60 kDa levels and was able to preserve intestinal integrity and barrier function by restoring the expression and redistribution of tight junction proteins. Moreover, the probiotics mix increased the expression of TDO 2 and serotonin receptors. Conclusions: This study provides evidence for the gutâbrain axis mediation by nanovesicles, influencing central nervous system function
Validation of PARADISE 24 and Development of PARADISE-EDEN 36 in Patients with Dementia
Dementia was one of the conditions focused on in an EU (European Union) project called âPARADISEâ (Psychosocial fActors Relevant to brAin DISorders in Europe) that later produced a measure called PARADISE 24, developed within the biopsychosocial model proposed in the International Classification of Functioning Disability and Health (ICF). The aims of this study are to validate PARADISE 24 on a wider sample of patients with mild to moderate dementia to expand PARADISE 24 by defining a more specific scale for dementia, by adding 18 questions specifically selected for dementia, which eventually should be reduced to 12. We enrolled 123 persons with dementia, recruited between July 2017 and July 2019 in home care and long-term care facilities, in Italy, and 80 participants were recruited in Warsaw between January and July 2012 as part of a previous cross-sectional study. The interviews with the patient and/or family were conducted by health professionals alone or as a team by using the Paradise data collection protocol. The psychometric analysis with the Rasch analysis has shown that PARADISE 24 and the selection of 18 additional condition-specific items can be expected to have good measurement properties to assess the functional state in persons with dementia
QUIN 2.0 - new release of the QUaternary fault strain INdicators database from the Southern Apennines of Italy
QUIN database integrates and organizes structural-geological information from published and unpublished sources to constrain deformation in seismotectonic studies. The initial release, QUIN1.0, comprised 3,339 Fault Striation Pairs, mapped on 445 sites exposed along the Quaternary faults of central Italy. The present Data Descriptor introduces the QUIN 2.0 release, which includes 4,297 Fault Striation Pairs on 738 Structural Sites from southern Italy. The newly investigated faults span ~500âkm along the Apennines chain, with strikes transitioning from ~SE to ~SW and comprehensively details Fault Striation Pairsâ location, attitude, kinematics, and deformation axes. Additionally, it offers a shapefile of the fault traces hosting the data. The QUIN 2.0 release offers a significant geographic extension to the QUIN 1.0, with comprehensive description of local geometric-kinematic complexities of the regional pattern. The QUIN data may be especially relevant for constraining intra-Apennine potential seismogenic deformation patterns, where earthquake data only offer scattered or incomplete information. QUINâs data will support studies aimed at enhancing geological understanding, hazard assessment and comprehension of fault rupture propagation and barriers
The SSDC Role in the LICIACube Mission: Data Management and the MATISSE Tool
Light Italian Cubesat for Imaging of Asteroids (LICIACube) is an Italian mission managed by the Italian Space
Agency (ASI) and part of the NASA Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) planetary defense mission. Its
main goals are to document the effects of the DART impact on Dimorphos, the secondary member of the (65803)
Didymos binary asteroid system, characterizing the shape of the target body and performing dedicated scientific
investigations on it. Within this framework, the mission Science Operations Center will be managed by the Space
Science Data Center (ASI-SSDC), which will have the responsibility of processing, archiving, and disseminating
the data acquired by the two LICIACube onboard cameras. In order to better accomplish this task, SSDC also plans
to use and modify its scientific webtool Multi-purpose Advanced Tool for Instruments for the solar system
Exploration (MATISSE), making it the primary tool for the LICIACube data analysis, thanks to its advanced
capabilities for searching and visualizing data, particularly useful for the irregular shapes common to several small
bodies
VADER: Probing the Dark Side of Dimorphos with LICIACube LUKE
The ASI cubesat LICIACube has been part of the first planetary defense mission DART, having among its scopes to complement the DRACO images to better constrain the Dimorphos shape. LICIACube had two different cameras, LEIA and LUKE, and to accomplish its goal, it exploited the unique possibility of acquiring images of the Dimorphos hemisphere not seen by DART from a vantage point of view, in both time and space. This work is indeed aimed at constraining the tridimensional shape of Dimorphos, starting from both LUKE images of the nonimpacted hemisphere of Dimorphos and the results obtained by DART looking at the impacted hemisphere. To this aim, we developed a semiautomatic Computer Vision algorithm, named VADER, able to identify objects of interest on the basis of physical characteristics, subsequently used as input to retrieve the shape of the ellipse projected in the LUKE images analyzed. Thanks to this shape, we then extracted information about the Dimorphos ellipsoid by applying a series of quantitative geometric considerations. Although the solution space coming from this analysis includes the triaxial ellipsoid found by using DART images, we cannot discard the possibility that Dimorphos has a more elongated shape, more similar to what is expected from previous theories and observations. The result of our work seems therefore to emphasize the unique value of the LICIACube mission and its images, making even clearer the need of having different points of view to accurately define the shape of an asteroid.This work was supported by the Italian Space Agency (ASI) within the LICIACube project (ASI-INAF agreement AC No. 2019-31-HH.0) and by the DART mission, NASA contract 80MSFC20D0004
The Dimorphos ejecta plume properties revealed by LICIACube
The Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) had an impact with Dimorphos (a satellite of the asteroid Didymos) on 26 September 20221. Ground-based observations showed that the Didymos system brightened by a factor of 8.3 after the impact because of ejecta, returning to the pre-impact brightness 23.7âdays afterwards2. Hubble Space Telescope observations made from 15âminutes after impact to 18.5âdays after, with a spatial resolution of 2.1âkilometres per pixel, showed a complex evolution of the ejecta3, consistent with other asteroid impact events. The momentum enhancement factor, determined using the measured binary period change4, ranges between 2.2 and 4.9, depending on the assumptions about the mass and density of Dimorphos5. Here we report observations from the LUKE and LEIA instruments on the LICIACube cube satellite, which was deployed 15âdays in advance of the impact of DART. Data were taken from 71âseconds before the impact until 320âseconds afterwards. The ejecta plume was a cone with an aperture angle of 140â±â4 degrees. The inner region of the plume was blue, becoming redder with increasing distance from Dimorphos. The ejecta plume exhibited a complex and inhomogeneous structure, characterized by filaments, dust grains and single or clustered boulders. The ejecta velocities ranged from a few tens of metres per second to about 500âmetres per second.This work was supported by the Italian Space Agency (ASI) in the LICIACube project (ASI-INAF agreement AC no. 2019-31-HH.0) and by the DART mission, NASA contract 80MSFC20D0004. M.Z. acknowledges Caltech and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory for granting the University of Bologna a licence to an executable version of MONTE Project Edition software. M.Z. is grateful to D. Lubey, M. Smith, D. Mages, C. Hollenberg and S. Bhaskaran of NASA/JPL for the discussions and suggestions regarding the operational navigation of LICIACube. G.P. acknowledges financial support from the Centre national dâĂ©tudes spatiales (CNES, France). A.C.B. acknowledges funding by the NEO-MAPP project (grant agreement 870377, EC H2020-SPACE-2019) and by the Ministerio de Ciencia InnovaciĂłn (PGC 2018) RTI2018-099464-B-I00. F.F. acknowledges funding from the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) Ambizione (grant no. 193346). J.-Y.L. acknowledges the support from the NASA DART Participating Scientist Program (grant no. 80NSSC21K1131). S.D.R. and M.J. acknowledge support from the Swiss National Science Foundation (project no. 200021_207359)
Root hair anatomy and morphology in Posidonia oceanica (L.) Delile and substratum typology: First observations of a spiral form
The morpho-anatomical root hair features of P. oceanica ramets collected in meadows settled on different substrata (sand, matte and rock) were analysed. On each substratum, nine plagiothropic rhizomes each one composed by 3â6 interconnected short shoots were collected between April and May 2016 at 10 m of depth. On sand and on rock, the adventitious roots showed two distinct tubular and spiral-shaped hairs, clustered in yellowish-gray gelatinous pads. Tubular root hair tips were dactiliform and generally attached to grains of rock fragments. Moreover, a sub-circular swelling zone occurred. On matte, root hairs did not form gelatinous pads, were very short and had a simple distal portion. The root hair anatomy and morphology described here provides new information on the P. oceanica root system that can express a remarkable root hair polymorphism
Modeling the charge transport and degradation in HfO 2 dielectric for reliability improvement and life-time predictions in logic and memory devices
HfO2 is currently used in the gate stacks of CMOS logic devices and is widely investigated for its potential application in advanced non-volatile memories such as resistive switching devices (RRAMs). In both applications, the understanding of the physical mechanisms governing the charge transport and the degradation/breakdown (BD) of the dielectric is fundamental to optimize device operation and reliability, and represents the first step toward accurate lifetime predictions. These goals can be achieved through the development of accurate physics-based models linking the microscopic properties of HfO2 to the electrical behavior of the device. We show the model we developed for the charge transport and degradation in HfO2 and its application to logic and memory devices.Introduction. HfO 2 is currently used in the gate stacks of CMOS logic devices [1] and is widely investigated for its potential application in advanced non-volatile memories such as resistive switching devices (RRAMs) [2]. In both applications, the understanding of the physical mechanisms governing the charge transport and the degradation/breakdown (BD) of the dielectric is fundamental to optimize device operation and reliability, and represents the first step toward accurate lifetime predictions. These goals can be achieved through the development of accurate physics-based models linking the microscopic properties of HfO 2 to the electrical behavior of the device. We show the model we developed for the charge transport and degradation in HfO 2 and its application to logic and memory devices. © 2011 IEEE