1,830 research outputs found
Plantas uliginosas e aquaticas do Pantanal arenoso.
Com o objetivo de apoiar projetos de pesquisa sobre plantas forrageiras e componentes bioticos de habitats (jacare, peixes), iniciou-se em 1984 o levantamento de plantas aquaticas e uliginosas de lugares umidos no leque aluvial arenoso do rio Taquari, que abrange Nhecolandia e Paiaguas no Pantanal. A Nhecolandia caracteriza-se pelas lagoas (= "baias"), e Paiaguas, pelas vazantes, ou drenagem abertas. Ambas as sub-regioes tem campos estacionalmente palustres com plantas uliginosas e aquaticas. Algumas comunidades como "pirizal", "caetezal", "taboal", "camalotal", etc, tem nomes populares em funcao das plantas dominantes. No total foram listadas 157 especies, de 108 generos e 54 familias. As familias mais numerosas sao gramineae (37 especies) e Cyperaceae (19), seguidas de Leguminosae (10), Scrophulariceae (7), Eriocaulaceae (6), Alismataceae (5), Lentibulariaceae (5), Onagraceae (5) e Polygalaceae (5).bitstream/item/41130/1/PA06.pd
Quantification of Resveratrol in Different Parts of Solid Pinotage Winery Waste: Investigating the Variance Between Consecutive Harvests
Resveratrol is phenolic compound that is produced by several plant species as a protection mechanism against biotic and abiotic stress. Resveratrol is currently being investigated as nutraceutical supplement, and there is a market value for the compound. The aim of this work was to investigate, through consecutive harvests the variability of solid winery waste as a source of resveratrol as an antioxidant supplement. In this study the different parts of Pinotage solid winery waste from a 2018 and 2019 harvests were investigated as a possible resveratrol source. From the comparison of the different sources over time it was found that the 2019 Pinotage stems contained a maximum of 73 ± 4.3 μg/g resveratrol. Variable resveratrol concentrations were noted between consecutive harvests, indicating a variability in productivity. Furthermore, resveratrol distribution throughout the plant was variable, with the canes and stems having the highest concentrations. Nonetheless, it was concluded that Pinotage solid winery waste can be used as a possible source of resveratrol. The findings in this paper provide information about the extractable resveratrol and total phenolic content of different parts of Pinotage solid winery waste and the variability of resveratrol content both within the plant, and between harvests
Properties of bow-shock sources at the Galactic center
There are an enigmatic population of massive stars around the Galactic Center
(GC) that were formed some Ma ago. A fraction of these stars has been found to
orbit the supermassive black hole, SgrA*, in a projected clockwise disk, which
suggests that they were formed in a formerly existing dense disk around SgrA*.
We focus on the extended, near-infrared (NIR) sources IRS1W, IRS5, IRS10W, and
IRS21 that have been suggested to be young, massive stars that form bow-shocks
through their interaction with the ISM. Their nature has impeded accurate
determination of their orbital parameters. We aim at establishing their nature
and kinematics to test whether they form part of the clockwise disk. We
performed NIR multi-wavelength imaging using adaptive optics (AO) and sparse
aperture masking (SAM). We introduce a new method for self-calibration of the
SAM PSF in dense stellar fields. The emission mechanism, morphology and
kinematics of the targets were examined via 3D bow-shock models. We confirm
previous findings that IRS21, IRS1W, and IRS5 are bow-shocks created by the
interaction between mass-losing stars and the interstellar gas. The nature of
IRS10W remains unclear. Our modeling shows that the bow-shock-emission is
caused by thermal emission while the scattering of stellar light does not play
any significant role. IRS 1W appears to be a bow-shock produced by an
anisotropic stellar wind or by locally inhomogeneous ISM density. Our best-fit
models provide an estimate of the local proper motion of the ISM in the NA in
agreement with the published models. Assuming that all of the sources are tied
to SgrA*, their orbital planes were obtained via a Monte-Carlo simulation. Our
orbital analysis suggests that they are not part of any of the clockwise disk.
We thus add more evidence to recent findings that a large part of the massive
stars show apparently random orbital orientations.Comment: accepted for publication by A&A, 17 pages, 11 figures, 1 appendi
VLTI observations of IRS~3: The brightest compact MIR source at the Galactic Centre
The dust enshrouded star IRS~3 in the central light year of our galaxy was
partially resolved in a recent VLTI experiment. The presented observation is
the first step in investigating both IRS~3 in particular and the stellar
population of the Galactic Centre in general with the VLTI at highest angular
resolution. We will outline which scientific issues can be addressed by a
complete MIDI dataset on IRS~3 in the mid infrared.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, published in: The ESO Messenge
Application of a differentiator-based adaptive super-twisting controller for a redundant cable-driven parallel robot
In this paper we present preliminary, experimental results of an Adaptive Super-Twisting Sliding-Mode Controller with time-varying gains for redundant Cable-Driven Parallel Robots. The sliding-mode controller is paired with a feed-forward action based on dynamics inversion. An exact sliding-mode differentiator is implemented to retrieve the velocity of the end-effector using only encoder measurements with the properties of finite-time convergence, robustness against perturbations and noise filtering. The platform used to validate the controller is a robot with eight cables and six degrees of freedom powered by 940 W compact servo drives. The proposed experiment demonstrates the performance of the controller, finite-time convergence and robustness in tracking a trajectory while subject to external disturbances up to approximately 400% the mass of the end-effector
Direct Detection of the Tertiary Component in the Massive Multiple HD 150 136 with VLTI
Massive stars are of fundamental importance for almost all aspects of
astrophysics, but there still exist large gaps in our understanding of their
properties and formation because they are rare and therefore distant. It has
been found that most O-stars are multiples. HD 150 136 is the nearest system to
Earth with >100 M_sol, and provides a unique opportunity to study an extremely
massive system. Recently, evidence for the existence of a third component in HD
150 136, in addition to the tight spectroscopic binary that forms the main
component, was found in spectroscopic observations. Our aim was to image and
obtain astrometric and photometric measurements of this component using long
baseline optical interferometry to further constrain the nature of this
component. We observed HD150136 with the near-infrared instrument AMBER
attached to the ESO VLT Interferometer. The recovered closure phases are robust
to systematic errors and provide unique information on the source asymmetry.
Therefore, they are of crucial relevance for both image reconstruction and
model fitting of the source structure. The third component in HD 150 136 is
clearly detected in the high-quality data from AMBER. It is located at a
projected angular distance of 7.3 mas, or about 13 AU at the line-of-sight
distance of HD 150 136, at a position angle of 209 degrees East of North, and
has a flux ratio of 0.25 with respect to the inner binary. We resolved the
third component of HD 150 136 in J, H and K filters. The luminosity and color
of the tertiary agrees with the predictions and shows that it is also an O
main-sequence star. The small measured angular separation indicates that the
tertiary may be approaching the periastron of its orbit. These results, only
achievable with long baseline near infrared interferometry, constitute the
first step towards the understanding of the massive star formation mechanisms
Evidence of a discontinuous disk structure around the Herbig Ae star HD 139 614
A new class of pre-main sequence objects has been recently identified as
pre-transitional disks. They present near-infrared excess coupled to a flux
deficit at about 10 microns and a rising mid-infrared and far-infrared
spectrum. These features suggest a disk structure with inner and outer dust
components, separated by a dust-depleted region (or gap). We here report on the
first interferometric observations of the disk around the Herbig Ae star HD
139614. Its infrared spectrum suggests a flared disk, and presents
pre-transitional features,namely a substantial near-infrared excess accompanied
by a dip around 6 microns and a rising mid-infrared part. In this framework, we
performed a study of the spectral energy distribution (SED) and the
mid-infrared VLTI/MIDI interferometric data to constrain thespatial structure
of the inner dust disk region and assess its possibly multi-component
structure. We based our work on a temperature-gradient disk model that includes
dust opacity. While we could not reproduce the SED and interferometric
visibilities with a one-component disk, a better agreement was obtained with a
two-component disk model composed of an optically thin inner disk extending
from 0.22 to 2.3 au, a gap, and an outer temperature-gradient disk starting at
5.6 au. Therefore, our modeling favors an extended and optically thin inner
dust component and in principle rules out the possibility that the
near-infrared excess originates only from a spatially confined region.
Moreover, the outer disk is characterized by a very steep temperature profile
and a temperature higher than 300 K at its inner edge. This suggests the
existence of a warm component corresponding to a scenario where the inner edge
of the outer disk is directly illuminated by the central star. This is an
expected consequence of the presence of a gap, thus indicative of a
pre-transitional structure.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
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