6,506 research outputs found
Mycotoxin food safety risk in developing countries
"Mycotoxins are produced by fungi, commonly known as mold. These toxins can develop during production, harvesting, or storage of grains, nuts, and other crops. Mycotoxins are among the most potent mutagenic and carcinogenic substances known. They pose chronic health risks: prolonged exposure through diet has been linked to cancer and kidney, liver, and immune-system disease. Because mycotoxins occur more frequently under tropical conditions and diets in many developing countries are more heavily concentrated in crops susceptible to mycotoxins, these chronic health risks are particularly prevalent in developing countries." from TextFood safety ,food security ,Public health ,
DMRG studies on linear-exchange quantum spin models in one dimension
We study a class of spin-1/2 quantum antiferromagnetic chains using DMRG
technique. The exchange interaction in these models decreases linearly as a
function of the separation between the spins, for . For the separations beyond , the interaction is zero. The range
parameter takes positive integer values. The models corresponding to all
the odd values of are known to have the same exact doubly degenerate dimer
ground state as for the Majumdar-Ghosh (MG) model. In fact, R=3 is the MG
model. For even , the exact ground state is not known in general, except for
R=2 (the Bethe ansatz solvable Heisenberg chain) and in the asymptotic limit of
where the two MG dimer states again emerge as the exact ground state. In
the present work, we numerically investigate the even- models whose ground
state is not known analytically. In particular, for R=4, 6 and 8, we have
computed a number of ground state properties. We find that, unlike R=2, the
higher even- models are spin-gapped, and show strong dimer-dimer
correlations of the MG type. Moreover, the spin-spin correlations decay very
rapidly, albeit showing weak periodic revivals.Comment: 8 pages, 12 figure
The Process of Generating Single Large Combined Cloud for Grid-Free Solvers
Dealing with moving body problems, where one component moves relatively with respect to other, is a difficult task in CFD due to the efforts needed in grid handling for every delta change in position of the moving component. The inherent nature of mesh-free solvers reduces the efforts needed for these kinds of problems by operating on a cloud of points rather than a grid. A new method to handle moving body problems is proposed, where individual clouds are generated around each component and are combined into a single large combined cloud. The proposed method is applied to store separation problem and results generated using NAL-MCIR mesh-less solver is compared with experimental results
Supersolid in a one-dimensional model of hard-core bosons
We study a system of hardcore boson on a one-dimensional lattice with
frustrated next-nearest neighbor hopping and nearest neighbor interaction. At
half filling, for equal magnitude of nearest and next-nearest neighbor hopping,
the ground state of this system exhibits a first order phase transition from a
Bond-Ordered (BO) solid to a Charge-Density-Wave(CDW) solid as a function of
the nearest neighbor interaction. Moving away from half filling we investigate
the system at incommensurate densities, where we find a SuperSolid (SS) phase
which has concurrent off-diagonal long range order and density wave order which
is unusual in a system of hardcore bosons in one dimension. Using the
finite-size Density-Matrix Renormalization Group (DMRG) method, we obtain the
complete phase diagram for this model
A Highly Sensitive Plant Hybrid Protein Assay System Based on the \u3cem\u3eSpm\u3c/em\u3e Promoter and TnpA Protein for Detection and Analysis of Transcription Activation Domains
TnpA is a multifunctional DNA binding protein encoded by the maize Suppressor-mutator (Spm) transposable element. TnpA is required for transposition and is a repressor of the unmethylated Spm promoter. While analyzing protein domains using a yeast GAL4-based hybrid system in transiently transformed tobacco cells, we found that TnpA represses the \u3e10-fold transcriptional activation observed when the GAL4 DNA-binding domain is used alone. By contrast, compared to the backgroundless TnpA DNA-binding domain alone, 33- to 45-fold activation of the Spm promoter was observed when the VP16 activation domain was fused to it. TnpA-binding sites, but no TATA box, were required for transcription activation. Among the TnpA deletion derivatives tested, those retaining the coding sequences for the DNA-binding and protein dimerization domains gave the highest level of transcription activation when fused with the VP16 activation domain. The TnpA gene and TnpA-binding sites in the short Spm promoter therefore provide a novel, highly sensitive single-hybrid system for identifying and studying plant transcription activation domains in plant cells
Magnetically Arrested Disk: An Energetically Efficient Accretion Flow
We consider an accretion flow model originally proposed by Bisnovatyi-Kogan &
Ruzmaikin (1974), which has been confirmed in recent 3D MHD simulations. In the
model, the accreting gas drags in a strong poloidal magnetic field to the
center such that the accumulated field disrupts the axisymmetric accretion flow
at a relatively large radius. Inside the disruption radius, the gas accretes as
discrete blobs or streams with a velocity much less than the free-fall
velocity. Almost the entire rest mass energy of the gas is released as heat,
radiation and mechanical/magnetic energy. Even for a non-rotating black hole,
the efficiency of converting mass to energy is of order 50% or higher. The
model is thus a practical analog of an idealized engine proposed by Geroch and
Bekenstein.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure, new refs added, in print in PAS
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