28,771 research outputs found
Towards Conserving Nigeria’s Environment through Environmental Management Education
Environmental conservation involves the wise use of resources and their preservation from reckless exploitation and wanton destruction. In contemporary Nigeria however, the ideals of conservation have failed to be properly integrated into the National development agenda. Widespread ignorance and low levels environmental awareness have been identified as prominent factors responsible for this despicable state of affairs. Since education remains the cure for ignorance, this paper therefore, aims at emphasizing the urgent imperative for the incorporation of environmental management education as a major component of an integrative framework for the conservation of Nigeria’s environment. The paper contends that effective environmental conservation may never be attained unless and until requisite skills are developed and sufficient awareness created nationally and locally through a robust programme of environmental management education. The paper recommends the adoption of environmental management education as an important component of our effort to ensure effective conservation and national development. Specifically, environmental management education should be introduced as a subject in the primary and secondary schools, while universities and other tertiary institutions should offer it as a general course and make efforts to establish Environmental Management Department in the Faculty of Environmental Studies as approved by the National Universities Commission. Key words: Environmental Management, Education, Conservation, Resources, Awareness
Chemical composition, antibacterial efficacy, and antioxidant capacity of essential oil and oleoresin from Monodora myristica and Tetrapleura tetraptera in Southeast Nigeria
Specific to the West African sub-region, previous studies involving fruit, stem, and bark of Tetrapleura tetraptera as well as seeds of Monodora myristica have largely focused on phytochemical properties of aqueous and methanolic and ethanolic extracts. To supplement existing information, the chemical composition, antibacterial efficacy (tested against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus), and antioxidant capacity (1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH∙) radical scavenging, ferric reducing power, and total antioxidant capacity) of essential oil and oleoresin extracted from T. tetraptera fruit and M. myristica seeds cultivated in Southeast Nigeria, were studied. Essential oil and oleoresin were respectively extracted by steam distillation and aqueous maceration. By way of gas chromatograph mass spectrometry (GC–MS) analysis, the chemical compounds from essential oil and oleoresin from M. myristica and T. Tetraptera samples totaled 6 and 5, as well as 27 and 16, respectively. Besides the oleoresin of M. myristica and the essential oil of T. tetraptera showing some resistance against S. aureus, the oleoresins seemed highly susceptible to E. coli—all of which demonstrated concentration-dependence to the antibacterial inhibition zone. Scavenging DPPH radical, reduction power activity, and total antioxidant capacity increased with essential oil and oleoresin extracts' concentrations, which positions M. myristica and T. tetraptera spices as very promising for food preservation, especially against autoxidation and microbial spoilage. © 2022, The Author(s).Wrocław University of Environmental and Life Sciences, PolandMinistry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation, MinobrnaukaAuthor Q.N.O. gratefully acknowledges the research funding from the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation (Ural Federal University Program of Development within the Priority-2030 Program). Author S.J. and C.O.R.O. appreciate the financial support from Wrocław University of Environmental and Life Sciences, Poland
Interplay between unconventional superconductivity and heavy-fermion quantum criticality: CeCuSi versus YbRhSi
In this paper the low-temperature properties of two isostructural canonical
heavy-fermion compounds are contrasted with regards to the interplay between
antiferromagnetic (AF) quantum criticality and superconductivity. For
CeCuSi, fully-gapped d-wave superconductivity forms in the vicinity of
an itinerant three-dimensional heavy-fermion spin-density-wave (SDW) quantum
critical point (QCP). Inelastic neutron scattering results highlight that both
quantum critical SDW fluctuations as well as Mott-type fluctuations of local
magnetic moments contribute to the formation of Cooper pairs in CeCuSi.
In YbRhSi, superconductivity appears to be suppressed at
mK by AF order ( = 70 mK). Ultra-low temperature measurements reveal a
hybrid order between nuclear and 4f-electronic spins, which is dominated by the
Yb-derived nuclear spins, to develop at slightly above 2 mK. The hybrid
order turns out to strongly compete with the primary 4f-electronic order and to
push the material towards its QCP. Apparently, this paves the way for
heavy-fermion superconductivity to form at = 2 mK. Like the pressure -
induced QCP in CeRhIn, the magnetic field - induced one in YbRhSi
is of the local Kondo-destroying variety which corresponds to a Mott-type
transition at zero temperature. Therefore, these materials form the link
between the large family of about fifty low- unconventional heavy - fermion
superconductors and other families of unconventional superconductors with
higher s, notably the doped Mott insulators of the cuprates, organic
charge-transfer salts and some of the Fe-based superconductors. Our study
suggests that heavy-fermion superconductivity near an AF QCP is a robust
phenomenon.Comment: 30 pages, 7 Figures, Accepted for publication in Philosophical
Magazin
Statistical properties of mechanically generated surface gravity waves: a laboratory experiment in a three-dimensional wave basin
A wave basin experiment has been performed in the MARINTEK laboratories, in one of the largest existing three-dimensional wave tanks in the world. The aim of the experiment is to investigate the effects of directional energy distribution on the statistical properties of surface gravity waves. Different degrees of directionality have been considered, starting from long-crested waves up to directional distributions with a spread of ±30 • at the spectral peak. Particular attention is given to the tails of the distribution function of the surface elevation, wave heights and wave crests. Comparison with a simplified model based on second-order theory is reported. The results show that for long-crested, steep and narrow-banded waves, the second-order theory underestimates the probability of occurrence of large waves. As directional effects are included, the departure from second-order theory becomes less accentuated and the surface elevation is characterized by weak deviations from Gaussian statistics
Why could Electron Spin Resonance be observed in a heavy fermion Kondo lattice?
We develop a theoretical basis for understanding the spin relaxation
processes in Kondo lattice systems with heavy fermions as experimentally
observed by electron spin resonance (ESR). The Kondo effect leads to a common
energy scale that regulates a logarithmic divergence of different spin kinetic
coefficients and supports a collective spin motion of the Kondo ions with
conduction electrons. We find that the relaxation rate of a collective spin
mode is greatly reduced due to a mutual cancelation of all the divergent
contributions even in the case of the strongly anisotropic Kondo interaction.
The contribution to the ESR linewidth caused by the local magnetic field
distribution is subject to motional narrowing supported by ferromagnetic
correlations. The developed theoretical model successfully explains the ESR
data of YbRh2Si2 in terms of their dependence on temperature and magnetic
field.Comment: 5pages, 1 Figur
Break up of heavy fermions at an antiferromagnetic instability
We present results of high-resolution, low-temperature measurements of the
Hall coefficient, thermopower, and specific heat on stoichiometric YbRh2Si2.
They support earlier conclusions of an electronic (Kondo-breakdown) quantum
critical point concurring with a field induced antiferromagnetic one. We also
discuss the detachment of the two instabilities under chemical pressure. Volume
compression/expansion (via substituting Rh by Co/Ir) results in a
stabilization/weakening of magnetic order. Moderate Ir substitution leads to a
non-Fermi-liquid phase, in which the magnetic moments are neither ordered nor
screened by the Kondo effect. The so-derived zero-temperature global phase
diagram promises future studies to explore the nature of the Kondo breakdown
quantum critical point without any interfering magnetism.Comment: minor changes, accepted for publication in JPS
Thin disk kinematics from RAVE and the solar motion
Aims. We study the Milky Way thin disk with the Radial Velocity Experiment
(RAVE) survey. We consider the thin and thick disks as different Galactic
components and present a technique to statistically disentangle the two
populations. Then we focus our attention on the thin disk component. Methods.
We disentangle the thin disk component from amixture of the thin and thick
disks using a data set providing radial velocities, proper motions, and
photometrically determined distances. Results. We present the trend of the
velocity dispersions in the thin disk component of the Milky Way (MW) in the
radial direction above and below the Galactic plane using data from the RAdial
Velocity Experiment (RAVE). The selected sample is a limited subsample from the
entire RAVE catalogue, roughly mapping up to 500 pc above and below the
Galactic plane, a few degrees in azimuthal direction and covering a radial
extension of 2.0 kpc around the solar position. The solar motion relative to
the local standard of rest is also re-determined with the isolated thin disk
component. Major results are the trend of the velocity mean and dispersion in
the radial and vertical direction. In addition the azimuthal components of the
solar motion relative to the local standard of rest and the velocity dispersion
are discussed.Comment: accepted on A&A, please see companion paper "THICK disk kinem...
Volume-energy correlations in the slow degrees of freedom of computer-simulated phospholipid membranes
Constant-pressure molecular-dynamics simulations of phospholipid membranes in
the fluid phase reveal strong correlations between equilibrium fluctuations of
volume and energy on the nanosecond time-scale. The existence of strong
volume-energy correlations was previously deduced indirectly by Heimburg from
experiments focusing on the phase transition between the fluid and the ordered
gel phases. The correlations, which are reported here for three different
membranes (DMPC, DMPS-Na, and DMPSH), have volume-energy correlation
coefficients ranging from 0.81 to 0.89. The DMPC membrane was studied at two
temperatures showing that the correlation coefficient increases as the phase
transition is approached
Quantum localization and cantori in chaotic billiards
We study the quantum behaviour of the stadium billiard. We discuss how the
interplay between quantum localization and the rich structure of the classical
phase space influences the quantum dynamics. The analysis of this model leads
to new insight in the understanding of quantum properties of classically
chaotic systems.Comment: 4 pages in RevTex with 4 eps figures include
Diagonal Ladders: A New Class of Models for Strongly Coupled Electron Systems
We introduce a class of models defined on ladders with a diagonal structure
generated by plaquettes. The case corresponds to the necklace
ladder and has remarkable properties which are studied using DMRG and recurrent
variational ansatzes. The AF Heisenberg model on this ladder is equivalent to
the alternating spin-1/spin-1/2 AFH chain which is known to have a
ferrimagnetic ground state (GS). For doping 1/3 the GS is a fully doped (1,1)
stripe with the holes located mostly along the principal diagonal while the
minor diagonals are occupied by spin singlets. This state can be seen as a Mott
insulator of localized Cooper pairs on the plaquettes. A physical picture of
our results is provided by a model of plaquettes coupled diagonally
with a hopping parameter . In the limit we recover the
original model on the necklace ladder while for weak hopping parameter
the model is easily solvable. The GS in the strong hopping regime is
essentially an "on link" Gutzwiller projection of the weak hopping GS. We
generalize the model to diagonal ladders with and the 2D
square lattice. We use in our construction concepts familiar in Statistical
Mechanics as medial graphs and Bratelli diagrams.Comment: REVTEX file, 22 pages (twocolumn), 35 figures inserted in text. 12
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