236 research outputs found
A semi-classical over-barrier model for charge exchange between highly charged ions and one-optical electron atoms
Absolute total cross sections for electron capture between slow, highly
charged ions and alkali targets have been recently measured. It is found that
these cross sections follow a scaling law with the projectile charge which is
different from the one previously proposed basing on a classical over-barrier
model (OBM) and verified using rare gases and molecules as targets. In this
paper we develop a "semi-classical" (i.e. including some quantal features) OBM
attempting to recover experimental results. The method is then applied to
ion-hydrogen collisions and compared with the result of a sophisticated
quantum-mechanical calculation. In the former case the accordance is very good,
while in the latter one no so satisfactory results are found. A qualitative
explanation for the discrepancies is attempted.Comment: RevTeX, uses epsf; 6 pages text + 3 EPS figures Journal of Physics B
(scehduled March 2000). This revision corrects fig.
Microturbulence studies in RFX-mod
Present-days Reversed Field Pinches (RFPs) are characterized by quasi-laminar
magnetic configurations in their core, whose boundaries feature sharp internal
transport barriers, in analogy with tokamaks and stellarators. The abatement of
magnetic chaos leads to the reduction of associated particle and heat transport
along wandering field lines. At the same time, the growth of steep temperature
gradients may trigger drift microinstabilities. In this work we summarize the
work recently done in the RFP RFX-mod in order to assess the existence and the
impact upon transport of such electrostatic and electromagnetic
microinstabilities as Ion Temperature Gradient (ITG), Trapped Electron Modes
(TEM) and microtearing modes.Comment: Work presented at the 2010 Varenna workshop "Theory of Fusion
Plasmas". To appear in Journal of Physics Conference Serie
About the parabolic relation existing between the skewness and the kurtosis in time series of experimental data
In this work we investigate the origin of the parabolic relation between
skewness and kurtosis often encountered in the analysis of experimental
time-series. We argue that the numerical values of the coefficients of the
curve may provide informations about the specific physics of the system
studied, whereas the analytical curve per se is a fairly general consequence of
a few constraints expected to hold for most systems.Comment: To appear in Physica Script
Electron Impact Ionization Close to the Threshold: Classical Calculations
In this paper we present Classical Trajectory Monte Carlo (CTMC) calculations
for single and multiple electron ionization of Argon atoms and ions in the
threshold region. We are able to recover the Wannier exponents a for the
power-law behavior of the cross section s versus excess energy: the exact value
of the exponent as well as the existence of its saturation for multiple
ionization appear to be related to how the total binding energy is shared
between target electrons.Comment: 9 pages. To be published in Journal of Physics
Ion Collisions in Very Strong Electric Fields
A Classical Trajectory Monte Carlo (CTMC) simulation has been made of
processes of charge exchange and ionization between an hydrogen atom and fully
stripped ions embedded in very strong static electric fields (
V/m), which are thought to exist in cosmic and laser--produced plasmas.
Calculations show that the presence of the field affects absolute values of the
cross sections, enhancing ionization and reducing charge exchange. Moreover,
the overall effect depends upon the relative orientation between the field and
the nuclear motion. Other features of a null-field situation, such as scaling
laws, are revisited.Comment: Latex, 13 pages, 11 figures (available upon request), to be published
in Journal of Physics
Electron impact double ionization of helium from classical trajectory calculations
With a recently proposed quasiclassical ansatz [Geyer and Rost, J. Phys. B 35
(2002) 1479] it is possible to perform classical trajectory ionization
calculations on many electron targets. The autoionization of the target is
prevented by a M\o{}ller type backward--forward propagation scheme and allows
to consider all interactions between all particles without additional
stabilization. The application of the quasiclassical ansatz for helium targets
is explained and total and partially differential cross sections for electron
impact double ionization are calculated. In the high energy regime the
classical description fails to describe the dominant TS1 process, which leads
to big deviations, whereas for low energies the total cross section is
reproduced well. Differential cross sections calculated at 250 eV await their
experimental confirmation.Comment: LaTeX, 22 pages, 10 figures, submitted to J. Phys.
Chaperones rescue the energetic landscape of mutant CFTR at single molecule and in cell
Molecular chaperones are pivotal in folding and degradation of the cellular proteome but their impact on the conformational dynamics of near-native membrane proteins with disease relevance remains unknown. Here we report the effect of chaperone activity on the functional conformation of the temperature-sensitive mutant cystic fibrosis channel (Delta F508-CFTR) at the plasma membrane and after reconstitution into phospholipid bilayer. Thermally induced unfolding at 37 degrees C and concomitant functional inactivation of Delta F508-CFTR are partially suppressed by constitutive activity of Hsc70 and Hsp90 chaperone/co-chaperone at the plasma membrane and post-endoplasmic reticulum compartments in vivo, and at singlemolecule level in vitro, indicated by kinetic and thermodynamic remodeling of the mutant gating energetics toward its wild-type counterpart. Thus, molecular chaperones can contribute to functional maintenance of Delta F508-CFTR by reshaping the conformational energetics of its final fold, a mechanism with implication in the regulation of metastable ABC transporters and other plasma membrane proteins activity in health and diseases
Sustainability of European winter wheat- and maize-based cropping systems: Economic, environmental and social ex-post assessment of conventional and IPM-based systems
In order to ensure higher sustainability of winter wheat and maize production in Europe, cropping systems featuring different levels of Integrated Pest Management (IPM) need to be tested in the field and validated for their sustainability before being adopted by farmers. However, the sustainability evaluation of cropping systems is difficult to perform effectively due to the complex economic, social and environmental dimensions of sustainability. Within the EU research project PURE, nine long-term experiments were conducted in various European regions from 2011 to 2014, comparing two IPM levels against the conventional system (CS) in winter wheat- and maize-based cropping systems. IPM1 encompassed some pesticide use in semi-diverse crop rotations while IPM2 favoured reduced- and non-chemical methods in diverse rotations. The modified DEXiPM (DEXi Pest Management) model for arable cropping systems was used for ex-post assessments to compare the economic, environmental and social sustainability of these systems. The assessments showed that in six out of nine trials the CS was overall unsustainable because of low evaluation of the environmental sustainability that was mainly due to high pesticide use and simplified crop rotations where the choice of crops is primarily market-driven. In contrast, six IPM1 and five IPM2 systems could be classified as sustainable, achieving ‘medium’ or ‘high’ scores for all three sustainability dimensions. Differences in the socio-economic conditions across countries and/or climatic and soil conditions across experimental trials highlighted that IPM is based on general principles that must be adapted to address specific local conditions. Overall, IPM systems included more diverse crop rotations and practices compared to the CS, promoting IPM-based strategies with less pesticide use but also a reduced reliance on pesticides that could partially compensate for any yield reductions by the savings on pesticide and application costs. It is recommended that the results of the study should be disseminated to policy-makers, advisors and farmers and that their implementation should be considered on a regional level. Regional policies to encourage the adoption of more sustainable systems based on IPM principles, as well as better support by more closely involving the regional advisory services for the general implementation of IPM is further recommended. Ex-post analysis with DEXiPM also identified the constraints of the IPM1 and IPM2 systems evaluated as not sustainable. These were related to i) environmental issues for those IPM1 systems that still relied mainly on pesticide use and had less diverse crop rotations, and ii) economic issues for IPM2 systems, mainly due to the choice of less profitable crops in the rotation, as well as to yield penalties caused by the very low pesticide use or replacing pesticides with less effective non-chemical methods. The identification of these constraints is a valuable input to the local and regional discussion on how to adopt IPM and develop more sustainable cropping systems
Global Distribution of Polaromonas Phylotypes - Evidence for a Highly Successful Dispersal Capacity
Bacteria from the genus Polaromonas are dominant phylotypes in clone libraries and culture collections from polar and high-elevation environments. Although Polaromonas has been found on six continents, we do not know if the same phylotypes exist in all locations or if they exhibit genetic isolation by distance patterns. To examine their biogeographic distribution, we analyzed all available, long-read 16S rRNA gene sequences of Polaromonas phylotypes from glacial and periglacial environments across the globe. Using genetic isolation by geographic distance analyses, including Mantel tests and Mantel correlograms, we found that Polaromonas phylotypes are globally distributed showing weak isolation by distance patterns at global scales. More focused analyses using discrete, equally sampled distances classes, revealed that only two distance classes (out of 12 total) showed significant spatial structuring. Overall, our analyses show that most Polaromonas phylotypes are truly globally distributed, but that some, as yet unknown, environmental variable may be selecting for unique phylotypes at a minority of our global sites. Analyses of aerobiological and genomic data suggest that Polaromonas phylotypes are globally distributed as dormant cells through high-elevation air currents; Polaromonas phylotypes are common in air and snow samples from high altitudes, and a glacial-ice metagenome and the two sequenced Polaromonas genomes contain the gene hipA, suggesting that Polaromonas can form dormant cells
Nonextensive perfect hydrodynamics - a model of dissipative relativistic hydrodynamics?
We demonstrate that nonextensive perfect relativistic hydrodynamics
(-hydrodynamics) can serve as a model of the usual relativistic dissipative
hydrodynamics (-hydrodynamics) facilitating therefore considerably its
applications. As illustration we show how using -hydrodynamics one gets the
-dependent expressions for the dissipative entropy current and the
corresponding ratios of the bulk and shear viscosities to entropy density,
and .Comment: Invited talk presented at SigmaPhi2008 conference, Kolymbari, Crete,
14-18 July 2008, revised version to be published in Cent. Eur. J. Phys.
(2009
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