4,630 research outputs found

    Post-LGM valley fills from the northern coast of Tuscany: depositional facies and stratigraphic architecture

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    The stratigraphic architecture of three adjacent valley bodies of post-LGM age buried beneath the northern coast of Tuscany is illustrated in detail. Above a gravel fluvial deposit, the valley fills exhibit a distinctive succession of coastal plain to estuarine facies, punctuated by an aggradational stacking pattern of millennial-scale depositional cycles with distinctive climatic signature. Radiocarbon dates document that the three valleys were active simultaneously and that rapidly created accommodation during transgression was filled under conditions of very high sediment supply

    c-axis transport and phenomenology of the pseudo-gap state in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δBi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta}

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    We measure and analyze the resistivity of Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δBi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta} crystals for different doping δ\delta. We obtain the fraction of carrier η(T,δ)=ng/nTOT\eta(T,\delta) = n_g/n_{TOT} that do not participate to the c-axis conductivity. All the curves η(T,δ)\eta(T,\delta) collapse onto a universal curve when plotted against a reduced temperature x=[T−Θ(δ)]/Δ∗(δ)x=[T-\Theta(\delta)]/\Delta^{*}(\delta). We find that at the superconducting transition ngn_g is doping independent. We also show that a magnetic field up to 14 T does not affect the degree of localization in the (a,b) planes but widens the temperature range of the x-scaling by suppressing the superconducting phase coherence.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.

    Superoxide reductase from Giardia intestinalis: structural characterization of the first sor from a eukaryotic organism shows an iron centre that is highly sensitive to photoreduction

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    Superoxide reductase (SOR), which is commonly found in prokaryotic organisms, affords protection from oxidative stress by reducing the superoxide anion to hydrogen peroxide. The reaction is catalyzed at the iron centre, which is highly conserved among the prokaryotic SORs structurally characterized to date. Reported here is the first structure of an SOR from a eukaryotic organism, the protozoan parasite Giardia intestinalis (GiSOR), which was solved at 2.0 Ã… resolution. By collecting several diffraction data sets at 100 K from the same flash-cooled protein crystal using synchrotron X-ray radiation, photoreduction of the iron centre was observed. Reduction was monitored using an online UV-visible microspectrophotometer, following the decay of the 647 nm absorption band characteristic of the iron site in the glutamate-bound, oxidized state. Similarly to other 1Fe-SORs structurally characterized to date, the enzyme displays a tetrameric quaternary-structure arrangement. As a distinctive feature, the N-terminal loop of the protein, containing the characteristic EKHxP motif, revealed an unusually high flexibility regardless of the iron redox state. At variance with previous evidence collected by X-ray crystallography and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy of prokaryotic SORs, iron reduction did not lead to dissociation of glutamate from the catalytic metal or other structural changes; however, the glutamate ligand underwent X-ray-induced chemical changes, revealing high sensitivity of the GiSOR active site to X-ray radiation damage

    Charmless charged two-body B decays at LHCb

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    In this note we summarize the status of the studies on charmless charged two-body B-meson decays at LHCb. LHCb has a great potential for triggering, reconstructing and selecting a huge number of such decays, increasing the available statistics from the B-factories and the Tevatron by more than one order of magnitude. First we will describe the selection algorithm ans its performance, then we will show how it is possible to get relevant information on the γ angle of the Unitarity Triangle and on the breaking of the U-spin symmetry using these decays

    The lagoonal harbour of Portus Pisanus (N Tyrrhen- ian Sea, Italy): a long history of human adaptation to changing coastline

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    During the last millennia human and natural processes have become increasingly intertwined, especially in the Mediterranean coastal and alluvial plains where major urban and trade centres developed since protohistoric times. The construction of ports represents one of the human activities that have mostly contributed to modify coastal environments, inducing a variety of hydrodynamic and hydrochemical changes especially since Roman times (Marriner et al., 2014). Exceptions in this common manner to plan harbours have been recognised along the N Tyrrhenian coast, where no high-impact defense works are explicitly documented by either historical sources or archaeological excavations for three main harbours developed during Etruscan-Roman times (IV-I century BC): Portus Lunae (Bini et al., 2012), Portus Pisanus and Vada Volterrana. Roman literary sources (i.e., Itinerarium Maritimum 501; Rutilio Namaziano) mentioned Portus Pisanus as a flourishing commercial site within a natural protected area (called Sinus Pisanus by Tacito) characterized by Posidonia meadows and located at the foot of Leghorn hills, ca. 18.5 km south of the Pisa city. Accordingly, recent excavations undertaken close to the hills slope, 3 km inland from modern coastline, unearthed a wooden palisade, stone piers and a warehouse dated to the Roman period (Pasquinucci, 2013; Morhange et al., 2015). However, the precise location of the lagoonal harbour basin is still controversial. This study aims to contribute to fill this knowledge gap and shed new light on the main stages of harbour history in the framework of the mid-late Holocene palaeogeographic evolution of the Pisa Plain. The application of a multidisciplinary approach (sedimentological and micropalaeontological core analyses, radiocarbon dating, geomorphological field survey, remote sensing and historical cartography) has revealed that a wide lagoonal basin formed in the study area during the marine transgression peak (ca. 8000 cal yr BP). This basin, recorded by a m-thick subsurface succession of soft grey clays with brackish meiofauna, persisted for several millennia and corresponds to Sinus Pisanus. The available stratigraphic data document that during Roman times the lagoon became progressively less connected to the sea and turned into a coastal lake/pond. Filling processes started two-three millennia later respect to the lagoon occupying the Pisa city area during the Holocene (Rossi et al., 2011). This seaward facies shift forced the westward transferring of the Middle Ages harbour. These results show that natural sheltered conditions along with the distance from coeval Arno River made more advantageous for humans following the shoreline changes, rather than making high-impact interventions. 2012, Bini M., Bruckner H., Chelli A., Da Prato S., Gervasini L., Palaeogeographies of the Magra Valley coastal plain to costrain the location of the Roman harbour of Luna (NW Italy), Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 337-338, 37–51. 2014, Marriner N., Morhange C., Kaniewski D., Carayon N., Ancient harbour infrastructure in the Levant: tracking the birth and rise of new forms of anthropogenic pressure, Nature Scientific Reports, 4, 5554. 2015, Morhange C., Marriner N., Baralis A., Blot M.L., Bony G., Carayon N., Carmona P., Flaux C., Giaime M., Goiran J.-P., Kouka M., Lena A., Oueslati A., Pasquinucci M., Porotov A., Dynamiques géomorphologiques et typologie géoarcheologique des ports antiques en contextes lagunaires, Quaternaire, 26, (2), 117–139. 2013, Pasquinucci M., Guida all’archeologia delle coste livornesi. Nardini Editore. Provincia di Livorno. 271 pp. 2011, Rossi V., Amorosi A., Sarti G., Potenza M., Influence of inherited topography on the Holocene sedimentary evolution of coastal systems: An example from Arno coastal plain (Tuscany, Italy), Geomorphology, 135 (1-2), 117–128

    Characterisation of the secondary-neutron production in particle therapy treatments with the MONDO tracking detector

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    Particle Therapy (PT) is a non-invasive technique that exploits charged light ions for the irradiation of tumours that cannot be effectively treated with surgery or conventional radiotherapy. While the largest dose fraction is released to the tumour volume by the primary beam, a non-negligible amount of additional dose is due to the beam fragmentation that occurs along the path towards the target volume. In particular, the produced neutrons are particularly dangerous as they can release their energy far away from the treated area, increasing the risk of developing a radiogenic secondary malignant neoplasm after undergoing a treatment. A precise measurement of the neutron flux, energy spectrum and angular distributions is eagerly needed in order to improve the treatment planning system software, so as to predict the normal tissue toxicity in the target region and the risk of late complications in the whole body. The MONDO (MOnitor for Neutron Dose in hadrOntherapy) project is dedicated to the characterisation of the secondary ultra-fast neutrons ([20-400] MeV energy range) produced in PT. The neutron tracking system exploits the reconstruction of the recoil protons produced in two consecutive (n, p) elastic scattering interactions to measure simultaneously the neutron incoming direction and energy. The tracker active media is a matrix of thin squared scintillating fibers arranged in orthogonally oriented layers that are read out by a sensor (SBAM) based on SPAD (Single-Photon Avalanche Diode) detectors developed in collaboration with the Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK)

    Invariant mass line shape of B -> PP decays at LHCb

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    The family of B meson decays into pairs of charmless charged pseudo-scalar mesons comprises many different channels. In order to disentagle the overlapped mass peaks of the various decay modes, an accurate description of the invariant mass distribution of each mode is required. In particular, the invariant mass parameterization must take into account the effect of QED final state radiation, which leads to the presence of a long tail on the lower side of the mass peak. In this document we propose a new parameterization based on a complete QED calculation of the photon emission rate and we compare it to a simpler one based on phenomenological arguments. Furthermore, we show how the shape of the invariant mass distributions under the pi+pi- mass hypothesis, for every decay mode of interest, can be described very precisely by means of analytical calculations

    Constraining the low-energy S=-2 meson-baryon interaction with two-particle correlations

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    The two-particle correlation technique applied to K−ΛK^-\Lambda pairs in pp collisions at LHC recently provided the most precise data on the strangeness S=−2S=-2 meson-baryon interaction. In this letter, we use for the first time femtoscopic data to constrain the parameters of a low-energy effective QCD Lagrangian. The tuned model delivers new insights on the molecular nature of the Ξ(1620)\Xi(1620) and Ξ(1690)\Xi(1690) states. This procedure opens the possibility to determine higher order corrections, directly constraining QCD effective models particularly in the multi-strange and charm sectors
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