11,067 research outputs found
Acute pulmonary pathology and sudden death in rats following the intravenous administration of the plasticizer, DI (2-ethylhexyl) phthalate, solubilized with Tween surfactants
Intravenous administration of 200-300 mg/kg of di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP) solubilized in aqueous solutions of several Tween surfactants caused respiratory distress in rats. There was a dose-dependent lethality with death generally occurring within 90 minutes after injection. The lungs from DEHP:Tween treated animals were enlarged, generally darkened, and in some cases showed hemorrhagic congestion. Neither the overt symptoms nor the morphologic alterations resulting from DEHP:Tween administration could be reproduced by intravenous administration of aqueous Tween solutions alone. The absence of pulmonary abnormalities following the intravenous administration of DEHP as an aqueous emulsion given either alone or even as soon as 2 minutes after pretreatment with Tween 80, suggests that the specific in vivo interaction between DEHP and Tween surfactants depends on the prior formation of water-soluble micelles of DEHP
Snowmelt and sublimation: field experiments and modelling in the High Atlas Mountains of Morocco
International audienceSnow in the High Atlas Mountains is a major source for freshwater renewal and for water availability in the semi-arid lowlands of south-eastern Morocco. Snowfall- and snow-ablation monitoring and modelling is important for estimating potential water delivery from the mountain water towers to the forelands. This study is part of GLOWA-IMPETUS, an integrated management project dealing with scarce water resources in West Africa. The Ameskar study area is located to the south of the High Atlas Mountains, in their rain shadow. As a part of the M'Goun river basin within the upper Drâa valley, the study area is characterised by high radiation inputs, low atmospheric humidity and long periods with sub-zero temperatures. Its altitude ranges between 2000 m and 4000 m, with dominant north- and south-facing slopes. Snowfall occurs mainly from November to April but even summit regions can become repeatedly devoid of snow cover. Snow cover maps for the M'Goun basin (1240 km2) are derived from calculations of NDSI (Normalized Difference Snow Index) from MODIS satellite images and snow depth is monitored at four automatic weather stations between 2000?4000 m. Snowfall events are infrequent at lower altitudes. The presence of snow penitentes at altitudes above 3000 m indicates that snow sublimation is an important component of snow ablation. Snow ablation was modelled with the UEB Utah Energy Balance Model (Tarboton and Luce, 1996). This single layer, physically-based, point energy and mass balance model is driven by meteorological variables recorded at the automatic weather stations at Tounza (2960 m) and Tichki (3260 m). Data from snow pillows at Tounza and Tichki are used to validate the model's physical performance in terms of energy and water balances for a sequence of two snowfall events in the winter of 2003/4. First UEB modelling results show good overall performance and timing of snowmelt and sublimation compared to field investigations. Up to 44% of snow ablation is attributed to snow sublimation in typical winters with subzero temperatures and low atmospheric humidity at an altitude of 3000 m. At altitudes below 3000 m snowmelt generally dominates over sublimation. Unfortunately, the highest altitude zones suffer long periods with direct water loss into the atmosphere by sublimation in the course of which they cannot contribute to direct runoff or groundwater formation in the southern High Atlas Mountains. Keywords: sublimation, snow ablation modelling, energy balance model, High Atlas Mountain
Far Infrared Variability of Sagittarius A*: 25.5 Hours of Monitoring with
Variable emission from Sgr~A*, the luminous counterpart to the super-massive
black hole at the center of our Galaxy, arises from the innermost portions of
the accretion flow. Better characterization of the variability is important for
constraining models of the low-luminosity accretion mode powering Sgr~A*, and
could further our ability to use variable emission as a probe of the strong
gravitational potential in the vicinity of the
black hole. We use the \textit{Herschel}
Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) to monitor Sgr~A* at
wavelengths that are difficult or impossible to observe from the ground. We
find highly significant variations at 0.25, 0.35, and 0.5 mm, with temporal
structure that is highly correlated across these wavelengths. While the
variations correspond to 1% changes in the total intensity in the
\textit{Herschel} beam containing Sgr~A*, comparison to independent,
simultaneous observations at 0.85 mm strongly supports the reality of the
variations. The lowest point in the light curves, 0.5 Jy below the
time-averaged flux density, places a lower bound on the emission of Sgr~A* at
0.25 mm, the first such constraint on the THz portion of the SED. The
variability on few hour timescales in the SPIRE light curves is similar to that
seen in historical 1.3 mm data, where the longest time series is available, but
the distribution of variations in the sub-mm do not show a tail of
large-amplitude variations seen at 1.3 mm. Simultaneous X-ray photometry from
XMM-Newton shows no significant variation within our observing period, which
may explain the lack of very large variations if X-ray and submillimeter flares
are correlated.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Na2V3O7, a frustrated nanotubular system with spin-1/2 diamond rings
Following the recent discussion on the puzzling nature of the interactions in
the nanotubular system Na2V3O7, we present a detailed ab-initio microscopic
analysis of its electronic and magnetic properties. By means of a non-trivial
downfolding study we propose an effective model in terms of tubes of nine-site
rings with the geometry of a spin-diamond necklace with frustrated inter-ring
interactions. We show that this model provides a quantitative account of the
observed magnetic behavior.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures. Phys. Rev. Lett. (in press
Characterisation of an n-type segmented BEGe detector
A four-fold segmented n-type point-contact "Broad Energy" high-purity
germanium detector, SegBEGe, has been characterised at the Max-Planck-Institut
f\"ur Physik in Munich. The main characteristics of the detector are described
and first measurements concerning the detector properties are presented. The
possibility to use mirror pulses to determine source positions is discussed as
well as charge losses observed close to the core contact
PEN as self-vetoing structural Material
Polyethylene Naphtalate (PEN) is a mechanically very favorable polymer.
Earlier it was found that thin foils made from PEN can have very high
radio-purity compared to other commercially available foils. In fact, PEN is
already in use for low background signal transmission applications (cables).
Recently it has been realized that PEN also has favorable scintillating
properties. In combination, this makes PEN a very promising candidate as a
self-vetoing structural material in low background experiments. Components
instrumented with light detectors could be built from PEN. This includes
detector holders, detector containments, signal transmission links, etc. The
current R\&D towards qualification of PEN as a self-vetoing low background
structural material is be presented.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, contribution to Proceedings of the sixth workshop
on Low Radioactivity Techniques 2017, 23-27 May 2017 Seoul, to be published
at AIP, editor: D. Leonar
Solar neutrino spectrum, sterile neutrinos and additional radiation in the Universe
Recent results from the SNO, Super-Kamiokande and Borexino experiments do not
show the expected upturn of the energy spectrum of events (the ratio ) at low energies. At the same time, cosmological observations
testify for possible existence of additional relativistic degrees of freedom in
the early Universe: . These facts strengthen the case
of very light sterile neutrino, , with eV, which mixes weakly with the active neutrinos. The
mixing in the mass eigenstate characterized by can explain an absence of the upturn. The mixing of in
the eigenstate with leads to production of
via oscillations in the Universe and to additional contribution before the big bang nucleosynthesis and later. Such a
mixing can be tested in forthcoming experiments with the atmospheric neutrinos
as well as in future accelerator long baseline experiments. It has substantial
impact on conversion of the supernova neutrinos.Comment: 27 pages, LaTeX, 14 eps figures, 3 figures and additional
considerations adde
A Frustrated 3-Dimensional Antiferromagnet: Stacked Layers
We study a frustrated 3D antiferromagnet of stacked layers. The
intermediate 'quantum spin liquid' phase, present in the 2D case, narrows with
increasing interlayer coupling and vanishes at a triple point. Beyond this
there is a direct first-order transition from N{\' e}el to columnar order.
Possible applications to real materials are discussed.Comment: 11 pages,7 figure
Two-loop renormalization-group theory for the quasi-one-dimensional Hubbard model at half filling
We derive two-loop renormalization-group equations for the half-filled
one-dimensional Hubbard chains coupled by the interchain hopping. Our
renormalization-group scheme for the quasi-one-dimensional electron system is a
natural extension of that for the purely one-dimensional systems in the sense
that transverse-momentum dependences are introduced in the g-ological coupling
constants and we regard the transverse momentum as a patch index. We develop
symmetry arguments for the particle-hole symmetric half-filled Hubbard model
and obtain constraints on the g-ological coupling constants by which resultant
renormalization equations are given in a compact form. By solving the
renormalization-group equations numerically, we estimate the magnitude of
excitation gaps and clarify that the charge gap is suppressed due to the
interchain hopping but is always finite even for the relevant interchain
hopping. To show the validity of the present analysis, we also apply this to
the two-leg ladder system. By utilizing the field-theoretical bosonization and
fermionization method, we derive low-energy effective theory and analyze the
magnitude of all the excitation gaps in detail. It is shown that the low-energy
excitations in the two-leg Hubbard ladder have SO(3) x SO(3) x U(1) symmetry
when the interchain hopping exceeds the magnitude of the charge gap.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures; Two appendices and one figure adde
Signatures of Strong Correlations in One-Dimensional Ultra-Cold Atomic Fermi Gases
Recent success in manipulating ultra-cold atomic systems allows to probe
different strongly correlated regimes in one-dimension. Regimes such as the
(spin-coherent) Luttinger liquid and the spin-incoherent Luttinger liquid can
be realized by tuning the inter-atomic interaction strength and trap
parameters. We identify the noise correlations of density fluctuations as a
robust observable (uniquely suitable in the context of trapped atomic gases) to
discriminate between these two regimes. Finally, we address the prospects to
realize and probe these phenomena experimentally using optical lattices.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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