52,667 research outputs found
Succession of Mycoflora on Finished Leathers During Storage
The succession of mycoflora on ten important types of variously tanned finished leathers has been studied in storage. A number of fungi responsible for its deterioration have been recorded. High number of species was obtained in the samples stored at 90% RH at 28degree centigrade in comparison to leathers stored in laboratory conditions(40-60%RH and 28 degree centigrade). Some interesting fungi, namely, A. flavus (Black sclerotial isolate), A. Sydowivar. 2,P citrinum, P. simplicissimum and P. purpurogenum str. 2 were recorded on leathers for the first time as chrome loving fungi. The moisture content of leather samples stored at 90% RH was found to increase considerably after 60 days
Utilization of Fatliquors by Fungi
wenty five fungi isolated from deteriorated finished leathers have been tested to know their relative capacity to utilize the fatliquors viz., raw fish oil, castor oil, fish oil (sulphated), spindle oil turkey red oil and coconut oil. All these fatty substances supported the growth of all the fungi except a few species of Aspergillus, Trichoderma and Drechslera which showed moderate growth. The studies support the contention that fatliquors initially provide a substrate for the growth of fungi on finished leather and its products
Isospin Dependence of the Spin-Orbit Force and Effective Nuclear Potentials,
The isospin dependence of the spin-orbit potential is investigated for an
effective Skyrme-like energy functional suitable for density dependent
Hartree-Fock calculations. The magnitude of the isospin dependence is obtained
from a fit to experimental data on finite spherical nuclei. It is found to be
close to that of relativistic Hartree models. Consequently, the anomalous kink
in the isotope shifts of Pb nuclei is well reproduced.Comment: Revised, 11 pages (Revtex) and 2 figures available upon request,
Preprint MPA-833, Physical Review Letters (in press)
Turbulence and Mixing in the Intracluster Medium
The intracluster medium (ICM) is stably stratified in the hydrodynamic sense
with the entropy increasing outwards. However, thermal conduction along
magnetic field lines fundamentally changes the stability of the ICM, leading to
the "heat-flux buoyancy instability" when and the "magnetothermal
instability" when . The ICM is thus buoyantly unstable regardless of
the signs of and . On the other hand, these
temperature-gradient-driven instabilities saturate by reorienting the magnetic
field (perpendicular to when and parallel to when ), without generating sustained convection. We show that
after an anisotropically conducting plasma reaches this nonlinearly stable
magnetic configuration, it experiences a buoyant restoring force that resists
further distortions of the magnetic field. This restoring force is analogous to
the buoyant restoring force experienced by a stably stratified adiabatic
plasma. We argue that in order for a driving mechanism (e.g, galaxy motions or
cosmic-ray buoyancy) to overcome this restoring force and generate turbulence
in the ICM, the strength of the driving must exceed a threshold, corresponding
to turbulent velocities . For weaker driving, the ICM
remains in its nonlinearly stable magnetic configuration, and turbulent mixing
is effectively absent. We discuss the implications of these findings for the
turbulent diffusion of metals and heat in the ICM.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figs., submitted to the conference proceedings of "The
Monster's Fiery Breath;" a follow up of arXiv:0901.4786 focusing on the
general mixing properties of the IC
Nuclear Breathing Mode in the Relativistic Mean Field Theory
The breathing-mode giant monopole resonance is studied within the framework
of the relativistic mean-field (RMF) theory. Using a broad range of parameter
sets, an analysis of constrained incompressibility and excitation energy of
isoscalar monopole states in finite nuclei is performed. It is shown that the
non-linear scalar self-interaction and the resulting surface properties
influence the breathing-mode considerably. It is observed that dynamical
surface properties respond differently in the RMF theory than in the Skyrme
approach. A comparison is made with the incompressibility derived from the
semi-infinite nuclear matter and with constrained nonrelativistic Skyrme
Hartree-Fock calculaions.Comment: Latex (12 pages) and 3 figures (available upon request) J. Phys. G
(in press
Specialty Preference Among Medical Students and Factors Affecting It
Introduction: Medical education is one of the core part of educational system of any country. Medical education requires undergraduate students to study a wide range of medical specialties. It is often assumed that students do not make their career preferences until after they have graduated from medical school. So the reasons and factors responsible for preferences need to be found out among medical students. Material and Methods: It was a Cross sectional study on 180 medical students to assess preference for specialty and factors responsible. Results: Out of total 190 medical students more or less everyone (97.89%) wanted to pursue specialization and majority of them (96.84%) wanted to pursue the same in Medical Field(p>0.05). majority of male students were interested to pursue their specialization in the field of medicine (37.63%), surgery (23.65%) and pediatrics (13.97%). On the other hand female students were more interested in medicine (24.17%), pediatrics (32.96%) and obstetrics & gynecology (24.17%)(p<0.05). Interest, by far was found to be most common factor (76.63%) responsible for the preference of particular medical specialty among all four groups of students (1st professional-25.27%, 2nd professional-75.92%, final professional-89.47%, interns-68.42%).Conclusion: It is thus concluded there are many factors playing role in the specialty selection and preference among the medical students and should be equally justified and addressed
Residual pollutants in treated pulp paper mill wastewater and their phytotoxicity and cytotoxicity in Allium cepa
Discharged pulp and paper mill wastewater (PPMW) were collected near M/s K. R. pulp and papers Limited, Shahjahanpur, India. Chemical analysis of the wastewater showed high BOD (3653-4180 mg L-1) and COD (17890-19100 mg L-1) values from two different sampling sites. The levels of total phenol were in the range of 389-432 mg L-1, nitrogen (125-234 mg L-1), sulfate (1926-2098 mg L-1), chloride (3.12-5.43 mg L-1) and lignin (38950-39000 mg L-1) along with various heavy metals (Fe, 87-79; Zn, 34-22; Cu, 3.28-2.57; Cd, 1.90- 0.36; Ni, 6-5, and Pb, 41.23-36.54 mg L-1); these were above the permissible limit as recommended by the CPCB and the USEPA. The BOD/COD ratio was 20% concentration of PPMW, α-amylase production was inhibited and chromosomal segregation at metaphase and anaphase during cell division was disturbed which resulted in c-mitosis, sticky chromosomes, and laggard chromosomes. In addition, SEM of the root of A. cepa showed fissures and fractured tissues of the root cap, probably due to the inhibition of auxins that were responsible for root cap formation. The findings indicated A. cepa as a good test model for examining the DNA damage and cytotoxicity by PPMW; and the discharged effluent should be treated at the tertiary stage for environmental protection
- …