30,210 research outputs found
Alteration and alterability of the anorthosite from Angola
Siliceous rocks are widely used as dimension stone but the last decades have registered an increase rate of their alteration when exposed to polluted environments. Anorthosites were treated by acidified solutions of HCl, HN03 and H2S04 simulating acid rain and the response was recorded through different experiments such as on the surface of the polished rock and on the surface of uncovered thin sections. The main components, plagioclase and olivine, both responded in similar ways to each acid solution, although following different trends; while plagioclase develops a thin layer which acts as protection to the mineral, olivine at first undergoes alteration due to leaching of magnesium and iron and in a following stage, is mechanically removed from the rock. The
action of warm water on the rock was tested through the use of the Soxhlet extractor which caused changes on the rock colour
and leaching of several cations from its components
Heavy-ion Physics at a Fixed-Target Experiment Using the LHC Proton and Lead Beams (AFTER@LHC): Feasibility Studies for Quarkonium and Drell-Yan Production
We outline the case for heavy-ion-physics studies using the multi-TeV lead
LHC beams in the fixed-target mode. After a brief contextual reminder, we
detail the possible contributions of AFTER@LHC to heavy-ion physics with a
specific emphasis on quarkonia. We then present performance simulations for a
selection of observables. These show that , and
production in heavy-ion collisions can be studied in new energy and
rapidity domains with the LHCb and ALICE detectors. We also discuss the
relevance to analyse the Drell-Yan pair production in asymmetric
nucleus-nucleus collisions to study the factorisation of the nuclear
modification of partonic densities and of further quarkonia to restore their
status of golden probes of the quark-gluon plasma formation.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figure
Detecting New Physics from CP-violating phase measurements in B decays
The standard CKM model can be tested and New Physics detected using only
CP-violating phase measurements in B decays. This requires the measurement of a
phase factor which is small in the Standard Model, in addition to the usual
large phases and . We also point out that identifying
violations of the unitarity of the CKM matrix is rather difficult, and cannot
be done with phase measurements alone.Comment: 6 pages, Latex, no figure
Dynamics and hysteresis in square lattice artificial spin-ice
Dynamical effects under geometrical frustration are considered in a model for
artificial spin ice on a square lattice in two dimensions. Each island of the
spin ice has a three-component Heisenberg-like dipole moment subject to shape
anisotropies that influence its direction. The model has real dynamics,
including rotation of the magnetic degrees of freedom, going beyond the
Ising-type models of spin ice. The dynamics is studied using a Langevin
equation solved via a second order Heun algorithm. Thermodynamic properties
such as the specific heat are presented for different couplings. A peak in
specific heat is related to a type of melting-like phase transition present in
the model. Hysteresis in an applied magnetic field is calculated for model
parameters where the system is able to reach thermodynamic equilibrium.Comment: Revised versio
Thermal behaviour simulation of the passenger compartment of vehicles
In this work a calculus program developed with the objective of simulating the thermal behaviour in the passenger compartment of vehicles is presented. The model is based on the space-integral energy balance equations for the inside air and for the main vehicle body and surfaces. It can solve two kinds of problems. In the first one, it calculates the heat stress that the air conditioning system must equilibrate in order to satisfy predefined permanent regimen project specifications. In the second one, once imposed a particular air conditioning system and given the ambient conditions, it computes the different temperatures and heat fluxes, either in transient or steady regimens. The validation of this model was done with a railway car, in a summer situation, when it was immobilized and running. The model reproduced well the experimentally determined temperature and heat flux evolutions. However, the numeric simulation showed best agreement with the experimental results when used with the convection heat transfer coefficients, determined experimentally in this work
Chemical Composition, Bioactive Compounds, and Antioxidant Activity of Two Wild Edible Mushrooms Armillaria mellea and Macrolepiota procera from Two Countries (Morocco and Portugal)
The present study aimed to investigate the chemical composition, bioactive compounds, and antioxidant activity of two wild edible mushrooms, the honey fungus (Armillaria mellea) and the parasol mushroom (Macrolepiota procera), collected from Northern Morocco (MA) and Portugal (PT). Those species were chosen due to their edibility, nutraceutical, and medicinal properties. Bioactive compounds (ascorbic acid, tannin, total phenolic, total flavonoid, beta-carotene, and lycopene) and their antioxidant activity were determined by spectrophotometric methods. Herein, the fruiting body of the samples revealed a significantly higher amount of bioactive compounds, and values varied between the Moroccan and the Portuguese ones. Methanolic extracts shown a strong antioxidant capacity: Using DPPH free radical-scavenging activity radicals (IC50 1.06-1.32 mg/mL); inhibition of beta-carotene bleaching radicals (IC50 0.09-0.53 mg/mL); and, reducing power radicals (IC50 0.52-1.11 mg/mL). The mushroom species with the highest antioxidant capacity was A. mellea from MA. Chemical composition was analyzed by GC-MS and LC-MS methodologies. GC-MS analysis showed that the most abundant biomolecules group was sugar compositions in the four samples (62.90%, 48.93%, 59.00%, and 53.71%) and the main components were galactitol 16.74%, petroselinic acid 19.83%, d-galactose 38.43%, and glycerol 24.43% in A. mellea (MA), A. mellea (PT), M. procera (MA), and M. procera (PT), respectively. LC-MS analysis of individual phenolic compounds revealed that vanillic acid (198.40 +/- 2.82 mu g/g dry weight (dw) and cinnamic acid (155.20 +/- 0.97 mu g/g dw) were the main compounds detected in A. mellea, while protocatechuic acid (92.52 +/- 0.45 and 125.50 +/- 0.89 mu g/g dw) was predominated in M. procera for MA and PT samples, respectively. In general, the results of this comparative study demonstrate that the geographic and climatic conditions of the collection site can influence biomolecule compounds and antioxidant properties of wild mushrooms. This study contributes to the elaboration of nutritional, nutraceutical, and pharmaceutical databases of the worldwide consumed mushrooms
Minimal 3-3-1 model, lepton mixing and muonium-antimuonium conversion
The recent experimental results on neutrino oscillation and on
muonium-antimuonium conversion require extension of the minimal 3-3-1 model. We
review the constraints imposed to the model by those measurements and suggest a
pattern of leptonic mixing, with charged leptons in a non-diagonal basis, which
accounts for the neutrino physics and circumvents the tight muonium-antimuonium
bounds on the model. We also illustrate a scenario where this pattern could be
realized.Comment: 4 pages; abbreviated version, conclusions unchange
Cooperation enhanced by inhomogeneous activity of teaching for evolutionary Prisoner's Dilemma games
Evolutionary Prisoner's Dilemma games with quenched inhomogeneities in the
spatial dynamical rules are considered. The players following one of the two
pure strategies (cooperation or defection) are distributed on a two-dimensional
lattice. The rate of strategy adoption from a randomly chosen neighbors are
controlled by the payoff difference and a two-value pre-factor
characterizing the players whom the strategy learned from. The reduced teaching
activity of players is distributed randomly with concentrations at the
beginning and fixed further on. Numerical and analytical calculations are
performed to study the concentration of cooperators as a function of and
for different noise levels and connectivity structures. Significant
increase of cooperation is found within a wide range of parameters for this
dynamics. The results highlight the importance of asymmetry characterizing the
exchange of master-follower role during the strategy adoptions.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, corrected typo
Comportamento de cultivares de mandioca (Manihot esculentaCrantz) DE mesa no Município de Belmonte, Bahia.
A expansão do mercado de mandioca de mesa depende de variedades que apresentem boas qualidades culinárias, baixa toxicidade cianogênicae resistência à deterioração pós-colheita (BORGES et al., 2002).A produtividade da mandioca no Brasil é baixa devido não serem adotadas práticas agronômicas de controle de pragas e doenças em seu cultivo, além de ocupar terras marginais, de baixa fertilidade, e com problemas climáticos adversos e uso de cultivares não adaptadas (FUKUDA, 1993). O uso de variedades melhoradas e adaptadas às condições edafoclimáticas locais é um dos meios para se promover melhoria do sistema de produção e aumentar o rendimento da mandioca na região (OLIVEIRA; DINIZ; CALDAS, 2006). É importante testes em diferentes cultivares para que se busque fazer a melhor escolha no plantio, aumentando as chances de maior produtividade e reduzir problemas com pragas e doenças. A introdução, seguida de avaliações criteriosas, além de constituir o método de melhoramento mais simples e menos oneroso para seleção, em mandioca, apresenta grande probabilidade de êxito em função da ampla diversidade genética disponível e ainda em crescente exploração (FUKUDA, 1999). O seguinte trabalho teve como objetivo avaliar o desenvolvimento de diferentes cultivares de mandioca de mesa no município de Belmonte, Bahia
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