659 research outputs found
Design and performance of an automatic regenerating adsorption aerosol dryer for continuous operation at monitoring sites
Sizes of aerosol particles depend on the relative humidity of their carrier gas. Most monitoring networks require therefore that the aerosol is dried to a relative humidity below 50% r.H. to ensure comparability of measurements at different sites. Commercially available aerosol dryers are often not suitable for this purpose at remote monitoring sites. Adsorption dryers need to be regenerated frequently and maintenance-free single column Nafion dryers are not designed for high aerosol flow rates. We therefore developed an automatic regenerating adsorption aerosol dryer with a design flow rate of 1 m3/h. Particle transmission efficiency of this dryer has been determined during a 3 week experiment. The lower 50% cut-off was found to be smaller than 3 nm at the design flow rate of the instrument. Measured transmission efficiencies are in good agreement with theoretical calculations. One dryer has been successfully deployed in the Amazon river basin. We present data from this monitoring site for the first 6 months of measurements (February 2008–August 2008). Apart from one unscheduled service, this dryer did not require any maintenance during this time period. The average relative humidity of the dried aerosol was 27.1+/−7.5% r.H. compared to an average ambient relative humidity of nearly 80% and temperatures around 30°C. This initial deployment demonstrated that these dryers are well suitable for continuous operation at remote monitoring sites under adverse ambient conditions
Seismic attenuation: effects of interfacial impedance on wave-induced pressure diffusion
Seismic attenuation and dispersion in layered sedimentary structures are often interpreted in terms of the classical White model for wave-induced pressure diffusion across the layers. However, this interlayer flow is severely dependent on the properties of the interface separating two layers. This interface behaviour can be described by a pressure jump boundary condition involving a non-vanishing interfacial impedance. In this paper, we incorporate the interfacial impedance into the White model by solving a boundary value problem in the framework of quasi-static poroelasticity. We show that the White model predictions for attenuation and dispersion substantially change. These changes can be attributed to petrophysically plausible scenarios such as imperfect hydraulic contacts or the presence of capillarity
In Vitro Toxicity And Control Of Meloidogyne Incognita In Soybean By Rosemary Extract
The control of nematodes in plants can be challenging, and there is a need for alternative, environmentally conscious methods for their management. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of rosemary extract (Rosmarinus officinalis) on the in vitro toxicity and control of Meloidogyne incognita in CD 206 and CD 215 soybean cultivars. Using an in vitro assay, 500 M. incognita eggs per plate were observed for 15 days after incubation with rosemary extract at concentrations of 1%, 5%, and 10%. Soybean plants were studied under greenhouse conditions, and starting at V3 stage, were sprayed weekly with the same concentration of rosemary extract for 64 days. Three days after the first treatment, each soybean plant was inoculated with 1800 eggs and 400 second-stage juveniles (J2). At the end of this essay, number of eggs and J2 in the roots and soil, number of galls, and the reproduction factor (RF) were evaluated. Our results showed that in the in vitro assay, rosemary extract reduced the number of M. incognita eggs that hatched. Under greenhouse conditions, the CD 206 cultivar showed a 46.5% reduction in the number of galls, as well as fewer eggs in the soil and a lower RF. Similarly, in the CD 215 cultivar, the number of eggs was reduced and the RF was lower. These results indicate the potential for rosemary extract to control M. incognita in soybean crops.37110311
Density Effect on Hadronization of a Quark Plasma
The hadronization cross section in a quark plasma at finite temperature and
density is calculated in the framework of Nambu--Jona-lasinio model with
explicit chiral symmetry breaking. In apposition to the familiar temperature
effect, the quark plasma at high density begins to hadronize suddenly. It leads
to a sudden and strong increase of final state pions in relativistic heavy ion
collisions which may be considered as a clear signature of chiral symmetry
restoration.Comment: Latex2e, 11 pages, 7 Postscript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
A versatile microarray platform for capturing rare cells
Analyses of rare events occurring at extremely low frequencies in body fluids are still challenging. We established a versatile microarray-based platform able to capture single target cells from large background populations. As use case we chose the challenging application of detecting circulating tumor cells (CTCs) - about one cell in a billion normal blood cells. After incubation with an antibody cocktail, targeted cells are extracted on a microarray in a microfluidic chip. The accessibility of our platform allows for subsequent recovery of targets for further analysis. The microarray facilitates exclusion of false positive capture events by co-localization allowing for detection without fluorescent labelling. Analyzing blood samples from cancer patients with our platform reached and partly outreached gold standard performance, demonstrating feasibility for clinical application. Clinical researchers free choice of antibody cocktail without need for altered chip manufacturing or incubation protocol, allows virtual arbitrary targeting of capture species and therefore wide spread applications in biomedical sciences
Wavepacket Dynamics in Yang-Mills Theory
We discuss the results of numerical simulations of colliding wavepackets in
Yang--Mills theory. We investigate their behavior as a function of
amplitude and momentum distribution. We find regions in our parameter space in
which initial wave packets scatter into final configurations with dramatically
different momentum distributions. These results constitute new classical
trajectories with multiparticle boundary conditions. We explain their relevance
for the calculation of scattering amplitudes in the semiclassical
approximation. Finally, we give directions for future work.Comment: 11 pgs. text, 11 optional figs using PiCTeX and epsf, new version
contains improved discussion of scaling properties of results and one
additional figure
Triplet superconductivity in a one-dimensional ferromagnetic t-J model
In this paper we study the ground state phase diagram of a one-dimensional
model, at half-filling. In the large-bandwidth limit and for
ferromagnetic exchange with easy-plane anisotropy, a phase with gapless charge
and massive spin excitations, characterized by the coexistence of triplet
superconducting () and spin density wave () instabilities is
realized in the ground state. With reduction of the bandwidth, a transition
into an insulating phase showing properties of the spin-1/2 XY model takes
place. In the case of weakly anisotropic antiferromagnetic exchange the system
shows a long range dimerized (Peierls) ordering in the ground state. The
complete weak-coupling phase diagram of the model, including effects of the
on-site Hubbard interaction, is obtained
Event-related potential correlates of sound organization: Early sensory and late cognitive effects
We tested whether incoming sounds are processed differently depending on how the preceding sound sequence has been interpreted by the brain. Sequences of a regularly repeating three-tone pattern, the perceived organization of which spontaneously switched back and forth between two alternative interpretations, were delivered to listeners. Occasionally, a regular tone was exchanged for a slightly or moderately lower one (deviants). The electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded while listeners continuously marked their perception of the sound sequence. We found that for both the regular and the deviant tones, the early exogenous P1 and N1 amplitudes varied together with the perceived sound organization. Percept dependent effects on the late endogenous N2 and P3a amplitudes were only found for deviant tones. These results suggest that the perceived sound organization affects sound processing both by modulating what information is extracted from incoming sounds as well as by influencing how deviant sound events are evaluated for further processing
Two-Hole and Four-Hole Bound States in a t-J Ladder at half-filling
The two-hole excitation spectrum of the t-J ladder at half-filling is studied
using linked-cluster series expansion methods. A rich spectrum of bound states
emerges, particularly at small . Their dispersion relations and coherence
lengths are computed, along with the threshold behaviour as the bound states
merge into the continuum. A class of 4-hole bound states is also studied,
leading to the conclusion that phase separation occurs for ,
in agreement with other studies.Comment: revtex
Transport by molecular motors in the presence of static defects
The transport by molecular motors along cytoskeletal filaments is studied
theoretically in the presence of static defects. The movements of single motors
are described as biased random walks along the filament as well as binding to
and unbinding from the filament. Three basic types of defects are
distinguished, which differ from normal filament sites only in one of the
motors' transition probabilities. Both stepping defects with a reduced
probability for forward steps and unbinding defects with an increased
probability for motor unbinding strongly reduce the velocities and the run
lengths of the motors with increasing defect density. For transport by single
motors, binding defects with a reduced probability for motor binding have a
relatively small effect on the transport properties. For cargo transport by
motors teams, binding defects also change the effective unbinding rate of the
cargo particles and are expected to have a stronger effect.Comment: 20 pages, latex, 7 figures, 1 tabl
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