23 research outputs found
Understanding the cycle of matter in the universe
Chapter 6. -- Colección: CSIC Scientific challenges : towards 2030Peer reviewe
First Results of the Ce(n,γ)Ce Cross-Section Measurement at n_TOF
An accurate measurement of the Ce(n,γ) energy-dependent cross-section was performed at the n_TOF facility at CERN. This cross-section is of great importance because it represents a bottleneck for the s-process nucleosynthesis and determines to a large extent the cerium abundance in stars. The measurement was motivated by the significant difference between the cerium abundance measured in globular clusters and the value predicted by theoretical stellar models. This discrepancy can be ascribed to an overestimation of the Ce capture cross-section due to a lack of accurate nuclear data. For this measurement, we used a sample of cerium oxide enriched in Ce to 99.4%. The experimental apparatus consisted of four deuterated benzene liquid scintillator detectors, which allowed us to overcome the difficulties present in the previous measurements, thanks to their very low neutron sensitivity. The accurate analysis of the p-wave resonances and the calculation of their average parameters are fundamental to improve the evaluation of the Ce Maxwellian-averaged cross-section
First Results of the Ce(n,γ)Ce Cross-Section Measurement at n_TOF
An accurate measurement of the Ce(n,γ) energy-dependent cross-section was performed at the n_TOF facility at CERN. This cross-section is of great importance because it represents a bottleneck for the s-process nucleosynthesis and determines to a large extent the cerium abundance in stars. The measurement was motivated by the significant difference between the cerium abundance measured in globular clusters and the value predicted by theoretical stellar models. This discrepancy can be ascribed to an overestimation of the Ce capture cross-section due to a lack of accurate nuclear data. For this measurement, we used a sample of cerium oxide enriched in Ce to 99.4%. The experimental apparatus consisted of four deuterated benzene liquid scintillator detectors, which allowed us to overcome the difficulties present in the previous measurements, thanks to their very low neutron sensitivity. The accurate analysis of the p-wave resonances and the calculation of their average parameters are fundamental to improve the evaluation of the Ce Maxwellian-averaged cross-section
Um filho quando eu quiser?: o caso da França contemporânea A child if I want when I want… Reviewing women's aspiration through IVF uses in a French Hospital
A livre escolha da maternidade e do momento de vivê-la foram reivindicações centrais e unânimes do movimento de mulheres nos anos 1970. Em uma primeira fase, esse embate foi amplamente acompanhado por profissionais da área médica, com a difusão de práticas medicalizadas de contracepção e de aborto. Em contrapartida, as tecnologias reprodutivas que permitem adiar a idade da maternidade foram acolhidas com controvérsias pelas feministas: será que essa medicalização da procriação contribuiria para libertar as mulheres dos limites cronológicos ou, pelo contrário, as confinaria a um destino maternal? É essa questão que esse artigo pretende esclarecer, a partir da experiência social da fecundação in vitro nas duas últimas décadas, sobretudo a realizada em um hospital francês.<br>Choosing freely motherhood and its calendar was a central and unanimous claim of the women's lib in the seventies. First, women and professionals belonging to the medical circle fought together to make contraception and abortion available. Nevertheless, feminists have been divided before reproductive technologies that could allow to delay pregnancies: would this medicalization of procreation contribute to emancipate women from time constraints or, on the contrary, contribute to lock them into a maternal destiny? This paper will try to shed light on this problem by discussing IVF social experience in France during the last two decades
First Results of the 140Ce(n,g)141Ce Cross-Section Measurement at n_TOF
The cerium oxide material for this measurement was provided by T. Katabuchi
of the Tokyo Institute of Technology.An accurate measurement of the 140Ce(n,g) energy-dependent cross-section was performed
at the n_TOF facility at CERN. This cross-section is of great importance because it represents a
bottleneck for the s-process nucleosynthesis and determines to a large extent the cerium abundance in
stars. The measurement was motivated by the significant difference between the cerium abundance
measured in globular clusters and the value predicted by theoretical stellar models. This discrepancy
can be ascribed to an overestimation of the 140Ce capture cross-section due to a lack of accurate
nuclear data. For this measurement, we used a sample of cerium oxide enriched in 140Ce to 99.4%.
The experimental apparatus consisted of four deuterated benzene liquid scintillator detectors, which
allowed us to overcome the difficulties present in the previous measurements, thanks to their very
low neutron sensitivity. The accurate analysis of the p-wave resonances and the calculation of their
average parameters are fundamental to improve the evaluation of the 140Ce Maxwellian-averaged
cross-section
Characterization and performance of the DTAS detector
11 pags., 16 figs., 3 tabs.DTAS is a segmented total absorption γ-ray spectrometer developed for the DESPEC experiment at FAIR. It is composed of up to eighteen NaI(Tl) crystals. In this work we study the performance of this detector with laboratory sources and also under real experimental conditions. We present a procedure to reconstruct offline the sum of the energy deposited in all the crystals of the spectrometer, which is complicated by the effect of NaI(Tl) light-yield non-proportionality. The use of a system to correct for time variations of the gain in individual detector modules, based on a light pulse generator, is demonstrated. We describe also an event-based method to evaluate the summing-pileup electronic distortion in segmented spectrometers. All of this allows a careful characterization of the detector with Monte Carlo simulations that is needed to calculate the response function for the analysis of total absorption γ-ray spectroscopy data. Special attention was paid to the interaction of neutrons with the spectrometer, since they are a source of contamination in studies of β-delayed neutron emitting nuclei.This work has been supported by the Spanish
Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad
under grants FPA2011-24553, AIC-A-2011-0696,
FPA2014-52823-C2-1-P and the program Severo
Ochoa (SEV-2014-0398), by the European Commission
under the FP7/EURATOM contract 605203,
and by the Spanish Ministerio de Educacion Cultura
y Deporte under the FPU12/01527 grant.
The work was also supported by the UK Science
and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) grant
14 ST/P005314/1. E. Ganioglu was supported by the
Istanbul University Scientic Research Project Unit
under FYO-2017-24144 project.Peer Reviewe
Summation Calculations for Reactor Antineutrino Spectra, Decay Heat and Delayed Neutron Fractions Involving New TAGS Data and Evaluated Databases
9 pags., 3 figs. -- Open Access funded by Creative Commons Atribution Licence 4.0Three observables of interest for present and future reactors depend on the β decay properties of the fission products: antineutrinos from reactors, the reactor decay heat and delayed neutron emission. In these proceedings, we present new results from summation calculations of the first two quantities quoted above, performed with evolved independent yields coupled with fission product decay data, from various nuclear data bases or models. New TAGS results from the latest experiment of the TAGS collaboration at the JYFL facility of Jyväskylä will be displayed as well as their impact on the antineutrino spectra and the decay heat associated to fission pulses of the main actinides
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Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola: from ‘has bean’ to supermodel
Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola causes halo blight of the common bean, Phaseolus vulgaris, worldwide and remains difficult to control. Races of the pathogen cause either disease symptoms or a resistant hypersensitive response on a series of differentially reacting bean cultivars. The molecular genetics of the interaction between P. syringae pv. phaseolicola and bean, and the evolution of bacterial virulence, have been investigated in depth and this research has led to important discoveries in the field of plant-microbe interactions. In this review, we discuss several of the areas of study that chart the rise of P. syringae pv. phaseolicola from a common pathogen of bean plants to a molecular plant-pathogen supermodel bacterium. Taxonomy: Bacteria; Proteobacteria, gamma subdivision; order Pseudomonadales; family Pseudomonadaceae; genus Pseudomonas; species Pseudomonas syringae; Genomospecies 2; pathogenic variety phaseolicola. Microbiological properties: Gram-negative, aerobic, motile, rod-shaped, 1.5 µm long, 0.7-1.2 µm in diameter, at least one polar flagellum, optimal temperatures for growth of 25-30 °C, oxidase negative, arginine dihydrolase negative, levan positive and elicits the hypersensitive response on tobacco. Host range: Major bacterial disease of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) in temperate regions and above medium altitudes in the tropics. Natural infections have been recorded on several other legume species, including all members of the tribe Phaseoleae with the exception of Desmodium spp. and Pisum sativum. Disease symptoms: Water-soaked lesions on leaves, pods, stems or petioles, that quickly develop greenish-yellow haloes on leaves at temperatures of less than 23 °C. Infected seeds may be symptomless, or have wrinkled or buttery-yellow patches on the seed coat. Seedling infection is recognized by general chlorosis, stunting and distortion of growth. Epidemiology: Seed borne and disseminated from exudation by water-splash and wind occurring during rainfall. Bacteria invade through wounds and natural openings (notably stomata). Weedy and cultivated alternative hosts may also harbour the bacterium. Disease control: Some measure of control is achieved with copper formulations and streptomycin. Pathogen-free seed and resistant cultivars are recommended. Useful websites: Pseudomonas-plant interaction http://www.pseudomonas-syringae.org/; PseudoDB http://xbase.bham.ac.uk/pseudodb/; Plant Associated and Environmental Microbes Database (PAMDB) http://genome.ppws.vt.edu/cgi-bin/MLST/home.pl; PseudoMLSA Database http://www.uib.es/microbiologiaBD/Welcome.html