288 research outputs found
Updates to some names used for microalgal taxa in Australia
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Once-through thorium cycle for BWR's
Problems in application of thorium cycles include greater fissile inventory requirements, the blending of highly enriched uranium or plutonium with thorium, and the necessity to recover and recycle the valuable U-233 produced in order to recover the costs of the initial inventory and enrichment. With these problems in mind, a once-through thorium cycle was developed for Boiling Water Reactors which minimizes the effect of thorium on the fissile inventory, which is initiated with ThO/sub 2/ fuel containing no initial fissile material, and which does not require U-233 recovery and recycle to make the application economically competitive. The design makes advantageous use of the inherent lattice heterogeneity and other characteristics of the BWR lattice to produce U-233 in ThO/sub 2/ without power distribution penalties and to improve reactor performance (thermal and transient margins). Standard BWR fuel assembly hardware was used to make the design backfitable with minimum manufacturing impact. Preliminary conclusions are that the once-through thorium application has potential to both reduce uranium ore requirements and increase BWR operating margins
Accretion, Outflows, and Winds of Magnetized Stars
Many types of stars have strong magnetic fields that can dynamically
influence the flow of circumstellar matter. In stars with accretion disks, the
stellar magnetic field can truncate the inner disk and determine the paths that
matter can take to flow onto the star. These paths are different in stars with
different magnetospheres and periods of rotation. External field lines of the
magnetosphere may inflate and produce favorable conditions for outflows from
the disk-magnetosphere boundary. Outflows can be particularly strong in the
propeller regime, wherein a star rotates more rapidly than the inner disk.
Outflows may also form at the disk-magnetosphere boundary of slowly rotating
stars, if the magnetosphere is compressed by the accreting matter. In isolated,
strongly magnetized stars, the magnetic field can influence formation and/or
propagation of stellar wind outflows. Winds from low-mass, solar-type stars may
be either thermally or magnetically driven, while winds from massive, luminous
O and B type stars are radiatively driven. In all of these cases, the magnetic
field influences matter flow from the stars and determines many observational
properties. In this chapter we review recent studies of accretion, outflows,
and winds of magnetized stars with a focus on three main topics: (1) accretion
onto magnetized stars; (2) outflows from the disk-magnetosphere boundary; and
(3) winds from isolated massive magnetized stars. We show results obtained from
global magnetohydrodynamic simulations and, in a number of cases compare global
simulations with observations.Comment: 60 pages, 44 figure
Coupled oscillators as models of phantom and scalar field cosmologies
We study a toy model for phantom cosmology recently introduced in the
literature and consisting of two oscillators, one of which carries negative
kinetic energy. The results are compared with the exact phase space picture
obtained for similar dynamical systems describing, respectively, a massive
canonical scalar field conformally coupled to the spacetime curvature, and a
conformally coupled massive phantom. Finally, the dynamical system describing
exactly a minimally coupled phantom is studied and compared with the toy model.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, to appear in Physical Review
Valor nutritivo de pastagens de capim-elefante manejadas sob sistema convencional e agroecológico.
O capim-elefante é utilizado, na sua grande maioria, em sistemas convencionais de produção animal. O objetivo deste trabalho foi comparar o valor nutritivo do capimelefante em sistemas de manejo agroecológico e convencional, quanto a proteína bruta (PB), fibra em detergente neutro (FDN) e digestibilidade in vitro da matéria seca (DIVMS). Foram usados quatro piquetes, com 0,12ha cada um. No sistema convencional, o capim-elefante foi estabelecido singularmente. No sistema agroecológico, o plantio foi feito em linhas afastadas de 3m. Nas entrelinhas, estabeleceu-se a aveia e o azevém no período hibernal, enquanto que no período estival permitiu-se o desenvolvimento de espécies espontâneas. A adubação foi feita com fertilizantes orgânicos (150kg ha-1 de N). No sistema agroecológico, foram conduzidos sete pastejos, de 24/04/2004 a 05/05/2005. Na pastagem convencional, usouse a mesma quantidade de N (uréia), sendo conduzidos quatro ciclos de pastejo, de 06/10/2004 a 05/05/2005. Para ambos os sistemas foram utilizadas vacas da raça Holandês, recebendo complementação alimentar de 3,5kg dia-1 de concentrado com 20% de proteína bruta, constituindo-se nos animais experimentais. Nas avaliações, considerou-se a massa de forragem inicial com base na matéria seca (MS), os componentes botânicos da pastagem e estruturais do capimelefante. As análises de qualidade foram feitas em amostras de pastejo simulado. O delineamento experimental foi o inteiramente casualizado com dois tratamentos, convencional e agroecológico, duas repetições (piquetes) e em parcelas incompletas subdivididas no tempo (pastejos). Houve interação (P<0,05) entre tratamentos e pastejos em todas as variáveis. Na pastagem agroecológica, o modelo que melhor se ajustou foi o cúbico para todas as variáveis, em função do tempo de pastejo. Na pastagem convencional, a PB e a DIVMS ajustaram-se melhor ao modelo linear, com taxa positiva de crescimento, sendo observado comportamento inverso para FDN, com o decorrer dos pastejos. Tanto na pastagem convencional quanto na agroecológica encontraram-se associações negativas entre lâmina foliar do capim-elefante com PB e DIVMS e positiva com FDN. Ambos os sistemas apresentaram teores qualitativos elevados das pastagens, considerando-se a adubação, o manejo e o tempo de utilização
Superconformal N=2, D=5 matter with and without actions
We investigate N=2, D=5 supersymmetry and matter-coupled supergravity
theories in a superconformal context. In a first stage we do not require the
existence of a Lagrangian. Under this assumption, we already find at the level
of rigid supersymmetry, i.e. before coupling to conformal supergravity, more
general matter couplings than have been considered in the literature. For
instance, we construct new vector-tensor multiplet couplings, theories with an
odd number of tensor multiplets, and hypermultiplets whose scalar manifold
geometry is not hyperkaehler.
Next, we construct rigid superconformal Lagrangians. This requires some extra
ingredients that are not available for all dynamical systems. However, for the
generalizations with tensor multiplets mentioned above, we find corresponding
new actions and scalar potentials. Finally, we extend the supersymmetry to
local superconformal symmetry, making use of the Weyl multiplet. Throughout the
paper, we will indicate the various geometrical concepts that arise, and as an
application we compute the non-vanishing components of the Ricci tensor of
hypercomplex group manifolds. Our results can be used as a starting point to
obtain more general matter-couplings to Poincare supergravity.Comment: 67 pages; v2: title of reference changed and small editing
corrections; v3: small typing errors corrected, version published in JHEP;
v4: typos corrected; v5: additional term in (2.109) and (4.11); v6: change of
order of indices in (2.89
The current status of species recognition and identification in Aspergillus
The species recognition and identification of aspergilli and their
teleomorphs is discussed. A historical overview of the taxonomic concepts
starting with the monograph of Raper & Fennell
(1965) is given. A list of
taxa described since 2000 is provided. Physiological characters, particularly
growth rates and the production of extrolites, often show differences that
reflect phylogenetic species boundaries and greater emphasis should be placed
on extrolite profiles and growth characteristics in species descriptions.
Multilocus sequence-based phylogenetic analyses have emerged as the primary
tool for inferring phylogenetic species boundaries and relationships within
subgenera and sections. A four locus DNA sequence study covering all major
lineages in Aspergillus using genealogical concordance theory
resulted in a species recognition system that agrees in part with phenotypic
studies and reveals the presence of many undescribed species not resolved by
phenotype. The use of as much data from as many sources as possible in making
taxonomic decisions is advocated. For species identification, DNA barcoding
uses a short genetic marker in an organism”s DNA to quickly and easily
identify it to a particular species. Partial cytochrome oxidase subunit 1
sequences, which are used for barcoding animal species, were found to have
limited value for species identification among black aspergilli. The various
possibilities are discussed and at present partial β-tubulin or
calmodulin are the most promising loci for Aspergillus
identification. For characterising Aspergillus species one
application would be to produce a multilocus phylogeny, with the goal of
having a firm understanding of the evolutionary relationships among species
across the entire genus. DNA chip technologies are discussed as possibilities
for an accurate multilocus barcoding tool for the genus
Aspergillus
Diving into the vertical dimension of elasmobranch movement ecology
Knowledge of the three-dimensional movement patterns of elasmobranchs is vital to understand their ecological roles and exposure to anthropogenic pressures. To date, comparative studies among species at global scales have mostly focused on horizontal movements. Our study addresses the knowledge gap of vertical movements by compiling the first global synthesis of vertical habitat use by elasmobranchs from data obtained by deployment of 989 biotelemetry tags on 38 elasmobranch species. Elasmobranchs displayed high intra- and interspecific variability in vertical movement patterns. Substantial vertical overlap was observed for many epipelagic elasmobranchs, indicating an increased likelihood to display spatial overlap, biologically interact, and share similar risk to anthropogenic threats that vary on a vertical gradient. We highlight the critical next steps toward incorporating vertical movement into global management and monitoring strategies for elasmobranchs, emphasizing the need to address geographic and taxonomic biases in deployments and to concurrently consider both horizontal and vertical movements
The Public Repository of Xenografts enables discovery and randomized phase II-like trials in mice
More than 90% of drugs with preclinical activity fail in human trials, largely due to insufficient efficacy. We hypothesized that adequately powered trials of patient-derived xenografts (PDX) in mice could efficiently define therapeutic activity across heterogeneous tumors. To address this hypothesis, we established a large, publicly available repository of well-characterized leukemia and lymphoma PDXs that undergo orthotopic engraftment, called the Public Repository of Xenografts (PRoXe). PRoXe includes all de-identified information relevant to the primary specimens and the PDXs derived from them. Using this repository, we demonstrate that large studies of acute leukemia PDXs that mimic human randomized clinical trials can characterize drug efficacy and generate transcriptional, functional, and proteomic biomarkers in both treatment-naive and relapsed/refractory disease
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