870 research outputs found
Atividade antioxidante e compostos fenólicos de cinco acessos de pimentas Capsicum chinense.
Pimentas além de serem popularmente utilizadas como condimentos, representam uma fonte significativa de compostos antioxidantes. A espécie de pimentas Capsicum chinense, originária do Brasil apresenta mais de 40 variedades, sendo que muitas ainda são desconhecidas quanto as suas potencialidades. Neste trabalho foram caracterizados quanto à atividade antioxidante e ao teor de compostos fenólicos, cinco genótipos de pimenta C. chinense do Banco Ativo de Germoplasma da Embrapa Amazônia Oriental, visando identificar as variedades promissoras para serem utilizadas em futuros programas de melhoramento genético. A atividade antioxidante foi determinada através dos ensaios de DPPH e ABTS e os compostos fenólicos através do reagente de Follin Ciocalteau. Em relação ao teor de compostos fenólicos a variedade (PCL-02) destacou-se das demais com 12710 mgEAG/100g de pimenta. Houve diferença significativa ao nível de 5% nos resultados das três análises para as cinco variedades de pimenta analisada, demonstrando que a intensidade desta ação antioxidante é diferenciada em cada uma das variedades
An effective theory of accelerated expansion
We work out an effective theory of accelerated expansion to describe general
phenomena of inflation and acceleration (dark energy) in the Universe. Our aim
is to determine from theoretical grounds, in a physically-motivated and model
independent way, which and how many (free) parameters are needed to broadly
capture the physics of a theory describing cosmic acceleration. Our goal is to
make as much as possible transparent the physical interpretation of the
parameters describing the expansion. We show that, at leading order, there are
five independent parameters, of which one can be constrained via general
relativity tests. The other four parameters need to be determined by observing
and measuring the cosmic expansion rate only, H(z). Therefore we suggest that
future cosmology surveys focus on obtaining an accurate as possible measurement
of to constrain the nature of accelerated expansion (dark energy and/or
inflation).Comment: In press; minor changes, results unchange
Passive galaxies as tracers of cluster environments at z~2
Even 10 billion years ago, the cores of the first galaxy clusters are often
found to host a characteristic population of massive galaxies with already
suppressed star formation. Here we search for distant cluster candidates at z~2
using massive passive galaxies as tracers. With a sample of ~40
spectroscopically confirmed passive galaxies at 1.3<z<2.1, we tune photometric
redshifts of several thousands passive sources in the full 2 sq.deg. COSMOS
field. This allows us to map their density in redshift slices, probing the
large scale structure in the COSMOS field as traced by passive sources. We
report here on the three strongest passive galaxy overdensities that we
identify in the redshift range 1.5<z<2.5. While the actual nature of these
concentrations is still to be confirmed, we discuss their identification
procedure, and the arguments supporting them as candidate galaxy clusters
(likely mid-10^13 M_sun range). Although this search approach is likely biased
towards more evolved structures, it has the potential to select still rare,
cluster-like environments close to their epoch of first appearance, enabling
new investigations of the evolution of galaxies in the context of structure
growth.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures; A&A Letters, in pres
Taxonomic distribution of neoplasia among non-domestic felid species under managed care
As evidenced by numerous case reports from zoos, neoplasia in felids is common, but most reports are limited to Panthera species in North America or Europe. In order to obtain a wider epidemiologic understanding of neoplasia distribution, necropsy records at seven facilities (USA, Mexico, Colombia, Peru, and Brazil) were evaluated. In contrast to others, this study population (195 cases, 16 species), included many non-Panthera felids. Overall neoplasia prevalence was 28.2% (55/195). Panthera species had a higher prevalence of neoplasia than non-Panthera species (52.5%; vs. 13.0%). Lions (66.7%), jaguars (55.0%), and tigers (31.3%) had the highest species-specific prevalence of neoplasia. Neoplasms in Panthera species were more frequently malignant than in non-Panthera (86.1% vs. 55.6%). The systems most commonly a_ected were the reproductive, hematolymphoid, and respiratory. The range of management conditions and more varied genetic backgrounds support a robust taxonomic pattern and suggest that the reported propensity for neoplasia in jaguars may have a genetic basis at a taxonomic level higher than species, as lions and tigers also have high prevalence. Given the high prevalence of neoplasia and high likelihood of malignancy, routine medical exams in all nondomestic felids, but Panthera species in particular, should include thorough assessments of any clinical signs of neoplasia
Automated reliability assessment for spectroscopic redshift measurements
We present a new approach to automate the spectroscopic redshift reliability
assessment based on machine learning (ML) and characteristics of the redshift
probability density function (PDF).
We propose to rephrase the spectroscopic redshift estimation into a Bayesian
framework, in order to incorporate all sources of information and uncertainties
related to the redshift estimation process, and produce a redshift posterior
PDF that will be the starting-point for ML algorithms to provide an automated
assessment of a redshift reliability.
As a use case, public data from the VIMOS VLT Deep Survey is exploited to
present and test this new methodology. We first tried to reproduce the existing
reliability flags using supervised classification to describe different types
of redshift PDFs, but due to the subjective definition of these flags, soon
opted for a new homogeneous partitioning of the data into distinct clusters via
unsupervised classification. After assessing the accuracy of the new clusters
via resubstitution and test predictions, unlabelled data from preliminary mock
simulations for the Euclid space mission are projected into this mapping to
predict their redshift reliability labels.Comment: Submitted on 02 June 2017 (v1). Revised on 08 September 2017 (v2).
Latest version 28 September 2017 (this version v3
Conservação de tecidos foliares de algodão coletados a campo para purificação do DNA
bitstream/CNPA/19689/1/COMTEC245.pd
zCOSMOS 20k: Satellite galaxies are the main drivers of environmental effects in the galaxy population at least to z~0.7
We explore the role of environment in the evolution of galaxies over
0.1<z<0.7 using the final zCOSMOS-bright data set. Using the red fraction of
galaxies as a proxy for the quenched population, we find that the fraction of
red galaxies increases with the environmental overdensity and with the stellar
mass, consistent with previous works. As at lower redshift, the red fraction
appears to be separable in mass and environment, suggesting the action of two
processes: mass and environmental quenching. The parameters describing these
appear to be essentially the same at z~0.7 as locally. We explore the relation
between red fraction, mass and environment also for the central and satellite
galaxies separately, paying close attention to the effects of impurities in the
central-satellite classification and using carefully constructed samples
matched in stellar mass. There is little evidence for a dependence of the red
fraction of centrals on overdensity. Satellites are consistently redder at all
overdensities, and the satellite quenching efficiency increases with
overdensity at 0.1<z<0.4. This is less marked at higher redshift, but both are
nevertheless consistent with the equivalent local measurements. At a given
stellar mass, the fraction of galaxies that are satellites also increases with
the overdensity. At a given overdensity and mass, the obtained relation between
the environmental quenching and the satellite fraction agrees well with the
satellite quenching efficiency, demonstrating that the environmental quenching
in the overall population is consistent with being entirely produced through
the satellite quenching process at least up to z=0.7. However, despite the
unprecedented size of our high redshift samples, the associated statistical
uncertainties are still significant and our statements should be understood as
approximations to physical reality, rather than physically exact formulae.Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures, submitted to MNRA
Uso de esferas de inox na maceração aceração de tecidos foliares de algodoeiro destinados à extração de DNA.
bitstream/CNPA/18389/1/COMTEC297.pd
- …