963 research outputs found
Chemical composition and bioactivity of essential oils and extracts from Oregano from Madeira Island, Portugal
In the course of ongoing investigations on polymorphic Lamiaceae species, we
studied Origanum vulgare spp. virens growing wild in several locations of Madeira
Island, Portugal. Variation in essential oil composition with climate conditions was
studied. The antimicrobial activity of the various essential oils was determined
against 10 strains of bacteria and yeasts, usually found as human pathogenic or food
contaminants. The essential oils inhibited all the bacteria tested excepting for P.
aeruginosa. The most sensitive microorganism was M. smegmatis with MIC = 25 µg
ml-1 for two of the oils. The results of this study suggest a potential application of
these oils in preventing the human pathogenic and food contaminant
microorganisms growth. Radical scavenging capacity of essential oils and solvent
extract (hexane, chloroform, ethyl acetate and methanol) were also determined,
since interest of oregano resides in both non polar and polar fractions, all known by
their very high antioxidant activity. From the hexane fraction, we obtained a large
amount of 1-hexacosanol, C26H54O, a long chain alcohol, which was previously
extracted in the non-esterified form only from Hygrophila erecta.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Production of resonances in a thermal model: invariant-mass spectra and balance functions
We present a calculation of the pi+ pi- invariant-mass correlations and the
pion balance functions in the single-freeze-out model. A satisfactory agreement
with the data for Au+Au collisions is found.Comment: Contribution to QM 2004 (4 pages, 2 figures
An Exact Fluctuating 1/2-BPS Configuration
This work explores the role of thermodynamic fluctuations in the two
parameter giant and superstar configurations characterized by an ensemble of
arbitrary liquid droplets or irregular shaped fuzzballs. Our analysis
illustrates that the chemical and state-space geometric descriptions exhibit an
intriguing set of exact pair correction functions and the global correlation
lengths. The first principle of statistical mechanics shows that the possible
canonical fluctuations may precisely be ascertained without any approximation.
Interestingly, our intrinsic geometric study exemplifies that there exist exact
fluctuating 1/2-BPS statistical configurations which involve an ensemble of
microstates describing the liquid droplets or fuzzballs. The Gaussian
fluctuations over an equilibrium chemical and state-space configurations
accomplish a well-defined, non-degenerate, curved and regular intrinsic
Riemannian manifolds for all physically admissible domains of black hole
parameters. An explicit computation demonstrates that the underlying chemical
correlations involve ordinary summations, whilst the state-space correlations
may simply be depicted by standard polygamma functions. Our construction
ascribes definite stability character to the canonical energy fluctuations and
to the counting entropy associated with an arbitrary choice of excited boxes
from an ensemble of ample boxes constituting a variety of Young tableaux.Comment: Minor changes, added references, 30 pages, 4 figures, PACS numbers:
04.70.-s: Physics of black holes; 04.70.-Bw: Classical black holes; 04.50.Gh
Higher-dimensional black holes, black strings, and related objects; 04.60.Cf
Gravitational aspects of string theory, accepted for publication in JHE
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Methodology for high-quality mobile measurement with focus on black carbon and particle mass concentrations
Measurements of air pollutants such as black carbon (BC) and particle mass concentration in general, using mobile platforms equipped with high-time-resolution instruments, have gained popularity over the last decade due to their wide range of applicability. Assuring the quality of mobile measurement, data have become more essential, particularly when the personal exposure to pollutants is related to their spatial distribution. In the following, we suggest a methodology to achieve data from mobile measurements of equivalent black carbon (eBC) and PM2:5 mass concentrations with high data quality. Besides frequent routine quality assurance measures of the instruments, the methodology includes the following steps: (a) measures to ensure the quality of mobile instruments through repeated collocated measurements using identical instrumentation, (b) inclusion of a fixed station along the route containing quality-assured reference instruments, and (c) sufficiently long and frequent intercomparisons between the mobile and reference instruments to correct the particle number and mass size distributions obtained from mobile measurements. The application of the methodology can provide the following results. First, collocated mobile measurements with sets of identical instruments allow identification of undetected malfunctions of the instruments. Second, frequent intercomparisons against the reference instruments will ensure the quality of the mobile measurement data of the eBC mass concentration. Third, the intercomparison data between the mobile optical particle size spectrometer (OPSS) and a reference mobility particle size spectrometer (MPSS) allow for the adjustment of the OPSS particle number size distribution using physically meaningful corrections. Matching the OPSS and MPSS volume particle size distributions is crucial for the determination of PM2:5 mass concentration. Using size-resolved complex refractive indices and time-resolved fine-mode volume correction factors of the fine-particle range, the calculated PM2:5 from the OPSS was within 5 % of the reference instruments (MPSSCAPSS). However, due to the nonsphericity and an unknown imaginary part of the complex refractive index of supermicrometer particles, a conversion to a volume equivalent diameter yields high uncertainties of the particle mass concentration greater than PM2:5. The proposed methodology addresses issues regarding the quality of mobile measurements, especially for health impact studies, validation of modeled spatial distribution, and development of air pollution mitigation strategies
Mobility particle size spectrometers: Calibration procedures and measurement uncertainties
Mobility particle size spectrometers (MPSS) belong to the essential instruments in aerosol science that
determine the particle number size distribution (PNSD) in the submicrometer size range. Following
calibration procedures and target uncertainties against standards and reference instruments are
suggested for a complete MPSS quality assurance program: (a) calibration of the CPC counting efficiency
curve (within 5% for the plateau counting efficiency; within 1 nm for the 50% detection efficiency
diameter), (b) sizing calibration of the MPSS, using a certified polystyrene latex (PSL) particle size
standard at 203 nm (within 3%), (c) intercomparison of the PNSD of the MPSS (within 10% and 20% of
the dN/dlogDP concentration for the particle size range 20–200 and 200–800 nm, respectively), and (d)
intercomparison of the integral PNC of the MPSS (within 10%). Furthermore, following measurement
uncertainties have been investigated: (a) PSL particle size standards in the range from 100 to 500 nm
match within 1% after sizing calibration at 203 nm. (b) Bipolar diffusion chargers based on
the radioactive nuclides Kr85, Am241, and Ni63 and a new ionizer based on corona discharge follow the
recommended bipolar charge distribution, while soft X-ray-based charges may alter faster than
expected. (c) The use of a positive high voltage supply show a 10% better performance than a negative
one. (d) The intercomparison of the integral PNC of an MPSS against the total number concentration is
still within the target uncertainty at an ambient pressure of approximately 500 hPa
Recommended from our members
Mobility particle size spectrometers: Calibration procedures and measurement uncertainties
Mobility particle size spectrometers (MPSS) belong to the essential instruments in aerosol science that determine the particle number size distribution (PNSD) in the submicrometer size range. Following calibration procedures and target uncertainties against standards and reference instruments are suggested for a complete MPSS quality assurance program: (a) calibration of the CPC counting efficiency curve (within 5% for the plateau counting efficiency; within 1 nm for the 50% detection efficiency diameter), (b) sizing calibration of the MPSS, using a certified polystyrene latex (PSL) particle size standard at 203 nm (within 3%), (c) intercomparison of the PNSD of the MPSS (within 10% and 20% of the dN/dlogDP concentration for the particle size range 20–200 and 200–800 nm, respectively), and (d) intercomparison of the integral PNC of the MPSS (within 10%). Furthermore, following measurement uncertainties have been investigated: (a) PSL particle size standards in the range from 100 to 500 nm match within 1% after sizing calibration at 203 nm. (b) Bipolar diffusion chargers based on the radioactive nuclides Kr85, Am241, and Ni63 and a new ionizer based on corona discharge follow the recommended bipolar charge distribution, while soft X-ray-based charges may alter faster than expected. (c) The use of a positive high voltage supply show a 10% better performance than a negative one. (d) The intercomparison of the integral PNC of an MPSS against the total number concentration is still within the target uncertainty at an ambient pressure of approximately 500 hPa. Copyright © 2018 Published with license by American Association for Aerosol Research
Some observations on the subfibrillar structure of collagen fibrils as noted during treatment with NKISK and cathepsin G with mechanical agitation
We observed the structure of collagen fibrils in rat tail tendons after treatment with NKISK and cathepsin G. NKISK is a pentapeptide that has been previously shown to bind fibronectin, while cathepsin G is a serine protease that cleaves fibronectin but not type I collagen. In tendons treated with NKISK, fibrils were seen to extensively dissociate into smaller-diameter subfibrils. These subfibrils were homogeneous in diameter with an average diameter of 26.3 ± 5.8 nm. Similar, although less extensive, dissociation into subfibrils was found in tendons treated with cathepsin G. The average diameter of these subfibrils was 24.8 ± 4.9 nm. The ability of NKISK and cathepsin G to release subfibrils at physiological pH without harsh denaturants may enhance the study of the subfibrillar structure of collagen fibrils
Black holes in the Einstein -Gauss-Bonnet theory and the geometry of their thermodynamics-II
In the present work we study (i) charged black hole in Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet
(EGB) theory, known as Einstein-Maxwell-Gauss-Bonnet (EMGB) black hole and (ii)
black hole in EGB gravity with Yang-Mills field. The thermodynamic geometry of
these two black hole solutions has been investigated, using the modified
entropy in Gauss-Bonnet theory.Comment: 7 page
Optogalvanic Spectroscopy of Metastable States in Yb^{+}
The metastable ^{2}F_{7/2} and ^{2}D_{3/2} states of Yb^{+} are of interest
for applications in metrology and quantum information and also act as dark
states in laser cooling. These metastable states are commonly repumped to the
ground state via the 638.6 nm ^{2}F_{7/2} -- ^{1}D[5/2]_{5/2} and 935.2 nm
^{2}D_{3/2} -- ^{3}D[3/2]_{1/2} transitions. We have performed optogalvanic
spectroscopy of these transitions in Yb^{+} ions generated in a discharge. We
measure the pressure broadening coefficient for the 638.6 nm transition to be
70 \pm 10 MHz mbar^{-1}. We place an upper bound of 375 MHz/nucleon on the
638.6 nm isotope splitting and show that our observations are consistent with
theory for the hyperfine splitting. Our measurements of the 935.2 nm transition
extend those made by Sugiyama et al, showing well-resolved isotope and
hyperfine splitting. We obtain high signal to noise, sufficient for laser
stabilisation applications.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Thermodynamical Metrics and Black Hole Phase Transitions
An important phase transition in black hole thermodynamics is associated with
the divergence of the specific heat with fixed charge and angular momenta, yet
one can demonstrate that neither Ruppeiner's entropy metric nor Weinhold's
energy metric reveals this phase transition. In this paper, we introduce a new
thermodynamical metric based on the Hessian matrix of several free energy. We
demonstrate, by studying various charged and rotating black holes, that the
divergence of the specific heat corresponds to the curvature singularity of
this new metric. We further investigate metrics on all thermodynamical
potentials generated by Legendre transformations and study correspondences
between curvature singularities and phase transition signals. We show in
general that for a system with n-pairs of intensive/extensive variables, all
thermodynamical potential metrics can be embedded into a flat (n,n)-dimensional
space. We also generalize the Ruppeiner metrics and they are all conformal to
the metrics constructed from the relevant thermodynamical potentials.Comment: Latex, 25 pages, reference added, typos corrected, English polished
and the Hawking-Page phase transition clarified; to appear in JHE
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