5,536 research outputs found

    Methods to Increase Algae Biomass Productivity in Raceway Pond Monocultures

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    The economics of algae biofuels and bioproducts would be improved by increased biomass productivity. Two studies on this potential are described in this thesis – one on a locally isolated filamentous yellow-green alga and the other on a planktonic strain genetically improved via selective enrichment. Polycultures have been viewed as productive, stable, and, in some cases, harvestable by natural bioflocculation. Local native strains might have higher productivity than culture collection strains because they are already adapted to local outdoor conditions. In this study, the filamentous yellow-green alga Tribonema minus was isolated from a local volunteer polyculture. Its productivity as a monoculture was compared to a volunteer polyculture in a year of thrice-weekly samples. The study was conducted in duplicate 1,000-L, 3.5-m2 outdoor raceway ponds fed with nitrified and filtered reclaimed wastewater. T. minus monocultures were more productive (17.6 ± 0.5 g/m2-d; mean ± range) than the polyculture (13.3 ± 0.4 g/m2-d). The T. minus monocultures were stable, growing for an average of 38 days before significant contamination with other algae genera, at which point the cultures were restarted. The annual average biochemical composition, in percent of ash-free dry-weight, of the T. minus cultures was 28.3 ± 0.4% (mean ± std. dev.) carbohydrates, 37.6 ± 0.7% proteins, and 6.1 ± 0.3% lipids. Eicosapentaenoic acid, a valuable nutritional omega-3 fatty acid, comprised 0.3% to 4% of the ash-free dry-weight and was the predominant fatty acid methyl ester measured. In summary, an alga isolated from a volunteer polyculture was more productive as a monoculture than the originating polyculture. The monoculture biomass contained a valuable nutritional fatty acid. Scenedesmus obliquus was subjected to UV mutagenesis followed by cultivation in benchtop bubble columns at high dilution rates to select for cultures (cultigens) that grew faster than the wild-type. Fast growing cultigens were transferred to 1,350-L outdoor raceways ponds for productivity measurement. Cultigen and wild-type cultivation was conducted on reclaimed wastewater media in coastal central California for seven months. One cultigen, MBE 501, had 23% higher productivity than the S. obliquus wild-type (11.5 ± 0.02 vs. 9.4 ± 0.6 g/m2-d) during July 28-December 30, 2019. MBE 501 had been subjected to 1:400 and 1:200 dilutions twice per week for the first two months and last five months of selection, respectively, and went through 289 generations in the lab. Compared to a volunteer polyculture (14.4 ± 1.3 g/m2-d), MBE 501 was not as productive on average. This study demonstrated that high dilution rates in lab cultures can select for cells that are more productive in outdoor raceways. Genetic comparison of MBE 501 and its wild-type are pending

    Inclusive Masculinity and Facebook Photographs Among Early Emerging Adults at a British University

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    Central to debates about the construction of masculinity in sociology is the influence of culture and what constitutes acceptable displays of masculinity. This article adopts a novel approach in examining this question. It adopts a summative content analysis, combined with a semiotic analysis, of 1,100 Facebook photographs, in order to explore the underlying meanings within the photos and the performances of masculinity. Facebook photographs from 44, straight, White, male, early emerging adults attending the same university are used as a representation of an individual’s ideal self. These are then analyzed in order to determine the behaviors endorsed by peer culture. It was found that the sample overwhelmingly adopted inclusive behaviors (including homosocial tactility, dancing, and kissing each other), and inclusive masculinity theory was utilized to contextualize participants’ constructions of masculinity. Thus, this research shows that emerging adult males at this university construct their masculine identities away from previous orthodox archetypes. It is argued that the reducing importance of gendered behavior patterns may represent an adoption of what are perceived as wider cultural norms and act as a symbol of adulthood to these early emerging adults

    Analytical and experimental studies of impinging liquid jets

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    Impinging injectors are a common type of injector used in liquid propellant rocket engines and are typically used in engines where both propellants are injected as a liquid, e.g., engines using LOX/hydrocarbon and storable propellant combinations. The present research program is focused on providing the requisite fundamental understanding associated with impinging jet injectors for the development of an advanced a priori combustion stability design analysis capability. To date, a systematic study of the atomization characteristics of impinging liquid jets under cold-flow conditions have been completed. Effects of orifice diameter, impingement angle, pre-impingement length, orifice length-to-diameter ratio, fabrication procedure, jet flow condition and jet velocity under steady and oscillating, and atmospheric- and high-pressure environments have been investigated. Results of these experimental studies have been compared to current models of sheet breakup and drop formation. In addition, the research findings have been scrutinized to provide a fundamental explanation for a proven empirical correlation used in the design of stable impinging injector-based rocket engines

    The Principle of Symmetric Criticality in General Relativity

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    We consider a version of Palais' Principle of Symmetric Criticality (PSC) that is applicable to the Lie symmetry reduction of Lagrangian field theories. PSC asserts that, given a group action, for any group-invariant Lagrangian the equations obtained by restriction of Euler-Lagrange equations to group-invariant fields are equivalent to the Euler-Lagrange equations of a canonically defined, symmetry-reduced Lagrangian. We investigate the validity of PSC for local gravitational theories built from a metric. It is shown that there are two independent conditions which must be satisfied for PSC to be valid. One of these conditions, obtained previously in the context of transverse symmetry group actions, provides a generalization of the well-known unimodularity condition that arises in spatially homogeneous cosmological models. The other condition seems to be new. The conditions that determine the validity of PSC are equivalent to pointwise conditions on the group action alone. These results are illustrated with a variety of examples from general relativity. It is straightforward to generalize all of our results to any relativistic field theory.Comment: 46 pages, Plain TeX, references added in revised versio

    Novel cyclic di-GMP effectors of the YajQ protein family control bacterial virulence

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    Bis-(3 ',5 ') cyclic di-guanylate (cyclic di-GMP) is a key bacterial second messenger that is implicated in the regulation of many critical processes that include motility, biofilm formation and virulence. Cyclic di-GMP influences diverse functions through interaction with a range of effectors. Our knowledge of these effectors and their different regulatory actions is far from complete, however. Here we have used an affinity pull-down assay using cyclic di-GMP-coupled magnetic beads to identify cyclic di-GMP binding proteins in the plant pathogen Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris (Xcc). This analysis identified XC_3703, a protein of the YajQ family, as a potential cyclic di-GMP receptor. Isothermal titration calorimetry showed that the purified XC_3703 protein bound cyclic di-GMP with a high affinity (K-d similar to 2 mu M). Mutation of XC_3703 led to reduced virulence of Xcc to plants and alteration in biofilm formation. Yeast two-hybrid and far-western analyses showed that XC_3703 was able to interact with XC_2801, a transcription factor of the LysR family. Mutation of XC_2801 and XC_3703 had partially overlapping effects on the transcriptome of Xcc, and both affected virulence. Electromobility shift assays showed that XC_3703 positively affected the binding of XC_2801 to the promoters of target virulence genes, an effect that was reversed by cyclic di-GMP. Genetic and functional analysis of YajQ family members from the human pathogens Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia showed that they also specifically bound cyclic di-GMP and contributed to virulence in model systems. The findings thus identify a new class of cyclic di-GMP effector that regulates bacterial virulence

    Quantum rotor theory of spinor condensates in tight traps

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    In this work, we theoretically construct exact mappings of many-particle bosonic systems onto quantum rotor models. In particular, we analyze the rotor representation of spinor Bose-Einstein condensates. In a previous work it was shown that there is an exact mapping of a spin-one condensate of fixed particle number with quadratic Zeeman interaction onto a quantum rotor model. Since the rotor model has an unbounded spectrum from above, it has many more eigenstates than the original bosonic model. Here we show that for each subset of states with fixed spin F_z, the physical rotor eigenstates are always those with lowest energy. We classify three distinct physical limits of the rotor model: the Rabi, Josephson, and Fock regimes. The last regime corresponds to a fragmented condensate and is thus not captured by the Bogoliubov theory. We next consider the semiclassical limit of the rotor problem and make connections with the quantum wave functions through use of the Husimi distribution function. Finally, we describe how to extend the analysis to higher-spin systems and derive a rotor model for the spin-two condensate. Theoretical details of the rotor mapping are also provided here.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
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