55,077 research outputs found

    Impact of Asian continental outflow on the concentrations of O3, CO, NMHCs and halocarbons on Jeju Island, South Korea during March 2005

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    As part of ABC-EAREX2005 experiment, numerous trace gases were measured at Gosan on Jeju Island, South Korea in March 2005 to characterize the impact of recent outflow from the Asian continent and to inter-compare measurement techniques used by participating groups. Here we present measurements of O3, CO, and whole air samples of methane, C2-C8 non-methane hydrocarbons (NMHCs) and C1-C2 halocarbons obtained during the study. The large temporal variations in the measured trace gas concentrations at Gosan were due to the transport of background marine air and of regional pollution mainly from the Chinese subcontinent. Average mixing ratios (± s.d.) were 54.6 (± 9.0) ppbv and 283 (± 100) ppbv for O3 and CO, respectively. CO showed good correlations (r2 = 0.62-0.81) with combustion tracers such as ethyne and benzene but poorly correlated (r2 = 0.11-0.29) with light alkanes, suggesting that the latter were contributed by non-combustion source(s). Back trajectory analysis showed that air masses mainly originated from the North China Plains and northeastern China, which together accounted for 64% of the total trajectories. The highest mean mixing ratios of O3 and combustion-derived species were found in air masses from eastern China and Korea, indicating the significant impact of emissions from these regions. Interestingly, air masses from northeast China contained elevated levels of light alkanes and the smallest ratios of ethyne/propane and benzene/propane among the air-mass groups, suggesting contribution from natural gas leakage in the upwind region, possibly from Siberia. © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Projected Hg dietary exposure of 3 bird species nesting on a contaminated floodplain (South River, Virginia, USA)

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    Dietary Hg exposure was modeled for Carolina wren (Thryothorus ludovicianus), Eastern song sparrow (Melospiza melodia), and Eastern screech owl (Otus asio) nesting on the contaminated South River floodplain (Virginia, USA). Parameterization of Monte-Carlo models required formal expert elicitation to define bird body weight and feeding ecology characteristics because specific information was either unavailable in the published literature or too difficult to collect reliably by field survey. Mercury concentrations and weights for candidate food items were obtained directly by field survey. Simulations predicted the probability that an adult bird during breeding season would ingest specific amounts of Hg during daily foraging and the probability that the average Hg ingestion rate for the breeding season of an adult bird would exceed published rates reported to cause harm to other birds (\u3e 100ng total Hg/g body weight per day). Despite the extensive floodplain contamination, the probabilities that these species\u27 average ingestion rates exceeded the threshold value were all \u3c 0.01. Sensitivity analysis indicated that overall food ingestion rate was the most important factor determining projected Hg ingestion rates. Expert elicitation was useful in providing sufficiently reliable information for Monte-Carlo simulation

    Effect of magnetic field on electron transport in HgTe/CdTe quantum wells: numerical analysis

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    The effect of magnetic field on electron transport in the inverted band structure of HgTe/CdTe quantum well is investigated. Although magnetic field breaks the time-reversal symmetry, the quantum spin Hall effect can still survive at large magnetic field up to 10 T. Moreover, two quantum anomalous Hall-like phases emerge, in which the system only has a spin-up or spin-down edge state at a given sample edge and the edge current is spin polarized. By tuning the Fermi energy, the system can transit between the quantum spin Hall phase and two quantum anomalous Hall-like phases, so the polarized direction of the edge current is well controllable. Thus the spin selectivity can be realized for potential applications of spintronics. Due to the quantum spin and anomalous Hall-like effects, the longitudinal and Hall resistances exhibit quantum plateaus. In addition, at certain magnetic field, some exotic plateaus like 23 fractional quantum Hall effect are also observed, where edge states with the same spin counterpropagate at the one edge. At last, these plateaus are hardly affected by Rashba spin-orbit interaction, Zeeman effect, and Anderson disorder. © 2012 American Physical Society.published_or_final_versio

    Inter-shell casts of entactiniid radiolarians from the Devonian of SW China

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    LES-RANS of installed ultra-high-bypass-ratio coaxial jet aeroacoustics with flight stream

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    EPSRC EP/L000261/1; EU-funded project “JERONIMO” (ACP2-GA-2012-314692-JERONIMO

    Electromechanical modeling and experimental analysis of a compression-based piezoelectric vibration energy harvester

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    Over the past few decades, wireless sensor networks have been widely used in the field of structure health monitoring of civil, mechanical, and aerospace systems. Currently, most wireless sensor networks are battery-powered and it is costly and unsustainable for maintenance because of the requirement for frequent battery replacements. As an attempt to address such issue, this article theoretically and experimentally studies a compression-based piezoelectric energy harvester using a multilayer stack configuration, which is suitable for civil infrastructure system applications where large compressive loads occur, such as heavily vehicular loading acting on pavements. In this article, we firstly present analytical and numerical modeling of the piezoelectric multilayer stack under axial compressive loading, which is based on the linear theory of piezoelectricity. A two-degree-of-freedom electromechanical model, considering both the mechanical and electrical aspects of the proposed harvester, was developed to characterize the harvested electrical power under the external electrical load. Exact closed-form expressions of the electromechanical models have been derived to analyze the mechanical and electrical properties of the proposed harvester. The theoretical analyses are validated through several experiments for a test prototype under harmonic excitations. The test results exhibit very good agreement with the analytical analyses and numerical simulations for a range of resistive loads and input excitation levels. © 2014 The Author(s)

    Isolation and characterization of a carotenoid oxygenase gene from Chlorella zofingiensis (Chlorophyta)

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    The green alga Chlorella zofingiensis produces large amounts of the valuable ketocarotenoid astaxanthin under dark, heterotrophic growth conditions, making it potentially employable for commercial production of astaxanthin as feed additives, colorants, and health products. Here, we report the identification and characterization of a β-carotene oxygenase (CRTO) gene that is directly involved in the biosynthesis of ketocarotenoids in C. zofingiensis. The open reading frame of the crtO gene, which is interrupted by three introns of 243, 318, and 351 bp, respectively, encodes a polypeptide of 312 amino acid residues. Only one crtO gene was detected in the genome of C. zofingiensis. Furthermore, the expression of the crtO gene was transiently up-regulated upon glucose treatment. Functional complementation in Escherichia coli showed that the coding protein of the crtO gene not only exhibits normal CRTO activity by converting β-carotene to canthaxanthin via echinenone, but also displays a high enzymatic activity of converting zeaxanthin to astaxanthin via adonixanthin. Based on the bifunctional CRTO, a predicted pathway for astaxanthin biosynthesis in C. zofingiensis is described, and the CRTO is termed as carotenoid 4,4′-β-ionone ring oxygenase. © Springer-Verlag 2005.postprin

    Intermittent hypoxia accelerates adipogenic differentiation in human subcutaneous preadipocytes in vitro

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    Poster Discussion Session - B30. Beast is Inside: What Causes the Adverse Outcomes of Sleep Disordered Breathing: no. A2704RATIONALE: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), characterized by intermittent hypoxia (IH), is highly associated with obesity. Depot-specific adipogenic differentiation, an important physiological mechanism in maintaining adipose tissue homeostasis, could be regulated by intracellular transcriptional factors, extracellular signaling pathways and inflammation in obesity. However, the impact of IH on adipogeneisis is unclear. This study aims at investigating the pathologic role of IH during the adipogenic differentiation process in human subcutaneous preadipocytes in …published_or_final_versio

    Spectropolarimetry of Supernovae

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    Overwhelming evidence has accumulated in recent years that supernova explosions are intrinsically 3-dimensional phenomena with significant departures from spherical symmetry. We review the evidence derived from spectropolarimetry that has established several key results: virtually all supernovae are significantly aspherical near maximum light; core-collapse supernovae behave differently than thermonuclear (Type Ia) supernovae; the asphericity of core-collapse supernovae is stronger in the inner layers showing that the explosion process itself is strongly aspherical; core-collapse supernovae tend to establish a preferred direction of asymmetry; the asphericity is stronger in the outer layers of thermonuclear supernovae providing constraints on the burning process. We emphasize the utility of the Q/U plane as a diagnostic tool and revisit SN 1987A and SN 1993J in a contemporary context. An axially-symmetric geometry can explain many basic features of core-collapse supernovae, but significant departures from axial symmetry are needed to explain most events. We introduce a spectropolarimetry type to classify the range of behavior observed in polarized supernovae. Understanding asymmetries in supernovae is important for phenomena as diverse as the origins of gamma-ray bursts and the cosmological applications of Type Ia supernovae in studies of the dark energy content of the universe.Comment: Draft of Annual Review article prior to final copy editing; 85 pages, 13 figures, 1 tabl
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