1,164 research outputs found
Aqueye+: a new ultrafast single photon counter for optical high time resolution astrophysics
Aqueye+ is a new ultrafast optical single photon counter, based on single
photon avalanche photodiodes (SPAD) and a 4-fold split-pupil concept. It is a
completely revisited version of its predecessor, Aqueye, successfully mounted
at the 182 cm Copernicus telescope in Asiago. Here we will present the new
technological features implemented on Aqueye+, namely a state of the art timing
system, a dedicated and optimized optical train, a high sensitivity and high
frame rate field camera and remote control, which will give Aqueye plus much
superior performances with respect to its predecessor, unparalleled by any
other existing fast photometer. The instrument will host also an optical
vorticity module to achieve high performance astronomical coronography and a
real time acquisition of atmospheric seeing unit. The present paper describes
the instrument and its first performances.Comment: Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 9504, id. 95040C 14 pp. (2015
fabrication and characterization of an innovative heat exchanger with open cell aluminum foams
Abstract: The present study deals with the design, the fabrication and the characterization of an innovative heat exchanger manufactured by using open cell aluminum foams. The cooling performances of the heat exchanger, working in low temperature difference were measured. Open cells aluminum foams, produced via polymeric foam replication method, have been assembled to manufacture the cooling elements. The wettability of the aluminum foam surface was improved through a surface treatment, in order to enhance the joining between the pipes and the metal foam. In a first phase, preliminary experimental tests on aluminum metal foam samples were used for an estimation of the overall cooling performance. The experimental test was also aimed to understand the basic mechanisms involved in the heat transfer process. In a second phase, the full heat exchanger was assembled, and an experimental setup was designed in order to determine the performance of the heat exchanger. The heat exchanger revealed its high potentiality in terms of thermal performance, showing also a remarkable behavior in terms of energy saving, assembly and endurance
Aqueye optical observations of the Crab Nebula pulsar
We observed the Crab pulsar in October 2008 at the Copernico Telescope in
Asiago - Cima Ekar with the optical photon counter Aqueye (the Asiago Quantum
Eye) which has the best temporal resolution and accuracy ever achieved in the
optical domain (hundreds of picoseconds). Our goal was to perform a detailed
analysis of the optical period and phase drift of the main peak of the Crab
pulsar and compare it with the Jodrell Bank ephemerides. We determined the
position of the main peak using the steepest zero of the cross-correlation
function between the pulsar signal and an accurate optical template. The pulsar
rotational period and period derivative have been measured with great accuracy
using observations covering only a 2 day time interval. The error on the period
is 1.7 ps, limited only by the statistical uncertainty. Both the rotational
frequency and its first derivative are in agreement with those from the Jodrell
Bank radio ephemerides archive. We also found evidence of the optical peak
leading the radio one by ~230 microseconds. The distribution of phase-residuals
of the whole dataset is slightly wider than that of a synthetic signal
generated as a sequence of pulses distributed in time with the probability
proportional to the pulse shape, such as the average count rate and background
level are those of the Crab pulsar observed with Aqueye. The counting
statistics and quality of the data allowed us to determine the pulsar period
and period derivative with great accuracy in 2 days only. The time of arrival
of the optical peak of the Crab pulsar leads the radio one in agreement with
what recently reported in the literature. The distribution of the phase
residuals can be approximated with a Gaussian and is consistent with being
completely caused by photon noise (for the best data sets).Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Differential behaviour of normal, transformed and Fanconi's anemia lymphoblastoid cells to modeled microgravity
Background: Whether microgravity might influence tumour growth and carcinogenesis is still an open issue. It is not clear also if and how normal and transformed cells are differently solicited by microgravity. The present study was designed to verify this issue.Methods: Two normal, LB and HSC93, and two transformed, Jurkat and 1310, lymphoblast cell lines were used as representative for the two conditions. Two lymphoblast lines from Fanconi's anemia patients group A and C (FA-A and FA-C, respectively), along with their isogenic corrected counterparts (FA-A-cor and FA-C-cor) were also used. Cell lines were evaluated for their proliferative ability, vitality and apoptotic susceptibility upon microgravity exposure in comparison with unexposed cells. Different parameters correlated to energy metabolism, glucose consumption, mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), intracellular ATP content, red-ox balance and ability of the cells to repair the DNA damage product 8 OHdG induced by the treatment of the cells with 20 mM KBrO3 were also evaluated.Results: Transformed Jurkat and 1310 cells appear resistant to the microgravitational challenge. On the contrary normal LB and HSC93 cells display increased apoptotic susceptibility, shortage of energy storages and reduced ability to cope with oxidative stress. FA-A and FA-C cells appear resistant to microgravity exposure, analogously to transformed cells. FA corrected cells did shown intermediate sensitivity to microgravity exposure suggesting that genetic correction does not completely reverts cellular phenotype.Conclusions: In the light of the reported results microgravity should be regarded as an harmful condition either when considering normal as well as transformed cells. Modeled microgravity and space-based technology are interesting tools in the biomedicine laboratory and offer an original, useful and unique approach in the study of cellular biochemistry and in the regulation of metabolic pathways
Effect of storage on biochemical and microbiological parametersof edible truffle species
The effects of different storage treatments on the most common edible truffle species, such as Tuber magnatum and Tuber borchii (white truffles), Tuber melanosporum and Tuber aestivum (black truffles), were analysed. Biochemical and microbiological profiles were monitored, in order to evaluate possible alterations during truffle preservation. After harvesting, some fresh samples were kept at 4 C for 30 days, other samples were frozen at 20 C for one month, thawed and preserved at 4 C; the remainder were autoclaved.
The biochemical parameters studied were sugar and protein content, the activity of some enzymes involved in the central metabolism
of the fungi and the electrophoretic pattern of soluble proteins. Total mesophilic bacteria were also counted. The results obtained showed
that the storage at 4 C is the treatment that best preserves the biochemical and microbiological characteristics of fresh truffles. Black
truffles were more resistant to biochemical spoilage than the white ones, while T. magnatum was the most resistant to microbial spoilage
Polynucleotide: Adenosine glycosidase is the sole activity of ribosome-inactivating proteins on DNA
Polynucleotide: adenosine glycosidases (PNAG) are a class of plant and bacterial enzymes commonly known as ribosome-inactivating proteins (RIP). They are presently classified as rRNA N-glycosidases in the enzyme nomenclature [EC 3.2.2.22]. Several activities on nucleic acids, other than depurination, have been attributed to PNAG: in particular modifications induced in circular plasmids, including linearisation and topological changes, and cleavage of guanidinic residues. Here we describe a chromatographic procedure to obtain nuclease-free PNAG by dye-chromatography onto Procion Red derivatized Sepharose®. Highly purified enzymes depurinate extensively pBR322 circular, supercoiled DNA at neutral pH and exhibit neither DNase nor DNA glycolyase activities, do not cause topological changes, and adenine is the only base released from DNA and rRNA, even at very high enzyme concentrations. A scanning force microscopy (SFM) study of pBR322 treated with saporin-S6 confirmed that (i) this PNAG binds extensively to the plasmid, (ii) the distribution of the bound saporin-S6 molecules along the DNA chain is markedly variable, (iii) plasmids already digested with saporin-S6 do not appear fragmented or topologically modified. The observations here described demonstrate that polynucleotide:adenosine glycosidase is the sole enzymatic activity of the four ribosome-inactivating proteins gelonin, momordin I, pokeweed antiviral protein from seeds and saporin-S6. These proteins belong to different families, suggesting that the findings here described may be generalized to all PNAG
High Incidence of Childhood Type 1 Diabetes in Liguria, Italy, From 1989 to 1998
OBJECTIVE—Assessing updated incidence of type 1 diabetes in 0- to 14-year-old children in Liguria, a Northwest region of Italy.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Incident cases were recorded prospectively from 1989 to 1998. Incidence rates (IRs) were standardized to the 1999 world population using the direct method. The independent effect of sex, age, residence, and calendar year was estimated with Poisson regression model. The degree of ascertainment was calculated in accordance to capture/recapture method.
RESULTS—During 10 full calendar years, 219 new cases of type 1 diabetes in children were diagnosed in Liguria. The standardized IR over the 10-year period was 12.56 cases per 100,000 per year (95% CI 11.0–14.3). The sex-specific IR among men and women was 14.15 and 10.88, respectively. The age-specific IR was higher in the 10- to 14-year-old age-group (15.01/100,000) than in 0- to 4-year-old age-group (9.01/100,000) and in the 5- to 9-year-old age-group (13.03/100,000).
CONCLUSIONS—The IR of type 1 diabetes in Liguria is among the highest in Southern Europe and approaches IRs of Northern European countries. In particular it is much higher than those reported in the surrounding Italian regions except for Sardinia. Therefore, the geographical distribution of type 1 diabetes does not seem to reflect the simple North-South gradient reported in several previous works
Abundances for metal-poor stars with accurate parallaxes I. Basic data
We present element-to-element abundance ratios measured from high dispersion
spectra for 150 field subdwarfs and early subgiants with accurate Hipparcos
parallaxes (errors <20%). For 50 stars new spectra were obtained with the UVES
on Kueyen (VLT UT2), the McDonald 2.7m telescope, and SARG at TNG.
Additionally, literature equivalent widths were taken from the works by Nissen
& Schuster, Fulbright, and Prochaska et al. to complement our data. The whole
sample includes both thick disk and halo stars (and a few thin disk stars);
most stars have metallicities in the range -2<[Fe/H]<-0.6. We found our data,
that of Nissen & Schuster, and that of Prochaska to be of comparable quality;
results from Fulbright scatter a bit more, but they are still of very good
quality and are extremely useful due to the large size of his sample. The
results of the present analysis will be used in forthcoming papers to discuss
the chemical properties of the dissipational collapse and accretion components
of our Galaxy.Comment: 43 pages, 8 encapsulated figures, 13 tables. Table 1 only available
in electronic form at CDS or from first author. Accepted for publication in
A&
Phytochemical analysis and biological potential of Argentinian plant essential oils and extracts
Our aim is to characterize the chemical composition, antimicrobial, antioxidant and anti-inflammatory potentials of the essential oils (EOs) and ethanolic extracts (EEs) of five northwest native plants in Argentina. The EOs and EEs were obtained from Lippia turbinata, Clinopodium gilliesii, Lippia integrifolia, Zuccagnia punctata, and Senecio subulatus var. salsus. EOs and EEs phytochemical composition were determined by GC-MS analysis and spectrophotometric methods. Antibacterial activity was assessed against Gram-negative and -positive pathogenic bacteria. Antioxidant activity was evaluated by DPPH radical scavenging assay and anti-inflammatory potential was determined by cyclooxygenase (COX-2) inhibition assay. EOs and EEs of all assayed plant species showed weak antibacterial effect. The EEs had stronger scavenging activity than the EOs. The best results were achieved for Z. punctata EE followed by L. turbinata and C. gilliesii EEs. The EOs exhibited greater inhibitory activity towards the COX-2 than EEs. C. gilliesii and L. integrifolia EOs showed the highest COX-2 inhibitory activity. These results would indicate that antioxidant activity is concentrated in the non-volatile fraction of the plants whether the anti-inflammatory activity is in the volatile one. This work contributes to knowledge of biological properties of plants from our region and could help to discover compounds with potential therapeutic uses.Fil: Barbieri, Natalia Paola del Carmen. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de Chilecito. Departamento de Ciencias Basicas y Tecnologicas; Argentina. Instituto de Ambiente de Montaña y Regiones Áridas; ArgentinaFil: Gilabert Valero, José Miguel. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Tucumán; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de Tucumán. Facultad de Bioquímica, Química y Farmacia; ArgentinaFil: Benavente, Alba María del Valle. Universidad Nacional de Chilecito. Departamento de Ciencias Basicas y Tecnologicas; Argentina. Instituto de Ambiente de Montaña y Regiones Áridas; Argentin
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