474 research outputs found

    Halal Food Sustainability between Certification and Blockchain: A Review

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    Islam is the second-largest religion on a global scale. All around the world Muslims are estimated to comprise more than 1.9 billion people. Therefore, the demand for Halal commodities is expected to reach a high growth rate: thus, it is crucial to increase its global market’s reliability and traceability. Based on these grounds, the scope of this paper is to assess Halal food sustainability, examining the barriers and opportunities offered by the certification and blockchain tools. To this purpose, the authors carried out an integrative literature review, selecting 54 contributions in the Web of Science platform. Despite several limitations, such as the lack of a standardized framework or universally accepted and reliable certifying authorities, the implementation of blockchain technology has emerged as an interesting instrument to increase the trustworthiness and traceability of Halal foods. This tool could also help the development of protocols and standard procedures, ensuring hygienic and permitted products that may boost food safety and security. Besides, the enhancement of the Halal certification and the blockchain tool, even if several efforts are required in terms of innovation and cooperation by local authorities, industrial associations and leading consumers, could enhance fair trade, ethical business, green animal breeding and environmental economics, and hence sustainable development

    Effective genes for resistance to stripe rust and virulence of Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici in Pakistan

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    Virulence patterns of wheat stripe rust were studied under the field conditions across four environmentally different locations: Quaid-i-Azam University (Islamabad), Pirsabak (NWFP), Faisalabad (Punjab) and Sakrand (Sindh) by planting trap nursery of tester lines and Pakistan varieties. The results revealed that stripe rust resistance genes Yr3, Yr5, Yr10, Yr15, Yr26, YrSP and YrCV were resistant, while Yr18 showed moderate susceptibility at all locations. Genes YrA-, Yr2, Yr6, Yr7, Yr8, Yr9, Yr17, Yr27 and gene combinations Opata (Yr27+Yr18) and Super Kauz (Yr9, Yr27, Yr18) were found susceptible. Among the fifty-one (51) commercial varieties; Barani70, Marvi2000, Iqbal2000, GA2000 and Seher2006 were found resistant. The genes found effective against stripe rust under natural conditions may be deployed singly or in combination to develop high yielding resistant wheat varieties in Pakistan.Key words: Near-isogenic lines, Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici, stripe rust, Triticum aestivum, virulence, Yr genes

    Cavity-enhanced superradiant Rayleigh scattering with ultra-cold and Bose-Einstein condensed atoms

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    We report on the observation of collective atomic recoil lasing and superradiant Rayleigh scattering with ultracold and Bose-Einstein condensed atoms in an optical ring cavity. Both phenomena are based on instabilities evoked by the collective interaction of light with cold atomic gases. This publication clarifies the link between the two effects. The observation of superradiant behavior with thermal clouds as hot as several tens of μK\mu\textrm{K} proves that the phenomena are driven by the cooperative dynamics of the atoms, which is strongly enhanced by the presence of the ring cavity.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure

    Incidental detection of sinus mucosal abnormalities on CT and MRI imaging of the head

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    Purpose: To investigate the prevalence of incidental sinus abnormalities on CT and MRI imaging of the head, and identify if there is any correlation between patient symptomatology and image findings. Materials and methods: One hundred and fifteen patients who underwent head CT or MRI for non-sinus related indications were included in this study, with image findings being analysed based on the Lund-Mackay Grading System (LMS). These were compared with their symptomatology based on theSNAQ-11 questionnaire. Two reviewers who were blinded to the patients’ SNAQ-11 scores analysed the images. Patients were also referred to an ENT surgeon for anterior rhinoscopy in an attempt to seek a correlation between symptomatology and/or imaging findings against clinical assessment. Results: The prevalence of incidental sinus abnormalities is between 14.8% and 37% for CT and 29.5%and 85.2% for MRI, depending upon the cutoff LMS used. There was no significant difference in the incidence rate between the different age groups or genders. Asymptomatic patients had a significantly lower incidence rate of sinus mucosal abnormalities (8.2-57.1%) when compared to the symptomatic patients (33.3-66.7%) (P<0.01). A significant correlation was found between the MRI sinus findings and patients’ symptoms (r=0.59, P<0.001) with no correlation demonstrated in the CT group. The mean LM score for the patients with clinical sinusitis was 6.2, while the normal patients had a mean LM score of 2.2. Conclusions: MRI is more sensitive than CT to detect sinus mucosal abnormalities. A significant correlation is noticed between MRI findings and patients’ symptomatology

    Geometric and homological finiteness in free abelian covers

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    We describe some of the connections between the Bieri-Neumann-Strebel-Renz invariants, the Dwyer-Fried invariants, and the cohomology support loci of a space X. Under suitable hypotheses, the geometric and homological finiteness properties of regular, free abelian covers of X can be expressed in terms of the resonance varieties, extracted from the cohomology ring of X. In general, though, translated components in the characteristic varieties affect the answer. We illustrate this theory in the setting of toric complexes, as well as smooth, complex projective and quasi-projective varieties, with special emphasis on configuration spaces of Riemann surfaces and complements of hyperplane arrangements.Comment: 30 pages; to appear in Configuration Spaces: Geometry, Combinatorics and Topology (Centro De Giorgi, 2010), Edizioni della Normale, Pisa, 201

    Thermoelectric Enhancement in BaGa_2Sb_2 by Zn Doping

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    The Zintl phase BaGa_2Sb_2 has a unique crystal structure in which large tunnels formed by ethane-like dimeric [Sb_3Ga−GaSb_3] units are filled with Ba atoms. BaGa_2Sb_2 was obtained in high purity from ball-milling followed by hot pressing. It shows semiconducting behavior, in agreement with the valence precise Zintl counting and band structure calculations, with a band gap ∼0.4 eV. The thermal conductivity of BaGa_2Sb_2 is found to be relatively low (0.95 W/K m at 550 K), which is an inherent property of compounds with complex crystal structures. As BaGa_2Sb_2 has a low carrier concentration (∼2 × 10^18 h^+/cm^3) at room temperature, the charge carrier tuning was performed by substituting trivalent Ga with divalent Zn. Zn-doped samples display heavily doped p-type semiconducting behavior with carrier concentrations in the range (5−8) × 10^19 h^+/cm^3. Correspondingly, the zT values were increased by a factor of 6 by doping compared to the undoped sample, reaching a value of ∼0.6 at 800 K. Zn-doped BaGa_2Sb_2 can thus be considered as a promising new thermoelectric material for intermediate-temperature applications

    Inter-Subunit Dynamics Controls Tunnel Formation During the Oxygenation Process in Hemocyanin Hexamers

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    Hemocyanin from horseshoe crab in its active form is a homo-hexameric protein. It exists in open and closed conformations when transitioning between deoxygenated and oxygenated states. Here, we present a detailed dynamic atomistic investigation of the oxygenated and deoxygenated states of the hexameric hemocyanin using explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulations. We focus on the variation in solvent cavities and the formation of tunnels in the two conformational states. By employing principal component analysis and CVAE-based deep learning, we are able to differentiate between the dynamics of the deoxy- and oxygenated states of hemocyanin. Finally, our results identify the deoxygenated open conformation, which adopts a stable, closed conformation after the oxygenation process

    Automorphisms of Partially Commutative Groups II: Combinatorial Subgroups

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    We define several "standard" subgroups of the automorphism group Aut(G) of a partially commutative (right-angled Artin) group and use these standard subgroups to describe decompositions of Aut(G). If C is the commutation graph of G, we show how Aut(G) decomposes in terms of the connected components of C: obtaining a particularly clear decomposition theorem in the special case where C has no isolated vertices. If C has no vertices of a type we call dominated then we give a semi-direct decompostion of Aut(G) into a subgroup of locally conjugating automorphisms by the subgroup stabilising a certain lattice of "admissible subsets" of the vertices of C. We then characterise those graphs for which Aut(G) is a product (not necessarily semi-direct) of two such subgroups.Comment: 7 figures, 63 pages. Notation and definitions clarified and typos corrected. 2 new figures added. Appendix containing details of presentation and proof of a theorem adde
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