5,287 research outputs found
The chemical structure of the very young starless core L1521E
L1521E is a dense starless core in Taurus that was found to have relatively
low molecular depletion by earlier studies, thus suggesting a recent formation.
We aim to characterize the chemical structure of L1521E and compare it to the
more evolved L1544 pre-stellar core. We have obtained 2.52.5
arcminute maps toward L1521E using the IRAM-30m telescope in transitions of
various species. We derived abundances for the species and compared them to
those obtained toward L1544. We estimated CO depletion factors. Similarly to
L1544, -CH and CHOH peak at different positions. Most species
peak toward the -CH peak. The CO depletion factor derived toward the
dust peak is 4.31.6, which is about a factor of three lower
than that toward L1544. The abundances of sulfur-bearing molecules are higher
toward L1521E than toward L1544 by factors of 2-20. The abundance of
methanol is similar toward the two cores. The higher abundances of
sulfur-bearing species toward L1521E than toward L1544 suggest that significant
sulfur depletion takes place during the dynamical evolution of dense cores,
from the starless to pre-stellar stage. The CO depletion factor measured toward
L1521E suggests that CO is more depleted than previously found. Similar
CHOH abundances between L1521E and L1544 hint that methanol is forming at
specific physical conditions in Taurus, characterized by densities of a few
10 cm and (H)10 cm, when CO
starts to catastrophically freeze-out, while water can still be significantly
photodissociated, so that the surfaces of dust grains become rich in solid CO
and CHOH, as already found toward L1544. Methanol can thus provide
selective crucial information about the transition region between dense cores
and the surrounding parent cloud.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, abstract abridge
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Lab-on-Chip for Testing Myelotoxic Effect of Drugs and Chemicals
This paper was presented at the 4th Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2014), which was held at University College, London, UK. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Italian Union of Thermofluiddynamics, IPEM, the Process Intensification Network, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Heat Transfer Society, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group, and the Energy Institute, ASME Press, LCN London Centre for Nanotechnology, UCL University College London, UCL Engineering, the International NanoScience Community, www.nanopaprika.eu.In the last twenty years, one of the main goals in the drug discovery field has been the development
of reliable in vitro models. In particular, in 2006 the European Centre for the Validation of Alternative
Methods (ECVAM) has approved the Colony forming Unit-Granulocytes-Macrophages (CFU-GM) test,
which is the first and currently unique test applied to evaluate the myelotoxicity of xenobiotics in vitro. The
present work aimed at miniaturizing this in vitro assay by developing and validating a Lab-on-Chip (LoC)
platform consisting of a high number of bioreactor chambers with screening capabilities in a high-throughput
regime
Manejo de Frankliniella occidentalis (Pergande) (Thysanoptera: Thripidae) na cultura do morangueiro no Rio Grande do Sul.
Esta Circular Técnica tem como objetivo descrever a biologia de F. occidentalis na cultura do morangueiro, caracterizar o tipo de injúria causada pelo inseto em flores e frutos e fornecer informações para o monitoramento e o controle da espécie na cultura no Estado do Rio Grande do Sul.bitstream/item/73816/1/cir090.pd
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Micromixing and microchannel design: Vortex shape and entropy
This paper was presented at the 2nd Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2009), which was held at Brunel University, West London, UK. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, IPEM, the Italian Union of Thermofluid dynamics, the Process Intensification Network, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group and the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications.In very recent years microdevices, due to their potency in replacing large-scale conventional laboratory instrumentation, are becoming a fast and low cost technology for the treatment of several chemical and biological processes. In particular microfluidics has been massively investigated, aiming at improving the performance of chemical reactors. This is because of the fact that reaction is often an interface phenomenon where the greater the surface to volume ratio, the higher the reaction speed, and microscale mixing increases the interfacial area (in terms of mixing-induced-by-vortices generation). However, microfluidic systems suffer from the limitation that they are characterized mostly by very low Reynolds numbers, with the consequence that (i) they cannot take advantage from the turbulence mixing support, and (ii) viscosity hampers proper vortex detection. Therefore, the proper design of micro-channels (MCs) becomes essential. In this framework, several geometries have been proposed to induce mixing vortices in MCs. However a quantitative comparison between proposed geometries in terms of their passive mixing
potency can be done only after proper definition of vortex formation (topology, size) and mixing performance. The objective of this study is to test the ability of different fluid dynamic metrics in vortex
detection and mixing effectiveness in micromixers. This is done numerically solving different conditions for the flow in a classic passive mixer, a ring shaped MC. We speculate that MCs design could take advantage from fluidic metrics able to rank properly flow related mixing
Measurements of the effect of collisions on transverse beam halo diffusion in the Tevatron and in the LHC
Beam-beam forces and collision optics can strongly affect beam lifetime,
dynamic aperture, and halo formation in particle colliders. Extensive
analytical and numerical simulations are carried out in the design and
operational stage of a machine to quantify these effects, but experimental data
is scarce. The technique of small-step collimator scans was applied to the
Fermilab Tevatron collider and to the CERN Large Hadron Collider to study the
effect of collisions on transverse beam halo dynamics. We describe the
technique and present a summary of the first results on the dependence of the
halo diffusion coefficient on betatron amplitude in the Tevatron and in the
LHC.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Submitted to the Proceedings of the ICFA
Mini-Workshop on Beam-beam Effects in Hadron Colliders (BB2013), Geneva,
Switzerland, 18-22 March 201
Implicit neural representations for unsupervised super-resolution and denoising of 4D flow MRI
4D flow MRI is a non-invasive imaging method that can measure blood flow velocities over time. However, the velocity fields detected by this technique have limitations due to low resolution and measurement noise. Coordinate-based neural networks have been researched to improve accuracy, with SIRENs being suitable for super-resolution tasks. Our study investigates SIRENs for time-varying 3-directional velocity fields measured in the aorta by 4D flow MRI, achieving denoising and super-resolution. We trained our method on voxel coordinates and benchmarked our approach using synthetic measurements and a real 4D flow MRI scan. Our optimized SIREN architecture outperformed state-of-the-art techniques, producing denoised and super-resolved velocity fields from clinical data. Our approach is quick to execute and straightforward to implement for novel cases, achieving 4D super-resolution
Beam halo dynamics and control with hollow electron beams
Experimental measurements of beam halo diffusion dynamics with collimator
scans are reviewed. The concept of halo control with a hollow electron beam
collimator, its demonstration at the Tevatron, and its possible applications at
the LHC are discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, in Proceedings of the 52nd ICFA Advanced Beam
Dynamics Workshop on High-Intensity and High-Brightness Hadron Beams
(HB2012), Beijing, China, 17-21 September 201
Detecting barriers to transport: A review of different techniques
We review and discuss some different techniques for describing local
dispersion properties in fluids. A recent Lagrangian diagnostics, based on the
Finite Scale Lyapunov Exponent (FSLE), is presented and compared to the Finite
Time Lyapunov Exponent (FTLE), and to the Okubo-Weiss (OW) and Hua-Klein (HK)
criteria. We show that the OW and HK are a limiting case of the FTLE, and that
the FSLE is the most efficient method for detecting the presence of
cross-stream barriers. We illustrate our findings by considering two examples
of geophysical interest: a kinematic meandering jet model, and Lagrangian
tracers advected by stratospheric circulation.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Physica
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