1,627 research outputs found
Kinetic parameters for nutrient enhanced crude oil biodegradation in intertidal marine sediments
Availability of inorganic nutrients, particularly nitrogen and phosphorous, is often a primary control on crude oil hydrocarbon degradation in marine systems. Many studies have empirically determined optimum levels of inorganic N and P for stimulation of hydrocarbon degradation. Nevertheless, there is a paucity of information on fundamental kinetic parameters for nutrient enhanced crude oil biodegradation that can be used to model the fate of crude oil in bioremediation programmes that use inorganic nutrient addition to stimulate oil biodegradation. Here we report fundamental kinetic parameters (Ks and qmax) for nitrate-and phosphate-stimulated crude oil biodegradation under nutrient limited conditions and with respect to crude oil, under conditions where N and P are not limiting. In the marine sediments studied, crude oil degradation was limited by both N and P availability. In sediments treated with 12.5 mg/g of oil but with no addition of N and P, hydrocarbon degradation rates, assessed on the basis of CO2 production, were 1.10 ± 0.03 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day which were comparable to rates of CO2 production in sediments to which no oil was added (1.05 ± 0.27 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day). When inorganic nitrogen was added alone maximum rates of CO2 production measured were 4.25 ± 0.91 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day. However, when the same levels of inorganic nitrogen were added in the presence of 0.5% P w/w of oil (1.6 μmol P/g wet sediment) maximum rates of measured CO2 production increased more than four-fold to 18.40 ± 1.04 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day. Ks and qmax estimates for inorganic N (in the form of sodium nitrate) when P was not limiting were 1.99 ± 0.86 μmol/g wet sediment and 16.16 ± 1.28 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day respectively. The corresponding values for P were 63 ± 95 nmol/g wet sediment and 12.05 ± 1.31 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day. The qmax values with respect to N and P were not significantly different (P < 0.05). When N and P were not limiting Ks and qmax for crude oil were 4.52 ± 1.51 mg oil/g wet sediment and 16.89 ± 1.25 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day. At concentrations of inorganic N above 45 μmol/g wet sediment inhibition of CO2 production from hydrocarbon degradation was evident. Analysis of bacterial 16S rRNA genes indicated that Alcanivorax spp. were selected in these marine sediments with increasing inorganic nutrient concentration, whereas Cycloclasticus spp. were more prevalent at lower inorganic nutrient concentrations. These data suggest that simple empirical estimates of the proportion of nutrients added relative to crude oil concentrations may not be sufficient to guarantee successful crude oil bioremediation in oxic beach sediments. The data we present also help define the maximum rates and hence timescales required for bioremediation of beach sediments
The use of an automated flight test management system in the development of a rapid-prototyping flight research facility
An automated flight test management system (ATMS) and its use to develop a rapid-prototyping flight research facility for artificial intelligence (AI) based flight systems concepts are described. The ATMS provides a flight test engineer with a set of tools that assist in flight planning and simulation. This system will be capable of controlling an aircraft during the flight test by performing closed-loop guidance functions, range management, and maneuver-quality monitoring. The rapid-prototyping flight research facility is being developed at the Dryden Flight Research Facility of the NASA Ames Research Center (Ames-Dryden) to provide early flight assessment of emerging AI technology. The facility is being developed as one element of the aircraft automation program which focuses on the qualification and validation of embedded real-time AI-based systems
Searching for bosons decaying to gluons
The production and decay of a new heavy vector boson, a chromophilic
vector boson, is described. The chromophilic couples only to two gluons,
but its two-body decays are absent, leading to a dominant decay mode of
. The unusual nature of the interaction predicts a
cross-section which grows with for a fixed coupling and an
accompanying gluon with a coupling that rises with its energy. We study the
decay mode, proposing distinct reconstruction techniques for the
observation of an excess and for the measurement of . We estimate the
sensitivity of current experimental datasets.Comment: For submission to PR
The Schwinger SU(3) construction - I: Multiplicity problem and relation to induced representations
The Schwinger oscillator operator representation of SU(3) is analysed with
particular reference to the problem of multiplicity of irreducible
representations. It is shown that with the use of an unitary
representation commuting with the SU(3) representation, the infinity of
occurrences of each SU(3) irreducible representation can be handled in complete
detail. A natural `generating representation' for SU(3), containing each
irreducible representation exactly once, is identified within a subspace of the
Schwinger construction; and this is shown to be equivalent to an induced
representation of SU(3).Comment: Latex, 25 page
A complementarity-based approach to phase in finite-dimensional quantum systems
We develop a comprehensive theory of phase for finite-dimensional quantum
systems. The only physical requirement we impose is that phase is complementary
to amplitude. To implement this complementarity we use the notion of mutually
unbiased bases, which exist for dimensions that are powers of a prime. For a
d-dimensional system (qudit) we explicitly construct d+1 classes of maximally
commuting operators, each one consisting of d-1 operators. One of this class
consists of diagonal operators that represent amplitudes (or inversions). By
the finite Fourier transform, it is mapped onto ladder operators that can be
appropriately interpreted as phase variables. We discuss the examples of qubits
and qutrits, and show how these results generalize previous approaches.Comment: 6 pages, no figure
Treponema pallidum, the syphilis spirochete: making a living as a stealth pathogen
The past two decades have seen a worldwide resurgence in infections caused by Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum, the syphilis spirochete. The well-recognized capacity of the syphilis spirochete for early dissemination and immune evasion has earned it the designation 'the stealth pathogen'. Despite the many hurdles to studying syphilis pathogenesis, most notably the inability to culture and to genetically manipulate T. pallidum, in recent years, considerable progress has been made in elucidating the structural, physiological, and regulatory facets of T. pallidum pathogenicity. In this Review, we integrate this eclectic body of information to garner fresh insights into the highly successful parasitic lifestyles of the syphilis spirochete and related pathogenic treponemes
Characterization of bipartite states using a single homodyne detector
We suggest a scheme to reconstruct the covariance matrix of a two-mode state
using a single homodyne detector plus a polarizing beam splitter and a
polarization rotator. It can be used to fully characterize bipartite Gaussian
states and to extract relevant informations on generic states.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
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