2,668 research outputs found
Biodiversity of nematode assemblages from the region of the Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone, an area of commercial mining interest
BACKGROUND: The possibility for commercial mining of deep-sea manganese nodules is currently under exploration in the abyssal Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone. Nematodes have potential for biomonitoring of the impact of commercial activity but the natural biodiversity is unknown. We investigate the feasibility of nematodes as biomonitoring organisms and give information about their natural biodiversity. RESULTS: The taxonomic composition (at family to genus level) of the nematode fauna in the abyssal Pacific is similar, but not identical to, the North Atlantic. Given the immature state of marine nematode taxonomy, it is not possible to comment on the commonality or otherwise of species between oceans. The between basin differences do not appear to be directly linked to current ecological factors. The abyssal Pacific region (including the Fracture Zone) could be divided into two biodiversity subregions that conform to variations in the linked factors of flux to the benthos and of sedimentary characteristics. Richer biodiversity is associated with areas of known phytodetritus input and higher organic-carbon flux. Despite high reported sample diversity, estimated regional diversity is less than 400 species. CONCLUSION: The estimated regional diversity of the CCFZ is a tractable figure for biomonitoring of commercial activities in this region using marine nematodes, despite the immature taxonomy (i.e. most marine species have not been described) of the group. However, nematode ecology is in dire need of further study
Path Integral Solubility of a General Two-Dimensional Model
The solubility of a general two dimensional model, which reduces to various
models in different limits, is studied within the path integral formalism.
Various subtleties and interesting features are pointed out.Comment: 7 pages, UR1386, ER40685-83
A simple functional form for proton-nucleus total reaction cross sections
A simple functional form has been found that gives a good representation of
the total reaction cross sections for the scattering of protons from (15)
nuclei spanning the mass range Be to U and for proton
energies ranging from 20 to 300 MeV.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, bib fil
Exact scaling of pair production in the high-energy limit of heavy-ion collisions
The two-center Dirac equation for an electron in the external electromagnetic
field of two colliding heavy ions in the limit in which the ions are moving at
the speed of light is exactly solved and nonperturbative amplitudes for free
electron-positron pair production are obtained. We find the condition for the
applicability of this solution for large but finite collision energy, and use
it to explain recent experimental results. The observed scaling of positron
yields as the square of the projectile and target charges is a result of an
exact cancellation of a nonperturbative charge dependence and holds as well for
large coupling. Other observables would be sensitive to nonperturbative phases.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex, no figures, submitted to PR
The quark mass and dependence of the QCD chiral critical point
In order to study the QCD chiral critical point we investigate Binder
Cumulants of the chiral condensate. The results were obtained from simulations
of 3 and 2+1 flavors of standard staggered fermions and 3 flavors of p4
improved staggered fermions. The quark masses used are close to the physical
quark mass. To extract the dependence on quark mass and chemical potential we
apply a new reweighting technique based on a Taylor expansion of the action.
The reweighting accuracy is for the standard and ,
for the p4 action.Comment: 3 pages, 6 figures, Lattice2002(nonzerot
Rational design of a (S)-selective-transaminase for asymmetric synthesis of (1S)-1-(1,1′-biphenyl-2-yl)ethanamine
Amine transaminases offer an environmentally sustainable synthesis route for the production of pure chiral amines. However, their catalytic efficiency toward bulky ketone substrates is greatly limited by steric hindrance and therefore presents a great challenge for industrial synthetic applications. We hereby report an example of rational transaminase enzyme design to help alleviate these challenges. Starting from the Vibrio fluvialis amine transaminase that has no detectable catalytic activity toward the bulky aromatic ketone 2-acetylbiphenyl, we employed a rational design strategy combining in silico and in vitro studies to engineer the transaminase enzyme with a minimal number of mutations, achieving an high catalytic activity and high enantioselectivity. We found that, by introducing two mutations W57G/R415A, detectable enzyme activity was achieved. The rationally designed variant, W57F/R88H/V153S/K163F/I259M/R415A/V422A, showed an improvement in reaction rate by more than 1716-fold toward the bulky ketone under study, producing the corresponding enantiomeric pure (S)-amine (enantiomeric excess (ee) value of >99%)
Asymptotic channels and gauge transformations of the time-dependent Dirac equation for extremely relativistic heavy-ion collisions
We discuss the two-center, time-dependent Dirac equation describing the
dynamics of an electron during a peripheral, relativistic heavy-ion collision
at extreme energies. We derive a factored form, which is exact in the
high-energy limit, for the asymptotic channel solutions of the Dirac equation,
and elucidate their close connection with gauge transformations which transform
the dynamics into a representation in which the interaction between the
electron and a distant ion is of short range. We describe the implications of
this relationship for solving the time-dependent Dirac equation for extremely
relativistic collisions.Comment: 12 pages, RevTeX, 2 figures, submitted to PR
Metabolism and thermoregulation of individual and clustered long-fingered bats, Miniopterus schreibersii, and the implications for roosting
Oxygen consumption of individual long-fingered bats, Miniopterus schreibersii, was measured at air temperatures (Tr) between 2 and 42°C and that of clusters of four and six bats between 5 and 30°C. BMR of individuals was estimated to be 2.29 ml O2 g-1 h-1 between 34 and about 38°C. M. schreibersii showed two different responses to Ta, either maintaining body temperature (Tb) by increasing metabolic rate, or allowing Tb to fall close to ambient temperature and conserving energy (torpor). Euthermic clusters of four and six bats had lower rates of mass-specific oxygen consumption and lower thermal conductances than individuals at equivalent temperatures and torpid clusters maintained a greater temperature differential between Tb and Ta. Lowest rates of metabolism were measured for euthermic bats at air temperatures higher than those available to them in their natural roost in summer, so typical roost temperatures result in metabolic rates that are about 2 4–3.1 times estimated BMR. Roost temperatures of M. schreibersii in South Africa are substantially higher in winter than are generally accepted as being suitable for hibernation but these do not substantially affect torpid metabolic rates, which are low and independent of ambient temperature below 22°C. Clearly at least some species of insectivorous bats are capable of hibernating at temperatures generally considered to be too warm for this activity
Coulomb Effects on Electromagnetic Pair Production in Ultrarelativistic Heavy-Ion Collisions
We discuss the implications of the eikonal amplitude on the pair production
probability in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion transits. In this context the
Weizs\"acker-Williams method is shown to be exact in the ultrarelativistic
limit, irrespective of the produced particles' mass. A new equivalent
single-photon distribution is derived which correctly accounts for the Coulomb
distortions. As an immediate application, consequences for unitarity violation
in photo-dissociation processes in peripheral heavy-ion encounters are
discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 4 .eps figure
Phase diagram of quarter-filled band organic salts, [EDT-TTF-CONMe2]2X, X = AsF6 and Br
An investigation of the P/T phase diagram of the quarter-filled organic
conductors, [EDT-TTF-CONMe2]2X, is reported on the basis of transport and NMR
studies of two members, X=AsF6 and Br of the family. The strongly insulating
character of these materials in the low pressure regime has been attributed to
a remarkably stable charge ordered state confirmed by 13C NMR and the only
existence of 1/4 Umklapp e-e scattering favoring a charge ordering instead of
the 1D Mott localization seen in (TM)2X which are quarter-filled compounds with
dimerization. A non magnetic insulating phase instead of the spin density wave
state is stabilized in the deconfined regime of the phase diagram. This
sequence of phases observed under pressure may be considered as a generic
behavior for 1/4-filled conductors with correlations
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