9,778 research outputs found
Oxidation of an oil rich in docosahexaenoic acid compared to linoleic acid in lactating women
Background: We studied the oxidation of an oil rich in docosahexaenoic acid (DHA; DHASCO(R)) in lactating mothers receiving a dietary DHA supplement or a placebo. The results were compared with the oxidation of linoleic acid. Methods: Breast-feeding mothers received a dietary supplement (DHASCO; 200 mg DHA/day, n = 5) or a placebo (n = 5) for 14 days. Six weeks post partum all 10 mothers received a single dose of 2 mg/kg body weight uniformly C-13-labeled DHASCO. In a previously reported study 6 mothers received 1 mg/kg body weight uniformly C-13-labeled linoleic acid. Breath samples were collected over 48 h after tracer application. The total CO2 production was measured by indirect calorimetry and the C-13 isotopic enrichment of labeled CO2 by isotopic ratio mass spectrometry. Results: The oxidation of C-13-labeled DHASCO in the supplemented and placebo groups was similar. Maximal C-13 enrichment was reached earlier in the group receiving C-13-DHASCO (median 1.0 vs. 3.0 h in the linoleic acid group). The cumulative C-13 recovery in breath was higher in the DHASCO versus the linoleic acid group until 10 h after tracer application and comparable thereafter. Conclusions: The difference in oxidation of DHASCO versus linoleic acid after tracer ingestion might be partly due to a faster absorption and oxidation of shorter chain saturated fatty acids contained in DHASCO. The cumulative oxidation of DHASCO and linoleic acid 24 and 48 h after tracer ingestion is similar. Copyright (C) 2000 S. Karger AG, Basel
Genetic variation of rougheye rockfish (Sebastes aleutianus) and shortraker rockfish (S. borealis) inferred from allozymes
Rougheye rockfish (Sebastes aleutianus) and shortraker rockfish (Sebastes borealis) were collected from the Washington coast, the Gulf of Alaska, the southern Bering Sea, and the eastern Kamchatka coast of Russia (areas encompassing most of their geographic distribution) for population genetic analyses. Using starch gel electrophoresis, we analyzed 1027 rougheye rockfish and 615 shortraker rockfish for variation at 29 proteincoding
loci. No genetic heterogeneity was found among shortraker rockfish throughout the sampled regions, although shortraker in the Aleutian Islands region, captured at deeper depths, were found to be significantly smaller in size than the shortraker caught in shallower waters from
Southeast Alaska. Genetic analysis of the rougheye rockfish revealed two evolutionary lineages that exist in sympatry with little or no gene f low between them. When analyzed
as two distinct species, neither lineage exhibited heterogeneity among regions. Sebastes aleutianus seems to
inhabit waters throughout the Gulf of Alaska and more southern waters, whereas S. sp. cf. aleutianus inhabits
waters throughout the Gulf of Alaska, Aleutian Islands, and Asia. The distribution of the two rougheye rockfish lineages may be related to depth where they are sympatric. The paler color morph, S. aleutianus, is found more abundantly in shallower waters and the darker color morph,
Sebastes sp. cf. aleutianus, inhabits deeper waters. Sebastes sp. cf. aleutianus, also exhibited a significantly
higher prevalence of two parasites, N. robusta and T. trituba, than did Sebastes aleutianus, in the 2001 samples, indicating a possible difference in habitat and (or) resource use between the two lineages
Three-dimensional Roton-Excitations and Supersolid formation in Rydberg-excited Bose-Einstein Condensates
We study the behavior of a Bose-Einstein condensate in which atoms are weakly
coupled to a highly excited Rydberg state. Since the latter have very strong
van der Waals interactions, this coupling induces effective, nonlocal
interactions between the dressed ground state atoms, which, opposed to dipolar
interactions, are isotropically repulsive. Yet, one finds partial attraction in
momentum space, giving rise to a roton-maxon excitation spectrum and a
transition to a supersolid state in three-dimensional condensates. A detailed
analysis of decoherence and loss mechanisms suggests that these phenomena are
observable with current experimental capabilities.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Relativistic models for quasi-elastic neutrino scattering
We present quasi-elastic neutrino-nucleus cross sections in the energy range
from 150 MeV up to 5 GeV for the target nuclei 12C and 56Fe. A relativistic
description of the nuclear dynamics and the neutrino-nucleus coupling is
adopted. For the treatment of final-state interactions (FSI) we rely on two
frameworks succesfully applied to exclusive electron-nucleus scattering: a
relativistic optical potential and a relativistic multiple-scattering Glauber
approximation. At lower energies, the optical-potential approach is considered
to be the optimum choice, whereas at high energies a Glauber approach is more
natural. Comparing the results of both calculations, it is found that the
Glauber approach yields valid results down to the remarkably small nucleon
kinetic energies of 200 MeV. We argue that the nuclear transparencies extracted
from A(e,e'p) measurements can be used to obtain realistic estimates of the
effect of FSI mechanisms on quasi-elastic neutrino-nucleus cross sections. We
present two independent relativistic plane-wave impulse approximation (RPWIA)
calculations of quasi-elastic neutrino-nucleus cross sections. They agree at
the percent level, showing the reliability of the numerical techniques adopted
and providing benchmark RPWIA results.Comment: revised version,28 pages, 7 figures, accepted in Phys.Rev.
The effect of the displacement damage on the Charge Collection Efficiency in Silicon Drift Detectors for the LOFT satellite
The technology of Silicon Drift Detectors (SDDs) has been selected for the
two instruments aboard the Large Observatory For X-ray Timing (LOFT) space
mission. LOFT underwent a three year long assessment phase as candidate for the
M3 launch opportunity within the "Cosmic Vision 2015 -- 2025" long-term science
plan of the European Space Agency. During the LOFT assessment phase, we studied
the displacement damage produced in the SDDs by the protons trapped in the
Earth's magnetosphere. In a previous paper we discussed the effects of the Non
Ionising Energy Losses from protons on the SDD leakage current. In this paper
we report the measurement of the variation of Charge Collection Efficiency
produced by displacement damage caused by protons and the comparison with the
expected damage in orbit.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication by Journal of
Instrumentatio
3D Distribution of Molecular Gas in the Barred Milky Way
We present a new model of the three-dimensional distribution of molecular gas
in the Milky Way Galaxy, based on CO line data. Our analysis is based on a
gas-flow simulation of the inner Galaxy using smoothed-particle hydrodynamics
(SPH) using a realistic barred gravitional potential derived from the observed
COBE/DIRBE near-IR light distribution. The gas model prescribes the gas orbits
much better than a simple circular rotation model and is highly constrained by
observations, but it cannot predict local details. In this study, we provide a
3D map of the observed molecular gas distribution using the velocity field from
the SPH model. A comparison with studies of the Galactic Center region suggests
that the main structures are reproduced but somewhat stretched along the
line-of-sight, probably on account of limited resolution of the underlying SPH
simulation. The gas model will be publicly available and may prove useful in a
number of applications, among them the analysis of diffuse gamma-ray emission
as measured with GLAST.Comment: ApJ in pres
Strong-coupling effects in the relaxation dynamics of ultracold neutral plasmas
We describe a hybrid molecular dynamics approach for the description of
ultracold neutral plasmas, based on an adiabatic treatment of the electron gas
and a full molecular dynamics simulation of the ions, which allows us to follow
the long-time evolution of the plasma including the effect of the strongly
coupled ion motion. The plasma shows a rather complex relaxation behavior,
connected with temporal as well as spatial oscillations of the ion temperature.
Furthermore, additional laser cooling of the ions during the plasma evolution
drastically modifies the expansion dynamics, so that crystallization of the ion
component can occur in this nonequilibrium system, leading to lattice-like
structures or even long-range order resulting in concentric shells
Demonstrating Universal Scaling in Quench Dynamics of a Yukawa One-Component Plasma
The Yukawa one-component plasma (OCP) is a paradigm model for describing
plasmas that contain one component of interest and one or more other components
that can be treated as a neutralizing, screening background. In appropriately
scaled units, interactions are characterized entirely by a screening parameter,
. As a result, systems of similar show the same dynamics,
regardless of the underlying parameters (e.g., density and temperature). We
demonstrate this behavior using ultracold neutral plasmas (UNP) created by
photoionizing a cold ( mK) gas. The ions in UNP systems are well
described by the Yukawa model, with the electrons providing the screening.
Creation of the plasma through photoionization can be thought of as a rapid
quench from to a final value set by the electron
density and temperature. We demonstrate experimentally that the post-quench
dynamics are universal in over a factor of 30 in density and an order
of magnitude in temperature. Results are compared with molecular dynamics
simulations. We also demonstrate that features of the post-quench kinetic
energy evolution, such as disorder-induced heating and kinetic-energy
oscillations, can be used to determine the plasma density and the electron
temperature.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figures, to be submitted to Physical Review
Compact mode-matched excitation structures for radar distance measurements in overmoded circular waveguides
This contribution deals with guided radar level measurements of liquid materials in large metal tubes, socalled stilling wells, bypass or still pipes. In the RF domain these tubes function as overmoded circular waveguides and mode-matched excitation structures like waveguide tapers are needed to avoid higher order waveguide modes. Especially for high-precision radar measurements the multimode propagation effects need to be minimized to achieve submillimeter accuracy. Therefore, a still pipe simulator is introduced with the purpose to fundamentally analyze the modal effects. Furthermore, a generalized design criterion is derived for the spurious mode suppression of compact circular waveguide transitions under the constraint of specified accuracy levels. According to the obtained results, a promising waveguide taper concept will finally be presented. © Author(s) 2008
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