Search results for "Temperature response"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

New research in the methods and applications of sclerochronology

2017

Abstract Because the instrumental record is short and does not extend to periods before the initiation of significant human impacts, full understanding of the processes and dynamics involved in the modern phase of very rapid global change depends on the interpretation of high resolution and precisely dated proxy archives. The identification of very long-lived species of bivalve mollusc in the extratropical marine environment has been a crucial recent advance. These molluscs form patterns of periodic (usually annual) banding in their shells that are synchronous within populations, so that long (centennial and millennial) stacked chronologies can be built by crossdating from live collected to…

010506 paleontology010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesbiologyLimpetGiant clamTrace elementPaleontologyGlobal changeOceanographybiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesPaleontologyOceanographySclerochronologyEnvironmental monitoringClimate modelTemperature responseEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Intrinsic localized excitations in nonlinear lattices: Heuristic explanation for the nature of polar nanoregions?

2010

The study is addressed to a topical problem of self-localization in condensed state with special emphasis on a class of complex oxides categorized as ferroelectric relaxors. Basically, their anomalous temperature response is associated with the dynamics of microscopic scale polar regions supported by somewhat artificial metastable configurations. A unified approach to the spontaneous emergence and stability of the polar nanoregions is assigned to intrinsic localized excitations in Hamiltonian lattices with nonlinearity and non-Gibbsian statistics as necessary and sufficient ingredients of the theory.

PhysicsCondensed matter physicsNonlinear latticeCondensed Matter PhysicsFerroelectricityAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsMicroscopic scaleElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsCondensed Matter::Materials ScienceNonlinear systemsymbols.namesakeQuantum mechanicsMetastabilitysymbolsPolarHamiltonian (quantum mechanics)Temperature responsePhysica E: Low-dimensional Systems and Nanostructures
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Extreme thermophilic (70°C), VFA-fed UASB reactor: performance, temperature response, load potential and comparison with 35 and 55°C UASB reactors

1999

Abstract The paper evaluates the reactor performance, load potential and temperature response of a 70°C, VFAs-fed UASB reactor, seeded with mesophilic granular sludge. Batch experiments were, in addition, conducted to assess the effect of temperature on the achievable residual VFAs in the 70°C effluent. The performance of similarly-fed and seeded 35 and 55°C UASB reactors was also tested. At a short HRT (2–3 h) and a moderate VLR of 12–20 g COD l−1 d−1, the 70°C UASB achieved 66–74% VFAs removal (acetate and butyrate 84–90%, propionate

chemistry.chemical_classificationEnvironmental EngineeringChromatographyChemistryEcological ModelingThermophilePulp and paper industryPollutionPropionateBioreactorWaste Management and DisposalAnaerobic exerciseTemperature responseEffluentWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringMesophileWater Research
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Turpentine-induced fever during stimulation and inhibition of hepatic protein synthesis

2003

Abstract 1. Male Wistar rats pretreated with d -galactosamine (500 mg/kg, i.p.), a specific inhibitor of hepatic protein synthesis, developed attenuated and prolonged fever in response to turpentine (0.5 ml/rat, s.c.). 2. Hepatic protein synthesis stimulator epinephrine (1.8 mg/kg, s.c.) did not affect body temperature response of Wistar rats to turpentine. 3. Both d -galactosamine (500 mg/kg) and epinephrine (1.8 mg/kg) failed to affect body temperature in non-febrile rats. 4. These data support the hypothesis that liver-synthesised acute phase proteins might be involved in mechanisms of fever, probably, as modulators of activated cytokine network, mediating febrile response.

medicine.medical_specialtyPhysiologybusiness.industryProlonged feverAcute-phase proteinTurpentineStimulationBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundEpinephrineEndocrinologychemistryInternal medicineGalactosaminemedicineGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesbusinessHEPATIC PROTEINTemperature responseDevelopmental Biologymedicine.drugJournal of Thermal Biology
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