4 resultados para heterotrophic plate count
em Consorci de Serveis Universitaris de Catalunya (CSUC), Spain
Resumo:
Se realizan recuentos ,aislamiento, identificación y determinación de la actividad Nitrogenasa de algas azules en muestras de suelo y agua, durante dos ciclos de cultivo del arroz . Los recuentos se realizan por la técnica del 'Plate Count', utilizando el medio de Chu y los resultados muestran grandes fluctuaciones en las muestras de agua, manteniéndose más altos y uniformes en las muestras de suelo. Después del aislamiento e identificación, llegamos a obtener colonias algales correspondientes en su mayor parte a los géneros Anabaena y Nostoc, las cuales se someten posteriormente a ensayos de reducción del acetileno, para determinar su actividad fijadora de nitrógeno. La especie identificada como N. humifusum, es en nuestras condiciones, la que posee mayor actividad fijadora, además de ser la más común en los dos campos de arroz ensayados.
Resumo:
The work in this paper deals with the development of momentum and thermal boundary layers when a power law fluid flows over a flat plate. At the plate we impose either constant temperature, constant flux or a Newton cooling condition. The problem is analysed using similarity solutions, integral momentum and energy equations and an approximation technique which is a form of the Heat Balance Integral Method. The fluid properties are assumed to be independent of temperature, hence the momentum equation uncouples from the thermal problem. We first derive the similarity equations for the velocity and present exact solutions for the case where the power law index n = 2. The similarity solutions are used to validate the new approximation method. This new technique is then applied to the thermal boundary layer, where a similarity solution can only be obtained for the case n = 1.
Resumo:
The high sensitivity and excellent timing accuracy of Geiger mode avalanche photodiodes makes them ideal sensors as pixel detectors for particle tracking in high energy physics experiments to be performed in future linear colliders. Nevertheless, it is well known that these sensors suffer from dark counts and afterpulsing noise, which induce false hits (indistinguishable from event detection) as well as an increase of the necessary area of the readout system. In this work, we present a comparison between APDs fabricated in a high voltage 0.35 µm and a high integration 0.13 µm commercially available CMOS technologies that has been performed to determine which of them best fits the particle collider requirements. In addition, a readout circuit that allows low noise operation is introduced. Experimental characterization of the proposed pixel is also presented in this work.
Resumo:
Avalanche photodiodes operated in the Geiger mode present very high intrinsic gain and fast time response, which make the sensor an ideal option for those applications in which detectors with high sensitivity and velocity are required. Moreover, they are compatible with conventional CMOS technologies, allowing sensor and front-end electronics integration within the pixel cell. Despite these excellent qualities, the photodiode suffers from high intrinsic noise, which degrades the performance of the detector and increases the memory area to store the total amount of information generated. In this work, a new front-end circuit that allows low reverse bias overvoltage sensor operation to reduce the noise in Geiger mode avalanche photodiode pixel detectors is presented. The proposed front-end circuit also enables to operate the sensor in the gated acquisition mode to further reduce the noise. Experimental characterization of the fabricated pixel with the conventional HV-AMS 0.35µm technology is also presented in this article.