RESUMO
This paper describes a new filamentary probe recently introduced on the COMPASS tokamak. It allows the measurement of electrostatic and magnetic properties of the filaments and their changes in dependence on distance from the separatrix in the region between a divertor and midplane. The probe head is mounted on a manipulator moving the probe radially on a shot-to-shot basis. This configuration is suitable for the long term statistical measurement of the plasma filaments and the measurement of their evolution during their propagation from the separatrix to the wall. The basics of the filamentary probe construction, the evolution of the plasma parameters, and first conditional averages of the plasma filaments in the scrape-off layer of the COMPASS tokamak during the L-mode regime are presented.
RESUMO
We perform a global χ² analysis of nuclear parton distribution functions using data from charged current neutrino-nucleus (νA) deep-inelastic scattering (DIS), charged-lepton-nucleus (â(±)A) DIS, and the Drell-Yan (DY) process. We show that the nuclear corrections in νA DIS are not compatible with the predictions derived from â(±)A DIS and DY data. We quantify this result using a hypothesis-testing criterion based on the χ² distribution which we apply to the total χ² as well as to the χ² of the individual data sets. We find that it is not possible to accommodate the data from νA and â(±)A DIS by an acceptable combined fit. Our result has strong implications for the extraction of both nuclear and proton parton distribution functions using combined neutrino and charged-lepton data sets.
RESUMO
Antibiotic resistance has been monitored in 293 strains of S. typhimurium and 260 strains of S. enteritidis isolated from poultry in Czech Republic in the years 1991 and 1992. Ninety per cent of all salmonella isolations examined by disc diffusion method (Bauer et al., 1966) were sensitive to all 8 antimicrobials (chloramphenicol, neomycin, tetracycline, streptomycin, colistin, ampicillin, kanamycin, sulfisoxazol) used for testing. The strains of S. typhimurium were more resistant than S. enteritidis strains, as seen from the percentage of resistant strains, 17.4% and 1.2% respectively. Thirty-two (62.7%) out of 51 resistant strains were multiresistant. The percentage of resistance in S. typhimurium strains was as follows: sulfisoxazol (12.3%), streptomycin (11.3%), tetracycline (4.4%) and chloramphenicol (1.7%).