Institution
DSM
Company•Heerlen, Netherlands•
About: DSM is a company organization based out in Heerlen, Netherlands. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Galaxy. The organization has 11183 authors who have published 14095 publications receiving 493443 citations. The organization is also known as: Royal DSM.
Topics: Catalysis, Galaxy, Polymer, Coating, Population
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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DSM1, Delft University of Technology2, University of Nottingham3, Technical University of Denmark4, Wageningen University and Research Centre5, University of Sheffield6, Utrecht University7, Biomax Informatics AG8, CLC bio9, University of Liverpool10, Ghent University11, University of Manchester12, University of Provence13, University of Groningen14, Pasteur Institute15, University of Amsterdam16, University of Angers17, Leiden University18, Radboud University Nijmegen19, University of Szeged20
TL;DR: The filamentous fungus Aspergillus niger is widely exploited by the fermentation industry for the production of enzymes and organic acids, particularly citric acid, and the sequenced genome revealed a large number of major facilitator superfamily transporters and fungal zinc binuclear cluster transcription factors.
Abstract: The filamentous fungus Aspergillus niger is widely exploited by the fermentation industry for the production of enzymes and organic acids, particularly citric acid. We sequenced the 33.9-megabase genome of A. niger CBS 513.88, the ancestor of currently used enzyme production strains. A high level of synteny was observed with other aspergilli sequenced. Strong function predictions were made for 6,506 of the 14,165 open reading frames identified. A detailed description of the components of the protein secretion pathway was made and striking differences in the hydrolytic enzyme spectra of aspergilli were observed. A reconstructed metabolic network comprising 1,069 unique reactions illustrates the versatile metabolism of A. niger. Noteworthy is the large number of major facilitator superfamily transporters and fungal zinc binuclear cluster transcription factors, and the presence of putative gene clusters for fumonisin and ochratoxin A synthesis.
1,161 citations
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21 Jun 1996-Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment
TL;DR: In this paper, a two-stage parallet-plate avalanche chamber of small amplification gap (100 μm) combined with a conversion-drift space is proposed for a gaseous detector.
Abstract: We describe a novel structure for a gaseous detector that is under development at Saclay. It consists of a two-stage parallet-plate avalanche chamber of small amplification gap (100 μm) combined with a conversion-drift space. It follows a fast removal of positive ions produced during the avalanche development. Fast signals (≤1 ns) are obtained during the collection of the electron avalanche on the anode microstrip plane. The positive ion signal has a duration of 100 ns. The fast evacuation of positive ions combined with the high granularity of the detector provide a high rate capability. Gas gains of up to 10 5 have been achieved.
1,156 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors characterized the effective beams, the effective beam window functions and the associated errors for the Planck High Frequency Instrument (HFI) detectors, including the effect of the optics, detectors, data processing and the scan strategy.
Abstract: This paper characterizes the effective beams, the effective beam window functions and the associated errors for the Planck High Frequency Instrument (HFI) detectors. The effective beam is the angular response including the effect of the optics, detectors, data processing and the scan strategy. The window function is the representation of this beam in the harmonic domain which is required to recover an unbiased measurement of the cosmic microwave background angular power spectrum. The HFI is a scanning instrument and its effective beams are the convolution of: a) the optical response of the telescope and feeds; b) the processing of the time-ordered data and deconvolution of the bolometric and electronic transfer function; and c) the merging of several surveys to produce maps. The time response transfer functions are measured using observations of Jupiter and Saturn and by minimizing survey difference residuals. The scanning beam is the post-deconvolution angular response of the instrument, and is characterized with observations of Mars. The main beam solid angles are determined to better than 0.5% at each HFI frequency band. Observations of Jupiter and Saturn limit near sidelobes (within 5 degrees) to about 0.1% of the total solid angle. Time response residuals remain as long tails in the scanning beams, but contribute less than 0.1% of the total solid angle. The bias and uncertainty in the beam products are estimated using ensembles of simulated planet observations that include the impact of instrumental noise and known systematic effects. The correlation structure of these ensembles is well-described by five errors eigenmodes that are sub-dominant to sample variance and instrumental noise in the harmonic domain. A suite of consistency tests provide confidence that the error model represents a sufficient description of the data. The total error in the effective beam window functions is below 1% at 100 GHz up to multiple l similar to 1500, below 0.5% at 143 and 217 GHz up to l similar to 2000.
1,124 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an updated recommendation for the usage of sets of parton distribution functions (PDFs) and the assessment of PDF and PDF+$\alpha_s$ uncertainties suitable for applications at the LHC Run II.
Abstract: We provide an updated recommendation for the usage of sets of parton distribution functions (PDFs) and the assessment of PDF and PDF+$\alpha_s$ uncertainties suitable for applications at the LHC Run II. We review developments since the previous PDF4LHC recommendation, and discuss and compare the new generation of PDFs, which include substantial information from experimental data from the Run I of the LHC. We then propose a new prescription for the combination of a suitable subset of the available PDF sets, which is presented in terms of a single combined PDF set. We finally discuss tools which allow for the delivery of this combined set in terms of optimized sets of Hessian eigenvectors or Monte Carlo replicas, and their usage, and provide some examples of their application to LHC phenomenology.
1,098 citations
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TL;DR: It is demonstrated that 30 days of resveratrol supplementation induces metabolic changes in obese humans, mimicking the effects of calorie restriction.
1,096 citations
Authors
Showing all 11186 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Hannes Jung | 159 | 2069 | 125069 |
Marc Besancon | 143 | 1799 | 106869 |
David J. Kupfer | 141 | 862 | 102498 |
Maksym Titov | 139 | 1573 | 128335 |
Emmanuelle Perez | 138 | 1550 | 99016 |
W. Kozanecki | 138 | 1498 | 99758 |
John A Coughlan | 135 | 1312 | 96578 |
Christophe Royon | 134 | 1453 | 90249 |
Jean-Luc Starck | 133 | 657 | 76224 |
Daniel Denegri | 132 | 1254 | 91183 |
Federico Ferri | 132 | 1376 | 89337 |
Eric Lancon | 131 | 1084 | 84629 |
Jacques Delabrouille | 131 | 354 | 94923 |
Ahmimed Ouraou | 131 | 1075 | 81695 |
Serguei Ganjour | 130 | 1162 | 86468 |