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Institution

Sapienza University of Rome

EducationRome, Lazio, Italy
About: Sapienza University of Rome is a education organization based out in Rome, Lazio, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Large Hadron Collider. The organization has 62002 authors who have published 155468 publications receiving 4397244 citations. The organization is also known as: La Sapienza & Università La Sapienza di Roma.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the morphology of the technical fibres of the Malvaceae family (Abelmoschus esculentus) was investigated through optical and electron microscopy and their thermal behaviour through thermogravimetric analysis.

440 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derive upper bounds on the coefficients of the most general ΔF = 2 effective Hamiltonian, and these upper bounds can be translated into lower bounds on new physics that contributes to these low-energy effective interactions.
Abstract: We update the constraints on new-physics contributions to ΔF = 2 processes from the generalized unitarity triangle analysis, including the most recent experimental developments. Based on these constraints, we derive upper bounds on the coefficients of the most general ΔF = 2 effective Hamiltonian. These upper bounds can be translated into lower bounds on the scale of new physics that contributes to these low-energy effective interactions. We point out that, due to the enhancement in the renormalization group evolution and in the matrix elements, the coefficients of non-standard operators are much more constrained than the coefficient of the operator present in the Standard Model. Therefore, the scale of new physics in models that generate new ΔF = 2 operators, such as next-to-minimal flavour violation, has to be much higher than the scale of minimal flavour violation, and it most probably lies beyond the reach of direct searches at the LHC.

440 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: De novo lipogenesis has pathogenic and prognostic significance for HCC and inhibitors of lipogenic signaling, including those that inhibit the AKT pathway, might be useful as therapeutics for patients with liver cancer.

440 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In amphibian skin secretions contain many biologically active compounds, such as biogenic amines, complex alkaloids, or peptides as mentioned in this paper, which are considered the effector molecules of innate immunity, acting as a first line of defense against bacterial infections.
Abstract: Amphibian skin secretions contain many biologically active compounds, such as biogenic amines, complex alkaloids, or peptides. Within the latter class of molecules, a large number of peptide antibiotics has been isolated and characterized from different amphibian species. Antimicrobial peptides are considered the effector molecules of innate immunity, acting as a first line of defense against bacterial infections, by perturbing the phospholipid bilayer of the target cell membrane. These gene-encoded molecules are synthesized as inactive precursors and in several cases their proparts were shown to have highly conserved structures. It has also been demonstrated that the promoter regions of inducible peptide antibiotics are often regulated by the transcriptional control machinery NF-κB/IκBα. In amphibia of Rana and Bombina genera, inhibition of transcription of the genes encoding antimicrobial peptides has been obtained by glucocorticoid treatment, which causes an increase of IκBα synthesis. Moreover, determination of the structure of a number of genes coding for antimicrobial peptides in amphibia has actually shown that their promoter regions contain recognition sites for nuclear factors. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biopoly 47: 435–450, 1998

440 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Georges Aad1, Brad Abbott2, Jalal Abdallah3, Ovsat Abdinov4  +2828 moreInstitutions (191)
TL;DR: In this article, the performance of the ATLAS muon identification and reconstruction using the first LHC dataset recorded at s√ = 13 TeV in 2015 was evaluated using the Monte Carlo simulations.
Abstract: This article documents the performance of the ATLAS muon identification and reconstruction using the first LHC dataset recorded at s√ = 13 TeV in 2015. Using a large sample of J/ψ→μμ and Z→μμ decays from 3.2 fb−1 of pp collision data, measurements of the reconstruction efficiency, as well as of the momentum scale and resolution, are presented and compared to Monte Carlo simulations. The reconstruction efficiency is measured to be close to 99% over most of the covered phase space (|η| 2.2, the pT resolution for muons from Z→μμ decays is 2.9% while the precision of the momentum scale for low-pT muons from J/ψ→μμ decays is about 0.2%.

440 citations


Authors

Showing all 62745 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Charles A. Dinarello1901058139668
Gregory Y.H. Lip1693159171742
Peter A. R. Ade1621387138051
H. Eugene Stanley1541190122321
Suvadeep Bose154960129071
P. de Bernardis152680117804
Bart Staels15282486638
Alessandro Melchiorri151674116384
Andrew H. Jaffe149518110033
F. Piacentini149531108493
Subir Sarkar1491542144614
Albert Bandura148255276143
Carlo Rovelli1461502103550
Robert C. Gallo14582568212
R. Kowalewski1431815135517
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023405
20221,106
20219,796
20209,753
20198,332
20187,615