Institution
University of Valencia
Education•Valencia, Spain•
About: University of Valencia is a education organization based out in Valencia, Spain. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 27096 authors who have published 65669 publications receiving 1765689 citations. The organization is also known as: Universitat de València & UV.
Topics: Population, Context (language use), Neutrino, Medicine, Catalysis
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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University of Zurich1, University of Notre Dame2, CERN3, Brookhaven National Laboratory4, Durham University5, University of Hamburg6, Max Planck Society7, Autonomous University of Madrid8, University of Victoria9, Technische Universität München10, University of Cagliari11, Instituto Superior Técnico12, University of British Columbia13, University of Valencia14, International School for Advanced Studies15, University of Warsaw16, University of Lyon17, Yale University18, University of Manchester19, University of Pisa20, RWTH Aachen University21, University of Wisconsin-Madison22, University of Sussex23, University of Tokyo24, Argonne National Laboratory25, Helsinki Institute of Physics26, University of Oregon27, University of Zagreb28, KEK29, University of Southampton30, Paul Scherrer Institute31, Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute32, University of California33, University of Paris34, University of Rome Tor Vergata35, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences36, University of Salento37, Boston University38, University of Würzburg39, International Centre for Theoretical Physics40, University of Murcia41, University of Michigan42, Indian Institute of Science43
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the theoretical, phenomenological and experimental issues related to flavor phenomena in the charged lepton sector and in flavor conserving CP-violating processes.
Abstract: This chapter of the report of the “Flavor in the era of the LHC” Workshop discusses the theoretical, phenomenological and experimental issues related to flavor phenomena in the charged lepton sector and in flavor conserving CP-violating processes. We review the current experimental limits and the main theoretical models for the flavor structure of fundamental particles. We analyze the phenomenological consequences of the available data, setting constraints on explicit models beyond the standard model, presenting benchmarks for the discovery potential of forthcoming measurements both at the LHC and at low energy, and exploring options for possible future experiments.
384 citations
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TL;DR: The biochemical mechanism for resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis crystal proteins was studied in a field population of diamondback moths with a reduced susceptibility to the bioinsecticidal spray.
Abstract: The biochemical mechanism for resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis crystal proteins was studied in a field population of diamondback moths (Plutella xylostella) with a reduced susceptibility to the bioinsecticidal spray. The toxicity and binding characteristics of three crystal proteins [CryIA(b), CryIB, and CryIC] were compared between the field population and a laboratory strain. The field population proved resistant (greater than 200-fold compared with the laboratory strain) to CryIA(b), one of the crystal proteins in the insecticidal formulation. Binding studies showed that the two strains differ in a membrane receptor that recognizes CryIA(b). This crystal protein did not bind to the brush-border membrane of the midgut epithelial cells of the field population, either because of strongly reduced binding affinity or because of the complete absence of the receptor molecule. Both strains proved fully susceptible to the CryIB and CryIC crystal proteins, which were not present in the B. thuringiensis formulation used in the field. Characteristics of CryIB and CryIC binding to brush-border membranes of midgut epithelial cells were virtually identical in the laboratory and the field population.
382 citations
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TL;DR: Results indicate that the transformed N. glauca represents a highly promising new tool for use in phytoremediation efforts, and seedlings of transformed plants grown in mining soils containing high levels of Pb accumulated double concentration of this heavy metal than wild type.
382 citations
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TL;DR: Several meson-baryon dynamically generated narrow N* and Λ* resonances with hidden charm are predicted with mass above 4 GeV and width smaller than 100 MeV, which definitely cannot be accommodated by quark models with three constituent quarks.
Abstract: Up to now, all established baryons can be ascribed into 3-quark (qqq) configurations [1], although some of them were suggested to be meson-baryon dynamically generated states [2–8] or states with large (qqqq¯ q) components [9–11]. A difficulty to pin down the nature of these baryon resonances is that the predicted states from various models are around the same energy region and there are always some adjustable ingredients in each model to fit the experimental data. In this letter, we report a study of the interactions between various charmed mesons and charmed baryons within the framework of the coupled channel unitary approach with the local hidden gauge formalism. Several meson-baryon dynamically generated ¯ ¯ ¯
381 citations
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National Autonomous University of Mexico1, Yale University2, Fermilab3, Massachusetts Institute of Technology4, University of Alabama5, Argonne National Laboratory6, Los Alamos National Laboratory7, University of Florida8, Louisiana State University9, University of Cincinnati10, Columbia University11, University of Colorado Boulder12, University of Minnesota13, University of Michigan14, University of Valencia15, Indiana University16, Imperial College London17
TL;DR: The MiniBooNE experiment at Fermilab reports results from a search for ¯ν_{μ}→¯ν_{e} oscillations, using a data sample corresponding to 5.66×10²⁰ protons on target, consistent with antineutrino oscillations in the 0.1 to 1.0 eV² Δm² range.
Abstract: The MiniBooNE experiment at Fermilab reports results from a search for {nu}{sub {mu}{yields}{nu}e} oscillations, using a data sample corresponding to 5.66x10{sup 20} protons on target. An excess of 20.9{+-}14.0 events is observed in the energy range 475
380 citations
Authors
Showing all 27402 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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H. S. Chen | 179 | 2401 | 178529 |
Alvaro Pascual-Leone | 165 | 969 | 98251 |
Sabino Matarrese | 155 | 775 | 123278 |
Subir Sarkar | 149 | 1542 | 144614 |
Carlos Escobar | 148 | 1184 | 95346 |
Marco Costa | 146 | 1458 | 105096 |
Carmen García | 139 | 1503 | 96925 |
Javier Cuevas | 138 | 1689 | 103604 |
M. I. Martínez | 134 | 1251 | 79885 |
Marco Aurelio Diaz | 134 | 1015 | 93580 |
Avelino Corma | 134 | 1049 | 89095 |
Kevin Lannon | 133 | 1652 | 95436 |
Marina Cobal | 132 | 1078 | 85437 |
Mogens Dam | 131 | 1109 | 83717 |
Marcel Vos | 131 | 993 | 85194 |