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Alfredo Fon

    Alfredo Fon

    ALICE is a general-purpose heavy-ion experiment designed to study the physics of strongly interacting matter and the quark-gluon plasma in nucleus-nucleus collisions at the LHC. It currently includes more than 900 physicists and senior... more
    ALICE is a general-purpose heavy-ion experiment designed to study the physics of strongly interacting matter and the quark-gluon plasma in nucleus-nucleus collisions at the LHC. It currently includes more than 900 physicists and senior engineers, from both nuclear and high-energy physics, from about 80 institutions in 28 countries. The experiment was approved in February 1997. The detailed design of the different detector systems has been laid down in a number of Technical Design Reports issued between mid-1998 and the end of 2001 and construction has started for most detectors. Since the last comprehensive information on detector and physics performance was published in the ALICE Technical Proposal in 1996, the detector as well as simulation, reconstruction and analysis software have undergone significant development. The Physics Performance Report (PPR) will give an updated and comprehensive summary of the current status and performance of the various ALICE subsystems, including updates to the Technical Design Reports, where appropriate, as well as a description of systems which have not been published in a Technical Design Report. The PPR will be published in two volumes. The current Volume I contains: a short theoretical overview and an extensive reference list concerning the physics topics of interest to ALICE, relevant experimental conditions at the LHC, a short summary and update of the subsystem designs, and a description of the offline framework and Monte Carlo generators. Volume II, which will be published separately, will contain detailed simulations of combined detector performance, event reconstruction, and analysis of a representative sample of relevant physics observables from global event characteristics to hard processes.
    Aquest període, de curta durada, coincideix amb l’ingrés en els fons del Museu de Geologia de dues importants col·leccions pel que fa al nombre d’exemplars, la qualitat expositiva o l’interès científic. Es tracta de la col·lecció de... more
    Aquest període, de curta durada, coincideix amb l’ingrés en els fons del Museu de Geologia de dues importants col·leccions pel que fa al nombre d’exemplars, la qualitat expositiva o l’interès científic. Es tracta de la col·lecció de mineralogia de Josep Cervelló [14, 72, 103], adquirida per l’Ajuntament l’any 1979, i de la col·lecció de paleontologia del Dr. Josep F. de
    The COL1A2 gene is one of the two genes encoding for the polypeptides of type I collagen, that represent the major constituent of skin, bone, tendons, ligaments, blood vessels, dentin, and many interstitial tissues. The COL1A2 gene... more
    The COL1A2 gene is one of the two genes encoding for the polypeptides of type I collagen, that represent the major constituent of skin, bone, tendons, ligaments, blood vessels, dentin, and many interstitial tissues. The COL1A2 gene deletion polymorphism has been considered as an informative anthropological marker for describing geographically distinct human populations. Aim of the present study was to investigate the genetic variability at COL1A2 locus in two populations, one belonging to Ouangolodougou (n = 133), a village placed in Northern Ivory Coast, and one belonging to Lecco (n = 70), a village placed in a Northern Italy region called Lombardy. For each sampled population no data are available in literature. We reported, for the first time, the presence of the deleted allele among Ivorians (0.06), confirming the low deletion frequency of this polymorphism found in Sub Saharan Africa by other authors. For Italians, frequency analysis of this gene polymorphism (0.28 for the deleted allele) did not show any significant level of differentiation with respect to other Italian and European populations.