5,555 research outputs found
Enhancement of entanglement in one-dimensional disordered systems
The pairwise quantum entanglement of sites in disordered electronic
one-dimensional systems (rings) is studied. We focus on the effect of diagonal
and off diagonal disorder on the concurrence between electrons on
neighbor and non neighbor sites as a function of band filling. In the
case of diagonal disorder, increasing the degree of disorder leads to a
decrease of the concurrence with respect to the ordered case. However,
off-diagonal disorder produces a surprisingly strong enhancement of
entanglement. This remarkable effect occurs near half filling, where the
concurrence becomes up to 15% larger than in the ordered system.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figure
Two electron entanglement enhancement by an inelastic scattering process
In order to assess inelastic effects on two fermion entanglement production,
we address an exactly solvable two-particle scattering problem where the target
is an excitable scatterer. Useful entanglement, as measured by the two particle
concurrence, is obtained from post-selection of oppositely scattered particle
states. The matrix formalism is generalized in order to address non-unitary
evolution in the propagating channels. We find the striking result that
inelasticity can actually increase concurrence as compared to the elastic case
by increasing the uncertainty of the single particle subspace. Concurrence
zeros are controlled by either single particle resonance energies or total
reflection conditions that ascertain precisely one of the electron states.
Concurrence minima also occur and are controlled by entangled resonance
situations were the electron becomes entangled with the scatterer, and thus
does not give up full information of its state. In this model, exciting the
scatterer can never fully destroy phase coherence due to an intrinsic limit to
the probability of inelastic events.Comment: 8 pages, to appear in Phys. Rev
Can we use Google Scholar to identify highly-cited documents?
The main objective of this paper is to empirically test whether the identification of highly-cited documents through Google Scholar is feasible and reliable. To this end, we carried out a longitudinal analysis (1950 to 2013), running a generic query (filtered only by year of publication) to minimise the effects of academic search engine optimisation. This gave us a final sample of 64,000 documents (1,000 per year). The strong correlation between a document’s citations and its position in the search results (r= -0.67) led us to conclude that Google Scholar is able to identify highly-cited papers effectively.
This, combined with Google Scholar’s unique coverage (no restrictions on document type and source), makes the academic search engine an invaluable tool for bibliometric research relating to the identification of the most influential scientific documents. We find evidence, however, that Google Scholar ranks those documents whose language (or geographical web domain) matches with the user’s interface language higher than could be expected based on citations. Nonetheless, this language effect and other factors related to the Google Scholar’s operation, i.e. the proper identification of versions and the date of publication, only have an incidental impact. They do not compromise the ability of Google Scholar to identify the highly-cited papers
Reaffirming the connection between the Galactic stellar warp and the Canis Major overdensity
We perform a critical re-analysis and discussion of recent results presented
in the literature which interpret the CMa overdensity as the signature of an
accreting dwarf galaxy or a new substructure within the Galaxy. Several issues
are addressed. We show that arguments against the ``warp'' interpretation are
based on an erroneous perception of the Milky Way. There is nothing anomalous
with colour--magnitude diagrams on opposite sides of the average warp mid-plane
being different. We witnessed the rise and fall of the blue plume population,
first attributed to young stars in a disrupting dwarf galaxy and now discarded
as a normal disc population. Similarly, there is nothing anomalous in the outer
thin+thick disc metallicities being low (-1<[Fe/H]<-0.5), and spiral arms (as
part of the thin disc) should, and do, warp. Most importantly, we show
unambiguously that, contrary to previous claims, the warp produces a stellar
overdensity that is distance-compatible with that observed in CMa.The CMa
over-density remains fully accounted for in a first order approach by Galactic
models without new substructures. Given the intrinsic uncertainties (concerning
the properties of the warp, flare and disc cutoff, the role of extinction and
degeneracy), minor deviations with respect to these models are not enough to
support the hypothesis of an accreted dwarf galaxy or new substructure within
the Milky Way disc.Comment: A&A Letter, accepted, 4 pages, 3 figure
El paleógeno del sector suroccidental de la Cuenca del Duero: nueva división estratigráfica y controles sobre su sedimentación
A Paleogene four-fold stratigraphical division is proposed here as result from the detailed studies carried out during the elaboration of 22 sheets of the Geological Map of Spain (E. 1:50.000). This units (T.S.U.) are limited by regional discordances and they have a Upper Cretaceous to Oligocene ages. The previous stratigraphical schemes are rearranged due to the different stratigraphicalrelations observed between the lithostratigraphical units proPosed by other workers (Jiménez, 1970; Corrochano, 1977; Alonso, 1981 ...). An Upper Cretaceous-Paleocene age is assumed to T.S.U. MC which is mainly composed by siliciclastic sediments strongly silicified forming a FU megasequence. It is interpretated as braided streams that flowed downslope filling paleovalleys eroded onto Paleozoic materials. Mineralogical features point to a tropical climate. Lower Eocene (T.S.U. P1) is identified in the Salamanca area, where it was considered as lacking. It is composed by arkosic sediments forming a CU megasequence. Fossil faunas of this T.S.U. record a subtropical climate. It is observed a transition from high sinuosity streams to braided ones. T.S.U. P2 (Middle Eocene-Lower Oligocene) is composed of two lithostratigraphical units previously considered as bounded by a discordance (Alonso, 198 1). It has a subarkosic to lithic nature and forms a CU megasequence. This unit records a subtropical climate with short arid periods and is interpretated as braided streams showing an increasing stability and enviromental energy to the top. T.S.U. P3 (Upper Oligocene) is composed by arkosic sediments previously considered of Vallesian (Middle to Upper Miocene) age. They form a CU megasequence that records braided streams prograding basin ward from higher areas. Palinological associations and pedological features indicate an arid mediterranean climate with long arid periods and a short rainy season with strong floods. We consider that most of Lower Miocene sediments are of Paleogene age. They are afected by a widespread alteration profile developed along Lower Miocene that masked its more significative features. Sedimentological analysis of T.S.U. shows that its megasequentiality is related to the rates of tectonical uplift of source areas whereas a distensive regime developed in the sedimentation basin
Piecing together the puzzle of NGC 5253: abundances, kinematics and WR stars
We present Gemini-S/GMOS-IFU optical spectroscopy of four regions near the
centre of the nearby (3.8 Mpc) dwarf starburst galaxy NGC 5253. This galaxy is
famous for hosting a radio supernebula containing two deeply embedded massive
super star clusters, surrounded by a region of enhanced nitrogen abundance that
has been linked to the presence of WR stars. We detected 11 distinct sources of
red WR bump (CIV) emission over a 20" (~350 pc) area, each consistent with the
presence of ~1 WCE-type star. WC stars are not found coincident with the
supernebula, although WN stars have previously been detected here. We performed
a multi-component decomposition of the H\alpha\ line across all four fields and
mapped the kinematics of the narrow and broad (FWHM = 100-250 km/s) components.
These maps paint a picture of localised gas flows, as part of multiple
overlapping bubbles and filaments driven by the star clusters throughout the
starburst. We confirm the presence of a strong H\alpha\ velocity gradient over
~4.5" (~80 pc) coincident with the region of N/O enhancement, and high gas
density known from previous study, and interpret this as an accelerating
ionized gas outflow from the supernebula clusters. We measure the ionized gas
abundances in a number of regions in the outer IFU positions and combine these
with measurements from the literature to assess the radial abundance
distribution. We find that the O/H and N/H profiles are consistent with being
flat. Only the central 50 pc exhibits the well-known N/O enhancement, and we
propose that the unusually high densities/pressures in the supernebula region
have acted to impede the escape of metal-enriched hot winds from the star
clusters and allow them to mix with the cooler phases, thus allowing these
freshly processed chemicals to be seen in the optical.Comment: 16 pages, accepted to A&
Werner states and the two-spinors Heisenberg anti-ferromagnet
We ascertain, following ideas of Arnesen, Bose, and Vedral concerning thermal
entanglement [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 87} (2001) 017901] and using the
statistical tool called {\it entropic non-triviality} [Lamberti, Martin,
Plastino, and Rosso, Physica A {\bf 334} (2004) 119], that there is a one to
one correspondence between (i) the mixing coefficient of a Werner state, on
the one hand, and (ii) the temperature of the one-dimensional Heisenberg
two-spin chain with a magnetic field along the axis, on the other one.
This is true for each value of below a certain critical value . The
pertinent mapping depends on the particular value one selects within such a
range
Flavor Asymmetry of the Nucleon Sea: Consequences for Dilepton Production
Parton distributions derived from a chiral quark model that generates an
excess of down quarks and antiquarks in the proton's sea satisfactorily
describe the measured yields of muon pairs produced in proton-nucleus
collisions. Comparison of dilepton yields from hydrogen and deuterium targets
promises greater sensitivity to the predicted flavor asymmetry.Comment: 11 pages, REVTEX, (Three PostScript figures available by anonymous
ftp from fnth06.fnal.gov in directory /pub/Fermilab-Pub/92.264.)
FERMILAB-PUB-92/264--T LBL-3298
Optically Induced Modulation of a Laser Beam in Nematic Liquid Crystals Structures
In this paper we report the experimental results obtained when an He-Ne laser beam crosses an MBBA homeotropic sandwich structure and is modulated by the influence of another laser beam, in our case an Ar+ laser, crossing through the same region. We extend some results previously reported by us1 2 concerning the influence of the ratio of the diameters of the laser beams on the modulation characteristics. A theoretical model, based on the one reported in Ref6 , shows good agreement with the
experimental results. If the Ar+ laser is intensity chopped, the resulting He-Ne diffracted image is also intensity modulated. The highest frequency observed has been 500 p. p. s
An Updated Focus on Quadruplex Structures as Potential Therapeutic Targets in Cancer
Non-canonical, four-stranded nucleic acids secondary structures are present within
regulatory regions in the human genome and transcriptome. To date, these quadruplex structures
include both DNA and RNA G-quadruplexes, formed in guanine-rich sequences, and i-Motifs, found
in cytosine-rich sequences, as their counterparts. Quadruplexes have been extensively associated
with cancer, playing an important role in telomere maintenance and control of genetic expression of
several oncogenes and tumor suppressors. Therefore, quadruplex structures are considered attractive
molecular targets for cancer therapeutics with novel mechanisms of action. In this review, we provide
a general overview about recent research on the implications of quadruplex structures in cancer,
firstly gathering together DNA G-quadruplexes, RNA G-quadruplexes as well as DNA i-Motifs.3TR, IMI2
H2020-JTI538 IMI2-2018Instituto de Salud Carlos III
AC18/00008Government of Spain
FPU16/0582
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