54,606 research outputs found
Predicting Whole Forest Structure, Primary Productivity, and Biomass Density From Maximum Tree Size and Resource Limitations
In the face of uncertain biological response to climate change and the many
critiques concerning model complexity it is increasingly important to develop
predictive mechanistic frameworks that capture the dominant features of
ecological communities and their dependencies on environmental factors. This is
particularly important for critical global processes such as biomass changes,
carbon export, and biogenic climate feedback. Past efforts have successfully
understood a broad spectrum of plant and community traits across a range of
biological diversity and body size, including tree size distributions and
maximum tree height, from mechanical, hydrodynamic, and resource constraints.
Recently it was shown that global scaling relationships for net primary
productivity are correlated with local meteorology and the overall biomass
density within a forest. Along with previous efforts, this highlights the
connection between widely observed allometric relationships and predictive
ecology. An emerging goal of ecological theory is to gain maximum predictive
power with the least number of parameters. Here we show that the explicit
dependence of such critical quantities can be systematically predicted knowing
just the size of the largest tree. This is supported by data showing that
forests converge to our predictions as they mature. Since maximum tree size can
be calculated from local meteorology this provides a general framework for
predicting the generic structure of forests from local environmental parameters
thereby addressing a range of critical Earth-system questions.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures, 1 Tabl
Affine maps of density matrices
For quantum systems described by finite matrices, linear and affine maps of
matrices are shown to provide equivalent descriptions of evolution of density
matrices for a subsystem caused by unitary Hamiltonian evolution in a larger
system; an affine map can be replaced by a linear map, and a linear map can be
replaced by an affine map. There may be significant advantage in using an
affine map. The linear map is generally not completely positive, but the linear
part of an equivalent affine map can be chosen to be completely positive and
related in the simplest possible way to the unitary Hamiltonian evolution in
the larger system.Comment: 4 pages, title changed, sentence added, reference update
Raman spectra of GexAsySe1−x−y glasses
Various Ge–As–Se glasses spanning a mean coordination number (MCN) from 2.2 to 2.94 have been investigated using differential scanning calorimetry and Raman spectroscopy. The glass transition temperature Tg was found to increase with increasing MCN, except for those glasses located within the nanoscale phase-separated region of the phase diagram. The evolution of Raman features at wavenumbers from 150 to 350 cm⁻¹ exhibits two transitionlike features. Merging of the 225 and 250 cm⁻¹ modes at MCN=2.5 is a symbol of the extinction of Se–Se bonds. Additionally, the appearance of two modes at 280–290 and 170 cm⁻¹ at MCN>2.7 come from the defect modes of ethanelike Ge₂Se₆/₂. The increase in the scattering from these defects is an important factor leading to enhanced optical loss in the glasses with high MCN.This research was partly supported by the Australian
Research Council through its Centres of Excellence and Federation
Fellow Programs
Quantum Phase Transitions in Josephson Junction Chains
We investigate the quantum phase transition in a one-dimensional chain of
ultra-small superconducting grains, considering both the self- and junction
capacitances. At zero temperature, the system is transformed into a
two-dimensional system of classical vortices, where the junction capacitance
introduces anisotropy in the interaction between vortices. This leads to the
superconductor-insulator transition of the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless
type, as the ratios of the Josephson coupling energy to the charging energies
are varied. It is found that the junction capacitance plays a role similar to
that of dissipation and tends to suppress quantum fluctuations; nevertheless
the insulator region survives even for arbitrarily large values of the junction
capacitance.Comment: REVTeX+5 EPS figures, To appear in PRB Rapid
Trends Prediction Using Social Diffusion Models
The importance of the ability of predict trends in social media has been
growing rapidly in the past few years with the growing dominance of social
media in our everyday's life. Whereas many works focus on the detection of
anomalies in networks, there exist little theoretical work on the prediction of
the likelihood of anomalous network pattern to globally spread and become
"trends". In this work we present an analytic model the social diffusion
dynamics of spreading network patterns. Our proposed method is based on
information diffusion models, and is capable of predicting future trends based
on the analysis of past social interactions between the community's members. We
present an analytic lower bound for the probability that emerging trends would
successful spread through the network. We demonstrate our model using two
comprehensive social datasets - the "Friends and Family" experiment that was
held in MIT for over a year, where the complete activity of 140 users was
analyzed, and a financial dataset containing the complete activities of over
1.5 million members of the "eToro" social trading community.Comment: 6 Pages + Appendi
Orbiton-mediated multi-phonon scattering in LaSrMnO
We report on Raman scattering measurements of single crystalline
LaSrMnO (=0, 0.06, 0.09 and 0.125), focusing on the high
frequency regime. We observe multi-phonon scattering processes up to
fourth-order which show distinct features: (i) anomalies in peak energy and its
relative intensity and (ii) a pronounced temperature-, polarization-, and
doping-dependence. These features suggest a mixed orbiton-phonon nature of the
observed multi-phonon Raman spectra.Comment: 6pages, 6figures, submitted to PR
Study of CP Property of the Higgs at a Photon Collider using
We study possible effects of CP violation in the Higgs sector on
production at a -collider. These studies are performed in a
model-independent way in terms of six form-factors which
parametrize the CP mixing in the Higgs sector, and a strategy for their
determination is developed. We observe that the angular distribution of the
decay lepton from produced in this process is independent of any CP
violation in the vertex and hence best suited for studying CP mixing in
the Higgs sector. Analytical expressions are obtained for the angular
distribution of leptons in the c.m. frame of the two colliding photons for a
general polarization state of the incoming photons. We construct combined
asymmetries in the initial state lepton (photon) polarization and the final
state lepton charge. They involve CP even ('s) and odd ('s) combinations
of the mixing parameters. We study limits up to which the values of and
, with only two of them allowed to vary at a time, can be probed by
measurements of these asymmetries, using circularly polarized photons. We use
the numerical values of the asymmetries predicted by various models to
discriminate among them. We show that this method can be sensitive to the
loop-induced CP violation in the Higgs sector in the MSSM.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures added one referenc
Anomalous electronic Raman scattering in Na_xCoO_2 H_2O
Raman scattering experiments on Na_{x}CoO_2 yH_2O single crystals show a
broad electronic continuum with a pronounced peak around 100 cm-1 and a cutoff
at approximately 560 cm-1over a wide range of doping levels. The electronic
Raman spectra in superconducting and non-superconducting samples are similar at
room temperature, but evolve in markedly different ways with decreasing
temperature. For superconducting samples, the low-energy spectral weight is
depleted upon cooling below T* sim 150K, indicating a opening of a pseudogap
that is not present in non-superconducting materials. Weak additional phonon
modes observed below T* suggest that the pseudogap is associated with charge
ordering.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, for further information see www.peter-lemmens.d
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