203 research outputs found
Quantum discord and related measures of quantum correlations in XY chains
We examine the quantum correlations of spin pairs in the ground state of
finite XY chains in a transverse field, by evaluating the quantum discord as
well as other related entropic measures of quantum correlations. A brief review
of the latter, based on generalized entropic forms, is also included. It is
shown that parity effects are of crucial importance for describing the behavior
of these measures below the critical field. It is also shown that these
measures reach full range in the immediate vicinity of the factorizing field,
where they become independent of separation and coupling range. Analytical and
numerical results for the quantum discord, the geometric discord and other
measures in spin chains with nearest neighbor coupling and in fully connected
spin arrays are also provided.Comment: accepted in Int. J. Mod. Phys. B, special issue "Classical Vs Quantum
correlations in composite systems" edited by L. Amico, S. Bose, V. Korepin
and V. Vedra
The Institute for Religious works: key features of financial intermediation
Corresponding author: F. Arnaboldi, email: [email protected]. While the paper is the result of intense collaboration between the two authors, sections 3 is attributable to F. Arnaboldi and section 1 and 2 to B. Rossignoli. Section 4 is a joint effort. The authors wish to thank P. Mottura and two anonymous referees for their valuable comments. All errors are ours. Article peer reviewed.
SUMMARY: 1. Introduction – 2. Background to anti-money laundering – 3. Financial intermediation, 2011–2014 – 4. Conclusion
First Report of Paralytic Shellfish Toxins in Marine Invertebrates and Fish in Spain
A paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) episode developed in summer 2018 in the Rías Baixas
(Galicia, NW Spain). The outbreak was associated with an unprecedentedly intense and long-lasting
harmful algal bloom (HAB) (~one month) caused by the dinoflagellate Alexandrium minutum. Paralytic
shellfish toxins (PSTs) were analyzed in extracts of 45 A. minutum strains isolated from the bloom by
high-performance liquid chromatography with post-column oxidation and fluorescence detection
(HPLC-PCOX-FLD). PSTs were also evaluated in tissues from marine fauna (invertebrates and fish)
collected during the episode and in dolphin samples. The analysis of 45 A. minutum strains revealed a
toxic profile including GTX1, GTX2, GTX3 and GTX4 toxins. With regard to the marine fauna samples,
the highest PSTs levels were quantified in bivalve mollusks, but the toxins were also found in mullets,
mackerels, starfish, squids and ascidians. This study reveals the potential accumulation of PSTs in
marine invertebrates other than shellfish that could act as vectors in the trophic chain or pose a risk
for human consumption. To our knowledge, this is the first time that PSTs are reported in ascidians
and starfish from Spain. Moreover, it is the first time that evidence of PSTs in squids is described
in Europe.En prens
Quantum Discord and entropic measures of quantum correlations: Optimization and behavior in finite spin chains
We discuss a generalization of the conditional entropy and one-way
information deficit in quantum systems, based on general entropic forms. The
formalism allows to consider simple entropic forms for which a closed
evaluation of the associated optimization problem in qudit-qubit systems is
shown to become feasible, allowing to approximate that of the quantum discord.
As application, we examine quantum correlations of spin pairs in the exact
ground state of finite spin chains in a magnetic field through the quantum
discord and information deficit. While these quantities show a similar
behavior, their optimizing measurements exhibit significant differences, which
can be understood and predicted through the previous approximations. The
remarkable behavior of these quantities in the vicinity of transverse and
non-transverse factorizing fields is also discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Characterizing entanglement with global and marginal entropic measures
We qualify the entanglement of arbitrary mixed states of bipartite quantum
systems by comparing global and marginal mixednesses quantified by different
entropic measures. For systems of two qubits we discriminate the class of
maximally entangled states with fixed marginal mixednesses, and determine an
analytical upper bound relating the entanglement of formation to the marginal
linear entropies. This result partially generalizes to mixed states the
quantification of entaglement with marginal mixednesses holding for pure
states. We identify a class of entangled states that, for fixed marginals, are
globally more mixed than product states when measured by the linear entropy.
Such states cannot be discriminated by the majorization criterion.Comment: 6 pages, 5 color figures in low resolution due to oversizing
problems; to get the original high-resolution figures please contact the
authors. Minor changes, final versio
Maximum Entropy Variational Approach to Collective States
An approximation to the energy eigenstates of a many-body system, based on a previously introduced maximum entropy approach to the ground state, is developed and applied to a monopole fermion system. An excellent agreement with the exact eigenstates is obtained over the whole range of the pertinent coupling constant.Instituto de Física La Plat
Self-consistent quantal treatment of decay rates within the perturbed static path approximation
The framework of the Perturbed Static Path Approximation (PSPA) is used to
calculate the partition function of a finite Fermi system from a Hamiltonian
with a separable two body interaction. Therein, the collective degree of
freedom is introduced in self-consistent fashion through a Hubbard-Stratonovich
transformation. In this way all transport coefficients which dominate the decay
of a meta-stable system are defined and calculated microscopically. Otherwise
the same formalism is applied as in the Caldeira-Leggett model to deduce the
decay rate from the free energy above the so called crossover temperature
.Comment: 17 pages, LaTex, no figures; final version, accepted for publication
in PRE; e-mail: [email protected]
Bloom dynamics of an exceptional red tide of the toxigenic dinoflagellate
The toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium minutum generally proliferates in semi-enclosed sites such as estuaries, harbours and lagoons, where stratification, restricted circulation and accumulation of resting cysts set suitable conditions for its development. In the Galician Rías (NW Iberian Peninsula), its blooms follow also this pattern. They are recurrent in small, shallow estuarine bays inside the Rías, but rarely detected, and if so in minor amount, out of these areas. However, a massive proliferation of A. minutum from June to July 2018 in the Rías Baixas (Vigo and Pontevedra) changed this picture. The bloom initiated in semi-enclosed waters, as previously described for this species, but thereafter spread to the whole embayments where persisted more than one month. It generated a noticeable red tide with disperse patches that became heavily concentrated inside the port of Vigo. During that period shellfish harvesting closures and paralytic shellfish toxins in certain marine invertebrates and fish were reported for the first time in Spain. Meteorological conditions (higher than usual rains/runoff, sustained temperature increment and oscillating wind pattern promoting a series of upwelling-relaxation cycles) fostered optimal circumstances for the outbreak of A. minutum: strong vertical stratification and the alternation of retention and dispersion processes. Simulations from a particle tracking model portrayed the observed bloom development phases: onset, transport within the surface layer towards the interior parts of the Ría of Vigo, and dispersion all over the embayment. High concentrations of resting cysts were detected several months after the bloom, which may have favoured flourish of A. minutum in the following years, markedly in 2020
HABs in coastal upwelling systems: Insights from an exceptional red tide of the toxigenic dinoflagellate Alexandrium minutum
Alexandrium minutum blooms generally occur in semi-enclosed sites such as estuaries, harbours and lagoons, where enhanced stratification, restricted circulation and accumulation of resting cysts in the sediment set suitable habitat conditions for the proliferation of this paralytic shellfish poisoning toxigenic species. In the Galician Rías Baixas (NW Iberian Peninsula), according to weekly time-series between 1994 and 2020, blooms of A. minutum were recurrent in small, shallow estuarine bays inside the Rías de Vigo and Pontevedra, but rarely detected, and if so at low concentrations, out of these environments. However, from May to July 2018 it developed as usual in the small inner bays but then spread over both Rías (Vigo and Pontevedra) causing discoloured waters during one month and prolonged harvesting closures. Meteorological conditions during that period (rains / runoff higher than climatological averages, sustained temperature increment and oscillating wind pattern –i.e., series of upwelling-relaxation cycles), fostered optimal circumstances for the development of that extensive and massive proliferation: strong vertical stratification and the alternation of retention and dispersion processes. Simulations from a particle tracking model portrayed the observed bloom development phases: onset and development inside a small inner bay; transport within the surface layer, from these sites towards the interior parts of the Ría; and dispersion all over the embayment. Seedbeds with high concentrations of resting cysts were detected several months after the bloom, which may have favoured flourishment of A. minutum in the following two years, markedly in 2020. The present work contributes to the general understanding of the dynamics of harmful algal blooms (HABs), from which surveillance indicators of the state of marine ecosystems and their evolution can be derived. We hypothesize that the intensity and frequency of A. minutum proliferations in the Galician Rías could increase under projected climate trends.Postprint2,69
Reversal of diabetic-induced myopathy by swimming exercise in pregnant rats:a translational intervention study
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) plus rectus abdominis muscle (RAM) myopathy predicts long-term urinary incontinence (UI). Atrophic and stiff RAM are characteristics of diabetes-induced myopathy (DiM) in pregnant rats. This study aimed to determine whether swimming exercise (SE) has a therapeutic effect in mild hyperglycemic pregnant rats model. We hypothesized that SE training might help to reverse RAM DiM. Mild hyperglycemic pregnant rats model was obtained by a unique subcutaneous injection of 100 mg/kg streptozotocin (diabetic group) or citrate buffer (non-diabetic group) on the first day of life in Wistar female newborns. At 90 days of life, the rats are mated and randomly allocated to remain sedentary or subjected to a SE protocol. The SE protocol started at gestational day 0 and consisted of 60 min/day for 6 days/week in a period of 20 days in a swim tunnel. On day 21, rats were sacrificed, and RAM was collected and studied by picrosirius red, immunohistochemistry, and transmission electron microscopy. The SE protocol increased the fiber area and diameter, and the slow-twitch and fast-twitch fiber area and diameter in the diabetic exercised group, a finding was also seen in control sedentary animals. There was a decreased type I collagen but not type III collagen area and showed a similar type I/type III ratio compared with the control sedentary group. In conclusion, SE during pregnancy reversed the RAM DiM in pregnant rats. These findings may be a potential protocol to consider in patients with RAM damage caused by GDM
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