310 research outputs found
Effects of landscape configuration and composition on phylogenetic diversity of trees in a highly fragmented tropical forest
© 2016 British Ecological Society. Fragmentation of tropical forests is a major driver of the global extinction crisis. A key question is understanding how fragmentation impacts phylogenetic diversity, which summarizes the total evolutionary history shared across species within a community. Conserving phylogenetic diversity decreases the potential of losing unique ecological and phenotypic traits and plays important roles in maintaining ecosystem function and stability. Our study was conducted in landscapes within the highly fragmented Brazilian Atlantic forest. We sampled living trees with d.b.h. ≥ 4.8 cm in 0.1 ha plots within 28 fragment interiors and 12 fragment edges to evaluate the impacts of landscape configuration, composition and patch size, as well as edge effects, on phylogenetic diversity indices (PD, a measure of phylogenetic richness; MPD, phylogenetic distance between individuals in a community in deep evolutionary time; and MNTD, phylogenetic distance between each individual and its nearest phylogenetic neighbour). We found that PD and MPD were correlated with species richness, while MNTD was not. Best models suggest that MPD was positively related to edge density and negatively related to the number of forest patches, but that there was no effect of landscape configuration and composition metrics on PD or MNTD, or on standardized values of phylogenetic structure (sesPD, sesMPD and sesMNTD), which control for species richness. Considering all selected models for phylogenetic diversity and structure, edge density and number of forest patches were most frequently selected. With increasing patch size, we found lower PD in interiors but no change at edges and lower sesMNTD regardless of habitat type. Additionally, PD and sesMNTD were higher in interiors than at edges. Synthesis. Changes in MPD and sesMNTD suggest that extirpation of species at edges or in highly fragmented landscapes increases the dominance of species within a subset of clades (phylogenetic clustering), likely those adapted to disturbance. Smaller patch sizes are phylogenetically diverse and overdispersed, probably due to an invasion of edge-adapted species. Conservation must enhance patch area and connectivity via forest restoration; pivotally, even small forest patches are important reservoirs of phylogenetic diversity in the highly threatened Brazilian Atlantic forest
Quantum phase gate with a selective interaction
We present a proposal for implementing quantum phase gates using selective
interactions. We analize selectivity and the possibility to implement these
gates in two particular systems, namely, trapped ions and Cavity QED.Comment: Four pages of TEX file and two EPS figures. Submitted for publicatio
Electromagnetic Response of Layered Superconductors with Broken Lattice Inversion Symmetry
We investigate the macroscopic effects of charge density waves (CDW) and
superconductivity in layered superconducting systems with broken lattice
inversion symmetry (allowing for piezoelectricity) such as two dimensional (2D)
transition metal dichalcogenides (TMD). We work with the low temperature time
dependent Ginzburg-Landau theory and study the coupling of lattice distortions
and low energy CDW collective modes to the superconducting order parameter in
the presence of electromagnetic fields. We show that superconductivity and
piezoelectricity can coexist in these singular metals. Furthermore, our study
indicates the nature of the quantum phase transition between a commensurate CDW
phase and the stripe phase that has been observed as a function of applied
pressure.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure. Final version. Accepted in Phys.Rev.
Crystal Structure and Physical Properties of U3T3Sn4 (T = Ni, Cu) Single-Crystals
Heat capacity experiments, crystal structure determination and transmission
electron microscopy have been carried out on U3Cu3Sn4 single-crystals. U3Cu3Sn4
was confirmed to be a heavy-fermion antiferromagnet (TN=13(1) K) with a low
temperature electronic heat capacity coefficient gamma=390 mJ/molUK2. Low
temperature heat capacity experiments on a U3Ni3Sn4 single-crystal indicate
that below 0.4 K there is a crossover between the previously observed non-Fermi
liquid behavior and a Fermi liquid state.Comment: 12 pages (incl. 2 tables & 4 figures), to appear in Physica
Transport Properties through Double Barrier Structure in Graphene
The mode-dependent transmission of relativistic ballistic massless Dirac
fermion through a graphene based double barrier structure is being investigated
for various barrier parameters. We compare our results with already published
work and point out the relevance of these findings to a systematic study of the
transport properties in double barrier structures. An interesting situation
arises when we set the potential in the leads to zero, then our 2D problem
reduces effectively to a 1D massive Dirac equation with an effective mass
proportional to the quantized wave number along the transverse direction.
Furthermore we have shown that the minimal conductivity and maximal Fano factor
remain insensitive to the ratio between the two potentials V_2/V_1=\alpha.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, clarifications and reference added, misprints
corrected. Version to appear in JLT
Vacuum local and global electromagnetic self-energies for a point-like and an extended field source
We consider the electric and magnetic energy densities (or equivalently field
fluctuations) in the space around a point-like field source in its ground
state, after having subtracted the spatially uniform zero-point energy terms,
and discuss the problem of their singular behavior at the source's position. We
show that the assumption of a point-like source leads, for a simple Hamiltonian
model of the interaction of the source with the electromagnetic radiation
field, to a divergence of the renormalized electric and magnetic energy density
at the position of the source. We analyze in detail the mathematical structure
of such singularity in terms of a delta function and its derivatives. We also
show that an appropriate consideration of these singular terms solves an
apparent inconsistency between the total field energy and the space integral of
its density. Thus the finite field energy stored in these singular terms gives
an important contribution to the self-energy of the source. We then consider
the case of an extended source, smeared out over a finite volume and described
by an appropriate form factor. We show that in this case all divergences in
local quantities such as the electric and the magnetic energy density, as well
as any inconsistency between global and space-integrated local self-energies,
disappear.Comment: 8 pages. The final publication is available at link.springer.co
Gravitational field around a time-like current-carrying screwed cosmic string in scalar-tensor theories
In this paper we obtain the space-time generated by a time-like
current-carrying superconducting screwed cosmic string(TCSCS). This
gravitational field is obtained in a modified scalar-tensor theory in the sense
that torsion is taken into account. We show that this solution is comptible
with a torsion field generated by the scalar field . The analysis of
gravitational effects of a TCSCS shows up that the torsion effects that appear
in the physical frame of Jordan-Fierz can be described in a geometric form
given by contorsion term plus a symmetric part which contains the scalar
gradient. As an important application of this solution, we consider the linear
perturbation method developed by Zel'dovich, investigate the accretion of cold
dark matter due to the formation of wakes when a TCSCS moves with speed and
discuss the role played by torsion. Our results are compared with those
obtained for cosmic strings in the framework of scalar-tensor theories without
taking torsion into account.Comment: 21 pages, no figures, Revised Version, presented at the "XXIV-
Encontro Nacional de Fisica de Particulas e Campos ", Caxambu, MG, Brazil, to
appear in Phys. Rev.
O USO DO MÉTODO GEOSSISTÊMICO NA COMPARTIMENTAÇÃO AMBIENTAL DO MUNICÍPIO DE COREAÚ, CEARÁ.
O estudo tem como objetivo identificar e caracterizar as unidades geoambientais existentes no Município de Coreaú – Ceará, através da metodologia geossistêmica proposta por Bertrand - onde seu método de análise da paisagem é feito de forma sistêmica considerando a relação existente entre os elementos que a compõem. Neste caso refere-se ao relevo de áreas do semiárido nordestino, no qual tem no seu processo de formação a atuação do clima em sua pedogênese e na predominância no intemperismo físico
Competing orders in a magnetic field: spin and charge order in the cuprate superconductors
We describe two-dimensional quantum spin fluctuations in a superconducting
Abrikosov flux lattice induced by a magnetic field applied to a doped Mott
insulator. Complete numerical solutions of a self-consistent large N theory
provide detailed information on the phase diagram and on the spatial structure
of the dynamic spin spectrum. Our results apply to phases with and without
long-range spin density wave order and to the magnetic quantum critical point
separating these phases. We discuss the relationship of our results to a number
of recent neutron scattering measurements on the cuprate superconductors in the
presence of an applied field. We compute the pinning of static charge order by
the vortex cores in the `spin gap' phase where the spin order remains
dynamically fluctuating, and argue that these results apply to recent scanning
tunnelling microscopy (STM) measurements. We show that with a single typical
set of values for the coupling constants, our model describes the field
dependence of the elastic neutron scattering intensities, the absence of
satellite Bragg peaks associated with the vortex lattice in existing neutron
scattering observations, and the spatial extent of charge order in STM
observations. We mention implications of our theory for NMR experiments. We
also present a theoretical discussion of more exotic states that can be built
out of the spin and charge order parameters, including spin nematics and phases
with `exciton fractionalization'.Comment: 36 pages, 33 figures; for a popular introduction, see
http://onsager.physics.yale.edu/superflow.html; (v2) Added reference to new
work of Chen and Ting; (v3) reorganized presentation for improved clarity,
and added new appendix on microscopic origin; (v4) final published version
with minor change
Magnetic Catalysis: A Review
We give an overview of the magnetic catalysis phenomenon. In the framework of
quantum field theory, magnetic catalysis is broadly defined as an enhancement
of dynamical symmetry breaking by an external magnetic field. We start from a
brief discussion of spontaneous symmetry breaking and the role of a magnetic
field in its a dynamics. This is followed by a detailed presentation of the
essential features of the phenomenon. In particular, we emphasize that the
dimensional reduction plays a profound role in the pairing dynamics in a
magnetic field. Using the general nature of underlying physics and its
robustness with respect to interaction types and model content, we argue that
magnetic catalysis is a universal and model-independent phenomenon. In support
of this claim, we show how magnetic catalysis is realized in various models
with short-range and long-range interactions. We argue that the general nature
of the phenomenon implies a wide range of potential applications: from certain
types of solid state systems to models in cosmology, particle and nuclear
physics. We finish the review with general remarks about magnetic catalysis and
an outlook for future research.Comment: 37 pages, to appear in Lect. Notes Phys. "Strongly interacting matter
in magnetic fields" (Springer), edited by D. Kharzeev, K. Landsteiner, A.
Schmitt, H.-U. Yee. Version 2: references adde
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