810 research outputs found
Characterizing and Quantifying Frustration in Quantum Many-Body Systems
We present a general scheme for the study of frustration in quantum systems.
We introduce a universal measure of frustration for arbitrary quantum systems
and we relate it to a class of entanglement monotones via an exact inequality.
If all the (pure) ground states of a given Hamiltonian saturate the inequality,
then the system is said to be inequality saturating. We introduce sufficient
conditions for a quantum spin system to be inequality saturating and confirm
them with extensive numerical tests. These conditions provide a generalization
to the quantum domain of the Toulouse criteria for classical frustration-free
systems. The models satisfying these conditions can be reasonably identified as
geometrically unfrustrated and subject to frustration of purely quantum origin.
Our results therefore establish a unified framework for studying the
intertwining of geometric and quantum contributions to frustration.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur
The influence of Tropical Indian Ocean SST on the Indian summer monsoon
The Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM) is one of the main components of
the Asian summer monsoon. It is well known that one of the starting mechanisms
of a summer monsoon is the thermal contrast between land and ocean
and that sea surface temperature (SST) and moisture are crucial factors for its
evolution and intensity. The Indian Ocean, therefore, may play a very important
role in the generation and evolution of the ISM itself. A coupled general
circulation model, implemented with a high resolution atmospheric component,
appears to be able to simulate the Indian summer monsoon in a realistic
way. In particular, the features of the simulated ISM variability are similar to
the observations.
In this study, the relationships between ISM and Tropical Indian Ocean
(TIO) SST anomalies are investigated, as well as the ability of the coupled
model to capture those connections. The recent discovery of the Indian Ocean
Dipole Mode (IODM) may suggest new perspectives in the relationship between
ISM and TIO SST. A new statistical technique, the Coupled Manifold,
is used to investigate the TIO SST variability and its relation with the Tropical
Pacific Ocean (TPO). The analysis shows that the SST variability in the TIO
contains a significant portion that is independent from the TPO variability.
The same technique is used to estimate the amount of Indian rainfall variability
that can be explained by the Tropical Indian Ocean SST. Indian Ocean
SST anomalies are separated in a part remotely forced from the Tropical Pacific
Ocean variability and a part independent from that. The relationships
between the two SSTA components and the Indian monsoon variability are
then investigated in detail
Entanglement quantification by local unitaries
Invariance under local unitary operations is a fundamental property that must
be obeyed by every proper measure of quantum entanglement. However, this is not
the only aspect of entanglement theory where local unitaries play a relevant
role. In the present work we show that the application of suitable local
unitary operations defines a family of bipartite entanglement monotones,
collectively referred to as "mirror entanglement". They are constructed by
first considering the (squared) Hilbert-Schmidt distance of the state from the
set of states obtained by applying to it a given local unitary. To the action
of each different local unitary there corresponds a different distance. We then
minimize these distances over the sets of local unitaries with different
spectra, obtaining an entire family of different entanglement monotones. We
show that these mirror entanglement monotones are organized in a hierarchical
structure, and we establish the conditions that need to be imposed on the
spectrum of a local unitary for the associated mirror entanglement to be
faithful, i.e. to vanish on and only on separable pure states. We analyze in
detail the properties of one particularly relevant member of the family, the
"stellar mirror entanglement" associated to traceless local unitaries with
nondegenerate spectrum and equispaced eigenvalues in the complex plane. This
particular measure generalizes the original analysis of [Giampaolo and
Illuminati, Phys. Rev. A 76, 042301 (2007)], valid for qubits and qutrits. We
prove that the stellar entanglement is a faithful bipartite entanglement
monotone in any dimension, and that it is bounded from below by a function
proportional to the linear entropy and from above by the linear entropy itself,
coinciding with it in two- and three-dimensional spaces.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures. Improved and generalized proof of monotonicity
of the mirror and stellar entanglemen
Tracing the Evolution of Physics on the Backbone of Citation Networks
Many innovations are inspired by past ideas in a non-trivial way. Tracing
these origins and identifying scientific branches is crucial for research
inspirations. In this paper, we use citation relations to identify the
descendant chart, i.e. the family tree of research papers. Unlike other
spanning trees which focus on cost or distance minimization, we make use of the
nature of citations and identify the most important parent for each
publication, leading to a tree-like backbone of the citation network. Measures
are introduced to validate the backbone as the descendant chart. We show that
citation backbones can well characterize the hierarchical and fractal structure
of scientific development, and lead to accurate classification of fields and
sub-fields.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Analysis of the mid-latitude weather regimes in the 200-year control integration of the SINTEX model
Recent results indicate that climate predictions require models which can simulate accurately natural circulation
regimes and their associated variability. The main purpose of this study is to investigate whether (and how) a
coupled model can simulate the real world weather regimes. A 200-year control integration of a coupled GCM
(the «SINTEX model») is considered. The output analysed consists of monthly mean values of Northern Hemisphere
extended winter (November to April) 500-hPa geopotential heights. An Empirical Orthogonal Function (EOF)
analysis is first applied in order to define a reduced phase space based on the leading modes of variability. Therefore
the principal component PDF in the reduced phase space spanned by two leading EOFs is computed. Based on a
PDF analysis in the phase space spanned by the leading EOF1 and REOF2, substantial evidence of the nongaussian
regime structure of the SINTEX northern winter circulation is found. The model Probability Density
Function (PDF) exhibits three maxima. The 500-hPa height geographical patterns of these density maxima are
strongly reminiscent of well-documented Northern Hemisphere weather regimes. This result indicates that the
SINTEX model can not only simulate the non-gaussian structure of the climatic attractor, but is also able to
reproduce the natural modes of variability of the system
The rare case of positive FDG-positron emission tomography for giant cavernous hemangioma of the liver
Hemangioma is the most common benign liver tumor and the second most common liver tumor after metastases. Large hemangiomas are often heterogeneous. When they exceed 4 cm in diameter, they are termed giant hemangiomas. These giant hemangiomas often present heterogeneous patterns. These heterogeneous appearances are shown because of intratumoral changes due to several
degenerative phenomena. PET/CT is reported to be useful for the differentiation of benign from malignant liver lesions. We report the case of a large hepatic hemangioma characterized by high FDG uptake
Self-organized model of cascade spreading
Abstract.: We study simultaneous price drops of real stocks and show that for high drop thresholds they follow a power-law distribution. To reproduce these collective downturns, we propose aminimal self-organized model of cascade spreading based on a probabilistic response of the system elements to stress conditions. This model is solvable using the theory of branching processes and the mean-field approximation. For a wide range of parameters, the system is in a critical state and displays apower-law cascade-size distribution similar to the empirically observed one. We further generalize the model to reproduce volatility clustering and other observed properties of real stock
The double-ITCZ syndrome in coupled general circulation models: the role of large-scale vertical circulation regimes
The double-intertropical convergence zone (DI) systematic error, affecting state-of-the-art coupled general circulation models (CGCM) is examined in the multi-model Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) ensemble of simulations of the twentieth-century climate.
Aim of this study is to quantify the DI error on precipitation in the tropical Pacific, with a specific focus on the relationship between the DI error and the representation of large-scale vertical circulation regimes in climate models. The DI rainfall signal is analysed using a regime sorting approach for the vertical circulation regimes. Through the use of this compositing technique, precipitation events are regime-sorted based on the large scale vertical motions, as represented by the mid-tropospheric lagrangian pressure tendency omega500 dynamical proxy. This methodology allows the partition of the precipitation signal into deep and shallow convective components. Following the regime-sorting diagnosis, the total DI bias is split into an error affecting the magnitude of precipitation associated with individual convective events and an error affecting the frequency of occurrence of single convective regimes. It is shown that, despite the existing large intra-model differences, CGCMs can
be ultimately grouped into a few homegenous clusters,
each featuring a well defined rainfall-vertical circulation relationship in the DI region. Three major behavioural clusters are identified within the AR4 models ensemble:
two unimodal distributions, featuring maximum precipitation under subsidence and deep convection regimes, respectively, and one bimodal distribution, displaying both components. Extending this analysis to both coupled and uncoupled (atmosphere-only) AR4 simulations reveals that the DI bias in CGCMs is mainly due to the overly frequent occurrence of deep convection regimes, whereas the error on rainfall magnitude associated with individual convective events is overall consistent with errors already present in the corresponding atmosphere stand-alone simulations.
A critical parameter controlling the strength of the DI systematic error is identified in the model-dependent sea surface temperature (SST) threshold leading to the onset of deep convection (THR), combined with the average SST in the south-eastern Pacific
Changes in Tropical Cyclone Activity due to Global Warming in a General Circulation Model
This study investigates the possible changes that the greenhouse global warming might generate in
the characteristics of the tropical cyclones (TCs). The analysis has been performed using scenario
climate simulations carried out with a fully coupled high-resolution global general circulation
model. The capability of the model to reproduce a reasonably realistic TC climatology has been
assessed by comparing the model results from a simulation of the 20th Century with observations.
The model appears to be able to simulate tropical cyclone-like vortices with many features similar
to the observed TCs. The simulated TC activity exhibits realistic geographical distribution, seasonal
modulation and interannual variability, suggesting that the model is able to reproduce the major
basic mechanisms that link the TC occurrence with the large scale circulation.
The results from the climate scenarios reveal a substantial general reduction of the TC frequency
when the atmospheric CO2 concentration is doubled and quadrupled. The reduction appears
particularly evident for the tropical North West Pacific (NWP) and North Atlantic (ATL). In the
NWP the weaker TC activity seems to be associated with a reduced amount of convective
instabilities. In the ATL region the weaker TC activity seems to be due to both the increased
stability of the atmosphere and a stronger vertical wind shear. Despite the generally reduced TC
activity, there is evidence of increased rainfall associated with the simulated cyclones. Despite the
overall warming of the tropical upper ocean and the expansion of warm SSTs to the subtropics and
mid-latitudes, the action of the TCs remains well confined to the tropical region and the peak of TC
number remains equatorward of 20° latitude in both Hemispheres.
An extended version of this work is in available on Journal of Climate (Gualdi et al.,2008 - DOI:10.1175/2008JCLI1921.1
Effects of Land-Surface-Vegetation on theboreal summer surface climate of a GCM
A land surface model (LSM) has been included in the ECMWF Hamburg version 4 (ECHAM4) atmospheric general circulation model (AGCM). The LSM is an early version of the Organizing Carbon and Hydrology in Dynamic Ecosystems (ORCHIDEE) and it replaces the simple land surface scheme previously included in ECHAM4. The purpose of this paper is to document how a more exhaustive consideration of the land surface–vegetation processes affects the simulated boreal summer surface climate.
To investigate the impacts on the simulated climate, different sets of Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (AMIP)-type simulations have been performed with ECHAM4 alone and with the AGCM
coupled with ORCHIDEE. Furthermore, to assess the effects of the increase in horizontal resolution the coupling of ECHAM4 with the LSM has been implemented at different horizontal resolutions.
The analysis reveals that the LSM has large effects on the simulated boreal summer surface climate of the atmospheric model. Considerable impacts are found in the surface energy balance due to changes in the surface latent heat fluxes over tropical and midlatitude areas covered with vegetation. Rainfall and atmospheric circulation are substantially affected by these changes. In particular, increased precipitation is found over evergreen and summergreen vegetated areas.
Because of the socioeconomical relevance, particular attention has been devoted to the Indian summer monsoon (ISM) region. The results of this study indicate that precipitation over the Indian subcontinent is better simulated with the coupled ECHAM4–ORCHIDEE model compared to the atmospheric model alone
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