11,610 research outputs found
On the frequency dependence of p-mode frequency shifts induced by magnetic activity in Kepler solar-like stars
The variations of the frequencies of the low-degree acoustic oscillations in
the Sun induced by magnetic activity show a dependence with radial order. The
frequency shifts are observed to increase towards higher-order modes to reach a
maximum of about 0.8 muHz over the 11-yr solar cycle. A comparable frequency
dependence is also measured in two other main-sequence solar-like stars, the
F-star HD49933, and the young 1-Gyr-old solar analog KIC10644253, although with
different amplitudes of the shifts of about 2 muHz and 0.5 muHz respectively.
Our objective here is to extend this analysis to stars with different masses,
metallicities, and evolutionary stages. From an initial set of 87 Kepler
solar-like oscillating stars with already known individual p-mode frequencies,
we identify five stars showing frequency shifts that can be considered reliable
using selection criteria based on Monte Carlo simulations and on the
photospheric magnetic activity proxy Sph. The frequency dependence of the
frequency shifts of four of these stars could be measured for the l=0 and l=1
modes individually. Given the quality of the data, the results could indicate
that a different physical source of perturbation than in the Sun is dominating
in this sample of solar-like stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Wetland restoration and nitrate reduction: the example of the periurban wetland of Vitoria-Gasteiz (Basque Country, North Spain)
Changes in land use and agricultural intensification caused wetlands on the quaternary aquifer of Vitoria-Gasteiz (Basque Country) to disappear some years ago and nitrate concentration in groundwaters increased very quickly. The Basque Government recently declared the East Sector of this aquifer a Vulnerable Zone according to the 91/676/CEE European Directive. Recently, the wetlands have been restored through the closure of the main drainage ditches, the consequent elevation of the water table and the abondonment of agricultural practices near the wetlands. This is the case of the Zurbano wetland. Restoration has allowed the recovery of its biogeochemical function, which has reduced nitrate concentrations in waters. Nitrate concentrations which exceed 50 mg lâ1 in groundwaters entering into the wetland are less than 10 mg lâ1 at the outlet. Conditions in the wetland are conducive to the loss of nitrates: organic matter rich wetted soils, clay presence allowing a local semiconfined flow and very low hydraulic gradient. Water quality monitoring at several points around the wetland showed the processes involved in nitrate loss, although some aspects still remain unresolved. However, during storm events, the wetland effectively reduces the nitrate concentration entering the Alegria River, the most important river on the quaternary aquifer
Neutrino mean free paths in spin-polarized neutron Fermi liquids
Neutrino mean free paths in magnetized neutron matter are calculated using
the Hartree-Fock approximation with effective Skyrme and Gogny forces in the
framework of the Landau Fermi Liquid Theory. It is shown that describing
nuclear interaction with Skyrme forces and for magnetic field strengths
, the neutrino mean free paths stay almost unchanged
at intermediate densities but they largely increase at high densities when they
are compared to the field-free case results. However the description with Gogny
forces differs from the previous and mean free paths stay almonst unchanged or
decrease at densities . This different behaviour can be explained
due to the combination of common mild variation of the Landau parameters with
both types of forces and the values of the nucleon effective mass and induced
magnetization of matter under presence of a strong magnetic field as described
with the two parametrizations of the nuclear interaction.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Entropy and Entanglement in Quantum Ground States
We consider the relationship between correlations and entanglement in gapped
quantum systems, with application to matrix product state representations. We
prove that there exist gapped one-dimensional local Hamiltonians such that the
entropy is exponentially large in the correlation length, and we present strong
evidence supporting a conjecture that there exist such systems with arbitrarily
large entropy. However, we then show that, under an assumption on the density
of states which is believed to be satisfied by many physical systems such as
the fractional quantum Hall effect, that an efficient matrix product state
representation of the ground state exists in any dimension. Finally, we comment
on the implications for numerical simulation.Comment: 7 pages, no figure
Recommended from our members
Mesenchymal stem cells and their use as cell replacement therapy and disease modelling tool.
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) from adult somatic tissues may differentiate in vitro and in vivo into multiple mesodermal tissues including bone, cartilage, adipose tissue, tendon, ligament or even muscle. MSCs preferentially home to damaged tissues where they exert their therapeutic potential. A striking feature of the MSCs is their low inherent immunogenicity as they induce little, if any, proliferation of allogeneic lymphocytes and antigen-presenting cells. Instead, MSCs appear to be immunosuppressive in vitro. Their multilineage differentiation potential coupled to their immuno-privileged properties is being exploited worldwide for both autologous and allogeneic cell replacement strategies. Here, we introduce the readers to the biology of MSCs and the mechanisms underlying immune tolerance. We then outline potential cell replacement strategies and clinical applications based on the MSCs immunological properties. Ongoing clinical trials for graft-versus-host-disease, haematopoietic recovery after co-transplantation of MSCs along with haematopoietic stem cells and tissue repair are discussed. Finally, we review the emerging area based on the use of MSCs as a target cell subset for either spontaneous or induced neoplastic transformation and, for modelling non-haematological mesenchymal cancers such as sarcomas
On topological phases of spin chains
Symmetry protected topological phases of one-dimensional spin systems have
been classified using group cohomology. In this paper, we revisit this problem
for general spin chains which are invariant under a continuous on-site symmetry
group G. We evaluate the relevant cohomology groups and find that the
topological phases are in one-to-one correspondence with the elements of the
fundamental group of G if G is compact, simple and connected and if no
additional symmetries are imposed. For spin chains with symmetry
PSU(N)=SU(N)/Z_N our analysis implies the existence of N distinct topological
phases. For symmetry groups of orthogonal, symplectic or exceptional type we
find up to four different phases. Our work suggests a natural generalization of
Haldane's conjecture beyond SU(2).Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables. Version v2 corresponds to the
published version. It includes minor revisions, additional references and an
application to cold atom system
- âŠ