131 research outputs found
Ground-state clusters of two-, three- and four-dimensional +-J Ising spin glasses
A huge number of independent true ground-state configurations is calculated
for two-, three- and four-dimensional +- J spin-glass models. Using the genetic
cluster-exact approximation method, system sizes up to N=20^2,8^3,6^4 spins are
treated. A ``ballistic-search'' algorithm is applied which allows even for
large system sizes to identify clusters of ground states which are connected by
chains of zero-energy flips of spins. The number of clusters n_C diverges with
N going to infinity. For all dimensions considered here, an exponential
increase of n_C appears to be more likely than a growth with a power of N. The
number of different ground states is found to grow clearly exponentially with
N. A zero-temperature entropy per spin of s_0=0.078(5)k_B (2d), s_0=0.051(3)k_B
(3d) respectively s_0=0.027(5)k_B (4d) is obtained.Comment: large extensions, now 12 pages, 9 figures, 27 reference
Structural and elastic properties of defect chalcopyrite HgGa2S4 under high pressure
In this work, we focus on the study of the structural and elastic properties of mercury digallium sulfide (HgGa2S4) at high pressures. This compound belongs to the family of AB(2)X(4) ordered-vacancy compounds and exhibits a tetragonal defect chalcopyrite structure. X-ray diffraction measurements at room temperature have been performed under compression up to 15.1 GPa in a diamond anvil cell. Our measurements have been complemented and compared with ab initio total energy calculations. The axial compressibility and the equation of state of the low-pressure phase of HgGa2S4 have been experimentally and theoretically determined and compared to other related ordered-vacancy compounds. The pressure dependence of the theoretical cation-anion and vacancy-anion distances and compressibilities in HgGa2S4 are reported and discussed in comparison to other related ordered-vacancy compounds. Finally, the pressure dependence of the theoretical elastic constants and elastic moduli of HgGa2S4 has been studied. Our calculations indicate that the low-pressure phase of HgGa2S4 becomes mechanically unstable above 13.8 GPa. (C) 2013 Elsevier B. V. All rights reserved.This study was supported by the Spanish government MEC under Grants No: MAT2010-21270-C04-01/03/04 and CTQ2009-14596-C02-01, by the Comunidad de Madrid and European Social Fund (S2009/PPQ-1551 4161893), by MALTA Consolider Ingenio 2010 Project (CSD2007-00045), by Generalitat Valenciana (GVA-ACOMP-2013-1012), and by the Vicerrectorado de Investigacion y Desarrollo of the Universidad Politecnica de Valencia (UPV2011-0914 PAID-05-11 and UPV2011-0966 PAID-06-11). E.P-G., A. M., and P.R-H. acknowledge computing time provided by Red Espa ola de Supercomputacion (RES) and MALTA-Cluster. J.A.S. acknowledges Juan de la Cierva fellowship program for financial support.Gomis Hilario, O.; SantamarĂa-PĂ©rez, D.; Vilaplana Cerda, RI.; Luna Molina, R.; Sans, JA.; ManjĂłn Herrera, FJ.; Errandonea, D.... (2014). Structural and elastic properties of defect chalcopyrite HgGa2S4 under high pressure. Journal of Alloys and Compounds. 583:70-78. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jallcom.2013.08.123S707858
Relationship of Weather Types on the Seasonal and Spatial Variability of Rainfall, Runoff, and Sediment Yield in the Western Mediterranean Basin
Rainfall is the key factor to understand soil erosion processes, mechanisms, and rates. Most research was conducted to determine rainfall characteristics and their relationship with soil erosion (erosivity) but there is little information about how atmospheric patterns control soil losses, and this is important to enable sustainable environmental planning and risk prevention. We investigated the temporal and spatial variability of the relationships of rainfall, runoff, and sediment yield with atmospheric patterns (weather types, WTs) in the western Mediterranean basin. For this purpose, we analyzed a large database of rainfall events collected between 1985 and 2015 in 46 experimental plots and catchments with the aim to: (i) evaluate seasonal differences in the contribution of rainfall, runoff, and sediment yield produced by the WTs; and (ii) to analyze the seasonal efficiency of the different WTs (relation frequency and magnitude) related to rainfall, runoff, and sediment yield. The results indicate two different temporal patterns: the first weather type exhibits (during the cold period: autumn and winter) westerly flows that produce the highest rainfall, runoff, and sediment yield values throughout the territory; the second weather type exhibits easterly flows that predominate during the warm period (spring and summer) and it is located on the Mediterranean coast of the Iberian Peninsula. However, the cyclonic situations present high frequency throughout the whole year with a large influence extended around the western Mediterranean basin. Contrary, the anticyclonic situations, despite of its high frequency, do not contribute significantly to the total rainfall, runoff, and sediment (showing the lowest efficiency) because of atmospheric stability that currently characterize this atmospheric pattern. Our approach helps to better understand the relationship of WTs on the seasonal and spatial variability of rainfall, runoff and sediment yield with a regional scale based on the large dataset and number of soil erosion experimental stations.Spanish Government (Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, MINECO) and FEDER Projects: CGL2014 52135-C3-3-R, ESP2017-89463-C3-3-R, CGL2014-59946-R, CGL2015-65569-R, CGL2015-64284-C2-2-R, CGL2015-64284-C2-1-R, CGL2016-78075-P, GL2008-02879/BTE, LEDDRA 243857, RECARE-FP7, CGL2017-83866-C3-1-R, and PCIN-2017-061/AEI. Dhais Peña-Angulo received a âJuan de la Ciervaâ postdoctoral contract (FJCI-2017-33652 Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, MEC). Ana Lucia acknowledge the "Brigitte-Schlieben-Lange-Programm". The âGeoenvironmental Processes and Global Changeâ (E02_17R) was financed by the AragĂłn Government and the European Social Fund. JosĂ© AndrĂ©s LĂłpez-TarazĂłn acknowledges the Secretariat for Universities and Research of the Department of the Economy and Knowledge of the Autonomous Government of Catalonia for supporting the Consolidated Research Group 2014 SGR 645 (RIUS- Fluvial Dynamics Research Group). Artemi CerdĂ thank the funding of the OCDE TAD/CRP JA00088807. JosĂ© MartĂnez-Fernandez acknowledges the project Unidad de Excelencia CLU-2018-04 co-funded by FEDER and Castilla y LeĂłn Government. Ane Zabaleta is supported by the Hydro-Environmental Processes consolidated research group (IT1029-16, Basque Government). This paper has the benefit of the Lab and Field Data Pool created within the framework of the COST action CONNECTEUR (ES1306)
The SUrvey for Pulsars and Extragalactic Radio Bursts â II. New FRB discoveries and their follow-up
We report the discovery of four Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) in the ongoing SUrvey for Pulsars and Extragalactic Radio Bursts at the Parkes Radio Telescope: FRBs 150610, 151206, 151230 and 160102. Our real-time discoveries have enabled us to conduct extensive, rapid multimessenger follow-up at 12 major facilities sensitive to radio, optical, X-ray, gamma-ray photons and neutrinos on time-scales ranging from an hour to a few months post-burst. No counterparts to the FRBs were found and we provide upper limits on afterglow luminosities. None of the FRBs were seen to repeat. Formal fits to all FRBs show hints of scattering while their intrinsic widths are unresolved in time. FRB 151206 is at low Galactic latitude, FRB 151230 shows a sharp spectral cut-off, and FRB 160102 has the highest dispersion measure (DM = 2596.1 ± 0.3âpcâcmâ3) detected to date. Three of the FRBs have high dispersion measures (DM > 1500âpcâcmâ3), favouring a scenario where the DM is dominated by contributions from the intergalactic medium. The slope of the Parkes FRB source counts distribution with fluences >2âJyâms is α=â2.2+0.6â1.2 and still consistent with a Euclidean distribution (α = â3/2). We also find that the all-sky rate is 1.7+1.5â0.9Ă103 FRBs/(4Ï sr)/day above âŒ2Jyms and there is currently no strong evidence for a latitude-dependent FRB sky rate
TRY plant trait database â enhanced coverage and open access
Plant traitsâthe morphological, anatomical, physiological, biochemical and phenological characteristics of plantsâdetermine how plants respond to environmental factors, affect other trophic levels, and influence ecosystem properties and their benefits and detriments to people. Plant trait data thus represent the basis for a vast area of research spanning from evolutionary biology, community and functional ecology, to biodiversity conservation, ecosystem and landscape management, restoration, biogeography and earth system modelling. Since its foundation in 2007, the TRY database of plant traits has grown continuously. It now provides unprecedented data coverage under an open access data policy and is the main plant trait database used by the research community worldwide. Increasingly, the TRY database also supports new frontiers of traitâbased plant research, including the identification of data gaps and the subsequent mobilization or measurement of new data. To support this development, in this article we evaluate the extent of the trait data compiled in TRY and analyse emerging patterns of data coverage and representativeness. Best species coverage is achieved for categorical traitsâalmost complete coverage for âplant growth formâ. However, most traits relevant for ecology and vegetation modelling are characterized by continuous intraspecific variation and traitâenvironmental relationships. These traits have to be measured on individual plants in their respective environment. Despite unprecedented data coverage, we observe a humbling lack of completeness and representativeness of these continuous traits in many aspects. We, therefore, conclude that reducing data gaps and biases in the TRY database remains a key challenge and requires a coordinated approach to data mobilization and trait measurements. This can only be achieved in collaboration with other initiatives
Evaluation of inhibition of the Candida intermedia due to the effect of supernatants from bioprotectors and their synergistic effect
9 pĂĄginasIn this work, the inhibitory effect of the supernatants of three commercial bioprotectors (HOLDBAC YM-CÂź 100DCU, MicroGARD 200Âź y Lyofasr FPR2Âź) was evaluated sn order to establish the most effective bioprotector against the food spoilage yeast Candidal intermedia. Additional, the synergistic effect of the bioprotectors was studied through an experimental design of optimized mixture to determine the optimum mixing ratio that maximizes inhibition of Candida intermedia at a concentration of 10 exp 5 CFU/mL. The highest inhibition was obtained using the supernatants of MicroGARD 200Âź, reducing the microbial load in 3.2 logarithmic cycles, while HOLDBAC YM-CÂź and Lyofast FPR2Âź reduced the microbial load in 1.7 and 1.2 logarithmic cycles respectively. It was determined that there is a synergistic effect between the supernatants of the bioprotectors and that the optimum mixing of bioprotectors that maximized inhibition of Candida intermediate contained 23.7 % of HOLDBAC and 76.3 % of MicroGARD, reducing the microbial load in 3.4 logarithmic cycles.En este trabajo se evaluĂł el efecto inhibitorio de los sobrenadantes de tres bioprotectores comerciales (HOLDBAC YM-CÂź 100DCU, MicroGARD 200Âź y Lyofast FPR2Âź), con el fin de establecer el bioprotector con mayor efecto inhibitorio sobre la levadura alterante de alimentos Candida intermedia. De igual forma, se estudiĂł el efecto sinĂ©rgico que tienen los bioprotectores, por medio de un diseño experimental de mezcla optimizada, para establecer el porcentaje Ăłptimo de mezcla que maximice la inhibiciĂłn de crecimiento de la Candida intermedia a una concentraciĂłn de 10 exp 5 UFC/mL. El mayor efecto inhibitorio se obtuvo empleando los sobrenadantes del bioprotector MicroGARD 200Âź, reduciendo la carga microbiana en 3.2 ciclos logarĂtmicos, mientras que HOLDBAC YM-CÂź y Lyofast FPR2Âź redujeron la carga microbiana en 1.7 y 1.2 ciclos logarĂtmicos respectivamente. Se determinĂł que existe un efecto sinĂ©rgico entre los sobrenadantes de los bioprotectores y la mezcla Ăłptima que maximiza la inhibiciĂłn de la Candida intermedia contenĂa 23.7% de HOLDBAC y 76.3% de MicroGARD, reduciendo la carga microbiana en 3.4 ciclos logarĂtmicos
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