17,345 research outputs found
THE MEANING OF ENDEMISM IN PHYTOGEOGRAPHY
The definition of endemism is a relative concept, and is relative to the size of the territory and the hierarchical rank of the taxon one is referring to.
The more the territory is small, less you would expect to find in it the whole areal of taxa which ranks are high as a family or an order. Here is the case to cite FAVARGER (1969): "It is the scale that creates the phenomenon."
The criterion for the definition of endemism is therefore the exclusive membership to a certain geographical territory taken as a reference, not the size of the range of taxon
Massive young clusters in the disc of M31
We have studied the properties of a sample of 67 very blue and likely young
massive clusters in M31 extracted from the Bologna Revised Catalog of globular
clusters, selected according to their color [(B-V) < 0.45] and/or to the
strength of their Hbeta spectral index (Hbeta > 3.5 A). Their existence in M31
has been noted by several authors in the past; we show here that these Blue
Luminous Compact Clusters (BLCCs) are a significant fraction (>~ 15%) of the
whole globular cluster system of M31. Compared to the global properties of the
M31 globular cluster system, they appear to be intrinsically fainter,
morphologically less concentrated, and with a shallower Balmer jump and
enhanced absorption in their spectra.
Empirical comparison with integrated properties of clusters with known age as
well as with theoretical SSP models consistently indicate that their typical
age is less than ~2 Gyr, while they probably are not so metal-poor as deduced
if considered to be old. Either selecting BLCCs by their (B-V) colors or by the
strength of their Hbeta index the cluster sample turns out to be distributed
onto the outskirts of M31 disc, sharing the kinematical properties of the thin,
rapidly rotating disc component.
If confirmed to be young and not metal-poor, these clusters indicate the
occurrence of a significant recent star formation in the thin disc of M31,
although they do not set constraints on the epoch of its early formation.Comment: Submitted for publication in the Astronomical Journal. Aastex Latex
file of 22 pages, 12 figures and 3 table
Quantum theory of intersubband polarons
We present a microscopic quantum theory of intersubband polarons,
quasiparticles originated from the coupling between intersubband transitions
and longitudinal optical phonons. To this aim we develop a second quantized
theory taking into account both the Fr\"ohlich interaction between phonons and
intersubband transitions and the Coulomb interaction between the intersubband
transitions themselves. Our results show that the coupling between the phonons
and the intersubband transitions is extremely intense, thanks both to the
collective nature of the intersubband excitations and to the natural tight
confinement of optical phonons. Not only the coupling is strong enough to
spectroscopically resolve the resonant splitting between the modes (strong
coupling regime), but it can become comparable to the bare frequency of the
excitations (ultrastrong coupling regime). We thus predict the possibility to
exploit intersubband polarons both for applied optoelectronic research, where a
precise control of the phonon resonances is needed, and also to observe
fundamental quantum vacuum physics, typical of the ultrastrong coupling regime
A nonparametric approach for model individualization in an artificial pancreas
The identification of patient-tailored linear time invariant glucose-insulin models is investigated for type 1 diabetic patients, that are characterized by a substantial inter-subject variability. The individualized linear models are identified by considering a novel kernel-based nonparametric approach and are compared with a linear time invariant average model in terms of prediction performance by means of the coefficient of determination, fit, positive and negative max errors, and root mean squared error. Model identification and validation are based on in-silico data collected from the adult virtual population of the UVA/Padova simulator. The data generation involves a protocol designed to produce a sufficient input excitation without compromising patient safety, compatible also with real life scenarios. The identified models are exploited to synthesize an individualized Model Predictive Controller (MPC) for each patient, which is used in an Artificial Pancreas to maintain the blood glucose concentration within an euglycemic range. The MPC used in several clinical studies, synthesized on the basis of a non-individualized average linear time invariant model, is also considered as reference. The closed-loop control performance is evaluated in an in-silico study on the adult virtual population of the UVA/Padova simulator in a perturbed scenario, in which the MPC is blind to random variations of insulin sensitivity in each virtual patient. © 2015, IFAC (International Federation of Automatic Control) Hosting by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Accuracy of a teleported trapped field state inside a single bimodal cavity
We propose a simplified scheme to teleport a superposition of coherent states
from one mode to another of the same bimodal lossy cavity. Based on current
experimental capabilities, we present a calculation of the fidelity that can be
achieved, demonstrating accurate teleportation if the mean photon number of
each mode is at most 1.5. Our scheme applies as well for teleportation of
coherent states from one mode of a cavity to another mode of a second cavity,
both cavities embedded in a common reservoir.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, in appreciation for publication in Physical
Review
Glycolaldehyde in Perseus young solar analogs
Aims: In this paper we focus on the occurrence of glycolaldehyde (HCOCH2OH)
in young solar analogs by performing the first homogeneous and unbiased study
of this molecule in the Class 0 protostars of the nearby Perseus star forming
region. Methods: We obtained sub-arcsec angular resolution maps at 1.3mm and
1.4mm of glycolaldehyde emission lines using the IRAM Plateau de Bure (PdB)
interferometer in the framework of the CALYPSO IRAM large program. Results:
Glycolaldehyde has been detected towards 3 Class 0 and 1 Class I protostars out
of the 13 continuum sources targeted in Perseus: NGC1333-IRAS2A1,
NGC1333-IRAS4A2, NGC1333-IRAS4B1, and SVS13-A. The NGC1333 star forming region
looks particularly glycolaldehyde rich, with a rate of occurrence up to 60%.
The glycolaldehyde spatial distribution overlaps with the continuum one,
tracing the inner 100 au around the protostar. A large number of lines (up to
18), with upper-level energies Eu from 37 K up to 375 K has been detected. We
derived column densities > 10^15 cm^-2 and rotational temperatures Trot between
115 K and 236 K, imaging for the first time hot-corinos around NGC1333-IRAS4B1
and SVS13-A. Conclusions: In multiple systems glycolaldehyde emission is
detected only in one component. The case of the SVS13-A+B and IRAS4-A1+A2
systems support that the detection of glycolaldehyde (at least in the present
Perseus sample) indicates older protostars (i.e. SVS13-A and IRAS4-A2), evolved
enough to develop the hot-corino region (i.e. 100 K in the inner 100 au).
However, only two systems do not allow us to firmly conclude whether the
primary factor leading to the detection of glycolaldehyde emission is the
environments hosting the protostars, evolution (e.g. low value of Lsubmm/Lint),
or accretion luminosity (high Lint).Comment: A&A, in pres
Theory of continuum percolation II. Mean field theory
I use a previously introduced mapping between the continuum percolation model
and the Potts fluid to derive a mean field theory of continuum percolation
systems. This is done by introducing a new variational principle, the basis of
which has to be taken, for now, as heuristic. The critical exponents obtained
are , and , which are identical with the mean
field exponents of lattice percolation. The critical density in this
approximation is \rho_c = 1/\ve where \ve = \int d \x \, p(\x) \{ \exp [-
v(\x)/kT] - 1 \}. p(\x) is the binding probability of two particles
separated by \x and v(\x) is their interaction potential.Comment: 25 pages, Late
A rescaled method for RBF approximation
A new method to compute stable kernel-based interpolants
has been presented by the second and third authors. This rescaled interpolation method combines the
standard kernel interpolation with a properly defined rescaling operation, which
smooths the oscillations of the interpolant. Although promising, this procedure
lacks a systematic theoretical investigation.
Through our analysis, this novel method can be understood as standard
kernel interpolation by means of a properly rescaled kernel. This point of view
allow us to consider its error and stability properties.
First, we prove that the method is an instance of the Shepard\u2019s method,
when certain weight functions are used. In particular, the method can reproduce
constant functions.
Second, it is possible to define a modified set of cardinal functions strictly
related to the ones of the not-rescaled kernel. Through these functions, we
define a Lebesgue function for the rescaled interpolation process, and study its
maximum - the Lebesgue constant - in different settings.
Also, a preliminary theoretical result on the estimation of the interpolation
error is presented.
As an application, we couple our method with a partition of unity algorithm.
This setting seems to be the most promising, and we illustrate its behavior with
some experiments
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