23,058 research outputs found
Management arrangements for accommodating nonrice crops in rice-based irrigation systems: Proceedings of the First Progress Review and Coordination Workshop of the Research Network on Irrigation Management for Crop Diversification in Rice-Based Systems (IMCD), held in Quezon City, the Philippines, 10-14 December 1990
Irrigation management / Crops / Diversification / Rice / Irrigated farming / Policy / Research / Sri Lanka / Bangladesh / India / Indonesia / Malaysia / Nepal / Philippines / Thailand
Observationally-Motivated Analysis of Simulated Galaxies
The spatial and temporal relationships between stellar age, kinematics, and
chemistry are a fundamental tool for uncovering the physics driving galaxy
formation and evolution. Observationally, these trends are derived using
carefully selected samples isolated via the application of appropriate
magnitude, colour, and gravity selection functions of individual stars;
conversely, the analysis of chemodynamical simulations of galaxies has
traditionally been restricted to the age, metallicity, and kinematics of
`composite' stellar particles comprised of open cluster-mass simple stellar
populations. As we enter the Gaia era, it is crucial that this approach
changes, with simulations confronting data in a manner which better mimics the
methodology employed by observers. Here, we use the \textsc{SynCMD} synthetic
stellar populations tool to analyse the metallicity distribution function of a
Milky Way-like simulated galaxy, employing an apparent magnitude plus gravity
selection function similar to that employed by the RAdial Velocity Experiment
(RAVE); we compare such an observationally-motivated approach with that
traditionally adopted - i.e., spatial cuts alone - in order to illustrate the
point that how one analyses a simulation can be, in some cases, just as
important as the underlying sub-grid physics employed.Comment: Accepted for publication in PoS (Proceedings of Science): Nuclei in
the Cosmos XIII (Debrecen, Jul 2014); 6 pages; 3 figure
Valence-bond theory of highly disordered quantum antiferromagnets
We present a large-N variational approach to describe the magnetism of
insulating doped semiconductors based on a disorder-generalization of the
resonating-valence-bond theory for quantum antiferromagnets. This method
captures all the qualitative and even quantitative predictions of the
strong-disorder renormalization group approach over the entire experimentally
relevant temperature range. Finally, by mapping the problem on a hard-sphere
fluid, we could provide an essentially exact analytic solution without any
adjustable parameters.Comment: 5 pages, 3 eps figure
Melting of scalar mesons and black-hole quasinormal modes in a holographic QCD model
A holographic model for QCD is employed to investigate the effects of the
gluon condensate on the spectrum and melting of scalar mesons. We find the
evolution of the free energy density with the temperature, and the result shows
that the temperature of the confinement/deconfinement transition is sensitive
to the gluon-condensate parameter. The spectral functions (SPFs) are also
obtained and show a series of peaks in the low-temperature regime, indicating
the presence of quasiparticle states associated to the mesons, while the number
of peaks decreases with the increment of the temperature, characterizing the
quasiparticle melting. In the dual gravitational description, the scalar mesons
are identified with the black-hole quasinormal modes (QNMs). We obtain the
spectrum of QNMs and the dispersion relations corresponding to the scalar-field
perturbations of the gravitational background, and find their dependence with
the gluon-condensate parameter.Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures, 5 table
Massive Black Hole Binary Systems in Hierarchical Scenario of Structure Formation
The hierarchical scenario of structure formation describes how objects like
galaxies and galaxy clusters are formed by mergers of small objects. In this
scenario, mergers of galaxies can lead to the formation of massive black hole
(MBH) binary systems. On the other hand, the merger of two MBH could produce a
gravitational wave signal detectable, in principle, by the Laser Interferometer
Space Antenna (LISA). In the present work, we use the Press-Schechter
formalism, and its extension, to describe the merger rate of haloes which
contain massive black holes. Here, we do not study the gravitational wave
emission of these systems. However, we present an initial study to determine
the number of systems formed via mergers that could permit, in a future
extension of this work, the calculation of the signature in gravitational waves
of these systems.Comment: to match the published version in International Journal of Modern
Physics
Random Antiferromagnetic SU(N) Spin Chains
We analyze random isotropic antiferromagnetic SU(N) spin chains using the
real space renormalization group. We find that they are governed at low
energies by a universal infinite randomness fixed point different from the one
of random spin-1/2 chains. We determine analytically the important exponents:
the energy-length scale relation is , where
, and the mean correlation function is given by
, where . Our analysis shows
that the infinite-N limit is unable to capture the behavior obtained at any
finite N.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Emergent SU(N) symmetry in disordered SO(N) spin chains
Strongly disordered spin chains invariant under the SO(N) group are shown to
display random-singlet phases with emergent SU(N) symmetry without fine tuning.
The phases with emergent SU(N) symmetry are of two kinds: one has a ground
state formed of randomly distributed singlets of strongly bound pairs of SO(N)
spins (a `mesonic' phase), while the other has a ground state composed of
singlets made out of strongly bound integer multiples of N SO(N) spins (a
`baryonic' phase). The established mechanism is general and we put forward the
cases of and as prime candidates for experimental
realizations in material compounds and cold-atoms systems. We display universal
temperature scaling and critical exponents for susceptibilities distinguishing
these phases and characterizing the enlarging of the microscopic symmetries at
low energies.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, Contribution to the Topical Issue "Recent
Advances in the Theory of Disordered Systems", edited by Ferenc Igl\'oi and
Heiko Riege
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