6,469 research outputs found

    Influence of the geometry on a field-road model : the case of a conical field

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    Field-road models are reaction-diffusion systems which have been recently introduced to account for the effect of a road on propagation phenomena arising in epidemiology and ecology. Such systems consist in coupling a classical Fisher-KPP equation to a line with fast diffusion accounting for a road. A series of works investigate the spreading properties of such systems when the road is a straight line and the field a half-plane. Here, we take interest in the case where the field is a cone. Our main result is that the spreading speed is not influenced by the angle of the cone

    The Bose polaron problem: effect of mass imbalance on binding energy

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    By means of Quantum Monte Carlo methods we calculate the binding energy of an impurity immersed in a Bose-Einstein condensate at T = 0. The focus is on the attractive branch of the Bose polaron and on the role played by the mass imbalance between the impurity and the surrounding particles. For an impurity resonantly coupled to the bath, we investigate the dependence of the binding energy on the mass ratio and on the interaction strength within the medium. In particular, we determine the equation of state in the case of a static (infinite mass) impurity, where three-body correlations are irrelevant and the result is expected to be a universal function of the gas parameter. For the mass ratio corresponding to 40^{40}K impurities in a gas of 87^{87}Rb atoms we provide an explicit comparison with the experimental findings of a recent study carried out at JILA.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Reunion overseas: introduced wild boars and cultivated orange trees interact in the Brazilian Atlantic forest

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    Little is known concerning novel interactions between species that typically interact in their native range but, as a consequence of human activity, are also interacting out of their original distribution under new ecological conditions. Objective: We investigate the interaction between the orange tree and wild boar, both of which share Asian origins and have been introduced to the Americas (i.e. the overseas). Methods: Specifically, we assessed whether i) wild boars consume orange (Citrus sinensis) fruits and seeds in orchards adjacent to a remnant of the Atlantic Forest of Brazil, ii) the orange seeds are viable after passing through boar’s digestive tract and iii) whether the orange tree may naturalise in the forest remnant assisted by wild boars. Results: Our camera surveys indicated that wild boar was by far the most frequent consumer of orange fruits (40.5 % of camera trap-days). A considerable proportion of sown orange seeds extracted from fresh boar feces emerged seedlings (27.8 %, N = 386) under controlled greenhouse conditions. Further, 37.6 % of sown seeds (N = 500) in the forest remnant emerged seedlings in July 2015; however, after ~4 years (March 2019) only 9 seedlings survived (i.e. 4.8 %, N = 188). Finally, 52 sweet orange seedlings were found during surveys within the forest remnant which is intensively used by wild boars. This study indicates a high potential of boars to act as effective seed dispersers of the sweet orange. However, harsh competition with native vegetation and the incidence of lethal diseases, which quickly kill sweet orange trees under non-agricultural conditions, could seriously limit orange tree establishment in the forest. Conclusions: Our results have important implications not only because the wild boar could be a vector of potential invasive species, but also because they disperse seeds of some native species (e.g. the queen palm, Syagrus romanzofiana) in defaunated forests, where large native seed dispersers are missing; thus, wild boars could exert critical ecological functions lost due to human activityinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Adjusting the Labor Supply to Mitigate Violent Shocks: Evidence from Rural Colombia

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    This paper studies the use of labor markets to mitigate the impact of violent shocks on households in rural areas in Colombia. It examines changes in the labor supply from on-farm to off-farm labor as a means of coping with the violent shock and the ensuing redistribution of time within households. It identifies the heterogeneous response by gender. Because the incidence of violent shocks is not exogenous, the analysis uses instrumental variables that capture several dimensions of the cost of exercising terror. As a response to the violent shocks, households decrease the time spent on on-farm work and increase their supply of labor to off-farm activities (non-agricultural ones). Men carry the bulk of the adjustment in the use of time inasmuch as they supply the most hours to off-farm non-agricultural work and formal labor markets. Labor markets do not fully absorb the additional labor supply. Women in particular are unable to find jobs in formal labor markets and men have increased time dedicated to leisure and household chores. Additional off-farm supply does not fully cover the decrease in consumption. The results suggest that in rural Colombia, labor markets are a limited alternative for coping with violent shocks. Thus, policies in conflict-affected countries should go beyond short-term relief and aim at preventing labor markets from collapsing and at supporting the recovery of agricultural production.Conflict, labor markets, developing economies, instrumental variables

    Simulation of the hydrogen ground state in Stochastic Electrodynamics

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    Stochastic electrodynamics is a classical theory which assumes that the physical vacuum consists of classical stochastic fields with average energy 12ω\frac{1}{2}\hbar \omega in each mode, i.e., the zero-point Planck spectrum. While this classical theory explains many quantum phenomena related to harmonic oscillator problems, hard results on nonlinear systems are still lacking. In this work the hydrogen ground state is studied by numerically solving the Abraham -- Lorentz equation in the dipole approximation. First the stochastic Gaussian field is represented by a sum over Gaussian frequency components, next the dynamics is solved numerically using OpenCL. The approach improves on work by Cole and Zou 2003 by treating the full 3d3d problem and reaching longer simulation times. The results are compared with a conjecture for the ground state phase space density. Though short time results suggest a trend towards confirmation, in all attempted modelings the atom ionises at longer times.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures. Published version, minor change

    La correlación lógico-jurídica entre deberes y derechos.

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    artículo que defiende la exitencia de relaciones lógicas entre derechos y deberesSegún el punto de vista usual, la licitud de un hecho es correlativa con la obligatoriedad o la prohibición de ciertos hechos ajenos. Varios autores contemporáneos han cuestionado tal correlación. Defiendo aquí la vigencia de la misma en virtud de reglas de lógica deóntica --que podemos ver también como normas de derecho natural--, sin las cuales no puede haber ordenamiento jurídico, sino a lo sumo un ilógico conglomerado de preceptos inservible para ordenar la convivencia social. La correlación se basa en las reglas de respeto a los derechos ajenos y de licitud de las conductas no prohibidas.Licitness is commonly held to be correlative with the obligatoriness or forbiddenness of certain facts by other agents. A number of modern authors have challenged such a correlation. I support its validity on the ground of deontic- logic rules -- which can also regarded as natural-law norms -- without which no proper legal order is possible at all, but at most an illogic conglomeration of mandates unable to regulate the social living-together. The correlation is founded on the two rules of standing by other people's rights and the licitness of any non-prohibited behaviour.Peer reviewe
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