4,055 research outputs found
Bordos and Boundaries: Sustainable Agriculture in the High Altitude Deserts of Northwest Argentina, AD 850-1532
Bordos were essential for the long-term sustainability of agriculture in the high altitude desert of Antofagasta de la Sierra in Northwest Argentina during the Late (AD 850 – 1480) and Inca Period (AD 1480 – 1532). Bordos were lineal humps of soil that stimulated the pedogenesis of the predominantly sandy soils of the area. Furthermore, they served as boundaries delimiting irrigation and cultivation fields. Therefore, bordos alongside other technologies were an efficient means by which viable farming was possible in an otherwise marginal agricultural zone. Besides explaining the role of bordos in the context of Northwestern Argentine agriculture this article describes the irrigation systems in place at Antofagasta de la Sierra throughout this period and compares it to the present state of affairs. Our results demonstrate that these late Prehispanic bordos and irrigation networks were well set out and organized such that use of water and soil was efficient, proportional and fair. The Inca do not seem to have disrupted these systems or local autonomy over them. In contrast, modern water and soil is characterized by a household-level decentralized management system. This situation leads to serious conflicts over water use allocations, wastage and flawed irrigation resulting in rising ground salinization.Fil: Salminci, Pedro Miguel. SecretarÃa de Cultura de la Nación. Dirección Nacional de Cultura y Museos. Instituto Nacional de AntropologÃa y Pensamiento Latinoamericano; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Tchilinguirian, Pablo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas; Argentina. University of Cambridge. Faculty of Archaeology and Anthropology; Reino UnidoFil: Lane, Kevin John. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas; Argentina. University of Cambridge. Faculty of Archaeology and Anthropology; Reino Unid
Light pollution at high zenith angles, as measured at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory
On the basis of measurements of the V-band sky brightness obtained at Cerro
Tololo Inter-American Observatory in December 2006 and December 2008 we confirm
the functional form of the basic model of Garstang (1989, 1991). At high zenith
angles we measure an enhancement of a factor of two over Garstang's later model
when there is no marine cloud layer over La Serena/Coquimbo. No corresponding
enhancement is found in the B-band.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, to be published in the March, 2010, issue of
Publs. of the Astron. Soc. of the Pacifi
Quantum criticality in the two-channel pseudogap Anderson model: A test of the non-crossing approximation
We investigate the dynamical properties of the two-channel Anderson model
using the noncrossing approximation (NCA) supplemented by numerical
renormalization-group calculations. We provide evidence supporting the
conventional wisdom that the NCA gives reliable results for the standard
two-channel Anderson model of a magnetic impurity in a metal. We extend the
analysis to the pseudogap two-channel model describing a semi-metallic host
with a density of states that vanishes in power-law fashion at the Fermi
energy. This model exhibits continuous quantum phase transitions between weak-
and strong-coupling phases. The NCA is shown to reproduce the correct
qualitative features of the pseudogap model, including the phase diagram, and
to yield critical exponents in excellent agreement with the NRG and exact
results. The forms of the dynamical magnetic susceptibility and impurity
Green's function at the fixed points are suggestive of
frequency-over-temperature scaling.Comment: 6 pages, 10 figures, to appear in the special issue of pss on Quantum
Criticality and Novel Phases (QCNP12
Physics with Beam Tau-Neutrino Appearance at DUNE
We explore the capabilities of the upcoming Deep Underground Neutrino
Experiment (DUNE) to measure charged-current interactions and the
associated oscillation probability at its far
detector, concentrating on how such results can be used to probe neutrino
properties and interactions. DUNE has the potential to identify significantly
more events than all existing experiments and can use this data
sample to nontrivially test the three-massive-neutrinos paradigm by providing
complementary measurements to those from the appearance and
disappearance channels. We further discuss the sensitivity of the
appearance channel to several hypotheses for the physics that may lurk beyond
the three-massive-neutrinos paradigm: a non-unitary lepton mixing matrix, the
light neutrinos hypothesis, and the existence of non-standard
neutral-current neutrino interactions. Throughout, we also consider the
relative benefits of the proposed high-energy tune of the Long-Baseline
Neutrino Facility (LBNF) beam-line.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figures, 2 appendice
Optimal Mass Variables for Semivisible Jets
Strongly coupled hidden sector theories predict collider production of
invisible, composite dark matter candidates mixed with regular hadrons in the
form of semivisible jets. Classical mass reconstruction techniques may not be
optimal for these unusual topologies, in which the missing transverse momentum
comes from massive particles and has a nontrivial relationship to the visible
jet momentum. We apply the artificial event variable network, a semisupervised,
interpretable machine learning technique that uses an information bottleneck,
to derive superior mass reconstruction functions for several cases of resonant
semivisible jet production. We demonstrate that the technique can extrapolate
to unknown signal model parameter values. We further demonstrate the viability
of conducting an actual search for new physics using this method, by applying
the learned functions to standard model background events from quantum
chromodynamics.Comment: To be submitted to SciPost Phy
CaloDiffusion with GLaM for High Fidelity Calorimeter Simulation
Simulation is crucial for all aspects of collider data analysis, but the
available computing budget in the High Luminosity LHC era will be severely
constrained. Generative machine learning models may act as surrogates to
replace physics-based full simulation of particle detectors, and diffusion
models have recently emerged as the state of the art for other generative
tasks. We introduce CaloDiffusion, a denoising diffusion model trained on the
public CaloChallenge datasets to generate calorimeter showers. Our algorithm
employs 3D cylindrical convolutions, which take advantage of symmetries of the
underlying data representation. To handle irregular detector geometries, we
augment the diffusion model with a new geometry latent mapping (GLaM) layer to
learn forward and reverse transformations to a regular geometry that is
suitable for cylindrical convolutions. The showers generated by our approach
are nearly indistinguishable from the full simulation, as measured by several
different metrics.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figure
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