6,695 research outputs found
Ground state entanglement in quantum spin chains
A microscopic calculation of ground state entanglement for the XY and
Heisenberg models shows the emergence of universal scaling behavior at quantum
phase transitions. Entanglement is thus controlled by conformal symmetry. Away
from the critical point, entanglement gets saturated by a mass scale. Results
borrowed from conformal field theory imply irreversibility of entanglement loss
along renormalization group trajectories. Entanglement does not saturate in
higher dimensions which appears to limit the success of the density matrix
renormalization group technique. A possible connection between majorization and
renormalization group irreversibility emerges from our numerical analysis.Comment: 26 pages, 16 figures, added references, minor changes. Final versio
Observations of Very High Energy Gamma-Rays during Moonlight and Twilight with the MAGIC Telescope
We study the capability of the MAGIC telescope to observe under moderate
moonlight. TeV gamma-ray signals from the Crab nebula were detected with the
MAGIC telescope during periods when the Moon was above the horizon and during
twilight. This was accomplished by increasing the trigger discriminator
thresholds. No change is necessary in the high voltage settings since the
camera PMTs were especially designed to avoid high currents. We characterize
the telescope performance by studying the effect of the moonlight on the
gamma-ray detection efficiency and sensitivity, as well as on the energy
threshold.Comment: Contribution to the 30th ICRC, Merida Mexico, July 2007 on behalf of
the MAGIC Collaboratio
Fine-grained entanglement loss along renormalization group flows
We explore entanglement loss along renormalization group trajectories as a
basic quantum information property underlying their irreversibility. This
analysis is carried out for the quantum Ising chain as a transverse magnetic
field is changed. We consider the ground-state entanglement between a large
block of spins and the rest of the chain. Entanglement loss is seen to follow
from a rigid reordering, satisfying the majorization relation, of the
eigenvalues of the reduced density matrix for the spin block. More generally,
our results indicate that it may be possible to prove the irreversibility along
RG trajectories from the properties of the vacuum only, without need to study
the whole hamiltonian.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; minor change
The flavor of neutrinos in muon decays at a neutrino factory and the LSND puzzle
The accurate prediction of the neutrino beam produced in muon decays and the
absence of opposite helicity contamination for a particular neutrino flavor
make a future neutrino factory the ideal place to look for the lepton flavor
violating (LFV) decays of the kind \mu^+\ra e^+\nuebar\numu and lepton number
violating (LNV) processes like \mu^-\ra e^-\nue\numu. Excellent sensitivities
can be achieved using a detector capable of muon and/or electron identification
with charge discrimination. This would allow to set experimental limits that
improve current ones by more than two orders of magnitude and test the
hypothesis that the LSND excess is due to such anomalous decays, rather than
neutrino flavor oscillations in vacuum.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure
Isolation mediates persistent founder effects on zooplankton colonisation in new temporary ponds
Understanding the colonisation process in zooplankton is crucial for successful restoration of aquatic ecosystems. Here, we analyzed the clonal and genetic structure of the cyclical parthenogenetic rotifer Brachionus plicatilis by following populations established in new temporary ponds during the first three hydroperiods. Rotifer populations established rapidly after first flooding, although colonisation was ongoing throughout the study. Multilocus genotypes from 7 microsatellite loci suggested that most populations (10 of 14) were founded by few clones. The exception was one of the four populations that persisted throughout the studied hydroperiods, where high genetic diversity in the first hydroperiod suggested colonisation from a historical egg bank and, no increase in allelic diversity was detected with time. In contrast, in another of these four populations, we observed a progressive increase of allelic diversity. This population became less differentiated from the other populations suggesting effective gene flow soon after its foundation. Allelic diversity and richness remained low in the remaining two, more isolated, populations, suggesting little gene flow. Our results highlight the complexity of colonisation dynamics, with evidence for persistent founder effects in some ponds, but not in others, and with early immigration both from external source populations, and from residual, historical diapausing egg banks
TeologĂa en AmĂ©rica Latina, vol. III. El siglo de las teologĂas latinoamericanistas (1899-2001). [Reseña]
Reseña de: Josep Ignasi SARANYANA (dir.)- Carmen-José
ALEJOS GRAU (coord.), TeologĂa en AmĂ©rica
Latina, vol. III. El siglo de las teologĂas latinoamericanistas
(1899-2001), Iberoamericana-
Vervuert, Madrid-Frankfurt am Main 2002,
774 pp
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