106,831 research outputs found
Size structure and inequality in a commercial stand of the seaweed gelidium-sesquipedale
The temporal dynamics of the frequency distributions of 2 measures of Gelidium sesquipedale frond size, length and weight, was investigated in a subtidal stand under commercial exploitation. Frond weight/length allometry was highly variable, both seasonally and between years, showing that in this species weight and length cannot be used interchangeably as a measure of frond size. Physical disturbances played a fundamental role in allometric variability. The loss of branches due to commercial harvest and storms reduced the slope of the log weight/log length relationship. During spring the slope increased, indicating the production and growth of lateral branches. Size differences among individuals in the population (inequality) were quantified by 3 statistics: the skewness coefficient (g(1)), the coefficient of variation (CV), and the Gini coefficient (G). Highly significant changes in frond length inequality, but not weight, were shown. These correspond to periods when G. sesquipedale length structure varied due to the combined effects of the demographic parameters that regulate the population (frond recruitment, survival, breakage and growth). Graphical analysis of significantly different length structures revealed that a recruitment peak of vegetatively developed fronds occurred during winter, following periods of high frond mortality and breakage caused by both human (summer harvesting) and natural (late fall storms) disturbances. During late spring and summer, the density of smaller fronds decreased due to mortality and growth into higher size classes. To assess density-dependent regulation processes, such as suppressed growth of smaller fronds and self-thinning, the time variation of both relationships, inequality/mean frond weight and biomass/density, was analysed. Inequality/mean frond weight and biomass/density values decreased from summer to winter and increased to the following summer. The increase of inequality while mean frond weight is increasing is consistent with the asymmetric competition theory on the development of crowded plant stands, and supports the hypothesis that the slower growth of smaller fronds during this period (Santos 1994; Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 107: 295-305) is due to intraspecific competition. The time trajectory of the biomass/density relationship is perpendicular to and lies above the theoretical self-thinning line. Evidence for self-thinning was thus not detected. A conceptual model for the functioning of this population is proposed. Thinning and frond breakage caused by disturbances might be keeping intraspecific competition in these G. sesquipedale crowded stands (up to 18 000 fronds m(-2)) at low levels.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Observing different quantum trajectories in cavity QED
The experimental observation of quantum jumps is an example of single open
quantum systems that, when monitored, evolve in terms of stochastic
trajectories conditioned on measurements results. Here we present a proposal
that allows the experimental observation of a much larger class of quantum
trajectories in cavity QED systems. In particular, our scheme allows for the
monitoring of engineered thermal baths that are crucial for recent proposals
for probing entanglement decay and also for entanglement protection. The scheme
relies on the interaction of a three-level atom and a cavity mode that
interchangeably play the roles of system and probe. If the atom is detected the
evolution of the cavity fields follows quantum trajectories and vice-versa.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Disordered two-dimensional superconductors: roles of temperature and interaction strength
We have considered the half-filled disordered attractive Hubbard model on a
square lattice, in which the on-site attraction is switched off on a fraction
of sites, while keeping a finite on the remaining ones. Through Quantum
Monte Carlo (QMC) simulations for several values of and , and for system
sizes ranging from to , we have calculated the
configurational averages of the equal-time pair structure factor , and,
for a more restricted set of variables, the helicity modulus, , as
functions of temperature. Two finite-size scaling {\it ansatze} for have
been used, one for zero-temperature and the other for finite temperatures. We
have found that the system sustains superconductivity in the ground state up to
a critical impurity concentration, , which increases with , at least up
to U=4 (in units of the hopping energy). Also, the normalized zero-temperature
gap as a function of shows a maximum near , for . Analyses of the helicity modulus and of the pair structure factor
led to the determination of the critical temperature as a function of , for
4 and 6: they also show maxima near , with the highest
increasing with in this range. We argue that, overall, the observed
behavior results from both the breakdown of CDW-superconductivity degeneracy
and the fact that free sites tend to "push" electrons towards attractive sites,
the latter effect being more drastic at weak couplings.Comment: 9 two-column pages, 14 figures, RevTe
Experimental Signatures of Fermiophobic Higgs bosons
The most general Two Higgs Doublet Model potential without explicit CP
violation depends on 10 real independent parameters. Excluding spontaneous CP
violation results in two 7 parameter models. Although both models give rise to
5 scalar particles and 2 mixing angles, the resulting phenomenology of the
scalar sectors is different. If flavour changing neutral currents at tree level
are to be avoided, one has, in both cases, four alternative ways of introducing
the fermion couplings. In one of these models the mixing angle of the CP even
sector can be chosen in such a way that the fermion couplings to the lightest
scalar Higgs boson vanishes. At the same time it is possible to suppress the
fermion couplings to the charged and pseudo-scalar Higgs bosons by
appropriately choosing the mixing angle of the CP odd sector. We investigate
the phenomenology of both models in the fermiophobic limit and present the
different branching ratios for the decays of the scalar particles. We use the
present experimental results from the LEP collider to constrain the models.Comment: 23 pages, 18 figures included, newer experimental data include
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