74,580 research outputs found
Spinodal instability growth in new stochastic approaches
Are spinodal instabilities the leading mechanism in the fragmentation of a
fermionic system? Numerous experimental indications suggest such a scenario and
stimulated much effort in giving a suitable description, without being
finalised in a dedicated transport model.
On the one hand, the bulk character of spinodal behaviour requires an
accurate treatment of the one-body dynamics, in presence of mechanical
instabilities. On the other hand, pure mean-field implementations do not apply
to situations where instabilities, bifurcations and chaos are present. The
evolution of instabilities should be treated in a large-amplitude framework
requiring fluctuations of Langevin type.
We present new stochastic approaches constructed by requiring a thorough
description of the mean-field response in presence of instabilities. Their
particular relevance is an improved description of the spinodal fragmentation
mechanism at the threshold, where the instability growth is frustrated by the
mean-field resilience.Comment: Conf. proc. IWM2014-EC, Catania, 6-9 May 201
Quasi-morphisms and L^p-metrics on groups of volume-preserving diffeomorphisms
Let M be a smooth compact connected oriented manifold of dimension at least
two endowed with a volume form. We show that every homogeneous quasi-morphism
on the identity component of the group of volume preserving
diffeomorphisms of M, which is induced by a quasi-morphism on the fundamental
group, is Lipschitz with respect to the L^p-metric on the group
. As a consequence, assuming certain conditions on the
fundamental group, we construct bi-Lipschitz embeddings of finite dimensional
vector spaces into .Comment: This is a published versio
Genetic relationships within and among Iberian fescues (Festuca L.) based on PCR-amplified markers
The genus Festuca comprises approximately 450 species and is widely distributed around the world. The Iberian Penninsula, with more than 100 taxa colonizing very diverse habitats, is one of its main centers of diversification. This study was conducted to assess molecular genetic variation and genetic relatedness among 91 populations of 31 taxa of Iberian fescues, based on several molecular markers (random amplified polymorphic DNA, amplified fragment length polymorphisms, and trnL sequences). The analyses showed the paraphyletic origin of the broad-leaved (subgenus Festuca, sections Scariosae and Subbulbosae, and subgenus Schedonorus) and the fine-leaved fescues (subgenus Festuca, sections Aulaxyper, Eskia, and Festuca). Schedonorus showed a weak relationship with Lolium rigidum and appeared to be the most recent of the broad-leaved clade. Section Eskia was the most ancient and Festuca the most recent of the fine-leaved clade. Festuca and Aulaxyper were the most related sections, in concordance with their taxonomic affinities. All taxa grouped into their sections, except F. ampla and F. capillifolia (section Festuca), which appeared to be more closely related to Aulaxyper and to a new independent section, respectively. Most populations clustered at the species level, but some subspecies and varieties mixed their populations. This study demonstrated the value in combining different molecular markers to uncover hidden genetic relationships between populations of Festuca
Opposite polarity field with convective downflow and its relation to magnetic spines in a sunspot penumbra
We discuss NICOLE inversions of Fe I 630.15 nm and 630.25 nm Stokes spectra
from a sunspot penumbra recorded with the CRISP imaging spectropolarimeter on
the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope at a spatial resolution close to 0.15". We
report on narrow radially extended lanes of opposite polarity field, located at
the boundaries between areas of relatively horizontal magnetic field (the
intra-spines) and much more vertical field (the spines). These lanes harbor
convective downflows of about 1 km/s. The locations of these downflows close to
the spines agree with predictions from the convective gap model (the "gappy
penumbra") proposed six years ago, and more recent 3D MHD simulations. We also
confirm the existence of strong convective flows throughout the entire
penumbra, showing the expected correlation between temperature and vertical
velocity, and having vertical RMS velocities of about 1.2 km/s.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A (06-March-2013). Minor corrections
made in this version
Spectral properties of the narrow-line region in Seyfert galaxies selected from the SDSS-DR7
Although the properties of the narrow-line region (NLR) of active galactic
nuclei(AGN) have been deeply studied by many authors in the past three decades,
many questions are still open. The main goal of this work is to explore the NLR
of Seyfert galaxies by collecting a large statistical spectroscopic sample of
Seyfert 2 and Intermediate-type Seyfert galaxies having a high signal-to-noise
ratio in order to take advantage of a high number of emission-lines to be
accurately measured. 2153 Seyfert 2 and 521 Intermediate-type Seyfert spectra
were selected from Sloan Digital Sky Survey - Data Release 7 (SDSS-DR7) with a
diagnostic diagram based on the oxygen emission-line ratios. All the
emission-lines, broad components included, were measured by means of a
self-developed code, after the subtraction of the stellar component. Physical
parameters, such as internal reddening, ionization parameter, temperature,
density, gas and stellar velocity dispersion were determined for each object.
Furthermore, we estimated mass and radius of the NLR, kinetic energy of the
ionized gas, and black-hole accretion rate. From the emission-line analysis and
the estimated physical properties, it appears that the NLR is similar in
Seyfert 2 and Intermediate-Seyfert galaxies. The only differences, lower
extinction, gas kinematics in general not dominated by the host galaxy
gravitational potential and higher percentage of [O III]5007 blue asymmetries
in Intermediate-Seyfert can be ascribed to an effect of inclination of our line
of sight with respect to the torus axis.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
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