384 research outputs found

    Thermal Pions at Finite Isospin Chemical Potential

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    The density corrections, in terms of the isospin chemical potential μI\mu_I, to the mass of the pions are studied in the framework of the SU(2) low energy effective chiral lagrangian. The pion decay constant fπ(T,μI)f_{\pi}(T, \mu_{I}) is also analized. As a function of temperature for μI=0\mu_I =0, the mass remains quite stable, starting to grow for very high values of TT, confirming previous results. However, there are interesting corrections to the mass when both effects (temperature and chemical potential) are simultaneously present. At zero temperature the π±\pi ^{\pm} should condensate when μI=mπ\mu_{I} = \mp m_{\pi}. This is not longer valid anymore at finite TT. The mass of the π0\pi_0 acquires also a non trivial dependence on μI\mu_I due to the finite temperature.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure

    DFR Perturbative Quantum Field theory on Quantum Space Time, and Wick Reduction

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    We discuss the perturbative approach a` la Dyson to a quantum field theory with nonlocal self-interaction :phi*...*phi:, according to Doplicher, Fredenhagen and Roberts (DFR). In particular, we show that the Wick reduction of non locally time--ordered products of Wick monomials can be performed as usual, and we discuss a very simple Dyson diagram.Comment: 15 pages, pdf has active hyperlinks. To appear in the proceedings of the conference on "Rigorous quantum Field Theory", held at Saclay on July 19-21, 2004, on the occasion of Jacques Bros' 70th birthda

    The Influence of Interspecific Competition and Host Preference on the Phylogeography of Two African Ixodid Tick Species

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    A comparative phylogeographic study on two economically important African tick species, Amblyomma hebraeum and Hyalomma rufipes was performed to test the influence of host specificity and host movement on dispersion. Pairwise AMOVA analyses of 277 mtDNA COI sequences supported significant population differentiation among the majority of sampling sites. The geographic mitochondrial structure was not supported by nuclear ITS-2 sequencing, probably attributed to a recent divergence. The three-host generalist, A. hebraeum, showed less mtDNA geographic structure, and a lower level of genetic diversity, while the more host-specific H. rufipes displayed higher levels of population differentiation and two distinct mtDNA assemblages (one predominantly confined to South Africa/Namibia and the other to Mozambique and East Africa). A zone of overlap is present in southern Mozambique. A mechanistic climate model suggests that climate alone cannot be responsible for the disruption in female gene flow. Our findings furthermore suggest that female gene dispersal of ticks is more dependent on the presence of juvenile hosts in the environment than on the ability of adult hosts to disperse across the landscape. Documented interspecific competition between the juvenile stages of H. rufipes and H. truncatum is implicated as a contributing factor towards disrupting gene flow between the two southern African H. rufipes genetic assemblages

    Corrección de la deriva en sistemas de seguimiento solar a través de control de lazo cerrado

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    CIES2020 - XVII Congresso Ibérico e XIII Congresso Ibero-americano de Energia SolarRESUMEN: Los sistemas de seguimiento solar de dos ejes en aplicaciones de concentración solar requieren una mayor precisión en el seguimiento automático de la posición aparente del Sol, esto con el fin de mantener la radiación solar concentrada en una posición fija en el receptor del sistema, ya que una mínima variación se traduce en un desplazamiento (deriva) del spot de concentración de la zona de interés. Este trabajo se centra en la discusión de los métodos implementados para la solución de los problemas de deriva y corrección de los ángulos de elevación y acimut en los dispositivos de seguimiento solar. Para llevar a cabo la evaluación de la corrección de la deriva, se emplearon dos dispositivos de seguimiento solar de dos ejes de movimiento. Un Helióstato de 36 m2 (E3) ubicado en la Plataforma Solar de Hermosillo, Sonora, México. El segundo es un concentrador solar reflectivo de no imagen tipo Fresnel para la caracterización de celdas fotovoltaicas ubicado en el IER-UNAM en Temixco, Morelos, México. El análisis planteado en este documento se basa principalmente en la comparativa de los resultados obtenidos a partir de implementar una estrategia de control de lazo abierto y cerrado. El control de lazo abierto consiste en un código de programación que realiza el cálculo de la posición del Sol mediante algoritmos propuestos por distintos autores, y que permiten enviar señales de comando a los actuadores de los ejes de acimut y elevación en ambos dispositivos de seguimiento. Para la metodología de lazo cerrado se utiliza un sistema óptico de retroalimentación que trata de un dispositivo de visión (CCD) que permite observar la posición del Sol en tiempo real.ABSTRACT: Two axis solar tracking systems require high precision regarding automatic tracking of apparent sun position for solar concentration applications. This, with the aim of maintaining the concentrated solar radiation in a fixed position in the system´s receiver. This is so, because a minimum variation results in a deviation (drift) of the solar image concentrated in the area of interest. This work focuses on a discussion of implemented methods for solving drift problems and a correction of elevation and azimuth angles in solar tracking devices. Two sun tracking devices of two axes movement were used in order to evaluate drift correction. The first one was a 36 m2 heliostat (named E3), located in the Solar Platform in Hermosillo, Sonora, México. The second tracking device was a solar concentrator Fresnel type for characterizing photovoltaic cells (FRESNEL) located at IER-UNAM, Temixco, Morelos, México. The analysis of this document is mainly based on the comparison of obtained results from implementing an open-loop and close-loop control strategy. Open-loop control consists of a program code that calculates the Sun's position using algorithms suggested by different authors, it allows send command signals to elevation and azimuth axis actuators on both tracking devices. Closed-loop methodology uses an optical feedback system, which refers to a vision device (webcam) that allows observing in real time the Sun´s position.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Geometric Phase, Curvature, and Extrapotentials in Constrained Quantum Systems

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    We derive an effective Hamiltonian for a quantum system constrained to a submanifold (the constraint manifold) of configuration space (the ambient space) by an infinite restoring force. We pay special attention to how this Hamiltonian depends on quantities which are external to the constraint manifold, such as the external curvature of the constraint manifold, the (Riemannian) curvature of the ambient space, and the constraining potential. In particular, we find the remarkable fact that the twisting of the constraining potential appears as a gauge potential in the constrained Hamiltonian. This gauge potential is an example of geometric phase, closely related to that originally discussed by Berry. The constrained Hamiltonian also contains an effective potential depending on the external curvature of the constraint manifold, the curvature of the ambient space, and the twisting of the constraining potential. The general nature of our analysis allows applications to a wide variety of problems, such as rigid molecules, the evolution of molecular systems along reaction paths, and quantum strip waveguides.Comment: 27 pages with 1 figure, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Thermal rho and sigma mesons from chiral symmetry and unitarity

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    We study the temperature evolution of the rho and sigma mass and width, using a unitary chiral approach. The one-loop pion-pion scattering amplitude in Chiral Perturbation Theory at finite temperature is unitarized via the Inverse Amplitude Method. Our results predict a clear increase with T of both the rho and sigma widths. The masses decrease slightly for high T, while the rho-pion-pion coupling increases. The rho behavior seems to be favored by experimental results. In the sigma case, it signals chiral symmetry restoration.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, revtex. References and brief comments added. Final version to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Evaluating the probability of avoiding disease-related extinctions of Panamanian amphibians through captive breeding programs

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    Amphibians around the world are declining from threats that cannot currently be mitigated, making it impossible to safeguard some species in their natural habitats. Amphibians in the mountainous neotropics are one example where severe diseaserelated declines prompted calls for the establishment of captive assurance colonies to avoid extinctions. We surveyed experts in Panamanian amphibians to determine the probability of avoiding chytridiomycosis-related extinctions using captive breeding programs. We ranked Panamanian amphibian species by perceived susceptibility to chytridiomycosis, then calculated the likelihood of avoiding extinction as the product of three probabilities, which include (1) finding sufficient founder animals, (2) successfully breeding these species in captivity and (3) becoming extinct in the wild. The likelihood of finding enough animals to create a captive founding population was low for many rare species, especially for salamanders and caecilians. It was also low for frogs which were once regularly encountered, but have already disappeared including Atelopus chiriquiensis, Craugastor emcelae, C. obesus, C. punctariolus, C. rhyacobatrachus, Ecnomiohyla rabborum, Isthmohyla calypsa and Oophaga speciosa. Our results indicate that captive breeding could improve the odds of avoiding extinction for species that have severely declined or are likely to decline due to chytridiomycosis including Atelopus certus, A. glyphus, A. limosus, A. varius, A. zeteki, Anotheca spinosa, Gastrotheca cornuta, Agalychnis lemur and Hemiphractus fasciatus. Priority species that experts predicted were highly susceptible to chytridiomycosis that might also benefit from ex situ management include Craugastor tabasarae, C. azueroensis, C. evanesco, Strabomantis bufoniformis and Colostethus panamansis. In spite of high levels of uncertainty, this expert assessment approach allowed us to refine our priorities for captive amphibian programs in Panama and identify priority conservation actions with a clearer understanding of the probability of success.Amphibians around the world are declining from threats that cannot currently be mitigated, making it impossible to safeguard some species in their natural habitats. Amphibians in the mountainous neotropics are one example where severe diseaserelated declines prompted calls for the establishment of captive assurance colonies to avoid extinctions. We surveyed experts in Panamanian amphibians to determine the probability of avoiding chytridiomycosis-related extinctions using captive breeding programs. We ranked Panamanian amphibian species by perceived susceptibility to chytridiomycosis, then calculated the likelihood of avoiding extinction as the product of three probabilities, which include (1) finding sufficient founder animals, (2) successfully breeding these species in captivity and (3) becoming extinct in the wild. The likelihood of finding enough animals to create a captive founding population was low for many rare species, especially for salamanders and caecilians. It was also low for frogs which were once regularly encountered, but have already disappeared including Atelopus chiriquiensis, Craugastor emcelae, C. obesus, C. punctariolus, C. rhyacobatrachus, Ecnomiohyla rabborum, Isthmohyla calypsa and Oophaga speciosa. Our results indicate that captive breeding could improve the odds of avoiding extinction for species that have severely declined or are likely to decline due to chytridiomycosis including Atelopus certus, A. glyphus, A. limosus, A. varius, A. zeteki, Anotheca spinosa, Gastrotheca cornuta, Agalychnis lemur and Hemiphractus fasciatus. Priority species that experts predicted were highly susceptible to chytridiomycosis that might also benefit from ex situ management include Craugastor tabasarae, C. azueroensis, C. evanesco, Strabomantis bufoniformis and Colostethus panamansis. In spite of high levels of uncertainty, this expert assessment approach allowed us to refine our priorities for captive amphibian programs in Panama and identify priority conservation actions with a clearer understanding of the probability of success
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