264 research outputs found
Discontinuity relations for the AdS(4)/CFT(3) correspondence
We study in detail the analytic properties of the Thermodynamic Bethe Ansatz
(TBA) equations for the anomalous dimensions of composite operators in the
planar limit of the 3D N=6 superconformal Chern-Simons gauge theory and derive
functional relations for the jump discontinuities across the branch cuts in the
complex rapidity plane. These relations encode the analytic structure of the Y
functions and are extremely similar to the ones obtained for the
previously-studied AdS(5)/CFT(4) case. Together with the Y-system and more
basic analyticity conditions, they are completely equivalent to the TBA
equations. We expect these results to be useful to derive alternative nonlinear
integral equations for the AdS(4)/CFT(3) spectrum.Comment: 33 pages, 9 figure
The full Quantum Spectral Curve for
The spectrum of planar N=6 superconformal Chern-Simons theory, dual to type
IIA superstring theory on , is accessible at finite coupling
using integrability. Starting from the results of [arXiv:1403.1859], we study
in depth the basic integrability structure underlying the spectral problem, the
Quantum Spectral Curve. The new results presented in this paper open the way to
the quantitative study of the spectrum for arbitrary operators at finite
coupling. Besides, we show that the Quantum Spectral Curve is embedded into a
novel kind of Q-system, which reflects the OSp(4|6) symmetry of the theory and
leads to exact Bethe Ansatz equations. The discovery of this algebraic
structure, more intricate than the one appearing in the case,
could be a first step towards the extension of the method to .Comment: 43 + 27 pages, 7 figures. v4: text improved, more details and App D
included. This is the same as the published version JHEP09(2017)140, with
small typos corrected in App
Seasonal temperatures over Italy and their relationship with low-frequency atmospheric circulation patterns
An analysis of Italian seasonal temperatures from 1961 to 2006 was carried out, using homogenized data from 49 synoptic stations well distributed throughout Italy. The results show remarkable differences among seasons. Stationarity characterizes winter series, except for Northern Italy (where a warming trend from 1961 is identified); a positive trend over the entire period is recognized for spring series. Summer series are marked by a negative trend until 1981 and by a positive trend afterwards; finally, autumn series show a warming starting from 1970. The relationship between seasonal temperatures and four teleconnection patterns (North Atlantic Oscillation, East Atlantic Pattern, Scandinavian Pattern and Arctic Oscillation) influencing European climate was investigated through Spearman rank correlation and composites. Among the results, the strong linear correlation with the East Atlantic Pattern in all seasons but autumn is remarkable; moreover, the explained variance varies between 31.9% and 50.4% (leaving out autumn). Besides these four atmospheric patterns the role of other factors (e.g. soil moisture) is not dealt with, but their importance and the need for more investigation is pointed ou
The stuffed crocodile of "Castel Nuovo" in Naples (Italy): new insights from ancient DNA and radiocarbon
In the present study, a stuffed crocodile displayed for centuries at the "Castel Nuovo" (New Castle) in Naples was radiocarbon dated and examined using ancient DNA analysis. The specimen was classified as Crocodylus niloticus based on its large body size and the mitochondrial DNA haplotype obtained, already described for a living population in Lake Nasser (Egypt). Radiocarbon analysis indicated an age of 585 ± 40 14C year BP, which coincides with the end of the Middle Ages. These results are commented in the light of Medieval religious symbolism and ancient legends which link the crocodile to the history of Naples during the mid-fifteenth century. The data obtained seem to confirm the explanation found in an old guidebook to Naples, according to which the stuffed crocodile was offered by a soldier returning from Egypt as an ex-voto to the image of the "Madonna del Parto" in the chapel of the castle. In addition, the radiocarbon dating shows that the individual analysed could be the oldest taxidermied vertebrate in Europe
The first new species of European Ascocotyle Looss, 1899 (Digenea: Heterophyidae) described in more than half a century
Ascocotyle (Phagicola) trentinii n. sp. is described based on adults from experimentally infected ducklings (Anas platyrhynchos domesticus) fed with metacercariae from the visceral serosa of the Mediterranean banded killifish, Aphanius fasciatus (Cyprinodontiformes: Aphaniidae), from coastal lagoons in northeastern Italy (Emilia-Romagna Region). The new species is placed into the subgenus Phagicola because of the presence of a single row of circumoral spines, vitelline follicles being confined between the ventral sucker and testes, and uterine loops not reaching anterior to the ventral sucker. Ascocotyle (P.) trentinii n. sp. differs from other members of the subgenus Phagicola, as well as other species of Ascocotyle, by the number (27–33) of circumoral spines which are 13.5–17 μm long and 3.5–5 μm wide, and by the morphology of a gonotyl which is composed of about 8 large refractile pockets. The occurrence of metacercariae in A. fasciatus indicates that the life cycle of the new species is completed in brackish water lagoons. It is the fourth species of Ascocotyle described in Europe and may be endemic to the Mediterranean region because its second (fish) intermediate host is endemic to this region
Identifying the Central Symptoms of Problematic Social Networking Sites Use Through Network Analysis
Absence of anisakis nematodes in smoked farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) products on sale in European countries
The increase of global demand of aquaculture products as compensation for the lowering of fishery sustainability has shown a parallel awareness by the consumers on the importance of the safety and quality of fish products. Among these, salmon industry has reached a leading position demonstrating the negligible risk of presence of zoonotic helminths such as anisakis nematodes
in farmed salmon. Despite the massive production of data in literature on parasitological surveys carried out on fresh salmon, no data are published on processed farmed salmon such as smoked products. In 2016, 270 slices of smoked farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and 13 smoked slices from wild sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) have been analyzed by visual inspection
and UV-press method searching for the presence of anisakid nematodes. No parasites were detected in samples from farmed Atlantic salmon, while 10 out of 13 from wild salmon were positive for Anisakis simplex s.s. larvae. This first survey on the possible presence of anisakid nematodes in processed smoked salmon confirms that this risk in farmed Atlantic salmon products has to be considered negligible
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