877 research outputs found
Opportunità e percorsi di collaborazione transfrontaliera fra Italia e Svizzera: il caso della 'Regio Insubrica'
2007/2008La ricerca affronta il tema della collaborazione transfrontaliera fra Italia e Svizzera alla luce dei processi di defunzionalizzazione delle frontiere e di formazione delle cosiddette Euroregioni, in atto nel Vecchio Continente a partire dai primi anni Novanta del secolo scorso. È in questo contesto che, nel 1995, nasce la comunità di lavoro della Regio Insubrica, cui oggi aderiscono cinque province italiane - Como, Lecco, Novara, Varese e Verbano Cusio Ossola - e lo svizzero Canton Ticino.
La tesi, nella parte iniziale (capitoli 2, 3 e 4), descrive la formazione storica della regione italo-svizzera dei laghi prealpini, comunemente detta Insubria, il suo posizionamento strategico all’interno del panorama europeo e le ricadute che esso sta avendo sull’area in esame a livello di sviluppo infrastrutturale e nella prospettiva della costruzione dei grandi Corridoio intermodali paneuropei.
Il corpus centrale della ricerca (capitoli 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 e 10) è invece dedicato all’analisi socioeconomica delle aree che fanno parte della comunità di lavoro, col chiaro intento di mettere in evidenza i molti tratti che accomunano i territori aderenti alla Regio Insubrica.
Al centro dei capitoli 11 e 12 che concludono il lavoro, sono infine la storia, l’organizzazione e le iniziative messe in campo da quest’ultima dal momento della creazione sino a oggi, sul tema della collaborazione transfrontaliera e della promozione unitaria dello spazio insubrico.XXI Cicl
Digital quantum simulators in a scalable architecture of hybrid spin-photon qubits
Resolving quantum many-body problems represents one of the greatest
challenges in physics and physical chemistry, due to the prohibitively large
computational resources that would be required by using classical computers. A
solution has been foreseen by directly simulating the time evolution through
sequences of quantum gates applied to arrays of qubits, i.e. by implementing a
digital quantum simulator. Superconducting circuits and resonators are emerging
as an extremely-promising platform for quantum computation architectures, but a
digital quantum simulator proposal that is straightforwardly scalable,
universal, and realizable with state-of-the-art technology is presently
lacking. Here we propose a viable scheme to implement a universal quantum
simulator with hybrid spin-photon qubits in an array of superconducting
resonators, which is intrinsically scalable and allows for local control. As
representative examples we consider the transverse-field Ising model, a spin-1
Hamiltonian, and the two-dimensional Hubbard model; for these, we numerically
simulate the scheme by including the main sources of decoherence. In addition,
we show how to circumvent the potentially harmful effects of inhomogeneous
broadening of the spin systems
Coarse-grained collisionless dynamics with long-range interactions
We present an effective evolution equation for a coarse-grained distribution
function of a long-range-interacting system preserving the symplectic structure
of the non-collisional Boltzmann, or Vlasov, equation. We first derive a
general form of such an equation based on symmetry considerations only. Then,
we explicitly derive the equation for one-dimensional systems, finding that it
has the form predicted on general grounds. Finally, we use such an equation to
predict the dependence of the damping times on the coarse-graining scale and
numerically check it for some one-dimensional models, including the Hamiltonian
Mean Field (HMF) model, a scalar field with quartic interaction, a 1-d
self-gravitating system, and the Self-Gravitating Ring (SGR).Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Researc
Black-hole mergers in disk-like environments could explain the observed correlation
Current gravitational-wave data from stellar-mass black-hole binary mergers
suggest a correlation between the binary mass ratio and the effective spin
: more unequal-mass binaries consistently show larger and
positive values of the effective spin. Multiple generations of black-hole
mergers in dense astrophysical environments may provide a way to form
unequal-mass systems, but they cannot explain the observed correlation on their
own. We show that the symmetry of the astrophysical environment is a crucial
feature to shed light on this otherwise puzzling piece of observational
evidence. We present a toy model that reproduces, at least qualitatively, the
observed correlation. The model relies on axisymmetric, disk-like environments
where binaries participating in hierarchical mergers share a preferential
direction. Migration traps in AGN disks are a prime candidate for this setup,
hinting at the exciting possibility of constraining their occurrence with
gravitational-wave data.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Spreading of a local excitation in a Quantum Hierarchical Model
We study the dynamics of the quantum Dyson hierarchical model in its
paramagnetic phase. An initial state made by a local excitation of the
paramagnetic ground state is considered. We provide analytical predictions for
its time evolution, solving the single-particle dynamics on a hierarchical
network. A localization mechanism is found and the excitation remains close to
its initial position at arbitrary times. Furthermore, a universal scaling among
space and time is found related to the algebraic decay of the interactions as
. We compare our predictions to numerics, employing tensor
network techniques, for large magnetic fields, discussing the robustness of the
mechanism in the full many-body dynamics
Dynamical deconfinement transition driven by density of excitations
We investigate the deconfinement transition driven by excitations in
long-range spin models. At low temperatures, these models exhibit a confined
phase where domain-wall (or kinks) are localized. As temperature increases,
kinks interact and propagate, leading to a transition to a de-confined phase.
This transition is influenced by the interplay between thermal energy and
interaction effects, resulting in extended, de-confined regions. Although kinks
density is dynamically stable, non-equilibrium changes in their fluctuations
characterize the transition. Our findings provide insights into the mechanisms
of confinement and deconfinement in long-range spin models, with implications
for both condensed matter physics and lattice gauge theories. Bridging these
fields, this study sheds light on the universal aspects of confinement and
opens avenues for further exploration and experimental verification.Comment: Main Text : 6 pages, 5 figures/ Supplemental material: 5 pages, 4
figure
Work statistics, quantum signatures and enhanced work extraction in quadratic fermionic models
In quadratic fermionic models we determine a quantum correction to the work
statistics after a sudden and a time-dependent driving. Such a correction lies
in the non-commutativity of the initial quantum state and the time-dependent
Hamiltonian, and is revealed via the Kirkwood-Dirac quasiprobability (KDQ)
approach to two-times correlators. Thanks to the latter, one can assess the
onset of non-classical signatures in the KDQ distribution of work, in the form
of negative and complex values that no classical theory can reveal. By applying
these concepts on the one-dimensional transverse-field Ising model, we relate
non-classical behaviours of the KDQ statistics of work in correspondence of the
critical points of the model. Finally, we also prove the enhancement of the
extracted work in non-classical regimes where the non-commutativity takes a
role
FUS mutant human motoneurons display altered transcriptome and microRNA pathways with implications for ALS pathogenesis
The FUS gene has been linked to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). FUS is a ubiquitous RNA-binding protein, and the mechanisms leading to selective motoneuron loss downstream of ALS-linked mutations are largely unknown. We report the transcriptome analysis of human purified motoneurons, obtained from FUS wild-type or mutant isogenic induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). Gene ontology analysis of differentially expressed genes identified significant enrichment of pathways previously associated to sporadic ALS and other neurological diseases. Several microRNAs (miRNAs) were also deregulated in FUS mutant motoneurons, including miR-375, involved in motoneuron survival. We report that relevant targets of miR-375, including the neural RNA-binding protein ELAVL4 and apoptotic factors, are aberrantly increased in FUS mutant motoneurons. Characterization of transcriptome changes in the cell type primarily affected by the disease contributes to the definition of the pathogenic mechanisms of FUS-linked ALS
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