Institution
International School for Advanced Studies
Education•Trieste, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy•
About: International School for Advanced Studies is a education organization based out in Trieste, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Galaxy & Dark matter. The organization has 3751 authors who have published 13433 publications receiving 588454 citations. The organization is also known as: SISSA & Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati.
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the breaking of ergodicity measured in terms of return probability in the evolution of a quantum state of a spin chain and proposed a criterion for the identification of the many-body localization transition based on the distribution of the wave function coefficients, a standard observable in modern studies of Anderson localization.
Abstract: We study the breaking of ergodicity measured in terms of return probability in the evolution of a quantum state of a spin chain. In the non-ergodic phase a quantum state evolves in a much smaller fraction of the Hilbert space than would be allowed by the conservation of extensive observables. By the anomalous scaling of the participation ratios with system size we are led to consider the distribution of the wave function coefficients, a standard observable in modern studies of Anderson localization. We finally present a criterion for the identification of the ergodicity-breaking (many-body localization) transition based on these distributions which is quite robust and well suited for numerical investigations of a broad class of problems.
195 citations
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TL;DR: Bilingual children showed an advantage on the two ToM tasks but not on the control task, and if bilinguals have an advantage due to better executive inhibitory abilities involved in toM tasks, they should outperform monolinguals on both ToM task, inhibitory demands being similar.
Abstract: In their first years, children's understanding of mental states seems to improve dramatically, but the mechanisms underlying these changes are still unclear. Such 'theory of mind' (ToM) abilities may arise during development, or have an innate basis, developmental changes reflecting limitations of other abilities involved in ToM tasks (e.g. inhibition). Special circumstances such as early bilingualism may enhance ToM development or other capacities required by ToM tasks. Here we compare 3-year-old bilinguals and monolinguals on a standard ToM task, a modified ToM task and a control task involving physical reasoning. The modified ToM task mimicked a language-switch situation that bilinguals often encounter and that could influence their ToM abilities. If such experience contributes to an early consolidation of ToM in bilinguals, they should be selectively enhanced in the modified task. In contrast, if bilinguals have an advantage due to better executive inhibitory abilities involved in ToM tasks, they should outperform monolinguals on both ToM tasks, inhibitory demands being similar. Bilingual children showed an advantage on the two ToM tasks but not on the control task. The precocious success of bilinguals may be associated with their well-developed control functions formed during monitoring and selecting languages.
194 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a series of ground-based tests were conducted with the HFI focal plane in a cryogenic environment prior to launch to measure the relative spectral response of all HFI detectors to a known source of electromagnetic radiation individually.
Abstract: The Planck High Frequency Instrument (HFI) spectral response was determined through a series of ground based tests conducted with the HFI focal plane in a cryogenic environment prior to launch. The main goal of the spectral transmission tests was to measure the relative spectral response (includingthe level of out-of-band signal rejection) of all HFI detectors to a known source of electromagnetic radiation individually. This was determined by measuring the interferometric output of a continuously scanned Fourier transform spectrometer with all HFI detectors. As there is no on-board spectrometer within HFI, the ground-based spectral response experiments provide the definitive data set for the relative spectral calibration of the HFI. Knowledge of the relative variations in the spectral response between HFI detectors allows for a more thorough analysis of the HFI data. The spectral response of the HFI is used in Planck data analysis and component separation, this includes extraction of CO emission observed within Planck bands, dust emission, Sunyaev-Zeldovich sources, and intensity to polarization leakage. The HFI spectral response data have also been used to provide unit conversion and colour correction analysis tools. While previous papers describe the pre-flight experiments conducted on the Planck HFI, this paper focusses on the analysis of the pre-flight spectral response measurements and the derivation of data products, e.g. band-average spectra, unit conversion coefficients, and colour correction coefficients, all with related uncertainties. Verifications of the HFI spectral response data are provided through comparisons with photometric HFI flight data. This validation includes use of HFI zodiacal emission observations to demonstrate out-of-band spectral signal rejection better than 108. The accuracy of the HFI relative spectral response data is verified through comparison with complementary flight-data based unit conversion coefficients and colour correction coefficients. These coefficients include those based upon HFI observations of CO, dust, and Sunyaev-Zeldovich emission. General agreement is observed between the ground-based spectral characterization of HFI and corresponding in-flight observations, within the quoted uncertainty of each; explanations are provided for any discrepancies.
194 citations
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TL;DR: Theseus as mentioned in this paper is a space mission concept aimed at exploiting Gamma-Ray Bursts for investigating the early Universe and at providing a substantial advancement of multi-messenger and time-domain astrophysics.
194 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a systematic approach for the calculation of the negativity in the ground state of a one-dimensional quantum field theory is presented, where the partial transpose of the reduced density matrix of a subsystem A = A1∪A2 is explicitly constructed as an imaginary-time path integral and from this the replicated traces are obtained.
Abstract: We report on a systematic approach for the calculation of the negativity in the ground state of a one-dimensional quantum field theory. The partial transpose of the reduced density matrix of a subsystem A = A1∪A2 is explicitly constructed as an imaginary-time path integral and from this the replicated traces are obtained. The logarithmic negativity is then the continuation to n → 1 of the traces of the even powers. For pure states, this procedure reproduces the known results. We then apply this method to conformally invariant field theories (CFTs) in several different physical situations for infinite and finite systems and without or with boundaries. In particular, in the case of two adjacent intervals of lengths l1,l2 in an infinite system, we derive the result ℰ ∼ (c/4)ln(l1l2/(l1 + l2)), where c is the central charge. For the more complicated case of two disjoint intervals, we show that the negativity depends only on the harmonic ratio of the four end points and so is manifestly scale invariant. We explicitly calculate the scale invariant functions for the replicated traces in the case of the CFT for the free compactified boson, but we have not so far been able to obtain the n → 1 continuation for the negativity even in the limit of large compactification radius. We have checked all our findings against exact numerical results for the harmonic chain which is described by a non-compactified free boson.
194 citations
Authors
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Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Sabino Matarrese | 155 | 775 | 123278 |
G. de Zotti | 154 | 718 | 121249 |
J. González-Nuevo | 144 | 500 | 108318 |
Matt J. Jarvis | 144 | 1064 | 85559 |
Carlo Baccigalupi | 137 | 518 | 104722 |
L. Toffolatti | 136 | 376 | 95529 |
Michele Parrinello | 133 | 637 | 94674 |
Marzio Nessi | 129 | 1046 | 78641 |
Luigi Danese | 128 | 394 | 92073 |
Lidia Smirnova | 127 | 944 | 75865 |
Michele Pinamonti | 126 | 846 | 69328 |
David M. Alexander | 125 | 652 | 60686 |
Davide Maino | 124 | 410 | 88117 |
Dipak Munshi | 124 | 365 | 84322 |
Peter Onyisi | 114 | 694 | 60392 |