80,202 research outputs found
Finite-element quantum field theory
An alternative approach to lattice gauge theory has been under development
for the past decade. It is based on discretizing the operator Heisenberg
equations of motion in such a way as to preserve the canonical commutation
relations at each lattice site. It is now known how to formulate a non-Abelian
gauge theory within this framework. The formulation appears to be free of
fermion doubling. Since the theory is unitary, a time-development operator
(Hamiltonian) can be constructed.Comment: Talk presented at LATTICE96(theoretical developments), 3 pages,
LATEX, uses espcrc2.st
Quasi-Local Formulation of Non-Abelian Finite-Element Gauge Theory
Recently it was shown how to formulate the finite-element equations of motion
of a non-Abelian gauge theory, by gauging the free lattice difference
equations, and simultaneously determining the form of the gauge
transformations. In particular, the gauge-covariant field strength was
explicitly constructed, locally, in terms of a path ordered product of
exponentials (link operators). On the other hand, the Dirac and Yang-Mills
equations were nonlocal, involving sums over the entire prior lattice. Earlier,
Matsuyama had proposed a local Dirac equation constructed from just the
above-mentioned link operators. Here, we show how his scheme, which is closely
related to our earlier one, can be implemented for a non-Abelian gauge theory.
Although both Dirac and Yang-Mills equations are now local, the field strength
is not. The technique is illustrated with a direct calculation of the current
anomalies in two and four space-time dimensions. Unfortunately, unlike the
original finite-element proposal, this scheme is in general nonunitary.Comment: 19 pages, REVTeX, no figure
Review of 'Mather, P.M., 1999: Computer processing of remotely-sensed images. An introduction. Chichester: Wiley.'
Scarcity in IP addresses: IPv4 Address Transfer Markets and the Regional Internet Address Registries
We are running out of Internet addresses. This paper evaluates address transfer policies that Internet governance agencies are considering as a response to the depletion of the IPv4 address space. The paper focuses on proposals to allow organizations holding IPv4 addresses to sell address blocks to other organizations willing to buy them. This paper analyzes the economics of the proposed transfer policies, and conducts a systematic comparison of the policies proposed in the three main world Internet regions
The Killing floor: The First World War and the emergence of the South African beef industry 1902-24
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