15,682 research outputs found
Quenched KS light hadron mass at \beta=6.5 on a 64\times 48^3 lattice
We report our quenched staggered light hadron mass calculation at the
coupling of \beta = 6.5 on a 48^3 \times 64 lattice, based on an increased
statistics of two hundred gauge configurations. Staggered quark wall sources
with mass of m_q a = 0.01, 0.005, 0.0025 and 0.00125 are used. Flavor symmetry
is restored for pion and \rho meson. The lattice scale is estimated to be
a^{-1} = 3.7(2) GeV.Comment: 4 pages, espcrc2.sty, epsf.sty, Poster presented at LATTICE96(poster
Towards the continuum limit with quenched staggered quarks
We extend previous work on finite-size effects with dynamical staggered
quarks to the quenched approximation. We again emphasize the large volume limit
that is of interest for spectrum calculations which may hope to approach the
experimental values. Relying on new calculations at and recent work
with weaker couplings, we extrapolate to the continuum limit and find a nucleon
to rho mass ratio in close agreement with the experimental value and the value
obtained by extrapolations from calculations with Wilson quarks. Additional
calculations that should be done to improve the reliability of the
extrapolation are discussed.Comment: 3 pages, PostScript, Contribution to Lattice '9
Chiral limit of light hadron mass in quenched staggered QCD
We discuss chiral limit of light hadron mass from our quenched staggered
calculations with a high lattice cutoff of (a^{-1})(\sim)3.7 GeV at (\beta)=6.5
and a large lattice volume of (48^3\times 64). We added six heavier quark mass
values of (m_qa)=0.0075, 0.015, 0.02, 0.03, 0.04 and 0.05 to the previously
existing 0.01, 0.005, 0.0025, and 0.00125. An interesting curvature is observed
in the (m_\pi^2/m_q) to (m_q) plot near (m_qa)=0.01.Comment: LATTICE98(spectrum),3 pages and 4 figure
Notes on complexity of packing coloring
A packing -coloring for some integer of a graph is a mapping
such that any two vertices of color
are in distance at least . This concept
is motivated by frequency assignment problems. The \emph{packing chromatic
number} of is the smallest such that there exists a packing
-coloring of .
Fiala and Golovach showed that determining the packing chromatic number for
chordal graphs is \NP-complete for diameter exactly 5. While the problem is
easy to solve for diameter 2, we show \NP-completeness for any diameter at
least 3. Our reduction also shows that the packing chromatic number is hard to
approximate within for any .
In addition, we design an \FPT algorithm for interval graphs of bounded
diameter. This leads us to exploring the problem of finding a partial coloring
that maximizes the number of colored vertices.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
QCD Spectrum --- 1996
Progress on the calculation of the spectrum from lattice calculations is
reviewed. Particular emphasis is placed on discussing our ability to control
possible systematic errors coming from finite volume, and extrapolations in
quark mass and lattice spacing. Recent approaches based on improved actions are
compared.Comment: Plenary talk presented at LATTICE96(spectrum), 13 pages, LaTeX, 17
eps figures. Uses espcrc2, epsf. Additional figures may be found at:
http://physics.indiana.edu/~sg/lat96_spectrum.htm
Fracture simulation for zirconia toughened alumina microstructure
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to describe finite element modelling
for fracture and fatigue behaviour of zirconia toughened alumina
microstructures. Design/methodology/approach - A two-dimensional finite element
model is developed with an actual - 10 vol%
microstructure. A bilinear, time-independent cohesive zone law is implemented
for describing fracture behaviour of grain boundaries. Simulation conditions
are similar to those found at contact between a head and a cup of hip
prosthesis. Residual stresses arisen from the mismatch of thermal coefficient
between grains are determined. Then, effects of a micro-void and contact stress
magnitude are investigated with models containing residual stresses. For the
purpose of simulating fatigue behaviour, cyclic loadings are applied to the
models. Findings - Results show that crack density is gradually increased with
increasing magnitude of contact stress or number of fatigue cycles. It is also
identified that a micro-void brings about the increase of crack density rate.
Social implications - This paper is the first step for predicting the lifetime
of ceramic implants. The social implications would appear in the next few years
about health issues. Originality/value - This proposed finite element method
allows describing fracture and fatigue behaviours of alumina-zirconia
microstructures for hip prosthesis, provided that a microstructure image is
available
Quenched staggered light hadron spectroscopy from at
We report our light hadron mass calculation based on an increased statistics
of 250 quenched gauge configurations on a (48^3 \times 64) lattice at (\beta =
6.5). Quark propagators are calculated for each of these configurations with
staggered wall source and point sink at quark mass values of (m_q = 0.01,
0.005, 0.0025) and (0.00125). We also did additional calculations to improve
our understanding of systematic biases arising from autocorrelation, source
size, and propagator calculations. Our earlier conclusions that the flavor
symmetry breaking is reduced and the ratio (m_N/m_\rho (\sim 1.25(4))) is small
remains robust.Comment: 3 pages and 4 figures, poster presented at the lattice 97 conferenc
Edge states for topological insulators in two dimensions and their Luttinger-like liquids
Topological insulators in three spatial dimensions are known to possess a
precise bulk/boundary correspondence, in that there is a one-to-one
correspondence between the 5 classes characterized by bulk topological
invariants and Dirac hamiltonians on the boundary with symmetry protected zero
modes. This holographic characterization of topological insulators is studied
in two dimensions. Dirac hamiltonians on the one dimensional edge are
classified according to the discrete symmetries of time-reversal,
particle-hole, and chirality, extending a previous classification in two
dimensions. We find 17 inequivalent classes, of which 11 have protected zero
modes. Although bulk topological invariants are thus far known for only 5 of
these classes, we conjecture that the additional 6 describe edge states of new
classes of topological insulators. The effects of interactions in two
dimensions are also studied. We show that all interactions that preserve the
symmetries are exactly marginal, i.e. preserve the gaplessness. This leads to a
description of the distinct variations of Luttinger liquids that can be
realized on the edge.Comment: 13 pages with 4 Tables. Version 2: published version. Some clarifying
discussions has been added; main results are unchange
Holographic classification of Topological Insulators and its 8-fold periodicity
Using generic properties of Clifford algebras in any spatial dimension, we
explicitly classify Dirac hamiltonians with zero modes protected by the
discrete symmetries of time-reversal, particle-hole symmetry, and chirality.
Assuming the boundary states of topological insulators are Dirac fermions, we
thereby holographically reproduce the Periodic Table of topological insulators
found by Kitaev and Ryu. et. al, without using topological invariants nor
K-theory. In addition we find candidate Z_2 topological insulators in classes
AI, AII in dimensions 0,4 mod 8 and in classes C, D in dimensions 2,6 mod 8.Comment: 19 pages, 4 Table
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