804 research outputs found

    SCRI Results With the Tadpole-Improved Clover Action

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    We compare light hadron spectroscopy using the Wilson and Clover fermionic actions. We show that a Clover coefficient chosen using tadpole-improved tree-level perturbation theory effectively eliminates the O(a) discretization errors present in the Wilson action. We find that discretization errors in light spectroscopy for both the Wilson and Clover actions are characterized by an energy scale mu of about 200-300 MeV, indicating that these errors can be reduced to the 5% level by using the Clover action at an inverse lattice spacing of about 1.3 GeV.Comment: Talk presented at the International Workshop on Lattice QCD On Parallel Computers, University of Tsukuba, March 10-15 1997. 9 LaTex pages plus 6 postscript figures, uses espcrc2.st

    Spectral flow, condensate and topology in lattice QCD

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    We study the spectral flow of the Wilson-Dirac operator H(m) with and without an additional Sheikholeslami-Wohlert (SW) term on a variety of SU(3) lattice gauge field ensembles in the range 0m20\le m \le 2. We have used ensembles generated from the Wilson gauge action, an improved gauge action, and several two-flavor dynamical quark ensembles. Two regions in mm provide a generic characterization of the spectrum. In region I defined by mm1m\le m_1, the spectrum has a gap. In region II defined by m1m2m_1\le m \le 2, the gap is closed. The level crossings in H(m) that occur in region II correspond to localized eigenmodes and the localization size decreases monotonically with the crossing point down to a size of about one lattice spacing. These small modes are unphysical, and we find the topological susceptibility is relatively stable in the part of region II where the small modes cross. We argue that the lack of a gap in region II is expected to persist in the infinite volume limit at any gauge coupling. The presence of a gap is important for the implementation of domain wall fermions.Comment: 30 pages latex with 13 postscript figures included by epsf. Expanded discussion on domain wall fermions. Two figures have been bitmapped to reduce size. Originals are in http://www.scri.fsu.edu/~edwards/su3_to

    Evidence for hard chiral logarithms in quenched lattice QCD

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    We present the first direct evidence that quenched QCD differs from full QCD in the chiral (mq0m_q \rightarrow 0) limit, as predicted by chiral perturbation theory, from our quenched lattice QCD simulations at β=6/g2=6.0\beta = 6/g^2 = 6.0. We measured the spectrum of light hadrons on 163×6416^3 \times 64, 243×6424^3 \times 64 and 323×6432^3 \times 64, using staggered quarks of masses mq=0.01m_q=0.01, mq=0.005m_q=0.005 and mq=0.0025m_q=0.0025. The pion masses showed clear evidence for logarithmic violations of the PCAC relation mπ2mqm_{\pi}^2 \propto m_q, as predicted by quenched chiral perturbation theory. The dependence on spatial lattice volume precludes this being a finite size effect. No evidence was seen for such chiral logarithms in the behaviour of the chiral condensate ψˉψ\langle\bar{\psi}\psi\rangle.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, uuencoded compressed postscript fil

    Towards the glueball spectrum of full QCD

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    We present first results on masses of the scalar and tensor glueballs as well as of the torelon from simulations of QCD with two light flavours of Wilson fermions. The gauge configurations of extent 16^3*32 at beta = 5.6 and kappa = 0.156, 0.157 and 0.1575 have been generated as part of the SESAM collaboration programme. The present lattice resolutions correspond to 1/a = 2.0-2.3 GeV and ratios m(pi)/m(rho) = 0.83, 0.76 and 0.71, respectively. Studies on larger lattice volumes and closer to the chiral limit are in progress.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX, espcrc2 and epsf styles required, 4 epsf figures, poster presented by G. Bali at Lattice '9

    Thermodynamics with Dynamical Clover Fermions

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    We investigate the finite temperature behavior of nonperturbatively improved clover fermions on lattices with temporal extent N_t=4 and 6. Unfortunately in the gauge coupling range, where the clover coefficient has been determined nonperturbatively, the finite temperature crossover/transition occurs at heavy pseudoscalar masses and large pseudoscalar to vector meson mass ratios. However, on an N_t=6 lattice the thermal crossover for the improved fermions is much smoother than for unimproved Wilson fermions and no strange metastable behavior is observed.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX, 5 postscript figure

    Tempered Fermions in the Hybrid Monte Carlo Algorithm

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    Parallel tempering simulates at many quark masses simultaneously, by changing the mass during the simulation while remaining in equilibrium. The algorithm is faster than pure HMC if more than one mass is needed, and works better the smaller the smallest mass is.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Combined proceedings for Lattice 97, Edinburgh and the International Workshop 'Lattice QCD on Parallel Computers', University of Tsukuba, Japa

    Critical Dynamics of the Hybrid Monte Carlo Algorithm

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    We investigate the critical dynamics of the Hybrid Monte Carlo algorithm approaching the chiral limit of standard Wilson fermions. Our observations are based on time series of lengths O(5000) for a variety of observables. The lattice sizes are 16^3 x 32 and 24^3 x 40. We work at beta=5.6, and kappa=0.156, 0.157, 0.1575, 0.158, with 0.83 > m_pi/m_rho > 0.55. We find surprisingly small integrated autocorrelation times for local and extended observables. The dynamical critical exponent zz of the exponential autocorrelation time is compatible with 2. We estimate the total computational effort to scale between V^2 and V^2.25 towards the chiral limit.Comment: 3 pages, Latex with espcrc2.sty and postscript figures, Talk given at Lattice 9

    A Study of the Nambu--Jona-Lasinio Model on the Lattice

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    We present our full analysis of the two flavor Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model with SU(2)×SU(2)SU(2) \times SU(2) chiral symmetry on the four--dimensional hypercubic lattice with naive and Wilson fermions. We find that this model is an excellent toy field theory to investigate issues related to lattice QCD. We use the large NN approximation to leading order in 1/N1/N to obtain non perturbative analytical results over almost the whole parameter range. By using numerical simulations we estimate that the size of the 1/N1/N corrections for most of the quantities we consider are small and in this way we strengthen the validity of the leading order large NN calculations. We obtain results regarding the approach to the continuum chiral limit, the effects of the zero momentum fermionic modes on finite lattices and the scalar and pseudoscalar spectrum. Note: The full ps file of this preprint is also available via anonymous ftp to ftp.scri.fsu.edu. To get the ps file, ftp to this address and use for username "anonymous" and for password your complete E-mail address. The file is in the directory pub/vranas (to go to that directory type: cd pub/vranas) and is called NJL_long.ps (to get it type: get NJL_long.ps)Comment: 35 pages, LaTex file. (Added section with title: "The zero pion mass line on a finite lattice at large NN".

    Increase in knowledge of the marine gastropod fauna of Lebanon since the 19th century

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    We hereby review and update the current state of knowledge on the Lebanese gastropod biota based on published literature and the study of new samples. Review of 1543 published records yielded 237 gastropod taxa. New samples from the Lebanese coast yielded 2414 living specimens and 4003 empty shells, belonging to 188 taxa. Forty-six of the taxa are new records for the Lebanese fauna, bringing the gastropods known from Lebanon to 283 species. Literature records also included 71 nominal gastropod taxa based on type material from Lebanon, including 3 genera, 8 species, and 60 subspecific units. Of these, only 13 are retained as available. Of the 283 gastropod taxa known from Lebanon, 41 are aliens and 7 are cryptogenic. The majority of nonnative taxa were recorded only during the last decades, particularly from 1980 to 2019. Results from the present study question the common assumption that this region has extremely low native diversity. The flora and fauna of the Lebanese coast remain relatively unexplored and our data support the perception that several formerly abundant species have recently collapsed. Despite these advances, the lack of scientific data on biodiversity and community structure of Lebanese habitats and geographic zones is likely to hamper conservation actions and legal protection of critical species. We therefore recommend additional field and laboratory research to increase knowledge of both taxonomic composition and species’ distributions in Lebanon and elsewhere in the easternmost Mediterranean Sea
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