1,395 research outputs found
A lattice calculation of the pion form factor with Ginsparg-Wilson-type fermions
Results for Monte Carlo calculations of the electromagnetic vector and scalar
form factors of the pion in a quenched simulation are presented. We work with
two different lattice volumes up to a spatial size of 2.4 fm at a lattice
spacing of 0.148 fm. The pion form factors in the space-like region are
determined for pion masses down to 340 MeV.Comment: REVTeX 4, 8 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables; final versio
Large pion pole in Z_{S}^{MOM}/Z_{P}^{MOM} from Wilson action data
We show that, contrarily to recent claims, data from the Wilson (unimproved)
fermionic action at three different beta values demonstrate the presence of a
large Goldstone boson contribution in the quark pseudoscalar vertex,
quantitatively close to our previous estimate based on the SW action with
c_{SW}=1.769. We show that discretisation errors on Z_{S}^{MOM}/Z_{P}^{MOM}
seem to be much smaller than the Goldstone pole contribution over a very large
range of momenta. The subtraction of this non perturbative contribution leads
to numbers close to one-loop BPT.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, laTeX, minor corrections of typos, beta
dependence made more explicit, added one table giving the contribution of the
Goldstone vs. the discretisation errors at ap=
B_K from quenched overlap QCD
We present an exploratory calculation of the standard model Delta S=2 matrix
element relevant for indirect CP violation in K -> pi pi decays. The
computation is performed with overlap fermions in the quenched approximation at
beta=6.0 on a 16^3x32 lattice. The resulting bare matrix element is
renormalized non-perturbatively. Our preliminary result is B_K^{NDR}(2
GeV)=0.61(7), where the error does not yet include an estimate of systematic
uncertainties.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, Lattice2002(matrixel). Parallel session talk by
L. Lellouch at the 20th International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory
(Lattice 2002), Boston, Massachusetts, 24-29 June 200
3-point functions from twisted mass lattice QCD at small quark masses
We show at the example of the matrix element between pion states of a
twist-2, non-singlet operator that Wilson twisted mass fermions allow to
compute this phenomenologically relevant quantitiy at small pseudo scalar
masses of O(270 MeV). In the quenched approximation, we investigate the scaling
behaviour of this observable that is derived from a 3-point function by
applying two definitions of the critical mass and find a scaling compatible
with the expected O(a^2) behaviour in both cases. A combined continuum
extrapolations allows to obtain reliable results at small pion masses, which
previously could not be explored by lattice QCD simulations.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, talk presented at Lattice 200
Power Corrections to Perturbative QCD and OPE in Gluon Green Functions
We show that QCD Green functions in Landau Gauge exhibit sizable
corrections to the expected perturbative behavior at energies as high as 10
GeV. We argue that these are due to a -condensate which does not vanish
in Landau gauge.Comment: 3 pages 1 figure lattice2001 (gaugetheories
Prey selection by an apex predator : the importance of sampling uncertainty.
The impact of predation on prey populations has long been a focus of ecologists, but a firm understanding of the factors influencing prey selection, a key predictor of that impact, remains elusive. High levels of variability observed in prey selection may reflect true differences in the ecology of different communities but might also reflect a failure to deal adequately with uncertainties in the underlying data. Indeed, our review showed that less than 10% of studies of European wolf predation accounted for sampling uncertainty. Here, we relate annual variability in wolf diet to prey availability and examine temporal patterns in prey selection; in particular, we identify how considering uncertainty alters conclusions regarding prey selection.
Over nine years, we collected 1,974 wolf scats and conducted drive censuses of ungulates in Alpe di Catenaia, Italy. We bootstrapped scat and census data within years to construct confidence intervals around estimates of prey use, availability and selection. Wolf diet was dominated by boar (61.5±3.90 [SE] % of biomass eaten) and roe deer (33.7±3.61%). Temporal patterns of prey densities revealed that the proportion of roe deer in wolf diet peaked when boar densities were low, not when roe deer densities were highest. Considering only the two dominant prey types, Manly's standardized selection index using all data across years indicated selection for boar (mean = 0.73±0.023). However, sampling error resulted in wide confidence intervals around estimates of prey selection. Thus, despite considerable variation in yearly estimates, confidence intervals for all years overlapped. Failing to consider such uncertainty could lead erroneously to the assumption of differences in prey selection among years. This study highlights the importance of considering temporal variation in relative prey availability and accounting for sampling uncertainty when interpreting the results of dietary studies
THERIA_G: a software program to numerically model prograde garnet growth
We present the software program THERIA_G, which allows for numerical simulation of garnet growth in a given volume of rock along any pressure-temperature-time (P-T-t) path. THERIA_G assumes thermodynamic equilibrium between the garnet rim and the rock matrix during growth and accounts for component fractionation associated with garnet formation as well as for intracrystalline diffusion within garnet. In addition, THERIA_G keeps track of changes in the equilibrium phase relations, which occur during garnet growth along the specified P-T-t trajectory. This is accomplished by the combination of two major modules: a Gibbs free energy minimization routine is used to calculate equilibrium phase relations including the volume and composition of successive garnet growth increments as P and T and the effective bulk rock composition change. With the second module intragranular multi-component diffusion is modelled for spherical garnet geometry. THERIA_G allows to simulate the formation of an entire garnet population, the nucleation and growth history of which is specified via the garnet crystal size frequency distribution. Garnet growth simulations with THERIA_G produce compositional profiles for the garnet porphyroblasts of each size class of a population and full information on equilibrium phase assemblages for any point along the specified P-T-t trajectory. The results of garnet growth simulation can be used to infer the P-T-t path of metamorphism from the chemical zoning of garnet porphyroblasts. With a hypothetical example of garnet growth in a pelitic rock we demonstrate that it is essential for the interpretation of the chemical zoning of garnet to account for the combined effects of the thermodynamic conditions of garnet growth, the nucleation history and intracrystalline diffusio
Gluon propagator, triple gluon vertex and the QCD coupling constant
We study the UV-scaling of the flavorless gluon propagator in the Landau
gauge in an energy window up to 9 GeV. Dominant hypercubic lattice artifacts
are eliminated. A large set of renormalization schemes is used to test
asymptotic scaling. We compare with our results obtained directly from the
triple gluon vertex. We end-up with \Lambda_{\bar{\rm{MS}}} = 318(12)(5) MeV
and 292(5)(15) MeV respectively for these two methods, compatible which each
other but significantly above the Schrodinger method estimate.Comment: 3 pages, LaTeX with two figures; presented at LATTICE9
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