42,175 research outputs found

    Charmonium properties in hot quenched lattice QCD

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    We study the properties of charmonium states at finite temperature in quenched QCD on large and fine isotropic lattices. We perform a detailed analysis of charmonium correlation and spectral functions both below and above TcT_c. Our analysis suggests that both S wave states (J/ψJ/\psi and ηc\eta_c) and P wave states (χc0\chi_{c0} and χc1\chi_{c1}) disappear already at about 1.5Tc1.5 T_c. The charm diffusion coefficient is estimated through the Kubo formula and found to be compatible with zero below TcT_c and approximately 1/πT1/\pi T at 1.5Tc≲T≲3Tc1.5 T_c\lesssim T\lesssim 3 T_c.Comment: 32 pages, 19 figures, typo corrected, discussions on isotropic vs anisotropic lattices expanded, published versio

    Heavy Quark diffusion from lattice QCD spectral functions

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    We analyze the low frequency part of charmonium spectral functions on large lattices close to the continuum limit in the temperature region 1.5≲T/Tc≲31.5\lesssim T/T_c\lesssim 3 as well as for T≃0.75TcT \simeq 0.75T_c. We present evidence for the existence of a transport peak above TcT_c and its absence below TcT_c. The heavy quark diffusion constant is then estimated using the Kubo formula. As part of the calculation we also determine the temperature dependence of the signature for the charmonium bound state in the spectral function and discuss the fate of charmonium states in the hot medium.Comment: 4 pages, Proceedings for Quark Matter 2011 Conference, May 23-28, 2011, Annecy, Franc

    Disentangling the timescales behind the non-perturbative heavy quark potential

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    The static part of the heavy quark potential has been shown to be closely related to the spectrum of the rectangular Wilson loop. In particular the lowest lying positive frequency peak encodes the late time evolution of the two-body system, characterized by a complex potential. While initial studies assumed a perfect separation of early and late time physics, where a simple Lorentian (Breit-Wigner) shape suffices to describe the spectral peak, we argue that scale decoupling in general is not complete. Thus early time, i.e. non-potential effects, significantly modify the shape of the lowest peak. We derive on general grounds an improved peak distribution that reflects this fact. Application of the improved fit to non-perturbative lattice QCD spectra now yields a potential that is compatible with a transition to a deconfined screening plasma.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Charge and spin Hall effect in graphene with magnetic impurities

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    We point out the existence of finite charge and spin Hall conductivities of graphene in the presence of a spin orbit interaction (SOI) and localized magnetic impurities. The SOI in graphene results in different transverse forces on the two spin channels yielding the spin Hall current. The magnetic scatterers act as spin-dependent barriers, and in combination with the SOI effect lead to a charge imbalance at the boundaries. As indicated here, the charge and spin Hall effects should be observable in graphene by changing the chemical potential close to the gap.Comment: 7 page

    Direct observation of particle-hole mixing in the superconducting state by angle-resolved photoemission

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    Particle-hole (p-h) mixing is a fundamental consequence of the existence of a pair condensate. We present direct experimental evidence for p-h mixing in the angle-resolved photoemission (ARPES) spectra in the superconducting state of Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta}. In addition to its pedagogical importance, this establishes unambiguously that the gap observed in ARPES is associated with superconductivity.Comment: 3 pages, revtex, 4 postscript figure

    Complex Heavy-Quark Potential at Finite Temperature from Lattice QCD

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    We calculate for the first time the complex potential between a heavy quark and antiquark at finite temperature across the deconfinement transition in lattice QCD. The real and imaginary part of the potential at each separation distance rr is obtained from the spectral function of the thermal Wilson loop. We confirm the existence of an imaginary part above the critical temperature TCT_C, which grows as a function of rr and underscores the importance of collisions with the gluonic environment for the melting of heavy quarkonia in the quark-gluon-plasma.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to be published in PR
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