23,689 research outputs found
Vector Meson Dominance and at Finite Temperature from QCD Sum Rules
A Finite Energy QCD sum rule at non-zero temperature is used to determine the
- and the T-dependence of the vertex function in the
space-like region. A comparison with an independent QCD determination of the
electromagnetic pion form factor at indicates that Vector
Meson Dominance holds to a very good approximation at finite temperature. At
the same time, analytical evidence for deconfinement is obtained from the
result that vanishes at the critical temperature
, independently of . Also, by extrapolating the form
factor to , it is found that the pion radius increases with increasing
, and it diverges at .Comment: 7 pages, Latex, 3 figures to be delivered from the authors by
request, to appear in Phys. Lett.
QCD determination of the axial-vector coupling of the nucleon at finite temperature
A thermal QCD Finite Energy Sum Rule (FESR) is used to obtain the temperature
dependence of the axial-vector coupling of the nucleon, . We find
that is essentially independent of , in the very wide range , where is the critical temperature. While
at T=0 is -independent, it develops a dependence at
finite temperature. We then obtain the mean square radius associated with
and find that it diverges at , thus signalling quark
deconfinement. As a byproduct, we study the temperature dependence of the
Goldberger-Treiman relation.Comment: 8 pages and 3 figure
QCD sum rules and thermal properties of Charmonium in the vector channel
The thermal evolution of the hadronic parameters of charmonium in the vector
channel, i.e. the J/psi resonance mass, coupling (leptonic decay constant),
total width, and continuum threshold is analyzed in the framework of thermal
Hilbert moment QCD sum rules. The continuum threshold , as in other
hadronic channels, decreases with increasing temperature until the PQCD
threshold s_0 = 4, m_Q^2 is reached at T \simeq 1.22T_c (m_Q is the charm quark
mass) and the J/psi mass is essentially constant in a wide range of
temperatures. The other hadronic parameters behave in a very different way from
those of light-light and heavy-light quark systems. The total width grows with
temperature up to T \simeq 1.04T_c beyond which it decreases sharply with
increasing T. The resonance coupling is also initially constant beginning to
increase monotonically around T \simeq T_c. This behavior strongly suggests
that the J/psi resonance might survive beyond the critical temperature for
deconfinement, in agreement with lattice QCD results.Comment: 4 pages, two figures, contribution to QCD 10, Montpellier 28th
June-2nd July 201
Electromagnetic pion form factor at finite temperature
The electromagnetic form factor of the pion in the space-like region, and at
finite temperature, , is obtained from a QCD Finite Energy
Sum Rule. The form factor decreases with increasing T, and vanishes at some
critical temperature, where the pion radius diverges. This divergence may be
interpreted as a signal for quark deconfinement.Comment: LATEX File. UCT-TP-215/94. One figure available on request. To be
published in Phys. Lett.
Corrections to the Gell-Mann-Oakes-Renner relation and chiral couplings and
Next to leading order corrections to the
Gell-Mann-Oakes-Renner relation (GMOR) are obtained using weighted QCD Finite
Energy Sum Rules (FESR) involving the pseudoscalar current correlator. Two
types of integration kernels in the FESR are used to suppress the contribution
of the kaon radial excitations to the hadronic spectral function, one with
local and the other with global constraints. The result for the pseudoscalar
current correlator at zero momentum is , leading to the chiral corrections to GMOR: . The resulting uncertainties are mostly due to variations in the upper
limit of integration in the FESR, within the stability regions, and to a much
lesser extent due to the uncertainties in the strong coupling and the strange
quark mass. Higher order quark mass corrections, vacuum condensates, and the
hadronic resonance sector play a negligible role in this determination. These
results confirm an independent determination from chiral perturbation theory
giving also very large corrections, i.e. roughly an order of magnitude larger
than the corresponding corrections in chiral . Combining
these results with our previous determination of the corrections to GMOR in
chiral , , we are able to determine two low
energy constants of chiral perturbation theory, i.e. , and , both at the
scale of the -meson mass.Comment: Revised version with minor correction
Does Central Bank Intervention Increase the Volatility of Foreign Exchange Rates?
Since the abandonment of the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates in the early 1970s, exchange rates have displayed a surprisingly high degree of time-conditional volatility. This volatility can be explained statistically using autoregressive conditional heteroscedasticity models, but there remains the question of the economic source of this volatility. Central bank intervention policy may provide part of the explanation. Previous work has shown that central banks have relied heavily on intervention policy to influence the level of exchange rates, and that these operations have, at times, been effective. This paper investigates whether central bank interventions have also influenced the variance of exchange rates. The results from daily and weekly GARCH models of the /Yen rates over the period 1985 to 1991 indicate that publicly known Fed intervention generally decreased volatility over the full period. Further, results indicate that intervention need not be publicly known for it to influence the conditional variance of exchange rate changes. Secret intervention operations by both the Fed and the Bundesbank generally increased exchange rates volatility over the period.
The Market Microstructure of Central Bank Intervention
One of the great unknowns in international finance is the process by which new information influences exchange rate behavior. This paper focuses on one important source of information to the foreign exchange markets, the intervention operations of the G-3 central banks. Previous studies using daily and weekly foreign exchange rate data suggest that central bank intervention operations can influence both the level and variance of exchange rates, but little is known about how exactly traders learn of these operations and whether intra-daily market conditions influence the effectiveness of central bank interventions. This paper uses high-frequency data to examine the relationship between the efficacy of intervention operations and the 'state of the market' at the moment that the operation is made public to traders. The results indicate that some traders know that a central bank is intervening at least one hour prior to the public release of the information in newswire reports. Also, the evidence suggests that the timing of intervention operations matter interventions that occur during heavy trading volume and that are closely timed to scheduled macro announcements are the most likely to have large effects. Finally, post-intervention mean reversion in both exchange rate returns and volatility indicate that dealer inventories are affected by market reactions to intervention news.
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