17,689 research outputs found
Scalar meson in dynamical and partially quenched two-flavor QCD: lattice results and chiral loops
This is an exploratory study of the lightest non-singlet scalar
state on the lattice with two dynamical quarks. Domain Wall fermions are used
for both sea and valence quarks on a 16^3*32 lattice with an inverse lattice
spacing of 1.7 GeV. We extract the scalar meson mass 1.58(34) GeV from the
exponential time-dependence of the dynamical correlators with
and N_f=2. Since this statistical error-bar from dynamical correlators is
rather large, we analyze also the partially quenched lattice correlators with
not equal . They are positive for and
negative for . In order to understand this striking effect of
partial quenching, we derive the scalar correlator within the Partially
Quenched ChPT and find it describes lattice correlators well. The leading
unphysical contribution in Partially Quenched ChPT comes from the exchange of
the two pseudoscalar fields and is also positive for and
negative for at large t. After the subtraction of this
unphysical contribution from the partially quenched lattice correlators, the
correlators are positive and exponentially falling. The resulting scalar meson
mass 1.51(19) GeV from the partially quenched correlators is consistent with
the dynamical result and has appreciably smaller error-bar.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure
Resummation Effects in Vector-Boson and Higgs Associated Production
Fixed-order QCD radiative corrections to the vector-boson and Higgs
associated production channels, pp -> VH (V=W, Z), at hadron colliders are well
understood. We combine higher order perturbative QCD calculations with
soft-gluon resummation of both threshold logarithms and logarithms which are
important at low transverse momentum of the VH pair. We study the effects of
both types of logarithms on the scale dependence of the total cross section and
on various kinematic distributions. The next-to-next-to-next-to-leading
logarithmic (NNNLL) resummed total cross sections at the LHC are almost
identical to the fixed-order perturbative next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO)
rates, indicating the excellent convergence of the perturbative QCD series.
Resummation of the VH transverse momentum (p_T) spectrum provides reliable
results for small values of p_T and suggests that implementing a jet-veto will
significantly decrease the cross sections.Comment: 25 pages, references update
The SONYC survey: Towards a complete census of brown dwarfs in star forming regions
SONYC, short for "Substellar Objects in Nearby Young Clusters", is a survey
program to provide a census of the substellar population in nearby star forming
regions. We have conducted deep optical and near-infrared photometry in five
young regions (NGC1333, rho Ophiuchi, Chamaeleon-I, Upper Sco, and Lupus-3),
combined with proper motions, and followed by extensive spectroscopic campaigns
with Subaru and VLT, in which we have obtained more than 700 spectra of
candidate low-mass objects. We have identified and characterized more than 60
new substellar objects, among them a handful of objects with masses close to,
or below the Deuterium burning limit. Through SONYC and surveys by other
groups, the substellar IMF is now well characterized down to ~ 5 - 10 MJup, and
we find that the ratio of the number of stars with respect to brown dwarfs lies
between 2 and 6. A comprehensive survey of NGC 1333 reveals that, down to
~5MJup, free-floating objects with planetary masses are 20-50 times less
numerous than stars, i.e. their total contribution to the mass budget of the
clusters can be neglected.Comment: to appear in the proceedings of the conference 'Brown dwarfs come of
age', May 20-24 2013, Memorie della Societa Astronomica Italian
Multi-qubit compensation sequences
The Hamiltonian control of n qubits requires precision control of both the
strength and timing of interactions. Compensation pulses relax the precision
requirements by reducing unknown but systematic errors. Using composite pulse
techniques designed for single qubits, we show that systematic errors for n
qubit systems can be corrected to arbitrary accuracy given either two
non-commuting control Hamiltonians with identical systematic errors or one
error-free control Hamiltonian. We also examine composite pulses in the context
of quantum computers controlled by two-qubit interactions. For quantum
computers based on the XY interaction, single-qubit composite pulse sequences
naturally correct systematic errors. For quantum computers based on the
Heisenberg or exchange interaction, the composite pulse sequences reduce the
logical single-qubit gate errors but increase the errors for logical two-qubit
gates.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures; corrected reference formattin
The Kaon B-parameter from Quenched Domain-Wall QCD
We present numerical results for the kaon B-parameter, B_K, determined in the
quenched approximation of lattice QCD. Our simulations are performed using
domain-wall fermions and the renormalization group improved, DBW2 gauge action
which combine to give quarks with good chiral symmetry at finite lattice
spacing. Operators are renormalized non-perturbatively using the RI/MOM scheme.
We study scaling by performing the simulation on two different lattices with
a^{-1} = 1.982(30) and 2.914(54) GeV. We combine this quenched scaling study
with an earlier calculation of B_K using two flavors of dynamical, domain-wall
quarks at a single lattice spacing to obtain
B_K(MS,NDR,mu=2GeV)=0.563(21)(39)(30), were the first error is statistical, the
second systematic (without quenching errors) and the third estimates the error
due to quenching.Comment: 77 pages, 44 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Towards the implementation of an ion-exchange system for recovery of fluoride commodity chemicals. Kinetic and dynamic studies
Spent potlining (SPL), a hazardous waste product from primary aluminium production, presents an important opportunity to recycle fluoride and conserve global fluorspar reserves. A novel strategy for treatment of the waste requires a selective fluoride-removal step from aqueous leachate. This has been demonstrated, using a Lanthanum-loaded chelating resin, in a series of kinetic and dynamic studies, with a view to industrial implementation. Kinetics could be described by the pseudo second-order model and uptake from SPL leachate was considerably higher than from equivalent NaF solutions, although observed rate constants were an order of magnitude less. Uptake of coexisting species and activation energy calculations indicated that a novel complexation interaction between La centres and aqueous aluminium hydroxyfluorides dominated the uptake process. The resin operated efficiently in column studies, with a dynamic fluoride uptake capacity of 66.7 mg g-1, calculated by the Dose-Response model, which produced the best fit to the data. The attained elution profile suggested that fluoride recovery by cryolite precipitation would be feasible, which could be recycled back into primary aluminium production or exploited as a commodity. The resin was found to have high durability in performance studies over repeated batch treatments
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