4,785 research outputs found

    Decuplet Baryon Structure from Lattice QCD

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    The electromagnetic properties of the SU(3)-flavor baryon decuplet are examined within a lattice simulation of quenched QCD. Electric charge radii, magnetic moments, and magnetic radii are extracted from the E0 and M1 form factors. Preliminary results for the E2 and M3 moments are presented giving the first model independent insight to the shape of the quark distribution in the baryon ground state. As in our octet baryon analysis, the lattice results give evidence of spin-dependent forces and mass effects in the electromagnetic properties. The quark charge distribution radii indicate these effects act in opposing directions. Some baryon dependence of the effective quark magnetic moments is seen. However, this dependence in decuplet baryons is more subtle than that for octet baryons. Of particular interest are the lattice predictions for the magnetic moments of Ω\Omega^- and Δ++\Delta^{++} for which new recent experimental measurements are available. The lattice prediction of the Δ++/p\Delta^{++}/p ratio appears larger than the experimental ratio, while the lattice prediction for the Ω/p\Omega^-/p magnetic moment ratio is in good agreement with the experimental ratio.Comment: RevTeX manuscript, 34 pages plus 21 figures (available upon request

    Glueball matrix elements on anisotropic lattices

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    We describe a lattice calculation of the matrix elements relevant for glueball production in J/ψJ / \psi radiative decays. The techniques for such a calculation on anisotropic lattices with an improved action are outlined. We present preliminary results showing the efficacy of the computational method.Comment: 3 pages (LaTeX), 3 figures (PostScript), Presented at Lattice '9

    Baryon Octet to Decuplet Electromagnetic Transitions

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    The electromagnetic transition moments of the SU(3)SU(3)-flavor baryon octet to decuplet are examined within a lattice simulation of quenched QCD. The magnetic transition moment for the N  γΔN \; \gamma \to \Delta channel is found to be in agreement with recent experimental analyses. The lattice results indicate μpΔ/μp=0.88(15)\mu_{p \Delta} / \mu_p = 0.88(15). In terms of the Particle Data Group convention, fM1=0.231(41)f_{M1} = 0.231(41) GeV1/2{}^{-1/2} for p  γΔ+p \; \gamma \to \Delta^+ transitions. Lattice predictions for the hyperon M1M1 transition moments agree with those of a simple quark model. However the manner in which the quarks contribute to the transition moments in the lattice simulation is different from that anticipated by quark model calculations. The scalar quadrupole form factor exhibits a behavior consistent with previous multipole analyses. The E2/M1E2/M1 multipole transition moment ratios are also determined. The lattice results suggest REMGE2/GM1=+3±8R_{EM} \equiv -{\cal G}_{E2}/{\cal G}_{M1} = +3\pm 8 \% for p  γΔ+p \; \gamma \to \Delta^+ transitions. Of particular interest are significant nonvanishing signals for the E2/M1E2/M1 ratio in Ξ\Xi^- and Σ\Sigma^- electromagnetic transitions.Comment: PostScript file, 37 pages including figures. U. MD PP #93-085, U. KY PP #UK/92-09, TRIUMF PP #TRI-PP-92-12

    L1551NE - Discovery of a Binary Companion

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    L1551NE is a very young (class 0 or I) low-mass protostar located close to the well-studied L1551 IRS5. We present here evidence, from 1.3mm continuum interferometric observations at ~1'' resolution, for a binary companion to L1551NE. The companion, whose 1.3mm flux density is ~1/3 that of the primary component, is located 1.43'' (~230 A.U. at 160pc) to the southeast. The millimeterwave emission from the primary component may have been just barely resolved, with deconvolved size ~0.82"x0.70" (~131x112 A.U.). The companion emission was unresolved (<100 A.U.). The pair is embedded within a flattened circum-binary envelope of size ~5.4'' x 2.3'' (~860 x 370 A.U.). The masses of the three components (i.e. from the cicumstellar material of the primary star and its companion, and the envelope) are approximately 0.044, 0.014 and 0.023 Mo respectively.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur

    Effects of imperfections for Shor's factorization algorithm

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    We study effects of imperfections induced by residual couplings between qubits on the accuracy of Shor's algorithm using numerical simulations of realistic quantum computations with up to 30 qubits. The factoring of numbers up to N=943 show that the width of peaks, which frequencies allow to determine the factors, grow exponentially with the number of qubits. However, the algorithm remains operational up to a critical coupling strength ϵc\epsilon_c which drops only polynomially with log2N\log_2 N. The numerical dependence of ϵc\epsilon_c on log2N\log_2 N is explained by analytical estimates that allows to obtain the scaling for functionality of Shor's algorithm on realistic quantum computers with a large number of qubits.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, 1 table. Added references and new data. Erratum added as appendix. 1 Figure and 1 Table added. Research is available at http://www.quantware.ups-tlse.fr

    A Lattice Study of Quark and Glue Momenta and Angular Momenta in the Nucleon

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    We report a complete calculation of the quark and glue momenta and angular momenta in the proton. These include the quark contributions from both the connected and disconnected insertions. The quark disconnected insertion loops are computed with Z4Z_4 noise, and the signal-to-noise is improved with unbiased subtractions. The glue operator is comprised of gauge-field tensors constructed from the overlap operator. The calculation is carried out on a 163×2416^3 \times 24 quenched lattice at β=6.0\beta = 6.0 for Wilson fermions with κ=0.154,0.155\kappa=0.154, 0.155, and 0.15550.1555 which correspond to pion masses at 650,538650, 538, and 478478~MeV, respectively. The chirally extrapolated uu and dd quark momentum/angular momentum fraction is found to be 0.64(5)/0.70(5)0.64(5)/0.70(5), the strange momentum/angular momentum fraction is 0.024(6)/0.023(7)0.024(6)/0.023(7), and that of the glue is 0.33(6)/0.28(8)0.33(6)/0.28(8). The previous study of quark spin on the same lattice revealed that it carries a fraction of 0.25(12)0.25(12) of proton spin. The orbital angular momenta of the quarks are then obtained from subtracting the spin from their corresponding angular momentum components. We find that the quark orbital angular momentum constitutes 0.47(13)0.47(13) of the proton spin with almost all of it coming from the disconnected insertions.Comment: Renormalization section is expanded to include more details. There are slight changes in the final numbers. A few modification and corrections are made in the rest of the tex

    Nucleon Axial Form Factor from Lattice QCD

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    Results for the isovector axial form factors of the proton from a lattice QCD calculation are presented for both point-split and local currents. They are obtained on a quenched 163×2416^{3} \times 24 lattice at β=6.0\beta= 6.0 with Wilson fermions for a range of quark masses from strange to charm. We determine the finite lattice renormalization for both the local and point-split currents of heavy quarks. Results extrapolated to the chiral limit show that the q2q^2 dependence of the axial form factor agrees reasonably well with experiment. The axial coupling constant gAg_A calculated for the local and the point-split currents is about 6\% and 12\% smaller than the experimental value respectively.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures (included in part 2), UK/93-0

    Simulating chemistry efficiently on fault-tolerant quantum computers

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    Quantum computers can in principle simulate quantum physics exponentially faster than their classical counterparts, but some technical hurdles remain. Here we consider methods to make proposed chemical simulation algorithms computationally fast on fault-tolerant quantum computers in the circuit model. Fault tolerance constrains the choice of available gates, so that arbitrary gates required for a simulation algorithm must be constructed from sequences of fundamental operations. We examine techniques for constructing arbitrary gates which perform substantially faster than circuits based on the conventional Solovay-Kitaev algorithm [C.M. Dawson and M.A. Nielsen, \emph{Quantum Inf. Comput.}, \textbf{6}:81, 2006]. For a given approximation error ϵ\epsilon, arbitrary single-qubit gates can be produced fault-tolerantly and using a limited set of gates in time which is O(logϵ)O(\log \epsilon) or O(loglogϵ)O(\log \log \epsilon); with sufficient parallel preparation of ancillas, constant average depth is possible using a method we call programmable ancilla rotations. Moreover, we construct and analyze efficient implementations of first- and second-quantized simulation algorithms using the fault-tolerant arbitrary gates and other techniques, such as implementing various subroutines in constant time. A specific example we analyze is the ground-state energy calculation for Lithium hydride.Comment: 33 pages, 18 figure

    Detection of Trichomonas vaginalis Using the Polymerase Chain Reaction in Pregnant and Non-Pregnant Women

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    Objective: Trichomonas vaginalis vaginal infections are often both asymptomatic and difficult to detect by current methods. We evaluated the ability of a newly developed polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to identify T. vaginalis in vaginal samples from pregnant and non-pregnant women
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