2,860 research outputs found
CORE and the Haldane Conjecture
The Contractor Renormalization group formalism (CORE) is a real-space
renormalization group method which is the Hamiltonian analogue of the Wilson
exact renormalization group equations. In an earlier paper\cite{QGAF} I showed
that the Contractor Renormalization group (CORE) method could be used to map a
theory of free quarks, and quarks interacting with gluons, into a generalized
frustrated Heisenberg antiferromagnet (HAF) and proposed using CORE methods to
study these theories. Since generalizations of HAF's exhibit all sorts of
subtle behavior which, from a continuum point of view, are related to
topological properties of the theory, it is important to know that CORE can be
used to extract this physics. In this paper I show that despite the folklore
which asserts that all real-space renormalization group schemes are necessarily
inaccurate, simple Contractor Renormalization group (CORE) computations can
give highly accurate results even if one only keeps a small number of states
per block and a few terms in the cluster expansion. In addition I argue that
even very simple CORE computations give a much better qualitative understanding
of the physics than naive renormalization group methods. In particular I show
that the simplest CORE computation yields a first principles understanding of
how the famous Haldane conjecture works for the case of the spin-1/2 and spin-1
HAF.Comment: 36 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables, latex; extensive additions to conten
Status of Spin Physics - Experimental Summary
The current status of spin physics experiments, based on talks presented at
the Third Circum-Pan-Pacific Symposium on High Energy Spin Physics held in
Beijing, 2001, is summarized in this article. Highlights of recent experimental
results at SLAC, JLab, and DESY, as well as future plans at these facilities
and at RHIC-spin are discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, Invited talk presented at the Third
Circum-Pan-Pacific Symposium on High Energy Spin Physics held in Beijing,
October, 200
Dirac-Coulomb scattering with plane wave energy eigenspinors on de Sitter expanding universe
The lowest order contribution of the amplitude of Dirac-Coulomb scattering in
de Sitter spacetime is calculated assuming that the initial and final states of
the Dirac field are described by exact solutions of the free Dirac equation on
de Sitter spacetime with a given energy and helicity. We find that the total
energy is conserved in the scattering process.Comment: 9 pages, no figure
Form factors in quantum electrodynamics
The electromagnetic form factors of an electron in pure quantum electrodynamics are analyzed with the techniques of dispersion relations. The viewpoint is adopted here that no subtractions are required in the construction of dispersion relations for the electromagnetic vertex. This leads to coupled integral equations for the form factors in terms of other physical amplitudes; electron-positron scattering, for example. The relation between this and the usual perturbation approach to quantum electrodynamics, and the validity and consequences of the "no-subtraction" philosophy, are discussed
Extrapolation of K to \pi\pi decay amplitude
We examine the uncertainties involved in the off-mass-shell extrapolation of
the decay amplitude with emphasis on those aspects that
have so far been overlooked or ignored. Among them are initial-state
interactions, choice of the extrapolated kaon field, and the relation between
the asymptotic behavior and the zeros of the decay amplitude. In the inelastic
region the phase of the decay amplitude cannot be determined by strong
interaction alone and even its asymptotic value cannot be deduced from
experiment. More a fundamental issue is intrinsic nonuniqueness of off-shell
values of hadronic matrix elements in general. Though we are hampered with
complexity of intermediate-energy meson interactions, we attempt to obtain a
quantitative idea of the uncertainties due to the inelastic region and find
that they can be much larger than more optimistic views portray.Comment: 16 pages with 5 eps figures in REVTE
The free Dirac spinors of the spin basis on the de Sitter expanding universe
It is shown that on the de Sitter space-time the global behavior of the free
Dirac spinors in momentum representation is determined by several phases
factors which are functions of momentum with special properties. Such suitable
phase functions can be chosen for writing down the free Dirac quantum modes of
the spin basis that are well-defined even for the particles at rest in the
moving local charts where the modes of the helicity basis remain undefined.
Under quantization these modes lead to a basis in which the one-particle
operators keep their usual forms apart from the energy operator which lays out
a specific term which depend on the concrete phase function one uses.Comment: 8 pages no figure
Threshold corrections to rapidity distributions of Z and W^\pm bosons beyond N^2 LO at hadron colliders
Threshold enhanced perturbative QCD corrections to rapidity distributions of
and bosons at hadron colliders are presented using the Sudakov
resummed cross sections at NLO level. We have used renormalisation group
invariance and the mass factorisation theorem that these hard scattering cross
sections satisfy to construct the QCD amplitudes. We show that these higher
order threshold QCD corrections stabilise the theoretical predictions for
vector boson production at the LHC under variations of both renormalisation and
factorisation scales.Comment: 17 pages, 8 eps figures. This paper is dedicated to the memory of
W.L.G.A.M. van Neerve
Wide-angle pair production and quantum electrodynamics at small distances
Wide-angle photoproduction of high-energy electron-positron pairs in hydrogen is proposed and analyzed as a test of quantum electrodynamics at distances ≤10^-13 cm. The effect of proton structure can be removed in terms of the two form factors measured in the elastic electron-proton scattering process. Cross sections are presented for two classes of pair production experiments: (1) those detecting one of the final particles, and (2) coincidence experiments. In addition to kinematic, anomalous moment, and nucleon form-factor corrections to the Bethe-Heitler formula, dynamical corrections to the proton current and radiative corrections are calculated. The final theoretical formula is believed to be accurate to 2%. A simple cutoff model suggests that a 5% accuracy in an experiment of type (1) tests the electron propagator at distances ∼0.7×10^-13 cm, while a 10% accuracy in a coincidence arrangement of type (2) probes the electron propagator at ∼0.3×10^-13 cm
Type Ia Supernovae, Evolution, and the Cosmological Constant
We explore the possible role of evolution in the analysis of data on SNe Ia
at cosmological distances. First, using a variety of simple sleuthing
techniques, we find evidence that the properties of the high and low redshift
SNe Ia observed so far differ from one another. Next, we examine the effects of
including simple phenomenological models for evolution in the analysis. The
result is that cosmological models and evolution are highly degenerate with one
another, so that the incorporation of even very simple models for evolution
makes it virtually impossible to pin down the values of and
, the density parameters for nonrelativistic matter and for the
cosmological constant, respectively. Moreover, we show that if SNe Ia evolve
with time, but evolution is neglected in analyzing data, then, given enough SNe
Ia, the analysis hones in on values of and which
are incorrect. Using Bayesian methods, we show that the probability that the
cosmological constant is nonzero (rather than zero) is unchanged by the SNe Ia
data when one accounts for the possibility of evolution, provided that we do
not discriminate among open, closed and flat cosmologies a priori. The case for
nonzero cosmological constant is stronger if the Universe is presumed to be
flat, but still depends sensitively on the degree to which the peak
luminosities of SNe Ia evolve as a function of redshift. The estimated value of
, however, is only negligibly affected by accounting for possible
evolution.Comment: 45 pages, 15 figures; accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journal. Minor revisions and clarifications made including addition of recent
reference
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