28,481 research outputs found
Improved Pseudofermion Approach for All-Point Propagators
Quark propagators with arbitrary sources and sinks can be obtained more
efficiently using a pseudofermion method with a mode-shifted action.
Mode-shifting solves the problem of critical slowing down (for light quarks)
induced by low eigenmodes of the Dirac operator. The method allows the full
physical content of every gauge configuration to be extracted, and should be
especially helpful for unquenched QCD calculations. The method can be applied
for all the conventional quark actions: Wilson, Sheikoleslami-Wohlert,
Kogut-Susskind, as well as Ginsparg-Wilson compliant overlap actions. The
statistical properties of the method are examined and examples of physical
processes under study are presented.Comment: LateX, 26 pages, 10 eps figure
String Breaking in Four Dimensional Lattice QCD
Virtual quark pair screening leads to breaking of the string between
fundamental representation quarks in QCD. For unquenched four dimensional
lattice QCD, this (so far elusive) phenomenon is studied using the recently
developed truncated determinant algorithm (TDA). The dynamical configurations
were generated on an Athlon 650 MHz PC. Quark eigenmodes up to 420 MeV are
included exactly in these TDA studies performed at low quark mass on large
coarse (but O() improved) lattices. A study of Wilson line correlators in
Coulomb gauge extracted from an ensemble of 1000 two-flavor dynamical
configurations reveals evidence for flattening of the string tension at
distances R approximately 1 fm.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, Latex (deleted extraneous eps figure file
Above and below the water: Social/ecological transformation in northwest Newfoundland
Marine fisheries and fishing societies develop around the resources provided by a particular ecosystem. As they exploit these resources, fisheries transform the ecosystem, which pushes fishery and society to adapt in turn. This process is illustrated by fisheries, ecological and social data tracking dramatic changes on Newfoundland\u27s Northern Peninsula and its adjacent marine ecosystem, the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence. There a longstanding fishery for cod and other groundfish collapsed in the 1990s, and was replaced by fisheries targeting invertebrates. The new invertebrate fisheries have different socioeconomic characteristics than the former groundfish fisheries. The shift in target species reflects deep ecological changes that were underway at least a decade before official recognition of the crisis. Our analysis of biological data reveals that the main ecological changes occurred during âthe glory yearsâ of the 1980s, when Newfoundland\u27s domestic fisheries were at their peak. Overfishing and interactions with adverse climatic conditions drove the changes. As the ecosystem transformed, human population declined due to outmigration, and social indicators show signs of distress. Accounts by outport residents paint a generational picture of social change
Place effects on environmental views
How people respond to questions involving the environment depends partly on individual characteristics. Characteristics such as age, gender, education, and ideology constitute the well-studied social bases of environmental concern, which have been explained in terms of cohort effects or of cognitive and cultural factors related to social position. It seems likely that people\u27s environmental views depend not only on personal characteristics but also on their social and physical environments. This hypothesis has been more difficult to test, however. Using data from surveys in 19 rural U.S. counties, we apply mixed-effects modeling to investigate simple place effects with respect to locally focused environmental views. We find evidence for two kinds of place effects. Net of individual characteristics, specific place characteristics have the expected effect on related environmental views. Local changes are related to attitudes about regulation and growth. For example, respondents more often perceive rapid development as a problem, and favor environmental rules that restrict development, in rural counties with growing populations. Moreover, they favor conserving resources for the future rather than using them now to create jobs in counties that have low unemployment. After we controlled for county growth, unemployment and jobs in resource based industries, and individual social-position and ideological factors, there remains significant place-to-place variation in mean levels of environmental concern. Even with both kinds of place effects in the models, the individual level predictors of environmental concern follow patterns expected from previous research. Concern increases with education among Democrats, whereas among Republicans, the relationship is attenuated or reversed. The interaction marks reframing of environmental questions as political wedge issues, through nominally scientific counterarguments aimed at educated, ideologically receptive audiences. © 2010, by the Rural Sociological Society
Zero gravity crystal growth Final report
Experimental device for growing crystals under zero gravity condition
Physical Mechanisms for the Variable Spin-down of SGR 1900+14
We consider the physical implications of the rapid spindown of Soft Gamma
Repeater 1900+14, and of the apparent "braking glitch", \Delta P/P = l x 10^-4,
that was concurrent with the Aug. 27th giant flare. A radiation-hydrodynamical
outflow associated with the flare could impart the required torque, but only if
the dipole magnetic field is stronger than ~ 10^14 G and the outflow lasts
longer and/or is more energetic than the observed X-ray flare. A positive
period increment is also a natural consequence of a gradual, plastic
deformation of the neutron star crust by an intense magnetic field, which
forces the neutron superfluid to rotate more slowly than the crust. Sudden
unpinning of the neutron vortex lines during the August 27th event would then
induce a glitch opposite in sign to those observed in young pulsars, but of a
much larger magnitude as a result of the slower rotation.
The change in the persistent X-ray lightcurve following the August 27 event
is ascribed to continued particle heating in the active region of that
outburst. The enhanced X-ray output can be powered by a steady current flowing
through the magnetosphere, induced by the twisting motion of the crust. The
long term rate of spindown appears to be accelerated with respect to a simple
magnetic dipole torque. Accelerated spindown of a seismically-active magnetar
will occur when its persistent output of Alfven waves and particles exceeds its
spindown luminosity. We suggest that SGRs experience some episodes of relative
inactivity, with diminished spindown rates, and that such inactive magnetars
are observed as Anomalous X-ray Pulsars (AXPs). The rapid reappearence of
persistent X-ray emission following August 27 flare gives evidence against
accretion-powered models.Comment: 24 pages, no figure
Ethnic identity and aspirations among rural Alaska youth
The villages of rural Alaska comprise one of the most exceptional, yet least visible, sociocultural environments in the United States They are geographically remote, and set off from the mainstream also by their unique Eskimo, Indian or Aleut cultures. At the same time many economic, legal and cultural connections pull these villages toward the dominant U.S. society, impelling continual and rapid social change. Our research focuses on adolescents growing up in this culturally complex and changing environment. We employ survey data from adolescents in 19 rural schools to explore relationships between ethnic identity and students\u27 expectations about moving away or attending college. Many students describe their ethnic identity as mixed, both Native and non-Native. On some key variables, the responses of mixed-identity students fall between those of Natives and non-Natives, supporting a theoretical conception of ethnicity as a matter of degree rather than category. Migration and college expectations vary with ethnic identity, but the college expectations/identity relationship fades when we adjust for other variables. Ethnicity affects expectations for the most part indirectly, through âcultural tool kitâ variables including family role models and support. Gender differences in expectations, on the other hand, remain substantial even after adjusting for other variables
Place matters: challenges and opportunities in four rural Americas
A survey of 7,800 rural Americans in 19 counties across the country has led to the Carsey Institute\u27s first major publication that outlines four distinctly different rural Americasâamenity, decline, chronic poverty, and those communities in decline that are also amenity-richâeach has unique challenges in this modern era that will require different policies than their rural neighbors
Unquenched QCD with Light Quarks
We present recent results in unquenched lattice QCD with two degenerate light
sea quarks using the truncated determinant approximation (TDA). In the TDA the
infrared modes contributing to the quark determinant are computed exactly up to
some cutoff in quark off-shellness (typically 2). This approach
allows simulations to be performed at much lighter quark masses than possible
with conventional hybrid MonteCarlo techniques. Results for the static energy
and topological charge distributions are presented using a large ensemble
generated on very coarse (6) but physically large lattices. Preliminary
results are also reported for the static energy and meson spectrum on 10x20
lattices (lattice scale =1.15 GeV) at quark masses corresponding to
pions of mass 200 MeV. Using multiboson simulation to compute the
ultraviolet part of the quark determinant the TDA approach becomes an exact
with essentially no increase in computational effort. Some preliminary results
using this fully unquenched algorithm are presented.Comment: LateX, 39 pages, 16 eps figures, 1 ps figur
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