1,436 research outputs found
Quantum gauge fixing and vortex dominance
We introduce quantum gauge fixing (QGF) as a new class of gauge fixings.
While the maximal center gauge might not show vortex dominance, the confining
properties of the vortices observed in past lattice calculations are argued to
have been obtained in a gauge more akin to QGF than to the strict maximal
center gauge.Comment: talk presented at LATTICE99(confinement), Pisa, Italy, 3 pages, 2
figures, LaTeX using espcrc2.st
Interaction of confining vortices in SU(2) lattice gauge theory
Center projection of SU(2) lattice gauge theory allows to isolate magnetic
vortices as confining configurations. The vortex density scales according to
the renormalization group, implying that the vortices are physical objects
rather than lattice artifacts. Here, the binary correlations between points at
which vortices pierce a given plane are investigated. We find an attractive
interaction between the vortices. The correlations show the correct scaling
behavior and are therefore physical. The range of the interaction is found to
be (0.4 +/- 0.2) fm, which should be compared with the average planar vortex
density of approximately 2 vortices/fm^2. We comment on the implications of
these results for recent discussions of the Casimir scaling behavior of higher
dimensional representation Wilson loops in the vortex confinement picture.Comment: 9 pages LaTeX, 2 ps figures included via eps
Defining postoperative stability in children with radial polydactyly
There is little fundamental data on paediatric metacarpophalangeal joint instability in radial polydactyly following surgical reconstruction. We evaluated 27 thumbs in a healthy paediatric population (Group A: eight girls and 19 boys with a mean age of 9.7 years (range 2.7-14.2)) and 12 thumbs following Wassel-IV reconstruction (Group B: eight girls and four boys with a mean age at follow-up of 10.6 years (range 2.7-13.2)). Metacarpophalangeal joint radial deviation, ulnar deviation on stress testing, interphalangeal joint and metacarpophalangeal joint alignment on posterior-anterior radiographs were measured and scored according to parameters defining joint instability. The aim of our study was to provide fundamental data on thumb metacarpophalangeal joint mobility patterns and alignment for further postoperative evaluations in children. The average ulnar deviation and radial deviation on stress testing of the healthy (Group A) metacarpophalangeal joints was 25 degrees (10 degrees-45 degrees) and 30 degrees (10 degrees-55 degrees), respectively. In the operated (Group B) thumbs, the ulnar deviation and radial deviation was greater at 35 degrees (10 degrees-55 degrees) and 30 degrees (10 degrees-70 degrees). Ulnar deviation (UD) of the proximal phalanx at the metacarpophalangeal joint on posterior-anterior radiographs was a mean of 10 degrees (range -10 degrees-30 degrees) in Group B;this was significantly greater than in Group A at a mean of 5 degrees (range -5-20 degrees) (p = 0.029). The mean radial alignment of the interphalangeal joint (distal phalanx relative to the proximal phalanx) was significantly higher in Group B (15 degrees) than Group A (0 degrees) (p = 0.221). In the literature on radial polydactyly, cut off values defining metacarpophalangeal joint instability in children range from 5 degrees to 20 degrees. According to our results, high but physiological metacarpophalangeal joint mobility of the thumb needs to be taken into consideration when evaluating children following reconstruction. Ulnar or radial deviation greater than 30 degrees, in combination with the lack of a definite end point on metacarpophalangeal joint stress testing, may be regarded as unstable. Based on our study on healthy paediatric and reconstructed thumbs, comparison of joint stability with the healthy contralateral hand is recommended in order to define pathological instability
Ice XII in its second regime of metastability
We present neutron powder diffraction results which give unambiguous evidence
for the formation of the recently identified new crystalline ice phase[Lobban
et al.,Nature, 391, 268, (1998)], labeled ice XII, at completely different
conditions. Ice XII is produced here by compressing hexagonal ice I_h at T =
77, 100, 140 and 160 K up to 1.8 GPa. It can be maintained at ambient pressure
in the temperature range 1.5 < T < 135 K. High resolution diffraction is
carried out at T = 1.5 K and ambient pressure on ice XII and accurate
structural properties are obtained from Rietveld refinement. At T = 140 and 160
K additionally ice III/IX is formed. The increasing amount of ice III/IX with
increasing temperature gives an upper limit of T ~ 150 K for the successful
formation of ice XII with the presented procedure.Comment: 3 Pages of RevTeX, 3 tables, 3 figures (submitted to Physical Review
Letters
`Oumuamua as a messenger from the Local Association
7 pages, one table, two figures, accepted for publication by ApJL. © 2018. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.With a hyperbolic trajectory around the Sun, 'Oumuamua is the first confirmed interstellar object. However, its origin is poorly known. By simulating the orbits of 0.23 million local stars, we find 109 encounters with periastron less than 5 pc. 'Oumuamua's low peculiar velocity is suggestive of its origin from a young stellar association with similar velocity. In particular, we find that 'Oumuamua would have had slow encounters with at least five young stars belonging to the Local Association, thus suggesting these as plausible sites for formation and ejection. In addition to an extremely elongated shape, the available observational data for 'Oumuamua indicates a red color, suggestive of a potentially organic-rich and activity-free surface. These characteristics seem consistent with formation through energetic collisions between planets and debris objects in the middle part of a young stellar system. We estimate an abundance of at least 6.0 × 10 -3 au -3 for such interstellar objects with mean diameter larger than 100 m and find that it is likely that most of them will be ejected into the Galactic halo. Our Bayesian analysis of the available light curves indicates a rotation period of 6.96 +1.45 -0.39, which is consistent with the estimation by Meech et al. and shorter than those in other literature. The codes and results are available on GitHub (https://github.com/phillippro/Oumuamua).Peer reviewe
On the Spectrum of QCD(1+1) with SU(N_c) Currents
Extending previous work, we calculate in this note the fermionic spectrum of
two-dimensional QCD (QCD_2) in the formulation with SU(N_c) currents. Together
with the results in the bosonic sector this allows to address the as yet
unresolved task of finding the single-particle states of this theory as a
function of the ratio of the numbers of flavors and colors, \lambda=N_f/N_c,
anew. We construct the Hamiltonian matrix in DLCQ formulation as an algebraic
function of the harmonic resolution K and the continuous parameter \lambda.
Amongst the more surprising findings in the fermionic sector chiefly considered
here is that the fermion momentum is a function of \lambda. This dependence is
necessary in order to reproduce the well-known 't Hooft and large N_f spectra.
Remarkably, those spectra have the same single-particle content as the ones in
the bosonic sectors. The twist here is the dramatically different sizes of the
Fock bases in the two sectors, which makes it possible to interpret in
principle all states of the discrete approach. The hope is that some of this
insight carries over into the continuum. We also present some new findings
concerning the single-particle spectrum of the adjoint theory.Comment: 21 pp., 13 figures, version published in PR
Instantons and Monopoles in General Abelian Gauges
A relation between the total instanton number and the quantum-numbers of
magnetic monopoles that arise in general Abelian gauges in SU(2) Yang-Mills
theory is established. The instanton number is expressed as the sum of the
`twists' of all monopoles, where the twist is related to a generalized Hopf
invariant. The origin of a stronger relation between instantons and monopoles
in the Polyakov gauge is discussed.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures; comments added to put work into proper contex
The band structure of BeTe - a combined experimental and theoretical study
Using angle-resolved synchrotron-radiation photoemission spectroscopy we have
determined the dispersion of the valence bands of BeTe(100) along ,
i.e. the [100] direction. The measurements are analyzed with the aid of a
first-principles calculation of the BeTe bulk band structure as well as of the
photoemission peaks as given by the momentum conserving bulk transitions.
Taking the calculated unoccupied bands as final states of the photoemission
process, we obtain an excellent agreement between experimental and calculated
spectra and a clear interpretation of almost all measured bands. In contrast,
the free electron approximation for the final states fails to describe the BeTe
bulk band structure along properly.Comment: 21 pages plus 4 figure
Abelian Monopole and Center Vortex Views at the Multi-Instanton Gas
We consider full non-Abelian, Abelian and center projected lattice field
configurations built up from random instanton gas configurations in the
continuum. We study the instanton contribution to the force with
respect to ({\it i}) instanton density dependence, ({\it ii}) Casimir scaling
and ({\it iii}) whether various versions of Abelian dominance hold. We check
that the dilute gas formulation for the interaction potential gives an reliable
approximation only for densities small compared to the phenomenological value.
We find that Casimir scaling does not hold, confirming earlier statements in
the literature. We show that the lattice used to discretize the instanton gas
configurations has to be sufficiently coarse ( compared
with the instanton size ) such that maximal Abelian gauge
projection and center projection as well as the monopole gas contribution to
the force reproduce the non-Abelian instanton-mediated force in the
intermediate range of linear quasi-confinement. We demonstrate that monopole
clustering also depends critically on the discretization scale confirming
earlier findings based on monopole blocking.Comment: 21 pages, 22 Postscript figure
Monopole clusters, center vortices, and confinement in a Z(2) gauge-Higgs system
We propose to use the different kinds of vacua of the gauge theories coupled
to matter as a laboratory to test confinement ideas of pure Yang-Mills
theories. In particular, the very poor overlap of the Wilson loop with the
broken string states supports the 't Hooft and Mandelstam confinement criteria.
However in the Z(2) gauge-Higgs model we use as a guide we find that the
condensation of monopoles and center vortices is a necessary, but not
sufficient condition for confinement.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, minor changes, version to be published on Phys.
Rev.
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