614 research outputs found
A way to estimate the heavy quark thermalization rate from the lattice
The thermalization rate of a heavy quark is related to its momentum diffusion
coefficient. Starting from a Kubo relation and using the framework of the heavy
quark effective theory, we argue that in the large-mass limit the momentum
diffusion coefficient can be defined through a certain Euclidean correlation
function, involving color-electric fields along a Polyakov loop. Furthermore,
carrying out a perturbative computation, we demonstrate that the spectral
function corresponding to this correlator is relatively flat at small
frequencies. Therefore, unlike in the case of several other transport
coefficients, for which the narrowness of the transport peak makes analytic
continuation from Euclidean lattice data susceptible to severe systematic
uncertainties, it appears that the determination of the heavy quark
thermalization rate could be relatively well under control.Comment: 17 pages. v2: clarifications and references added, published versio
Three Dimensional N=2 Supersymmetry on the Lattice
We show how 3-dimensional, N=2 supersymmetric theories, including super QCD
with matter fields, can be put on the lattice with existing techniques, in a
way which will recover supersymmetry in the small lattice spacing limit.
Residual supersymmetry breaking effects are suppressed in the small lattice
spacing limit by at least one power of the lattice spacing a.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures, typo corrected, reference adde
Classical Sphaleron Rate on Fine Lattices
We measure the sphaleron rate for hot, classical Yang-Mills theory on the
lattice, in order to study its dependence on lattice spacing. By using a
topological definition of Chern-Simons number and going to extremely fine
lattices (up to beta=32, or lattice spacing a = 1 / (8 g^2 T)) we demonstrate
nontrivial scaling. The topological susceptibility, converted to physical
units, falls with lattice spacing on fine lattices in a way which is consistent
with linear dependence on (the Arnold-Son-Yaffe scaling relation) and
strongly disfavors a nonzero continuum limit. We also explain some unusual
behavior of the rate in small volumes, reported by Ambjorn and Krasnitz.Comment: 14 pages, includes 5 figure
Electromagnetic Emission and Energy Loss in the QGP
I discuss why photon production from the Quark Gluon Plasma (QGP) presents an
interesting problem, both experimentally and theoretically. I show how the
photon emission rate can be computed under the simplifying assumption that the
QGP fully thermalizes. The theoretical issues are very similar to those for jet
energy loss; so it should be possible to treat them in a common formalism and
relate the predictions of one phenomenon to those of the other.Comment: 8 pages, invited talk at Quark Matter 200
Heavy Quark Thermalization in Classical Lattice Gauge Theory: Lessons for Strongly-Coupled QCD
Thermalization of a heavy quark near rest is controlled by the correlator of
two electric fields along a temporal Wilson line. We address this correlator
within real-time, classical lattice Yang-Mills theory, and elaborate on the
analogies that exist with the dynamics of hot QCD. In the weak-coupling limit,
it can be shown analytically that the dynamics on the two sides are closely
related to each other. For intermediate couplings, we carry out
non-perturbative simulations within the classical theory, showing that the
leading term in the weak-coupling expansion significantly underestimates the
heavy quark thermalization rate. Our analytic and numerical results also yield
a general understanding concerning the overall shape of the spectral function
corresponding to the electric field correlator, which may be helpful in
subsequent efforts to reconstruct it from Euclidean lattice Monte Carlo
simulations.Comment: 22 pages. v2: a reference and clarifications added; published versio
Chern-Simons Number Diffusion and Hard Thermal Loops on the Lattice
We develop a discrete lattice implementation of the hard thermal loop
effective action by the method of added auxiliary fields. We use the resulting
model to measure the sphaleron rate (topological susceptibility) of Yang-Mills
theory at weak coupling. Our results give parametric behavior in accord with
the arguments of Arnold, Son, and Yaffe, and are in quantitative agreement with
the results of Moore, Hu, and Muller.Comment: 43 pages, 6 figure
Electroweak Bubble Nucleation, Nonperturbatively
We present a lattice method to compute bubble nucleation rates at radiatively
induced first order phase transitions, in high temperature, weakly coupled
field theories, nonperturbatively. A generalization of Langer's approach, it
makes no recourse to saddle point expansions and includes completely the
dynamical prefactor. We test the technique by applying it to the electroweak
phase transition in the minimal standard model, at an unphysically small Higgs
mass which gives a reasonably strong phase transition (lambda/g^2 =0.036, which
corresponds to m(Higgs)/m(W) = 0.54 at tree level but does not correspond to a
positive physical Higgs mass when radiative effects of the top quark are
included), and compare the results to older perturbative and other estimates.
While two loop perturbation theory slightly under-estimates the strength of the
transition measured by the latent heat, it over-estimates the amount of
supercooling by a factor of 2.Comment: 48 pages, including 16 figures. Minor revisions and typo fixes,
nothing substantial, conclusions essentially unchange
A curcumin direct protein biosensor for cell-free prototyping
In synthetic biology, biosensors are routinely coupled with a gene expression system for detecting small molecules and physical signals. We reveal a fluorescent complex, based on the interaction of an coli double bond reductase ( CurA), as a detection unit with its substrate curcumin-we call this a direct protein (DiPro) biosensor. Using a cell-free synthetic biology approach, we use the CurA DiPro biosensor to fine tune 10 reaction parameters (cofactor, substrate, and enzyme levels) for cell-free curcumin biosynthesis, assisted through acoustic liquid handling robotics. Overall, we increase CurA-curcumin DiPro fluorescence within cell-free reactions by 78-fold. This finding adds to the growing family of protein-ligand complexes that are naturally fluorescent and potentially exploitable for a range of applications, including medical imaging to engineering high-value chemicals
How fast can the wall move? A study of the electroweak phase transition dynamics
We consider the dynamics of bubble growth in the Minimal Standard Model at
the electroweak phase transition and determine the shape and the velocity of
the phase boundary, or bubble wall. We show that in the semi-classical
approximation the friction on the wall arises from the deviation of massive
particle populations from thermal equilibrium. We treat these with Boltzmann
equations in a fluid approximation. This approximation is reasonable for the
top quarks and the light species while it underestimates the friction from the
infrared bosons and Higgs particles. We use the two-loop finite temperature
effective potential and find a subsonic bubble wall for the whole range of
Higgs masses GeV. The result is weakly dependent on : the wall
velocity falls in the range , while the wall thickness is
in the range . The wall is thicker than the phase equilibrium
value because out of equilibrium particles exert more friction on the back than
on the base of a moving wall. We also consider the effect of an infrared gauge
condensate which may exist in the symmetric phase; modelling it simplemindedly,
we find that the wall may become supersonic, but not ultrarelativistic.Comment: 42 pages, plain latex, with three figures. Minor editing August 1 (we
figured out how to do analytically some integrals we previously did
numerically, made corresponding (slight) changes to numerical results, and
corrected some typos.
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