159 research outputs found

    Pomerons and Lattices: a Progress Report

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    We report on some attempts to use lattice QCD to investigate topics in strong interactions phenomenology which are usually interpreted in terms of soft Pomeron exchange.Comment: Talk presented at LAT96, 3 pages, Latex, one style file and 2 PostScript pictures include

    The Landshoff-Nachtmann Pomeron on the Lattice

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    We investigate the Landshoff-Nachtmann two-gluon-exchange model of the Pomeron using gluon propagators computed in the Landau gauge within quenched lattice QCD calculations. We first determine an effective gluon-quark coupling by constraining the Pomeron-quark coupling to its phenomenological value \beta_0 = 2\, \gev^{-1}. We then provide predictions for a variety of diffractive processes. As the propagators have been evaluated entirely from QCD first principles (although in the quenched approximation), our results provide a consistency check of the Landshoff-Nachtmann model. We address the issue of the possible gauge-dependence of our results, which will be the object of a future study.Comment: uuencoded, compressed tar file, 13 pages latex, 4 Postscript figures, requires epsf.st

    In-plane effects on segmented-mirror control

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    Extremely large optical telescopes are being designed with primary mirrors composed of hundreds of segments. The “out-of-plane” piston, tip, and tilt degrees of freedom of each segment are actively controlled using feedback from relative height measurements between neighboring segments. The “in-plane” segment translations and clocking (rotation) are not actively controlled; however, in-plane motions affect the active control problem in several important ways, and thus need to be considered. We extend earlier analyses by constructing the “full” interaction matrix that relates the height, gap, and shear motion at sensor locations to all six degrees of freedom of segment motion, and use this to consider three effects. First, in-plane segment clocking results in height discontinuities between neighboring segments that can lead to a global control system response. Second, knowledge of the in-plane motion is required both to compensate for this effect and to compensate for sensor installation errors, and thus, we next consider the estimation of in-plane motion and the associated noise propagation characteristics. In-plane motion can be accurately estimated using measurements of the gap between segments, but with one unobservable mode in which every segment clocks by an equal amount. Finally, we examine whether in-plane measurements (gap and/or shear) can be used to estimate out-of-plane segment motion; these measurements can improve the noise multiplier for the “focus-mode” of the segmented-mirror array, which involves pure dihedral angle changes between segments and is not observable with only height measurements

    Soft Covariant Gauges on the Lattice

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    We present an exploratory study of a one-parameter family of covariant, non-perturbative lattice gauge-fixing conditions, that can be implemented through a simple Monte Carlo algorithm. We demonstrate that at the numerical level the procedure is feasible, and as a first application we examine the gauge dependence of the gluon propagator.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, epsf.sty included + 5 PostScript picture
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