34,389 research outputs found
Island formation without attractive interactions
We show that adsorbates on surfaces can form islands even if there are no
attractive interactions. Instead strong repulsion between adsorbates at short
distances can lead to islands, because such islands increase the entropy of the
adsorbates that are not part of the islands. We suggest that this mechanism
cause the observed island formation in O/Pt(111), but it may be important for
many other systems as well.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Chiral gauge theories with domain wall fermions
We have investigated a proposal to construct chiral gauge theories on the
lattice using domain wall fermions. The model contains two opposite chirality
zeromodes, which live on two domain walls. We couple only one of them to a
gauge field, but find that mirror fermions which also couple to the gauge field
always seem to exist.Comment: 3 pages. ref. added, some rewording at the end. contribution to
Lattice'93. latex file, style file espcrc2.sty needed (appended), compressed
tar file with two figures appended at the end (look for FIGURES
Precision measurement of the rotational energy-level structure of the three-electron molecule He
The term values of all rotational levels of the
He ground vibronic state with
rotational quantum number have been determined with an accuracy of
8 x 10 cm ( MHz) by MQDT-assisted Rydberg spectroscopy
of metastable He. Comparison of these term values with term values
recently calculated ab initio by Tung et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 136, 104309
(2012)] reveal discrepancies that rapidly increase with increasing rotational
quantum number and reach values of 0.07 cm ( GHz) at
.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Are white-beaked dolphins Lagenorhynchus albirostris food specialst? Their diet in the southern North Sea
The white-beaked dolphin Lagenorhynchus albirostris is the most numerous cetacean after the harbour porpoise Phocoena phocoena in the North Sea, including Dutch coastal waters. In this study, the diet of 45 white-beaked dolphins stranded on the Dutch coast between 1968 and 2005 was determined by analysis of stomach contents. Although 25 fish species were identified, the diet was dominated by Gadidae (98.0% by weight, 40.0% in numbers), found in all stomachs. All other prey species combined contributed little to the diet by weight (2.0%W). The two most important prey species were whiting Merlangius merlangus (91.1% frequency of occurrence (FO), 30.5%N, 37.6%W) and cod Gadus morhua (73.3%FO, 7.4%N, 55.9%W). In numbers, gobies were most common (54.6%N), but contributed little to the diet by weight (0.6%W). Three stomachs contained different prey compared to the others: one animal had taken 2250 gobies, accounting for 96.4% of all gobies found; one animal had fed on 29 small sepiolids; and one animal had solely taken haddock Melanogrammus aeglefinus. Squid and haddock were not found in any other stomach. The overall diet showed a lasting predominance of whiting and cod, without clear changes over time (35 years) or differences between sexes or size-classes of dolphins. This study adds to earlier published and unpublished data for Dutch coastal waters and agrees well with studies of white-beaked dolphins from other parts of the species’ range, in the North Sea and in Canadian waters, with Gadidae dominating the diet on both sides of the Atlantic
Sigma-terms and axial charges for hyperons and charmed baryons
We present results for the -terms and axial charges for various
hyperons and charmed baryons using twisted mass fermions. For the
computation of the three-point function we use the fixed current method. For
one of the ensembles with pion mass of 373 MeV we compare the
results of the fixed current method with those obtained with a stochastic
method for computing the all-to-all propagator involved in the evaluation of
the three point functions.Comment: Talk presented at 31st International Symposium on Lattice Field
Theory LATTICE 2013, July 29 - August 3, 2013, Mainz, Germany, PoS(LATTICE
2013)279. 7 pages and6 figure
Effects of non-perturbatively improved dynamical fermions in UKQCD simulations
We present results for QCD with 2 degenerate flavours of quark using a
non-perturbatively improved action on a lattice volume of where
the bare gauge coupling and bare dynamical quark mass have been chosen to
maintain a fixed physical lattice spacing and volume (1.71 fm). By comparing
measurements from these matched ensembles, including quenched ones, we find
evidence of dynamical quark effects on the short distance static potential, the
scalar glueball mass and the topological susceptibility. There is little
evidence of effects on the light hadron spectrum over the range of quark masses
studied ().Comment: Lattice 2000 (Spectrum and quark masses), 4 pages, 5 figure
Stabilizing the electroweak vacuum by higher dimensional operators in a Higgs-Yukawa model
The Higgs boson discovery at the LHC with a mass of approximately 126 GeV
suggests, that the electroweak vacuum of the standard model may be metastable
at very high energies. However, any new physics beyond the standard model can
change this picture. We want to address this important question within a
lattice Higgs-Yukawa model as the limit of the standard model (SM). In this
framework we will probe the effect of a higher dimensional operator for which
we take a -term. Such a term could easily originate as
a remnant of physics beyond the SM at very large scales.
As a first step we investigate the phase diagram of the model including such
a operator. Exploratory results suggest the existence
of regions in parameter space where first order transitions turn to second
order ones, indicating the existence of a tri-critical line. We will explore
the phase structure and the consequences for the stability of the SM, both
analytically by investigating the constraint effective potential in lattice
perturbation theory, and by studying the system non-perturbatively using
lattice simulations.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures; Proceedings of the 31st International Symposium
on Lattice Field Theory - LATTICE 201
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