1,218 research outputs found
Direct determination of the gauge coupling derivatives for the energy density in lattice QCD
By matching Wilson loop ratios on anisotropic lattices we measure the
coefficients \cs and \ct, which are required for the calculation of the
energy density. The results are compared to that of an indirect method of
determination. We find similar behaviour, the differences are attributed to
different discretization errors.Comment: Talk presented at LATTICE97(finite temperature), 3 pages, 5
Postscript figure
Cutoff effects in meson spectral functions
We study the lattice spacing dependence of meson spectral functions
calculated in quenched QCD with domain wall fermions as well as clover Wilson
fermions in quenched and partially-quenched QCD. We conclude that for lattice
spacing GeV all excited states appearing in the spectral functions
are lattice artifacts.Comment: Lattice 2004 (non-zero), 3 pages, 3 figures, uses espcrc2 packag
Infrared features of unquenched finite temperature lattice Landau gauge QCD
The color diagonal and color antisymmetric ghost propagators slightly above
of MILC lattices are measured and compared with
zero temperature unquenched MILC and MILC
lattices and zero temperature quenched and
6.45 lattices. The expectation value of the color antisymmetric ghost
propagator is zero but its Binder cumulant, which is consistent
with that of dimensional Gaussian distribution below , decreases
above . Although the color diagonal ghost propagator is temperature
independent, the norm of the color antisymmetric ghost propagator is
temperature dependent. The expectation value of the ghost condensate observed
at zero temperature unquenched configuration is consistent with 0 in .
We also measure transverse, magnetic and electric gluon propagator and
extract gluon screening masses. The running coupling measured from the product
of the gluon dressing function and the ghost dressing function are almost
temperature independent but the effect of condensate observed at zero
temperature is consistent with 0 in .
The transverse gluon dressing function at low temperature has a peak in the
infrared but it becomes flatter at high temperature. Its absolute value in the
high momentum is larger for high temperature and similar to the magnetic gluon
dressing function. The electric gluon propagator at high momentum is
temperature independent. These data imply that the magnetic gluon propagator
and the color antisymmetric ghost propagator are affected by the presence of
dynamical quarks and there are strong non-perturbative effects through the
temperature dependent color anti-symmetric ghost propagator.Comment: 11 pages 16 figures, version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Probing the QCD Equation of State
We propose a novel quasiparticle interpretation of the equation of state of
deconfined QCD at finite temperature. Using appropriate thermal masses, we
introduce a phenomenological parametrisation of the onset of confinement in the
vicinity of the phase transition. Lattice results of bulk thermodynamic
quantities are well reproduced, the extension to small quark chemical potential
is also successful. We then apply the model to dilepton production and charm
suppression in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures. Invited talk presented by R. A. Schneider at the
XVI International Conference on Particles and Nuclei (PANIC02), Osaka, Japan,
September 30 - October 4, 200
QCD strings and the thermodynamics of the metastable phase of QCD at large
The thermodyanmics of a metastable hadronic phase of QCD at large are
related to properties of an effective QCD string. In particular, it is shown
that in the large limit and near the maximum hadronic temperature, ,
the energy density and pressure of the metastable phase scale as (for ) and (for ) where is the effective
number of transverse dimensions of the string theory. It is shown, however,
that for the thermodynamic quantities of interest the limits and
do not commute. The prospect of extracting via
lattice simulations of the metastable hadronic phase at moderately large
is discussed.Comment: After this paper was published, the author became aware of an
important early paper by Charles Thorn on the subject of the QCD phase
transition at large N_c and its relation to the Hagedorn spectrum. Given the
pioneering nature of Thorn's paper, and the fact that it is not as widely
known as it should be, it is important to cite it in the present work. This
updated version cites Thorn's wor
The boundary of the first order chiral phase transition in the m_pi-m_K--plane with a linear sigma model
Tree-level and complete one-loop parametrisation of the linear sigma model
(LSM) is performed and the phase boundary between first order and crossover
transition regions of the m_pi-m_K-plane is determined using the optimised
perturbation theory (OPT) as a resummation tool of perturbative series. Away
from the physical point the parameters of the model were determined by making
use of chiral perturbation theory (ChPT). The location of the phase boundary
for m_pi=m_K and of the tricritical point (TCP) on the m_pi=0 were estimated.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, uses espcrc1.sty; to appear in the proceedings of
Strong and Electroweak Matter 2006 (SEWM06), BNL, May 200
Anisotropic Lattices and Dynamical Fermions
We report results from full QCD calculations with two flavors of dynamical
staggered fermions on anisotropic lattices. The physical anisotropy as
determined from spatial and temporal masses, their corresponding dispersion
relations, and spatial and temporal Wilson loops is studied as a function of
the bare gauge anisotropy and the bare velocity of light appearing in the Dirac
operator. The anisotropy dependence of staggered fermion flavor symmetry
breaking is also examined. These results will then be applied to the study of
2-flavor QCD thermodynamics.Comment: Lattice2001(spectrum
A Lower Bound on in the O(4) Model on Anisotropic Lattices
Results of an investigation of the spin model at finite temperature
using anisotropic lattices are presented. In both the large approximation
and numerical simulations using the Wolff cluster algorithm we find that the
ratio of the symmetry restoration temperature to the Higgs mass
is independent of the anisotropy . From the numerical
simulations we obtain a lower bound of at a value for the Higgs mass , which is lowered
further by about at . Requiring certain timelike
correlation functions to coincide with their spacelike counterparts, quantum
and scaling corrections to the anisotropy are determined and are found to be
small, i.e., the anisotropy is found to be close to the ratio of spacelike and
timelike lattice spacings.Comment: 16 pages with 4 ps figures included. LaTeX file. BI-TP 92/27,
FSU-SCRI-92-101, HLRZ-92-40, TIFR/TH/92-4
Phase diagram at finite temperature and quark density in the strong coupling limit of lattice QCD for color SU(3)
We study the phase diagram of quark matter at finite temperature (T) and
finite chemical potential (mu) in the strong coupling limit of lattice QCD for
color SU(3). We derive an analytical expression of the effective free energy as
a function of T and mu, including baryon effects. The finite temperature
effects are evaluated by integrating over the temporal link variable exactly in
the Polyakov gauge with anti-periodic boundary condition for fermions. The
obtained phase diagram shows the first order phase transition at low
temperatures and the second order phase transition at high temperatures
separated by the tri-critical point in the chiral limit. Baryon has effects to
reduce the effective free energy and to extend the hadron phase to a larger mu
direction at low temperatures.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figure
The scalar glueball spectrum
We discuss scenarios for scalar glueballs using arguments based on sum rules,
spectral decomposition, the approximation, the scales of the
strong interaction and the topology of the flux tubes. We analyze the
phenomenological support of those scenarios and their observational
implications. Our investigations hint a rich low lying glueball spectrum.Comment: 11 pages: New title, figure, table and a more detailed comparison
with experiment
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