20,035 research outputs found
The Supersymmetric Ward-Takahashi Identity in 1-Loop Lattice Perturbation Theory. I. General Procedure
The one-loop corrections to the lattice supersymmetric Ward-Takahashi
identity (WTi) are investigated in the off-shell regime. In the Wilson
formulation of the N=1 supersymmetric Yang-Mills (SYM) theory, supersymmetry
(SUSY) is broken by the lattice, by the Wilson term and is softly broken by the
presence of the gluino mass. However, the renormalization of the supercurrent
can be realized in a scheme that restores the continuum supersymmetric WTi
(once the on-shell condition is imposed). The general procedure used to
calculate the renormalization constants and mixing coefficients for the local
supercurrent is presented. The supercurrent not only mixes with the gauge
invariant operator . An extra mixing with other operators coming from
the WTi appears. This extra mixing survives in the continuum limit in the
off-shell regime and cancels out when the on-shell condition is imposed and the
renormalized gluino mass is set to zero. Comparison with numerical results are
also presented.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures. Typos error correcte
Living with ghosts in Lorentz invariant theories
We argue that theories with ghosts may have a long lived vacuum state even if
all interactions are Lorentz preserving. In space-time dimension D = 2, we
consider the tree level decay rate of the vacuum into ghosts and ordinary
particles mediated by non-derivative interactions, showing that this is finite
and logarithmically growing in time. For D > 2, the decay rate is divergent
unless we assume that the interaction between ordinary matter and the ghost
sector is soft in the UV, so that it can be described in terms of non-local
form factors rather than point-like vertices. We provide an example of a
nonlocal gravitational-strength interaction between the two sectors, which
appears to satisfy all observational constraints.Comment: 17 pages, comments and references adde
Dispersion interactions from a local polarizability model
A local approximation for dynamic polarizability leads to a nonlocal
functional for the long-range dispersion interaction energy via an
imaginary-frequency integral. We analyze several local polarizability
approximations and argue that the form underlying the construction of our
recent van der Waals functional [O. A. Vydrov and T. Van Voorhis, Phys. Rev.
Lett. 103, 063004 (2009)] is particularly well physically justified. Using this
improved formula, we compute dynamic dipole polarizabilities and van der Waals
C_6 coefficients for a set of atoms and molecules. Good agreement with the
benchmark values is obtained in most cases
Pseudorandomness for Regular Branching Programs via Fourier Analysis
We present an explicit pseudorandom generator for oblivious, read-once,
permutation branching programs of constant width that can read their input bits
in any order. The seed length is , where is the length of the
branching program. The previous best seed length known for this model was
, which follows as a special case of a generator due to
Impagliazzo, Meka, and Zuckerman (FOCS 2012) (which gives a seed length of
for arbitrary branching programs of size ). Our techniques
also give seed length for general oblivious, read-once branching
programs of width , which is incomparable to the results of
Impagliazzo et al.Our pseudorandom generator is similar to the one used by
Gopalan et al. (FOCS 2012) for read-once CNFs, but the analysis is quite
different; ours is based on Fourier analysis of branching programs. In
particular, we show that an oblivious, read-once, regular branching program of
width has Fourier mass at most at level , independent of the
length of the program.Comment: RANDOM 201
Vibrational properties of phonons in random binary alloys: An augmented space recursive technique in the k-representation
We present here an augmented space recursive technique in the
k-representation which include diagonal, off-diagonal and the environmental
disorder explicitly : an analytic, translationally invariant, multiple
scattering theory for phonons in random binary alloys.We propose the augmented
space recursion (ASR) as a computationally fast and accurate technique which
will incorporate configuration fluctuations over a large local environment. We
apply the formalism to , Ni_{88}Cr_12} and
alloys which is not a random choice. Numerical results on spectral functions,
coherent structure factors, dispersion curves and disordered induced FWHM's are
presented. Finally the results are compared with the recent itinerant coherent
potential approximation (ICPA) and also with experiments.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX, 23 figure
Supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory on the lattice
Recent development in numerical simulations of supersymmetric Yang-Mills
(SYM) theories on the lattice is reviewed.Comment: 37 pages, 10 figure
Physical Adsorption at the Nanoscale: Towards Controllable Scaling of the Substrate-Adsorbate van der Waals Interaction
The Lifshitz-Zaremba-Kohn (LZK) theory is commonly considered as the correct
large-distance limit for the van der Waals (vdW) interaction of adsorbates
(atoms, molecules, or nanoparticles) with solid substrates. In the standard
approximate form, implicitly based on "local" dielectric functions, the LZK
approach predicts universal power laws for vdW interactions depending only on
the dimensionality of the interacting objects. However, recent experimental
findings are challenging the universality of this theoretical approach at
finite distances of relevance for nanoscale assembly. Here, we present a
combined analytical and numerical many-body study demonstrating that physical
adsorption can be significantly enhanced at the nanoscale. Regardless of the
band gap or the nature of the adsorbate specie, we find deviations from
conventional LZK power laws that extend to separation distances of up to 10--20
nanometers. Comparison with recent experimental observation of ultra
long-ranged vdW interactions in the delamination of graphene from a silicon
substrate reveals qualitative agreement with the present theory. The
sensitivity of vdW interactions to the substrate response and to the adsorbate
characteristic excitation frequency also suggests that adsorption strength can
be effectively tuned in experiments, paving the way to an improved control of
physical adsorption at the nanoscale
Kaon Condensation in the Bound-State Approach to the Skyrme Model
We explore kaon condensation using the bound-state approach to the Skyrme
model on a 3-sphere. The condensation occurs when the energy required to
produce a falls below the electron fermi level. This happens at the
baryon number density on the order of 3--4 times nuclear density.Comment: LaTeX format, 15 pages. 3 Postscript figures, compressed and
uuencode
Search for an Near-IR Counterpart to the Cas A X-ray Point Source
We report deep near-infrared and optical observations of the X-ray point
source in the Cassiopeia A supernova remnant, CXO J232327.9+584842. We have
identified a J=21.4 +/- 0.3 mag and Ks=20.5 +/- 0.3 mag source within the
1-sigma error circle, but we believe this source is a foreground Pop II star
with Teff=2600-2800 K at a distance of ~2 kpc, which could not be the X-ray
point source. We do not detect any sources in this direction at the distance of
Cas A, and therefore place 3-sigma limits of R >~ 25 mag, F675W >~ 27.3 mag, J
>~ 22.5 mag and Ks >~ 21.2 mag (and roughly H >~ 20 mag) on emission from the
X-ray point source, corresponding to M_{R} >~ 8.2 mag, M_{F675W} >~ 10.7 mag,
M_{J} >~ 8.5 mag, M_{H} >~ 6.5 mag, and M_{Ks} >~ 8.0 mag, assuming a distance
of 3.4 kpc and an extinction A_{V}=5 mag.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures. Accepted by Ap
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