5,687 research outputs found
Hybrid Monte Carlo Without Pseudofermions
We introduce a dynamical fermion algorithm which is based on the hybrid Monte
Carlo (HMC) algorithm, but without pseudofermions. The molecular dynamics steps
in HMC are retained except the derivatives with respect to the gauge fields are
calculated with the noise. The determinant ratios are estimated with the
Pa\`{d}e - method. Finally, we use the Kennedy-Kuti linear accept/reject
method for the Monte Carlo step which is shown to respect detailed balance. We
comment on the comparison of this algorithm with the pseudofermion algorithm.Comment: 4 pages, Latex, 3 ps figures. Talk presente at Lattice '9
Proton Spin Content From Lattice QCD
We calculate the form factor of the quark energy momentum tensor and thereby
extract the quark orbital angular momentum of the nucleon. The calculation is
done on a quenched lattice at and with Wilson
fermions at = 0.148, 0.152, 0.154 and 0.155. We calculate the
disconnected insertion stochastically which employs the noise with an
unbiased subtraction. This proves to be an efficient method of reduce the error
from the noise. We find that the total quark contribution to the proton spin is
. From this we deduce that the quark orbital angular momentum is
and predict the gluon spin to be , i.e. about
40% of the proton spin is due to the glue.Comment: LATTICE99(Matrix Elements), 3 pages, 3 figure
Oxygen vacancy levels and electron transport in Al(2)O(3)
The energy levels of the oxygen vacancy in α- and Ξ-Al2O3 were calculated using the screened exchange hybrid functional, and explain the electron hopping and trapping levels seen in deposited Al2O3 at ⌠1.8âeV below its conduction band edge. The vacancy supports five accessible charge states, from 2+ to 2â. Electron hopping corresponds to the 0/â level, which lies 1.8 eV below the conduction band edge in Ξ-Al2O3. This level lies much deeper than it does HfO2. The +/0 level lies at 2.8 eV above oxide valence band in Ξ-Al2O3 and thus below the Si valence band top
A Noisy Monte Carlo Algorithm
We propose a Monte Carlo algorithm to promote Kennedy and Kuti's linear
accept/reject algorithm which accommodates unbiased stochastic estimates of the
probability to an exact one. This is achieved by adopting the Metropolis
accept/reject steps for both the dynamical and noise configurations. We test it
on the five state model and obtain desirable results even for the case with
large noise. We also discuss its application to lattice QCD with stochastically
estimated fermion determinants.Comment: 10 pages, 1 tabl
Roper Resonance and S_{11}(1535) from Lattice QCD
Using the constrained curve fitting method and overlap fermions with the
lowest pion mass at , we observe that the masses of the first
positive and negative parity excited states of the nucleon tend to cross over
as the quark masses are taken to the chiral limit. Both results at the physical
pion mass agree with the experimental values of the Roper resonance
() and (). This is seen for the first
time in a lattice QCD calculation. These results are obtained on a quenched
Iwasaki lattice with . We also extract the
ghost states (a quenched artifact) which are shown to decouple from
the nucleon interpolation field above . From the
quark mass dependence of these states in the chiral region, we conclude that
spontaneously broken chiral symmetry dictates the dynamics of light quarks in
the nucleon.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, revised version to appear in PL
Topological Charge Correlators, Spectral Bounds, and Contact Terms
The structure of topological charge fluctuations in the QCD vacuum is
strongly restricted by the spectral negativity of the Euclidean 2-point
correlator for and the presence of a positive contact term. Some
examples are considered which illustrate the physical origin of these
properties.Comment: Lattice 2002 Conference Proceeding
Infrared cutoff dependence of the critical flavor number in three-dimensional QED
We solve, analytically and numerically, a gap equation in parity invariant
QED_3 in the presence of an infrared cutoff \mu and derive an expression for
the critical fermion number N_c as a function of \mu. We argue that this
dependence of N_c on the infrared scale might solve the discrepancy between
continuum Schwinger-Dyson equations studies and lattice simulations of QED_3.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure (revtex4), final versio
Low-dimensional long-range topological structure in the QCD vacuum
Lattice topological charge associated with Ginsparg-Wilson fermions exhibits
generic topological stability over quantum ensemble of configurations
contributing to the QCD path integral. Moreover, the underlying chiral symmetry
leads to the suppression of ultraviolet noise in the associated topological
charge densities ("chiral smoothing"). This provides a solid foundation for the
direct study of the role of topological charge fluctuations in the physics of
QCD vacuum. Using these tools it was recently demonstrated that: (a) there is a
well-defined space-time structure (order) in topological charge density
(defined through overlap fermions) for typical configurations contributing to
QCD path integral; (b) this fundamental structure is low-dimensional,
exhibiting sign-coherent behavior on subsets of dimension less than four and
not less than one; (c) the structure has a long-range global character
(spreading over maximal space-time distances) and is built around the locally
one-dimensional network of strong fields (skeleton). In this talk we elaborate
on certain aspects and implications of these results.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure; Lattice2003(topology
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