550 research outputs found
Direct Instantons and Nucleon Magnetic Moments
We calculate the leading direct-instanton contributions to the operator
product expansion of the nucleon correlator in a magnetic background field and
set up improved QCD sum rules for the nucleon magnetic moments. Remarkably, the
instanton contributions are found to affect only those sum rules which had
previously been considered unstable. The new sum rules show good stability and
reproduce the experimental values of the nucleon magnetic moments with values
of , the quark condensate magnetic susceptibility, consistent with other
estimates.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure
Linear meson and baryon trajectories in AdS/QCD
An approximate holographic dual of QCD is constructed and shown to reproduce
the empirical linear trajectories of universal slope on which the square masses
of radially and orbitally excited hadrons join. Conformal symmetry breaking and
other IR effects are described exclusively by deformations of the anti-de
Sitter background metric. The predictions for the light hadron spectrum include
new relations between ground state masses and trajectory slopes and are in good
overall agreement with experimental data.Comment: 4 page
Vacuum structure and string tension in Yang-Mills dimeron ensembles
We numerically simulate ensembles of SU(2) Yang-Mills dimeron solutions with
a statistical weight determined by the classical action and perform a
comprehensive analysis of their properties. In particular, we examine the
extent to which these ensembles capture topological and confinement properties
of the Yang-Mills vacuum. This further allows us to test the classic picture of
meron-induced quark confinement as triggered by dimeron dissociation. At small
bare couplings, spacial, topological-charge and color correlations among the
dimerons generate a short-range order which screens topological charges. With
increasing coupling this order weakens rapidly, however, in part because the
dimerons gradually dissociate into their meron constituents. Monitoring
confinement properties by evaluating Wilson-loop expectation values, we find
the growing disorder due to these progressively liberated merons to generate a
finite and (with the coupling) increasing string tension. The short-distance
behavior of the static quark-antiquark potential, on the other hand, is
dominated by small, "instanton-like" dimerons. String tension, action density
and topological susceptibility of the dimeron ensembles in the physical
coupling region turn out to be of the order of standard values. Hence the above
results demonstrate without reliance on weak-coupling or low-density
approximations that the dissociating dimeron component in the Yang-Mills vacuum
can indeed produce a meron-populated confining phase. The density of
coexisting, hardly dissociated and thus instanton-like dimerons seems to remain
large enough, on the other hand, to reproduce much of the additional
phenomenology successfully accounted for by non-confining instanton vacuum
models. Hence dimeron ensembles should provide an efficient basis for a rather
complete description of the Yang-Mills vacuum.Comment: 36 pages, 17 figure
Gauge-invariant and infrared-improved variational analysis of the Yang-Mills vacuum wave functional
We study a gauge-invariant variational framework for the Yang-Mills vacuum
wave functional. Our approach is built on gauge-averaged Gaussian trial
functionals which substantially extend previously used trial bases in the
infrared by implementing a general low-momentum expansion for the vacuum-field
dispersion (which is taken to be analytic at zero momentum). When completed by
the perturbative Yang-Mills dispersion at high momenta, this results in a
significantly enlarged trial functional space which incorporates both dynamical
mass generation and asymptotic freedom. After casting the dynamics associated
with these wave functionals into an effective action for collections of soft
vacuum-field orbits, the leading infrared improvements manifest themselves as
four-gradient interactions. Those turn out to significantly lower the minimal
vacuum energy density, thus indicating a clear overall improvement of the
vacuum description. The dimensional transmutation mechanism and the dynamically
generated mass scale remain almost quantitatively robust, however, which
ensures that our prediction for the gluon condensate is consistent with
standard values. Further results include a finite group velocity for the soft
gluonic modes due to the higher-gradient corrections and indications for a
negative differential color resistance of the Yang-Mills vacuum.Comment: 47 pages, 5 figures (vs2 contains a few minor stylistic adjustments
to match the published version
Holographic glueball structure
We derive and systematically analyze scalar glueball correlation functions in
both the hard-wall and dilaton soft-wall approximations to holographic QCD. The
dynamical content of the holographic correlators is uncovered by examining
their spectral density and by relating them to the operator product expansion,
a dilatational low-energy theorem and a recently suggested two-dimensional
power correction associated with the short-distance behavior of the heavy-quark
potential. This approach provides holographic estimates for the three
lowest-dimensional gluon condensates or alternatively their Wilson
coefficients, the two leading moments of the instanton size distribution in the
QCD vacuum and an effective UV gluon mass. A remarkable complementarity between
the nonperturbative physics of the hard- and soft-wall correlators emerges, and
their ability to describe detailed QCD results can be assessed quantitatively.
We further provide the first holographic estimates for the decay constants of
the 0++ glueball and its excitations. The hard-wall background turns out to
encode more of the relevant QCD physics, and its prediction f ~ 0.8-0.9 GeV for
the phenomenologically important ground state decay constant agrees inside
errors with recent QCD sum rule and lattice results.Comment: 25 pages, discussion extended to match the published version (up to
stylistic details), results and conclusions unchange
A cross-linguistic database of phonetic transcription systems
Contrary to what non-practitioners might expect, the systems of phonetic notation used by linguists are highly idiosyncratic. Not only do various linguistic subfields disagree on the specific symbols they use to denote the speech sounds of languages, but also in large databases of sound inventories considerable variation can be found. Inspired by recent efforts to link cross-linguistic data with help of reference catalogues (Glottolog, Concepticon) across different resources, we present initial efforts to link different phonetic notation systems to a catalogue of speech sounds. This is achieved with the help of a database accompanied by a software framework that uses a limited but easily extendable set of non-binary feature values to allow for quick and convenient registration of different transcription systems, while at the same time linking to additional datasets with restricted inventories. Linking different transcription systems enables us to conveniently translate between different phonetic transcription systems, while linking sounds to databases allows users quick access to various kinds of metadata, including feature values, statistics on phoneme inventories, and information on prosody and sound classes. In order to prove the feasibility of this enterprise, we supplement an initial version of our cross-linguistic database of phonetic transcription systems (CLTS), which currently registers five transcription systems and links to fifteen datasets, as well as a web application, which permits users to conveniently test the power of the automatic translation across transcription systems
Hyperon-nucleon coupling from QCD sum rules
The NKY coupling constant for and is evaluated in a
QCD sum rule calculation. We discuss and extend the result of a previous
analysis in the structure and compare it with the result
obtained with the use of the structure. We find a
huge violation of the SU(3) symmetry in the
structure.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, espcrc2.sty included. Talk presented at QCD99,
Montpellier, France (to appear in Nucl.Phys.B Proc.Suppl.
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