16 research outputs found
Probing the proton and its excitations in full QCD
We present a first look at the application of variational techniques for the
extraction of the electromagnetic properties of an excited nucleon system. In
particular, we include preliminary results for charge radii and magnetic
moments of the proton, its first even-parity excitation and the .Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, presented at the 31st International Symposium on
Lattice Field Theory (Lattice 2013), 29 July - 3 August 2013, Mainz, German
Transition of in Lattice QCD
With the ongoing experimental interest in exploring the excited hadron
spectrum, evaluations of the matrix elements describing the formation and decay
of such states via radiative processes provide us with an important connection
between theory and experiment. In particular, determinations obtained via the
lattice allow for a direct comparison of QCD-expectation with experimental
observation. Here we present the first light quark determination of the transition form factor from lattice QCD using dynamical
quarks. Using the PACS-CS 2+1 flavour QCD ensembles we are able to obtain
results across a range of masses, to the near physical value of
MeV. An important aspect of our approach is the use of variational methods to
isolate the desired QCD eigenstate. For low-lying states, such techniques
facilitate the removal of excited state contributions. In principle the method
enables one to consider arbitrary eigenstates. We find our results are in
accord with the non-relativistic quark model for heavy masses. In moving
towards the light-quark regime we observe an interesting quark mass dependence,
contrary to the quark model expectation. Comparison of our light-quark result
with experimental determinations highlights a significant discrepancy
suggesting that disconnected sea-quark loop contributions may play a
significant role in fully describing this process.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures and 1 tabl
Isolating the \Lambda(1405) in Lattice QCD
The negative-parity ground state of the \Lambda{} baryon lies surprisingly
low in mass. At 1405.1 MeV, it lies lower than the negative-parity ground state
nucleon, even though it has a valence strange quark. Using the PACS-CS
(2+1)-flavour full-QCD ensembles available through the ILDG, we employ a
variational analysis using source and sink smearing to isolate this elusive
state. We find three low-lying odd-parity states, and for the first time
reproduce the correct level ordering with respect to the nearby scattering
thresholds.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figure
Extracting Low-Lying Lambda Resonances Using Correlation Matrix Techniques
The lowest-lying negative-parity state of the Lambda is investigated in
(2+1)-flavour full-QCD on the PACS-CS configurations made available through the
ILDG. We show that a variational analysis using multiple source and sink
smearings can extract a state lying lower than that obtained by using a
standard fixed smeared source and sink operator alone.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, submitted to the proceedings of T(R)OPICAL QCD II,
Cairns, Australia, 201
Parity-expanded variational analysis for non-zero momentum
In recent years, the use of variational analysis techniques in lattice QCD
has been demonstrated to be successful in the investigation of the rest-mass
spectrum of many hadrons. However, due to parity-mixing, more care must be
taken for investigations of boosted states to ensure that the projected
correlation functions provided by the variational analysis correspond to the
same states at zero momentum. In this paper we present the Parity-Expanded
Variational Analysis (PEVA) technique, a novel method for ensuring the
successful and consistent isolation of boosted baryons through a parity
expansion of the operator basis used to construct the correlation matrix.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Lattice QCD Evidence that the Lambda(1405) Resonance is an Antikaon-Nucleon Molecule
For almost 50 years the structure of the Lambda(1405) resonance has been a
mystery. Even though it contains a heavy strange quark and has odd parity, its
mass is lower than any other excited spin-1/2 baryon. Dalitz and co-workers
speculated that it might be a molecular state of an antikaon bound to a
nucleon. However, a standard quark-model structure is also admissible. Although
the intervening years have seen considerable effort, there has been no
convincing resolution. Here we present a new lattice QCD simulation showing
that the strange magnetic form factor of the Lambda(1405) vanishes, signaling
the formation of an antikaon-nucleon molecule. Together with a Hamiltonian
effective-field-theory model analysis of the lattice QCD energy levels, this
strongly suggests that the structure is dominated by a bound antikaon-nucleon
component. This result clarifies that not all states occurring in nature can be
described within a simple quark model framework and points to the existence of
exotic molecular meson-nucleon bound states.Comment: Manuscript accepted for publication. 4 figures, 5 page
Accessing High Momentum States In Lattice QCD
Two measures are defined to evaluate the coupling strength of smeared
interpolating operators to hadronic states at a variety of momenta. Of
particular interest is the extent to which strong overlap can be obtained with
individual high-momentum states. This is vital to exploring hadronic structure
at high momentum transfers on the lattice and addressing interesting phenomena
observed experimentally. We consider a novel idea of altering the shape of the
smeared operator to match the Lorentz contraction of the probability
distribution of the high-momentum state, and show a reduction in the relative
error of the two-point function by employing this technique. Our most important
finding is that the overlap of the states becomes very sharp in the smearing
parameters at high momenta and fine tuning is required to ensure strong overlap
with these states.Comment: 10 page
Variational approach to the calculation of gA
AbstractA long standing problem in lattice QCD has been the discrepancy between the experimental and calculated values for the axial charge of the nucleon, gA≡GA(Q2=0). Though finite volume effects have been shown to be large, it has also been suggested that excited state effects may also play a significant role in suppressing the value of gA. In this work, we apply a variational method to generate operators that couple predominantly to the ground state, thus systematically removing excited state contamination from the extraction of gA. The utility and success of this approach is manifest in the early onset of ground state saturation and the early onset of a clear plateau in the correlation function ratio proportional to gA. Through a comparison with results obtained via traditional methods, we show how excited state effects can suppress gA by as much as 8% if sources are not properly tuned or source–sink separations are insufficiently large