72,489 research outputs found
Density, short-range order and the quark-gluon plasma
We study the thermal part of the energy density spatial correlator in the
quark-gluon plasma. We describe its qualitative form at high temperatures. We
then calculate it out to distances approx. 1.5/T in SU(3) gauge theory lattice
simulations for the range of temperatures 0.9<= T/T_c<= 2.2. The
vacuum-subtracted correlator exhibits non-monotonic behavior, and is almost
conformal by 2T_c. Its broad maximum at r approx. 0.6/T suggests a dense medium
with only weak short-range order, similar to a non-relativistic fluid near the
liquid-gas phase transition, where eta/s is minimal.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Locality and Statistical Error Reduction on Correlation Functions
We propose a multilevel Monte-Carlo scheme, applicable to local actions,
which is expected to reduce statistical errors on correlation functions. We
give general arguments to show how the efficiency and parameters of the
algorithm are determined by the low-energy spectrum. As an application, we
measure the euclidean-time correlation of pairs of Wilson loops in SU(3) pure
gauge theory with constant relative errors. In this case the ratio of the new
method's efficiency to the standard one increases as exp{m_0t/2}, where m_0 is
the mass gap and t the time separation.Comment: One paragraph changed in the introduction; some misprints corrected;
12 pages, 6 figure
Vector screening masses in the quark-gluon plasma and their physical significance
Static and non-static thermal screening states that couple to the conserved
vector current are investigated in the high-temperature phase of QCD. Their
masses and couplings to the current are determined at weak coupling, as well as
using two-flavor lattice QCD simulations. A consistent picture emerges from the
comparison, providing evidence that non-static Matsubara modes can indeed be
treated perturbatively. We elaborate on the physical significance of the
screening masses.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Submitted as a contribution to the proceedings of
the Quark Matter 2014 conference (talk given by H. Meyer
A relation between screening masses and real-time rates
Thermal screening masses related to the conserved vector current are
determined for the case that the current carries a non-zero Matsubara
frequency, both in a weak-coupling approach and through lattice QCD. We point
out that such screening masses are sensitive to the same infrared physics as
light-cone real-time rates. In particular, on the perturbative side, the
inhomogeneous Schrodinger equation determining screening correlators is shown
to have the same general form as the equation implementing LPM resummation for
the soft-dilepton and photon production rates from a hot QCD plasma. The static
potential appearing in the equation is identical to that whose soft part has
been determined up to NLO and on the lattice in the context of jet quenching.
Numerical results based on this potential suggest that screening masses
overshoot the free results (multiples of 2piT) more strongly than at zero
Matsubara frequency. Four-dimensional lattice simulations in two-flavour QCD at
temperatures of 250 and 340 MeV confirm the non-static screening masses at the
10% level. Overall our results lend support to studies of jet quenching based
on the same potential at T > 250 MeV.Comment: 32 pages. v2: clarifications added, typos corrected; published
versio
The limits of ex post implementation
The sensitivity of Bayesian implementation to agents' beliefs about others suggests the use of more robust notions of implementation such as ex-post implementation, which requires that each agent' s strategy be optimal for every possible realization of the types of other agents. We show that the only deterministic social choice functions that are ex-post implementable in generic mechanism design frameworks with multi-dimensional signals, interdependent valuations and transferable utilities, are constant functions. In other words, deterministic ex-post implementation requires that the same alternative must be chosen irrespective of agents' signals. The proof shows that
ex-post implementability of a non-trivial deterministic social choice function implies that certain rates of information substitution coincide for all agents.
This condition amounts to a system of differential equations that are not satis�ed by generic valuation functions
Proposed Category System for 1960-2000 Census Occupations
This paper proposes a detailed, consistent category system for occupations in the Census of Population data from 1960 to 2000. Most of the categories are based on the 1990 Census occupation definitions. We analyze employment levels, average earnings levels, and earnings variance in our occupation categories over time, compare these to similar trends for occupations defined in the occ1950 IPUMS classification, and test both classifications for consistency over time.occupations; jobs; classification; categories; metadata; Census; IPUMS
Gluon contributions to the pion mass and light cone momentum fraction
We calculate the matrix elements of the gluonic contributions to the
energy-momentum tensor for a pion of mass 600 < Mpi < 1100 MeV in quenched
lattice QCD. We find that gluons contribute (37 +/- 8 +/- 12)% of the pion's
light cone momentum. The bare matrix elements corresponding to the trace
anomaly contribution to the pion mass are also obtained. The discretizations of
the energy-momentum tensor we use have other promising applications, ranging
from calculating the origin of hadron spin to QCD thermodynamics.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
NICMOS2 hubble space telescope observations of the embedded cluster associated with Mon R2: Constraining the substellar initial mass function
We have analyzed Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS2 F110W-, F160W-, F165M-, and F207M-band images covering the central 1' × 1' region of the cluster associated with Mon R2 in order to constrain the initial mass function (IMF) down to 20M_J. The flux ratio between the F165M and F160W bands was used to measure the strength of the water-band absorption feature and select a sample of 12 out of the total sample of 181 objects that have effective temperatures between 2700 and 3300 K. These objects are placed in the H-R diagram together with sources observed by Carpenter et al. to estimate an age of ~1 Myr for the low-mass cluster population. By constructing extinction-limited samples, we are able to constrain the IMF and the fraction of stars with a circumstellar disk in a sample that is 90% complete for both high- and low-mass objects. For stars with estimated masses between 0.1 and 1.0 M_☉ for a 1 Myr population with A_V ≤ 19 mag, we find that 27% ± 9% have a near-infrared excess indicative of a circumstellar disk. The derived fraction is similar to or slightly lower than the fraction found in other star-forming regions of comparable age. We constrain the number of stars in the mass interval 0.08-1.0 M_☉ to the number of objects in the mass interval 0.02-0.08 M_☉ by forming the ratio R^(**) = N(0.08-1 M_☉)/N(0.02-0.08 M_☉) for objects in an extinction-limited sample complete for A_V ≤ 7 mag. The ratio is found to be R^(**) = 2.2 ± 1.3, assuming an age of 1 Myr, consistent with the similar ratio predicted by the system IMF proposed by Chabrier. The ratio is similar to the ratios observed toward the Orion Nebula Cluster and IC 348, as well as the ratio derived in the 28 deg^2 survey of Taurus by Guieu et al
Specifying Reusable Components
Reusable software components need expressive specifications. This paper
outlines a rigorous foundation to model-based contracts, a method to equip
classes with strong contracts that support accurate design, implementation, and
formal verification of reusable components. Model-based contracts
conservatively extend the classic Design by Contract with a notion of model,
which underpins the precise definitions of such concepts as abstract
equivalence and specification completeness. Experiments applying model-based
contracts to libraries of data structures suggest that the method enables
accurate specification of practical software
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