1,697 research outputs found
The radial distributions of a heavy-light meson on a lattice
In an earlier work, the charge (vector) and matter (scalar) radial
distributions of heavy-light mesons were measured in the quenched approximation
on a 16^3 times 24 lattice with a quark-gluon coupling of 5.7, a lattice
spacing of 0.17 fm, and a hopping parameter corresponding to a light quark mass
about that of the strange quark.
Several improvements are now made: 1) The configurations are generated using
dynamical fermions with a quark-gluon coupling of 5.2 (a lattice spacing of
0.14 fm); 2) Many more gauge configurations are included (78 compared with the
earlier 20); 3) The distributions at many off-axis, in addition to on-axis,
points are measured; 4) The data-analysis is much more complete. In particular,
distributions involving excited states are extracted.
The exponential decay of the charge and matter distributions can be described
by mesons of mass 0.9+-0.1 and 1.5+-0.1 GeV respectively - values that are
consistent with those of vector and scalar qqbar-states calculated directly
with the same lattice parameters.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, Lattice2002(heavyquark
A Study of Degenerate Four-quark states in SU(2) Lattice Monte Carlo
The energies of four-quark states are calculated for geometries in which the
quarks are situated on the corners of a series of tetrahedra and also for
geometries that correspond to gradually distorting these tetrahedra into a
plane. The interest in tetrahedra arises because they are composed of {\bf
three } degenerate partitions of the four quarks into two two-quark colour
singlets. This is an extension of earlier work showing that geometries with
{\bf two} degenerate partitions (e.g.\ squares) experience a large binding
energy. It is now found that even larger binding energies do not result, but
that for the tetrahedra the ground and first excited states become degenerate
in energy. The calculation is carried out using SU(2) for static quarks in the
quenched approximation with on a lattice. The
results are analysed using the correlation matrix between different euclidean
times and the implications of these results are discussed for a model based on
two-quark potentials.Comment: Original Raw PS file replace by a tarred, compressed and uuencoded PS
fil
Can lattice data for two heavy-light mesons be understood in terms of simply two-quark potentials?
By comparing lattice data for the two heavy-light meson system (Q^2 qbar^2)
with a standard many-body approach employing only interquark potentials, it is
shown that the use of unmodified two-quark potentials leads to a gross
overestimate of the binding energy.Comment: Contribution to LATTICE99 (Heavy Quarks). 3 pages, 2 ps figure
Non-perturbative determination of beta-functions and excited string states from lattices
We use lattice sum rules for the static quark potential to determine the
beta-function for symmetric and asymmetric lattices non-perturbatively. We also
study the colour field distributions in excited gluonic states.Comment: 9 pages, LATEX, 1 postscript figur
Flux-tube Structure, Sum Rules and Beta-functions in SU(2)
Action and energy flux-tube profiles are computed, in SU(2) with
beta=2.4,2.5, for two quarks up to 1 fm apart and for which the colour fields
are in their ground state (A_1g) and the first (E_u) and higher (A'_1g) excited
gluonic states. When these profiles are integrated over all space, a scaling
comparison is made between the beta=2.4 and 2.5 data. Using sum rules, these
integrated forms also permit an estimate to be made of generalised
beta-functions giving b(2.4)=-0.312(15), b(2.5)=-0.323(9), f(2.4)=0.65(1) and
f(2.5)=0.68(1). When the profiles are integrated only over planes transverse to
the interquark line and assuming underlying string features, scaling
comparisons are again made near the centres of the interquark line for the
largest interquark distances. For the A'_{1g} case, some of the profiles
exhibit a 'dip-like' structure characteristic of the Isgur-Paton model.Comment: 3 pages, 6 eps figures. Presented at LATTICE9
Continuous recording of the transport properties oa a superconducting tape using an AC magnetic field technique
The transport properties of superconductors are commonly characterized by means of a 4-probe measuring technique and the critical current is determined on a certain criterion for the electrical field. An alternative method to investigate the transport properties is to measure the magnetic response of a superconductor in a changing magnetic field. This magnetic technique has the interesting advantage that it can be used to investigate long lengths of (insulated) conductor. A detailed analysis is made to develop a reliable measuring procedure for this new test facility. The magnetic response of a superconductor is modeled in a description for an infinitely long tape with a rectangular cross-section and an arbitrary voltage-current relation. The calculated magnetic profiles, in space and time, are compared with experimental results at 77 K. It is demonstrated that the magnetic signal can be used to monitor the quality of a long length of tape (>500 m) with a high accuracy. Additionally it is shown that the shape of the voltage-current relation can be reconstructed based on the frequency dependence of the magnetic respons
Cooling and the SU(2) Instanton Vaccuum
We present results of an investigation into the nature of instantons in
4-dimensional pure gauge lattice \ obtained from configurations which
have been cooled using an under-relaxed cooling algorithm. We discuss ways of
calibrating the cooling and the effects of different degrees of cooling, and
compare our data for the shapes, sizes and locations of instantons with
continuum results. In this paper we extend the ideas and techniques developed
by us for use in , and compare the results with those obtained by other
groups.Comment: 22 pages, LaTeX, uuencoded compressed tarfile of figures sent
separately. Full (compressed) postscript version (118k)available from
ftp://rock.helsinki.fi/pub/preprints/tft/Year1995/HU-TFT-95-21/paper.ps.
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