43,708 research outputs found
Monte Carlo Study of Two-Color QCD with Finite Chemical Potential - Status report of Wilson fermion simulation
Using Wilson fermions, we study SU(2) lattice QCD with the chemical potential
at . The ratio of fermion determinants is evaluated at each
Metropolis link update step. We calculate the baryon number density, the
Polyakov loops and the pseudoscalar and vector masses on and lattices. Preliminary data show the pseudoscalar meson becomes massive
around , which indicates the chiral symmetry restoration. The
calculation is broken down when approaching to the transition region. We
analyze the behavior of the fermion determinant and eigen value distributions
of the determinant, which shows a peculiar ``Shell-and-Bean'' pattern near the
transition.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, Lattice 2000 (Finite Density
Toda Lattice and Tomimatsu-Sato Solutions
We discuss an analytic proof of a conjecture (Nakamura) that solutions of
Toda molecule equation give those of Ernst equation giving Tomimatsu-Sato
solutions of Einstein equation. Using Pfaffian identities it is shown for Weyl
solutions completely and for generic cases partially.Comment: LaTeX 8 page
Pion Interferometry From A Relativistic Fluid With A First Order Phase Transition In CERN-SPS 158 GeV/A Pb+Pb Collisions
We investigate pion source sizes through the Yano-Koonin-Podgoretski\u{\i}
(YKP) parametrization for the Hanbury-Brown Twiss (HBT) effect in the CERN-SPS
158 GeV/A central collisions. We calculate two-particle correlation functions
numerically based on a (3+1)-dimensional relativistic hydrodynamics with a
first order phase transition and analyze the pair momentum dependence of the
HBT radii extracted from the YKP parametrization in detail. We find that even
in the case of a first order phase transition, expansion and the surface
dominant freeze-out make the source in the hydrodynamical model opaque
significantly. Consequently, the interpretation of the temporal radius
parameter as the time duration becomes unavailable for the hydrodynamical
model.Comment: 5 pages, LaTeX with six eps figures, Contribution to 'International
Workshop XXVIII on Gross Properties of Nuclei And Nuclear Excitations'.
Hirchegg, Austria, Jan 16-22, 200
Quark and lepton masses and mixing in SO(10) with a GUT-scale vector matter
We explore in detail the effective matter fermion mass sum-rules in a class
of renormalizable SUSY SO(10) grand unified models where the quark and lepton
mass and mixing patterns originate from non-decoupling effects of an extra
vector matter multiplet living around the unification scale. If the
renormalizable type-II contribution governed by the SU(2)_L-triplet in 54_H
dominates the seesaw formula, we obtain an interesting correlation between the
maximality of the atmospheric neutrino mixing and the proximity of y_s/y_b to
V_cb in the quark sector.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables; v2: major update, references adde
Spin-orbit interactions in black-hole binaries
We perform numerical simulations of black-hole binaries to study the exchange
of spin and orbital angular momentum during the last, highly nonlinear, stages
of the coalescence process. To calculate the transfer of angular momentum from
orbital to spin, we start with two quasi-circular configurations, one with
initially non-spinning black holes, the other with corotating black holes. In
both cases the binaries complete almost two orbits before merging. We find
that, during these last orbits, the specific spin (a/m) of each horizon
increases by only 0.012 for the initially non-spinning configuration, and by
only 0.006 for the initially corotating configuration. By contrast, the
corotation value for the specific spin should increase from 0.1 at the initial
proper separation of 10M to 0.33 when the proper separation is 5M. Thus the
spin-orbit coupling is far too weak to tidally lock the binary to a corotating
state during the late-inspiral phase. We also study the converse transfer from
spin into orbital motion. In this case, we start the simulations with parallel,
highly-spinning non-boosted black holes. As the collision proceeds, the system
acquires a non-head-on orbital motion, due to spin-orbit coupling, that leads
to the radiation of angular momentum. We are able to accurately measure the
energy and angular momentum losses and model their dependence on the initial
spins.Comment: This version corrects two typos in Eq (4) and Table I present in the
published versio
Field measurement of penetrator seismic coupling in sediments and volcanic rocks
Field experiments were conducted to determine experimentally how well a seismometer installed using a penetrator would be coupled to the ground. A dry lake bed and a lava bed were chosen as test sites to represent geological environments of two widely different material properties. At each site, two half-scale penetrators were fired into the ground, a three-component geophone assembly was mounted to the aft end of each penetrator, and dummy penetrators were fired at various distances to generate seismic signals. The recorded signals were digitized, and cross-spectral analyses were performed to compare the observed signals in terms of power spectral density ratio, coherence and phase difference. The analyses indicate that seismometers deployed by penetrators will be as well coupled to the ground as are seismometers installed by conventional methods for the frequency range of interest in earthquake seismology, although some minor differences were observed at frequencies near the upper limit of the frequency band
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