25,956 research outputs found
Instanton classical solutions of SU(3) fixed point actions on open lattices
We construct instanton-like classical solutions of the fixed point action of
a suitable renormalization group transformation for the SU(3) lattice gauge
theory. The problem of the non-existence of one-instantons on a lattice with
periodic boundary conditions is circumvented by working on open lattices. We
consider instanton solutions for values of the size (0.6-1.9 in lattice units)
which are relevant when studying the SU(3) topology on coarse lattices using
fixed point actions. We show how these instanton configurations on open
lattices can be taken into account when determining a few-couplings
parametrization of the fixed point action.Comment: 23 pages, LaTeX, 4 eps figures, epsfig.sty; some comments adde
Coherent XUV generation driven by sharp metal tips photoemission
It was already experimentally demonstrated that high-energy electrons can be
generated using metal nanotips as active media. In addition, it has been
theoretically proven that the high-energy tail of the photoemitted electrons is
intrinsically linked to the recollision phenomenon. Through this recollision
process it is also possible to convert the energy gained by the laser-emitted
electron in the continuum in a coherent XUV photon. It means the emission of
harmonic radiation appears to be feasible, although it has not been
experimentally demonstrated hitherto till now. In this paper, we employ a
quantum mechanical approach to model the electron dipole moment including both
the laser experimental conditions and the bulk matter properties and predict is
possible to generate coherent UV and XUV radiation using metal nanotips as
sources. Our quantum mechanical results are fully supported by their classical
counterparts.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1309.034
From Perturbation Theory to Confinement: How the String Tension is built up
We study the spatial volume dependence of electric flux energies for SU(2)
Yang-Mills fields on the torus with twisted boundary conditions. The results
approach smoothly the rotational invariant Confinement regime. The would-be
string tension is very close to the infinite volume result already for volumes
of . We speculate on the consequences of our result for
the Confinement mechanism.Comment: 6p, ps-file (uuencoded). Contribution to Lattice'93 Conference
(Dallas, 1993). Preprint INLO-PUB 18/93, FTUAM-93/4
Probing for Instanton Quarks with epsilon-Cooling
We use epsilon-cooling, adjusting at will the order a^2 corrections to the
lattice action, to study the parameter space of instantons in the background of
non-trivial holonomy and to determine the presence and nature of constituents
with fractional topological charge at finite and zero temperature for SU(2). As
an additional tool, zero temperature configurations were generated from those
at finite temperature with well-separated constituents. This is achieved by
"adiabatically" adjusting the anisotropic coupling used to implement finite
temperature on a symmetric lattice. The action and topological charge density,
as well as the Polyakov loop and chiral zero-modes are used to analyse these
configurations. We also show how cooling histories themselves can reveal the
presence of constituents with fractional topological charge. We comment on the
interpretation of recent fermion zero-mode studies for thermalized ensembles at
small temperatures.Comment: 26 pages, 14 figures in 33 part
Nitrogen dynamics in the shallow groundwater of a riparian wetland zone of the Garonne, SW France: nitrate inputs, bacterial densities, organic matter supply and denitrification measurements
This study highlights the role of interactions between surface and sub-surface water of the riparian zone of a large river (the Garonne, SW
France). Information is given about the role of surface water in supplying Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC ) to the riparian zone for nitrate
removal processes. The densities of bacteria (up to 3.3106 cell m L-1) in groundwater are strongly conditioned by the water moving during
flood events. Total bacterial densities in groundwater were related to surface water bacterial densities. In sediment, total bacteria are attached
mainly to fine particles (90 % in the fraction < 1 mm). Spatial variations in organic carbon and nitrate content in groundwater at the site
studied are correlated with exchanges between the groundwater and the river, from the upstream to the downstream part of the meander. Total
bacterial densities, nitrate and decressing organic carbon concentrations follow the same pattern. These results suggest that, in this kind of
riparian wetland, nitrate from alluvial groundwater influenced by agricultural practices may be denitrified by bacteria in the presence of
organic carbon from river surface water
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