8,536 research outputs found
Bethe-Salpeter equations: mesons beyond the rainbow-ladder truncation
We investigate masses of light mesons from a coupled system of
Dyson--Schwinger (DSE) and Bethe--Salpeter equations (BSE), taking into account
dominant non-Abelian, sub-leading Abelian, and dominant pion cloud
contributions to the dressed quark-gluon vertex. The axial-vector
Ward-Takahashi identity preserving Bethe-Salpeter kernel is constructed and the
spectrum of light mesons calculated. Our model goes significantly beyond the
rainbow-ladder. We find that sub-leading Abelian corrections are further
dynamically suppressed, and that our results supersede early qualitative
predictions from simple truncation schemes.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. Talk given at the 5-th Int. Conf. on
Quarks and Nuclear Physics, Beijing, September 21-26,200
Carbon Abatement Costs: Why the Wide Range of Estimates?
Estimates of marginal abatement costs for reducing carbon emissions derived from major economic-energy models vary widely. Controlling for policy regimes, we use meta-analysis to examine the importance of structural modeling choices in explaining differences in estimates. The analysis indicates that particular assumptions about perfectly foresighted consumers and Armington trade elasticities generate lower estimates of marginal abatement costs. Other choices are associated with higher cost estimates, including perfectly mobile capital, inclusion of a backstop technology, and greater disaggregation among regions and sectors. Some features, such as greater technological detail, seem less significant. Understanding the importance of key modeling assumptions, as well as the way the models are used to estimate abatement costs, can help guide the development of consistent modeling practices for policy evaluation.climate models, carbon tax
Environmental and Technology Policies for Climate Mitigation
We assess different policies for reducing carbon dioxide emissions and promoting the innovation and diffusion of renewable energy. We evaluate the relative performance of policies according to incentives provided for emissions reduction, efficiency, and other outcomes. We also assess how the nature of technological progress through learning and R&D, and the degree of knowledge spillovers, affect the desirability of different policies. Due to knowledge spillovers, optimal policy involves a portfolio of different instruments targeted at emissions, learning, and R&D. Although the relative cost of individual policies in achieving reductions depends on parameter values and the emissions target, in a numerical application to the U.S. electricity sector, the ranking is roughly as follows: (1) emissions price, (2) emissions performance standard, (3) fossil power tax, (4) renewables share requirement, (5) renewables subsidy, and (6) R&D subsidy. Nonetheless, an optimal portfolio of policies achieves emissions reductions at significantly lower cost than any single policy.environment, technology, externality, policy, climate change, renewable energy
Probing the gluon self-interaction in light mesons
We investigate masses and decay constants of light mesons from a coupled
system of Dyson--Schwinger and Bethe--Salpeter equations. We explicitly take
into account dominant non-Abelian contributions to the dressed quark-gluon
vertex stemming from the gluon self-interaction. We construct the corresponding
Bethe-Salpeter kernel that satisfies the axial-vector Ward-Takahashi identity.
Our numerical treatment fully includes all momentum dependencies with all
equations solved completely in the complex plane. This approach goes well
beyond the rainbow-ladder approximation and permits us to investigate the
influence of the gluon self-interaction on the properties of mesons. As a first
result we find indications of a nonperturbative cancellation of the gluon
self-interaction contributions and pion cloud effects in the mass of the
rho-meson.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. Matches published version in PR
Mass spectra and Regge trajectories of light mesons in the Bethe-Salpeter approach
We extend the calculation of relativistic bound-states of a fermion
anti-fermion pair in the Bethe-Salpeter formalism to the case of total angular
momentum . Together with results for this allows for the
investigation of Regge trajectories in this approach. We exemplify such a study
for ground and excited states of light unflavored mesons as well as strange
mesons within the rainbow-ladder approximation. For the - and
-meson we find a linear Regge trajectory within numerical accuracy.
Discrepancies with experiment in other channels highlight the need to go beyond
rainbow-ladder and to consider effects such as state mixing and more
sophisticated quark-antiquark interaction kernels.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables. Minor typos corrected; accepted in
EPJ
A fresh look at hadronic light-by-light scattering in the muon g-2 with the Dyson-Schwinger approach
We present first results for the hadronic light-by-light scattering
contribution to the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon a_{\mu} in the
framework of Dyson-Schwinger and Bethe-Salpeter equations. We determine the
quark loop and pseudoscalar ({\pi}^0, {\eta}, {\eta}') meson exchange diagram
using a phenomenological model for the combined strength of the gluon
propagator and the quark-gluon interaction as the only input. Our result for
meson exchange, a_{\mu}^{LBL;PS}=(84 \pm 13) x 10^{-11}, is commensurate with
previous calculations. However, our number for the quark loop contribution,
a_{\mu}^{LBL;quarkloop} = (107 \pm 2 \pm 46) x 10^{-11}, is significantly
larger due to dressing effects in the quark propagator and the quark-photon
vertex. Taken at face value, this then leads to a revised estimate of the total
a_{\mu}=116 591 865.0(96.6) x 10^{-11}, which reduces the difference between
theory and experiment to about 1.9 {\sigma}.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, v2: title slightly changed, minor corrections,
version accepted by EP
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