459 research outputs found
Estimate of the hadronic vacuum polarization disconnected contribution to the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon from lattice QCD
The quark-line disconnected diagram is a potentially important ingredient in lattice QCD calculations of the hadronic vacuum polarization contribution to the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon. It is also a notoriously difficult one to evaluate. Here, for the first time, we give an estimate of this contribution based on lattice QCD results that have a statistically significant signal, albeit at one value of the lattice spacing and an unphysically heavy value of the u/d quark mass. We use HPQCDâs method of determining the anomalous magnetic moment by reconstructing the Adler function from time moments of the current-current correlator at zero spatial momentum. Our results lead to a total (including u, d and s quarks) quark-line disconnected contribution to aÎŒ of â0.15% of the u/d hadronic vacuum polarization contribution with an uncertainty which is 1% of that contribution
Heavy-light mesons with staggered light quarks
We demonstrate the viability of improved staggered light quarks in studies of
heavy-light systems. Our method for constructing heavy-light operators exploits
the close relation between naive and staggered fermions. The new approach is
tested on quenched configurations using several staggered actionsn combined
with nonrelativistic heavy quarks. The B_s meson kinetic mass, the hyperfine
and 1P-1S splittings in B_s, and the decay constant f_{B_s} are calculated and
compared to previous quenched lattice studies. An important technical detail,
Bayesian curve-fitting, is discussed at length.Comment: 38 pages, figures included. v2: Entry in Table IX corrected and other
minor changes, version appearing in Phys. Rev.
A multidisciplinary forensic analysis of two lightning deaths observed in South Africa
While in-depth studies of lightning deaths can be found in the literature, rarely do such investigations they utilize
a multidisciplinary approach, analysing both the medical and electrical aspects of a case. Even more rare, is to
find such studies on cases from the developing world such as Africa and South-East Asia - particularly in tropical
countries with very high lightning exposure. This paper details the forensic investigation of two lightning deaths
that took place during a weekend in February 2020, in South Africa. One event was eye witnessed and the other
was not (Case A and B). The investigation involves multidisciplinary forensic examination including case histories,
site analysis (including soil resistivity measurements), medical autopsies, lightning location system data
analysis and voltage gradient estimations. In both cases, lightning is determined to be the cause of death. In Case
A, we confirm that the responsible flash must have attached within close proximity to the deceased, if not a direct
strike and in Case B we confirm direct strike as the most probable mechanism of death. The importance of
clothing examination in the forensic studies of lightning victims is noted along with a discussion of the lightning
safety issues at play, and recommendations for avoiding such incidents in developing world countries.The National Research Foundation of South Africahttps://http//www.elsevier.com/locate/ijdrram2020Forensic Medicin
Heavy quark action on the anisotropic lattice
We investigate the improved quark action on anisotropic lattice as a
potential framework for the heavy quark, which may enable precision computation
of hadronic matrix elements of heavy-light mesons. The relativity relations of
heavy-light mesons as well as of heavy quarkonium are examined on a quenched
lattice with spatial lattice cutoff 1.6 GeV and the
anisotropy . We find that the bare anisotropy parameter tuned for the
massless quark describes both the heavy-heavy and heavy-light mesons within 2%
accuracy for the quark mass , which covers the charm quark
mass. This bare anisotropy parameter also successfully describes the
heavy-light mesons in the quark mass region within the
same accuracy. Beyond this region, the discretization effects seem to grow
gradually. The anisotropic lattice is expected to extend by a factor the
quark mass region in which the parameters in the action tuned for the massless
limit are applicable for heavy-light systems with well controlled systematic
errors.Comment: 11 pages, REVTeX4, 11 eps figure
Application of heavy-quark effective theory to lattice QCD: III. Radiative corrections to heavy-heavy currents
We apply heavy-quark effective theory (HQET) to separate long- and
short-distance effects of heavy quarks in lattice gauge theory. In this paper
we focus on flavor-changing currents that mediate transitions from one heavy
flavor to another. We stress differences in the formalism for heavy-light
currents, which are discussed in a companion paper, showing how HQET provides a
systematic matching procedure. We obtain one-loop results for the matching
factors of lattice currents, needed for heavy-quark phenomenology, such as the
calculation of zero-recoil form factors for the semileptonic decays . Results for the Brodsky-Lepage-Mackenzie scale are also
given.Comment: 35 pages, 17 figures. Program LatHQ2QCD to compute matching one-loop
coefficients available at http://theory.fnal.gov/people/kronfeld/LatHQ2QCD
Gauge Theories on a 2+2 Anisotropic Lattice
The implementation of gauge theories on a four-dimensional anisotropic
lattice with two distinct lattice spacings is discussed, with special attention
to the case where two axes are finely and two axes are coarsely discretized.
Feynman rules for the Wilson gauge action are derived and the renormalizability
of the theory and the recovery of the continuum limit are analyzed. The
calculation of the gluon propagator and the restoration of Lorentz invariance
in on-shell states is presented to one-loop order in lattice perturbation
theory for on both 2+2 and 3+1 lattices.Comment: 27 pages, uses feynmf. Font compatibility adjuste
Application of heavy-quark effective theory to lattice QCD: II. Radiative corrections to heavy-light currents
We apply heavy-quark effective theory to separate long- and short-distance
effects of heavy quarks in lattice gauge theory. In this approach, the inverse
heavy-quark mass and the lattice spacing are treated as short distances, and
their effects are lumped into short-distance coefficients. We show how to use
this formalism to match lattice gauge theory to continuum QCD, order by order
in the heavy-quark expansion. In this paper, we focus on heavy-light currents.
In particular, we obtain one-loop results for the matching factors of lattice
currents, needed for heavy-quark phenomenology, such as the calculation of
heavy-light decay constants, and heavy-to-light transition form factors.
Results for the Brodsky-Lepage-Mackenzie scale are also given.Comment: 32 pages, 8 figures. v2 corrects Eqs. (4.9) and (4.10) and adds a
reference. Program LatHQ2QCD to compute matching one-loop coefficients
available at http://theory.fnal.gov/people/kronfeld/LatHQ2QCD
NN Core Interactions and Differential Cross Sections from One Gluon Exchange
We derive nonstrange baryon-baryon scattering amplitudes in the
nonrelativistic quark model using the ``quark Born diagram" formalism. This
approach describes the scattering as a single interaction, here the
one-gluon-exchange (OGE) spin-spin term followed by constituent interchange,
with external nonrelativistic baryon wavefunctions attached to the scattering
diagrams to incorporate higher-twist wavefunction effects. The short-range
repulsive core in the NN interaction has previously been attributed to this
spin-spin interaction in the literature; we find that these perturbative
constituent-interchange diagrams do indeed predict repulsive interactions in
all I,S channels of the nucleon-nucleon system, and we compare our results for
the equivalent short-range potentials to the core potentials found by other
authors using nonperturbative methods. We also apply our perturbative
techniques to the N and systems: Some
channels are found to have attractive core potentials and may accommodate
``molecular" bound states near threshold. Finally we use our Born formalism to
calculate the NN differential cross section, which we compare with experimental
results for unpolarised proton-proton elastic scattering. We find that several
familiar features of the experimental differential cross section are reproduced
by our Born-order result.Comment: 27 pages, figures available from the authors, revtex, CEBAF-TH-93-04,
MIT-CTP-2187, ORNL-CCIP-93-0
Search for lepton-flavor violation at HERA
A search for lepton-flavor-violating interactions and has been performed with the ZEUS detector using the entire HERA I
data sample, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 130 pb^{-1}. The data
were taken at center-of-mass energies, , of 300 and 318 GeV. No
evidence of lepton-flavor violation was found, and constraints were derived on
leptoquarks (LQs) that could mediate such interactions. For LQ masses below
, limits were set on , where
is the coupling of the LQ to an electron and a
first-generation quark , and is the branching ratio of
the LQ to the final-state lepton ( or ) and a quark . For
LQ masses much larger than , limits were set on the four-fermion
interaction term for LQs that couple to an electron and a quark
and to a lepton and a quark , where and are
quark generation indices. Some of the limits are also applicable to
lepton-flavor-violating processes mediated by squarks in -Parity-violating
supersymmetric models. In some cases, especially when a higher-generation quark
is involved and for the process , the ZEUS limits are the most
stringent to date.Comment: 37 pages, 10 figures, Accepted by EPJC. References and 1 figure (Fig.
6) adde
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