1,498 research outputs found
Hybrid Monte Carlo Without Pseudofermions
We introduce a dynamical fermion algorithm which is based on the hybrid Monte
Carlo (HMC) algorithm, but without pseudofermions. The molecular dynamics steps
in HMC are retained except the derivatives with respect to the gauge fields are
calculated with the noise. The determinant ratios are estimated with the
Pa\`{d}e - method. Finally, we use the Kennedy-Kuti linear accept/reject
method for the Monte Carlo step which is shown to respect detailed balance. We
comment on the comparison of this algorithm with the pseudofermion algorithm.Comment: 4 pages, Latex, 3 ps figures. Talk presente at Lattice '9
Proton Spin Content From Lattice QCD
We calculate the form factor of the quark energy momentum tensor and thereby
extract the quark orbital angular momentum of the nucleon. The calculation is
done on a quenched lattice at and with Wilson
fermions at = 0.148, 0.152, 0.154 and 0.155. We calculate the
disconnected insertion stochastically which employs the noise with an
unbiased subtraction. This proves to be an efficient method of reduce the error
from the noise. We find that the total quark contribution to the proton spin is
. From this we deduce that the quark orbital angular momentum is
and predict the gluon spin to be , i.e. about
40% of the proton spin is due to the glue.Comment: LATTICE99(Matrix Elements), 3 pages, 3 figure
The nucleon's strange electromagnetic and scalar matrix elements
Quenched lattice QCD simulations and quenched chiral perturbation theory are
used together for this study of strangeness in the nucleon. Dependences of the
matrix elements on strange quark mass, valence quark mass and momentum transfer
are discussed in both the lattice and chiral frameworks. The combined results
of this study are in good agreement with existing experimental data and
predictions are made for upcoming experiments. Possible future refinements of
the theoretical method are suggested.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figure
A Noisy Monte Carlo Algorithm
We propose a Monte Carlo algorithm to promote Kennedy and Kuti's linear
accept/reject algorithm which accommodates unbiased stochastic estimates of the
probability to an exact one. This is achieved by adopting the Metropolis
accept/reject steps for both the dynamical and noise configurations. We test it
on the five state model and obtain desirable results even for the case with
large noise. We also discuss its application to lattice QCD with stochastically
estimated fermion determinants.Comment: 10 pages, 1 tabl
Topological Charge Fluctuations and Low-Lying Dirac Eigenmodes
We discuss the utility of low-lying Dirac eigenmodes for studying the nature
of topological charge fluctuations in QCD. The implications of previous results
using the local chirality histogram method are discussed, and the new results
using the overlap Dirac operator in Wilson gauge backgrounds at lattice
spacings ranging from a~0.04 fm to a~0.12 fm are reported. While the degree of
local chirality does not change appreciably closer to the continuum limit, we
find that the size and density of local structures responsible for chiral
peaking do change significantly. The resulting values are in disagreement with
the assumptions of the Instanton Liquid Model. We conclude that the
fluctuations of topological charge in the QCD vacuum are not locally quantized.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, Lattice2001(confinement
Topological Charge Correlators, Spectral Bounds, and Contact Terms
The structure of topological charge fluctuations in the QCD vacuum is
strongly restricted by the spectral negativity of the Euclidean 2-point
correlator for and the presence of a positive contact term. Some
examples are considered which illustrate the physical origin of these
properties.Comment: Lattice 2002 Conference Proceeding
Low-dimensional long-range topological structure in the QCD vacuum
Lattice topological charge associated with Ginsparg-Wilson fermions exhibits
generic topological stability over quantum ensemble of configurations
contributing to the QCD path integral. Moreover, the underlying chiral symmetry
leads to the suppression of ultraviolet noise in the associated topological
charge densities ("chiral smoothing"). This provides a solid foundation for the
direct study of the role of topological charge fluctuations in the physics of
QCD vacuum. Using these tools it was recently demonstrated that: (a) there is a
well-defined space-time structure (order) in topological charge density
(defined through overlap fermions) for typical configurations contributing to
QCD path integral; (b) this fundamental structure is low-dimensional,
exhibiting sign-coherent behavior on subsets of dimension less than four and
not less than one; (c) the structure has a long-range global character
(spreading over maximal space-time distances) and is built around the locally
one-dimensional network of strong fields (skeleton). In this talk we elaborate
on certain aspects and implications of these results.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure; Lattice2003(topology
K* nucleon hyperon form factors and nucleon strangeness
A crucial input for recent meson hyperon cloud model estimates of the nucleon
matrix element of the strangeness current are the nucleon-hyperon-K* (NYK*)
form factors which regularize some of the arising loops. Prompted by new and
forthcoming information on these form factors from hyperon-nucleon potential
models, we analyze the dependence of the loop model results for the
strange-quark observables on the NYK* form factors and couplings. We find, in
particular, that the now generally favored soft N-Lambda-K* form factors can
reduce the magnitude of the K* contributions in such models by more than an
order of magnitude, compared to previous results with hard form factors. We
also discuss some general implications of our results for hadronic loop models.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, new co-author, discussion extended to the
momentum dependence of the strange vector form factor
What Do We Know About the Strange Magnetic Radius?
We analyze the q^2-dependence of the strange magnetic form factor, \GMS(q^2),
using heavy baryon chiral perturbation theory (HBChPT) and dispersion
relations. We find that in HBChPT a significant cancellation occurs between the
O(p^2) and O(p^3) loop contributions. Consequently, the slope of \GMS at the
origin displays an enhanced sensitivity to an unknown O(p^3) low-energy
constant. Using dispersion theory, we estimate the magnitude of this constant,
show that it may have a natural size, and conclude that the low-q^2 behavior of
\GMS could be dominated by nonperturbative physics. We also discuss the
implications for the interpretation of parity-violating electron scattering
measurements used to measure \GMS(q^2).Comment: 9 pages, Revtex, 2 ps figure
Charmonium Spectrum from Quenched QCD with Overlap Fermions
We present preliminary results using overlap fermions for the charmonium
spectrum, in particular for hyperfine splitting. Simulations are performed on
lattices, with Wilson gauge action at .
Depending on how the scale is set, we obtain 104(5) MeV (using
) or 88(4) MeV (using =0.5 fm) for the hyperfine
splitting.Comment: 3 pages, 5 fiugres. Talk presented at Lattice 2004 (heavy
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