361 research outputs found
B and B_s decay constants from QCD Duality at three loops
Using special linear combinations of finite energy sum rules which minimize
the contribution of the unknown continuum spectral function, we compute the
decay constants of the pseudoscalar mesons B and B_s. In the computation, we
employ the recent three loop calculation of the pseudoscalar two-point function
expanded in powers of the running bottom quark mass. The sum rules show
remarkable stability over a wide range of the upper limit of the finite energy
integration. We obtain the following results for the pseudoscalar decay
constants: f_B=178 \pm 14 MeV and f_{B_s}=200 \pm 14 MeV. The results are
somewhat lower than recent predictions based on Borel transform, lattice
computations or HQET. Our sum rule approach of exploiting QCD quark hadron
duality differs significantly from the usual ones, and we believe that the
errors due to theoretical uncertainties are smaller
Radiative Decays of the P-Wave Charmed Mesons
Minor (mainly numerical) corrections.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX, MZ-TH/92-5
Calculation of Infrared-Divergent Feynman Diagrams with Zero Mass Threshold
Two-loop vertex Feynman diagrams with infrared and collinear divergences are
investigated by two independent methods. On the one hand, a method of
calculating Feynman diagrams from their small momentum expansion extended to
diagrams with zero mass thresholds is applied. On the other hand, a numerical
method based on a two-fold integral representation is used. The application of
the latter method is possible by using lightcone coordinates in the parallel
space. The numerical data obtained with the two methods are in impressive
agreement.Comment: 20 pages, Latex with epsf-figures, References updated, to appear in
Z.Phys.
Charm-quark mass from weighted finite energy QCD sum rules
The running charm-quark mass in the scheme is determined from
weighted finite energy QCD sum rules (FESR) involving the vector current
correlator. Only the short distance expansion of this correlator is used,
together with integration kernels (weights) involving positive powers of ,
the squared energy. The optimal kernels are found to be a simple {\it pinched}
kernel, and polynomials of the Legendre type. The former kernel reduces
potential duality violations near the real axis in the complex s-plane, and the
latter allows to extend the analysis to energy regions beyond the end point of
the data. These kernels, together with the high energy expansion of the
correlator, weigh the experimental and theoretical information differently from
e.g. inverse moments FESR. Current, state of the art results for the vector
correlator up to four-loop order in perturbative QCD are used in the FESR,
together with the latest experimental data. The integration in the complex
s-plane is performed using three different methods, fixed order perturbation
theory (FOPT), contour improved perturbation theory (CIPT), and a fixed
renormalization scale (FMUPT). The final result is , in a wide region of stability against changes in the
integration radius in the complex s-plane.Comment: A short discussion on convergence issues has been added at the end of
the pape
Hadronic contribution to the muon g-2: a theoretical determination
The leading order hadronic contribution to the muon g-2, , is
determined entirely from theory using an approach based on Cauchy's theorem in
the complex squared energy s-plane. This is possible after fitting the
integration kernel in with a simpler function of . The
integral determining in the light-quark region is then split
into a low energy and a high energy part, the latter given by perturbative QCD
(PQCD). The low energy integral involving the fit function to the integration
kernel is determined by derivatives of the vector correlator at the origin,
plus a contour integral around a circle calculable in PQCD. These derivatives
are calculated using hadronic models in the light-quark sector. A similar
procedure is used in the heavy-quark sector, except that now everything is
calculable in PQCD, thus becoming the first entirely theoretical calculation of
this contribution. Using the dual resonance model realization of Large
QCD to compute the derivatives of the correlator leads to agreement with the
experimental value of . Accuracy, though, is currently limited by the
model dependent calculation of derivatives of the vector correlator at the
origin. Future improvements should come from more accurate chiral perturbation
theory and/or lattice QCD information on these derivatives, allowing for this
method to be used to determine accurately entirely from theory,
independently of any hadronic model.Comment: Several additional clarifying paragraphs have been added. 1/N_c
corrections have been estimated. No change in result
Bottom-quark mass from finite energy QCD sum rules
Finite energy QCD sum rules involving both inverse and positive moment
integration kernels are employed to determine the bottom quark mass. The result
obtained in the scheme at a reference scale of
is . This value translates into
a scale invariant mass . This result
has the lowest total uncertainty of any method, and is less sensitive to a
number of systematic uncertainties that affect other QCD sum rule
determinations.Comment: An appendix has been added with explicit expressions for the
polynomials used in Table
On the asymptotic behavior of the electroweak gauge bosons vacuum polarization functions for arbitrary quark masses
We derive the QCD corrections to the electroweak gauge bosons vacuum
polarization functions at high and zero--momentum transfer in the case of
arbitrary internal quark masses. We then discuss in this general case (i) the
connection between the calculations of the vector bosons
self--energies using dimensional regularization and the one performed via a
dispersive approach and (ii) the QCD corrections to the parameter for a
heavy quark isodoublet.Comment: 14 pages + 2 figures (not included: available by mail from A.
Djouadi), Preprint UdeM-LPN-TH-93-156 and NYU-TH-93/05/0
Dynamic tight binding for large-scale electronic-structure calculations of semiconductors at finite temperatures
Calculating the electronic structure of materials at finite temperatures is
important for rationalizing their physical properties and assessing their
technological capabilities. However, finite-temperature calculations typically
require large system sizes or long simulation times. This is challenging for
non-empirical theoretical methods because the involved bottleneck of performing
many first-principles calculations can pose a steep computational barrier for
larger systems. While machine-learning molecular dynamics enables
large-scale/long-time simulations of the structural properties, the difficulty
of computing in particular the electronic structure of large and disordered
materials still remains. In this work, we suggest an adaptation of the
tight-binding formalism which allows for computationally efficient calculations
of temperature-dependent properties of semiconductors. Our dynamic
tight-binding approach utilizes hybrid-orbital basis functions and a modeling
of the distance dependence of matrix elements via numerical integration of
atomic orbitals. We show that these design choices lead to a dynamic
tight-binding model with a minimal amount of parameters which are
straightforwardly optimized using density functional theory. Combining dynamic
tight-binding with machine learning molecular dynamics and hybrid density
functional theory, we find that it accurately describes finite-temperature
electronic properties in comparison to experiment for the prototypical
semiconductor gallium-arsenide
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