37 research outputs found

    A perfect monopole action for SU(2) QCD

    Full text link
    We found a quantum perfect lattice action in the 4-dimensional monopole current theory which is known as an effective theory in the infrared region of QCD. The perfect monopole action is transformed exactly into a lattice action of a string model. When the monopole interactions are weak as in the case of infrared SU(2) QCD, the string interactions are strong. The static potential and the string tension in this region can be estimated analytically by the use of the strong coupling expansion.Comment: Lattice99:Confinement sessio

    A Quantum Perfect Lattice Action for Monopoles and Strings

    Get PDF
    A quantum perfect lattice action in four dimensions can be derived analytically as a renormalized trajectory when we perform a block spin transformation of monopole currents in a simple but non-trivial case of quadratic monopole interactions. The spectrum of the lattice theory is identical to that of the continuum theory. The perfect monopole action is transformed exactly into a lattice action of a string model. A perfect operator evaluating a static potential between electric charges is also derived explicitly. If the monopole interactions are weak as in the case of infrared SU(2) QCD, the string interactions become strong. The static potential and the string tension is estimated analytically by the use of the strong coupling expansion and the continuum rotational invariance is restored completely.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure; to be published in Phys. Lett.

    Recent topics of infrared effective lattice QCD

    Get PDF
    Three topics concerning infrared effective lattice QCD are discussed. (1)Perfect lattice action of infrared SU(3) QCD and perfect operators for the static potential are analytically given when we assume two-point monopole interactions alone. The assumption seems to be justified from numerical analyses of pure SU(3) QCD in maximally abelian gauge. (2)Gauge invariance of monopole dominance can be proved theoretically if the gauge invariance of abelian dominance is proved. The gauge invariance of monopole condensation leads us to confinement of abelian neutral but color octet states after abelian projection. (3)A stochastic gauge fixing method is developed to study the gauge dependence of the Abelian projection, which interpolates between the maximally abelian (MA) gauge and no gauge fixing. Abelian dominance for the heavy quark potential holds even in the gauge which is far from Maximally Abelian one.Comment: LATTICE99(Poster),3 pages, LaTeX with 4 eps figure

    An Almost Perfect Quantum Lattice Action for Low-energy SU(2) Gluodynamics

    Full text link
    We study various representations of infrared effective theory of SU(2) Gluodynamics as a (quantum) perfect lattice action. In particular we derive a monopole action and a string model of hadrons from SU(2) Gluodynamics. These are lattice actions which give almost cut-off independent physical quantities even on coarse lattices. The monopole action is determined by numerical simulations in the infrared region of SU(2) Gluodynamics. The string model of hadrons is derived from the monopole action by using BKT transformation. We illustrate the method and evaluate physical quantities such as the string tension and the mass of the lowest state of the glueball analytically using the string model of hadrons. It turns out that the classical results in the string model is near to the one in quantum SU(2) Gluodynamics.Comment: 39 pages, 10 figure

    Almost perfect quantum lattice action for low-energy SU(2) gluodynamics

    Get PDF
    金沢大学総合メディア基盤センター We study various representations of infrared effective theory of SU(2) gluodynamics as a (quantum) perfect lattice action. In particular we derive a monopole action and a string model of hadrons from SU(2) gluodynamics. These are lattice actions which give almost cutoff independent physical quantities even on coarse lattices. The monopole action is determined by numerical simulations in the infrared region of SU(2) gluodynamics. The string model of hadrons is derived from the monopole action by using BKT transformation. We illustrate the method and evaluate physical quantities such as the string tension and the mass of the lowest state of the glueball analytically using the string model of hadrons. It turns out that the classical results in the string model are near to the one in quantum SU(2) gluodynamics. ©2000 The American Physical Society

    Carcinosarcoma of the Sigmoid Colon: Report of a Case

    Get PDF
    Our case was a 65-year-old male, with the chief complaints of diarrhea and abdominal distention. Three years earlier, the patient had undergone transcatheter arterial embolization and radiofrequency treatment based on a diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma due to hepatitis B by another doctor. In October 2007, the patient developed diarrhea and increased abdominal distention. In December, CT examination conducted by the previous doctor revealed a 20-cm tumor within the pelvis. The patient was diagnosed with sigmoid colon cancer based on barium enema examination using gastrografin, and was introduced to our hospital for treatment. He was diagnosed with low-differentiated carcinoma by biopsy of the colon during endoscopy and underwent sigmoidectomy based on a diagnosis of sigmoid colon cancer. The tumor had infiltrated the bladder, and a tumorectomy was conducted through partially combined resection. The tumor was a huge lesion occupying the inside of the lumen, and histopathological findings revealed that the tumor, the main part of which lay beneath the mucous membrane, had a transitional image composed of both spindle-shaped atypical cells and sarcomatoid shape. The result of immunostaining was CK7(+), CK20(-), AFP(-), and the patient was diagnosed as having carcinosarcoma of the colon. Carcinosarcoma of the colon is a malignant tumor with poor prognosis, and the mean survival period in past reports was approximately 6 months. The patient was treated with FOLFIRI+Bevacizumab therapy according to chemotherapy for colon cancer, but he was refractory to the therapy

    Tortuosity of the brachiocephalic artery complicated with arterial injury after tracheotomy: a case report

    Get PDF
    Tracheotomy is an operation of the airway performed even on critical care patients. Surgical complications of tracheotomies are fatal. In this study, tortuosity of the brachiocephalic artery complicated with arterial injury was observed in a patient after tracheotomy. A 95-year-old woman in coma was admitted to our medical center. The patient needed airway management, and tracheal intubation was performed. The cause of the coma was extensive cerebral infarction of the right middle cerebral artery. It was expected that the coma would be prolonged, and a tracheotomy was performed after 7 days. Tortuosity of the brachiocephalic artery was confirmed with cervical computed tomography before surgery. The patient bled through the tracheostomy after 30 days. To arrest bleeding from the right common carotid artery, a vascular repair surgery was performed. There was no recurrent bleeding after surgery. After 37 days, the patient died of deteriorating primary disease. Although tracheotomy is a common operation, attention should be paid to abnormalities of blood vessels including tortuosity of the brachiocephalic artery

    愛知県内少年野球チームの肩関節および肘関節のメディカルチェック

    Get PDF
    The purposes of this study are to clarify when and which characteristics that have been supposed to be the cause of "baseball shoulders" such as instability, subacromial impingement and SLAP lesions observed in adults develop them. We had medical check of forty juvenile baseball players (av.12.3 years). They belong to the same baseball club in Aichi prefecture. One senior sports doctor measured range of motion and examine tenderness points, sings and laxities of the bilateral shoulder and elbow joints. External rotation of the first position of the dominant side was significantly greater than that of the non-dominant side. External rotation of the third position of the dominant side was significantly greater than that of the non-dominant side and internal rotation of the third position of the dominant side was significantly less than that of the non-dominant side. There ware little pathological signs in shoulder and elbow joints of these juvenile baseball players. One player showed positive anterior load and shift test of the shoulder of dominant side and six showed those of non-dominant side. Seven players showed positive posterior load and shift test of the shoulders of dominant side and fifteen showed those of non-dominant side. Five players showed positive sulcus signs of the shoulders of dominant side and eight showed those of non-dominant side. The nine players who had positive sulcus signs on either dominant or non-dominant side had significantly less internal rotation of the third position than the other players. Whereas the eighteen players who had positive posterior laxity on either dominant or non-dominant side didn\u27t have significantly less internal rotation of the third position than the other players. Positive sulcus sign suggests inferior laxity. This means inferior laxity has different role on developing posterior tightness of the throwing shoulder from posterior laxity
    corecore