414 research outputs found
Y-type Flux-Tube Formation in Baryons
For more than 300 different patterns of the 3Q systems, the ground-state 3Q
potential is investigated using SU(3) lattice QCD with
at and at at the
quenched level. As a result of the detailed analyses, we find that the
ground-state potential is well described with so-called
Y-ansatz as , with the accuracy better than 1%.
Here, denotes the minimal value of total flux-tube length. We
also studythe excited-state potential using lattice QCD
with at for more than 100 patterns of the 3Q
systems. The energy gap between and , which physically means the gluonic excitation energy, is found to be
about 1 GeV in the typical hadronic scale. Finally, we suggest a possible
scenario which connects the success of the quark model to QCD.Comment: Talk given at Color Confinement and Hadrons in Quantum Chromodynamics
(Confinement 2003), Saitama, Japan, 21-24 July 2003; 5 pages, 4 figure
Y-type Flux-Tube Formation and Gluonic Excitations in Baryons: From QCD to Quark Model
Using SU(3) lattice QCD, we perform the first systematic study for the
ground-state three-quark (3Q) potential and the 1st
excited-state 3Q potential , {\it i.e.}, the energies of
the ground state and the 1st excited state of the gluon field in the presence
of the static three quarks. From the accurate and thorough calculation for more
than 300 different patterns of 3Q systems, the static ground-state 3Q potential
is found to be well described by the Coulomb plus
Y-type linear potential, {\it i.e.}, Y-Ansatz, within 1%-level deviation. As a
clear evidence for Y-Ansatz, Y-type flux-tube formation is actually observed on
the lattice in maximally-Abelian projected QCD. For more than 100 patterns of
3Q systems, we calculate the 1st excited-state 3Q potential in quenched lattice QCD, and find the gluonic excitation energy to be about 1
GeV. This large gluonic-excitation energy is conjectured to ensure the success
of the quark model for the low-lying hadrons even without gluonic excitations.Comment: Talk given at International Conference on Color Confinement and
Hadrons in Quantum Chromodynamics - Confinement 2003, RIKEN, Japan, 21-24 Jul
200
Meson-Meson and Meson-Baryon Interactions in Lattice QCD
We study the meson-meson and meson-baryon interactions in lattice QCD. The
simulation is performed on 20^3 * 24 lattice at \beta=5.7 using Wilson gauge
action and Wilson fermion at the quenched level. By adopting one static quark
for each hadron as "heavy-light meson" and "heavy-light-light baryon", we
define the distance of two hadrons and extract the inter-hadron potential
from the energy difference of the two-particle state and its asymptotic state.
We find that both of the meson-meson and meson-baryon potentials are
nontrivially weak for the whole range of 0.2 fm <= r <= 0.8 fm. The effect of
including/excluding the quark-exchange diagrams is found to be marginal.Comment: Talk given at Particles and Nuclei International Conference
(PANIC05), Santa Fe, NM, USA, 24-28 Oct. 2005. 3 pages, 2 figure
Low-lying Dirac eigenmodes and monopoles in 3+1D compact QED
We study the properties of low-lying Dirac modes in quenched compact QED at
, employing () lattices and the
overlap formalism for the fermion action. We pay attention to the spatial
distributions of low-lying Dirac modes below and above the ``phase transition
temperature'' . Near-zero modes are found to have universal
anti-correlations with monopole currents, and are found to lose their temporal
structures above exhibiting stronger spatial localization properties. We
also study the nearest-neighbor level spacing distribution of Dirac eigenvalues
and find a Wigner-Poisson transition.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, 1 tabl
Multi-Quarks and Two-Baryon Interaction in Lattice QCD
We study multi-quark (3Q,4Q,5Q) systems in lattice QCD. We perform the
detailed studies of multi-quark potentials in lattice QCD to clarify the
inter-quark interaction in multi-quark systems. We find that all the
multi-quark potentials are well described by the OGE Coulomb plus multi-Y-type
linear potential, i.e., the multi-Y Ansatz. For multi-quark systems, we observe
lattice QCD evidences of ``flip-flop'', i.e., flux-tube recombination. These
lattice QCD studies give an important bridge between elementary particle
physics and nuclear physics.Comment: A talk given at Particles and Nuclei International
Conference(PANIC05), Santa Fe, NM, Oct. 24-28, 2005. 3 pages, 6 figure
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