173 research outputs found
Light baryon masses in different large- limits
We investigate the behavior of light baryon masses in three inequivalent
large- limits: 't~Hooft, QCD and Corrigan-Ramond. Our
framework is a constituent quark model with relativistic-type kinetic energy,
stringlike confinement and one-gluon-exchange term, thus leading to
well-defined results even for massless quarks. We analytically prove that the
light baryon masses scale as , and in the 't~Hooft, QCD and Corrigan-Ramond limits respectively. Those results confirm previous
ones obtained by using either diagrammatic methods or constituent approaches,
mostly valid for heavy quarks.Comment: Final version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Glueballs and k-strings in SU(N) gauge theories : calculations with improved operators
We test a variety of blocking and smearing algorithms for constructing
glueball and string wave-functionals, and find some with much improved overlaps
onto the lightest states. We use these algorithms to obtain improved results on
the tensions of k-strings in SU(4), SU(6), and SU(8) gauge theories. We
emphasise the major systematic errors that still need to be controlled in
calculations of heavier k-strings, and perform calculations in SU(4) on an
anisotropic lattice in a bid to minimise one of these. All these results point
to the k-string tensions lying part-way between the `MQCD' and `Casimir
Scaling' conjectures, with the power in 1/N of the leading correction lying in
[1,2]. We also obtain some evidence for the presence of quasi-stable strings in
calculations that do not use sources, and observe some near-degeneracies
between (excited) strings in different representations. We also calculate the
lightest glueball masses for N=2, ...,8, and extrapolate to N=infinity,
obtaining results compatible with earlier work. We show that the N=infinity
factorisation of the Euclidean correlators that are used in such mass
calculations does not make the masses any less calculable at large N.Comment: 49 pages, 15 figure
Confining strings in SU(N) gauge theories
We calculate the string tensions of -strings in SU() gauge theories in
both 3 and 4 dimensions. In D=3+1, we find that the ratio of the string
tension to the fundamental string tension is consistent, at the level, with both the M(-theory)QCD-inspired conjecture and with
`Casimir scaling'. In D=2+1 we see a definite deviation from the MQCD formula,
as well as a much smaller but still significant deviation from Casimir scaling.
We find that in both D=2+1 and D=3+1 the high temperature spatial -string
tensions also satisfy approximate Casimir scaling. We point out that
approximate Casimir scaling arises naturally if the cross-section of the flux
tube is nearly independent of the flux carried, and that this will occur in an
effective dual superconducting description, if we are in the deep-London limit.
We estimate, numerically, the intrinsic width of -strings in D=2+1 and
indeed find little variation with . In addition to the stable -strings we
investigate some ofthe unstable strings, finding in D=2+1 that they satisfy
(approximate) Casimir scaling. We also investigate the basic assumption that
confining flux tubes are described by an effective string theory at large
distances. We estimate the coefficient of the universal L\"uscher correction
from periodic strings that are longer than 1 fermi, and find in
D=3+1 and in D=2+1. These values are within of the
simple bosonic string values and are inconsistent with other simple effective
string theories.Comment: 57 pages, 11 figures. Errors on fits reduced by altering the analysis
to a standard one. Conclusions unchanged; note addedchanged. Some typos
correcte
Domain walls and perturbation theory in high temperature gauge theory: SU(2) in 2+1 dimensions
We study the detailed properties of Z_2 domain walls in the deconfined high
temperature phase of the d=2+1 SU(2) gauge theory. These walls are studied both
by computer simulations of the lattice theory and by one-loop perturbative
calculations. The latter are carried out both in the continuum and on the
lattice. We find that leading order perturbation theory reproduces the detailed
properties of these domain walls remarkably accurately even at temperatures
where the effective dimensionless expansion parameter, g^2/T, is close to
unity. The quantities studied include the surface tension, the action density
profiles, roughening and the electric screening mass. It is only for the last
quantity that we find an exception to the precocious success of perturbation
theory. All this shows that, despite the presence of infrared divergences at
higher orders, high-T perturbation theory can be an accurate calculational
tool.Comment: 75 pages, LaTeX, 14 figure
Plaquette expectation value and gluon condensate in three dimensions
In three dimensions, the gluon condensate of pure SU(3) gauge theory has
ultraviolet divergences up to 4-loop level only. By subtracting the
corresponding terms from lattice measurements of the plaquette expectation
value and extrapolating to the continuum limit, we extract the finite part of
the gluon condensate in lattice regularization. Through a change of
regularization scheme to MSbar and (inverse) dimensional reduction, this result
would determine the first non-perturbative coefficient in the weak-coupling
expansion of hot QCD pressure.Comment: 11 page
Lattice Calculation of Glueball Matrix Elements
Matrix elements of the form are calculated using
the lattice QCD Monte Carlo method. Here, is a glueball state with
quantum numbers , , and is the gluon field
strength operator. The matrix elements are obtained from the hybrid correlation
functions of the fuzzy and plaquette operators performed on the and
lattices at and respectively. These matrix
elements are compared with those from the QCD sum rules and the tensor meson
dominance model. They are the non-perturbative matrix elements needed in the
calculation of the partial widths of radiative decays into glueballs.Comment: 12 pages, UK/92-0
Properties of the deconfining phase transition in SU(N) gauge theories
We extend our earlier investigation of the finite temperature deconfinement
transition in SU(N) gauge theories, with the emphasis on what happens as N->oo.
We calculate the latent heat in the continuum limit, and find the expected
quadratic in N behaviour at large N. We confirm that the phase transition,
which is second order for SU(2) and weakly first order for SU(3), becomes
robustly first order for N>3 and strengthens as N increases. As an aside, we
explain why the SU(2) specific heat shows no sign of any peak as T is varied
across what is supposedly a second order phase transition. We calculate the
effective string tension and electric gluon masses at T=Tc confirming the
discontinuous nature of the transition for N>2. We explicitly show that the
large-N `spatial' string tension does not vary with T for T<Tc and that it is
discontinuous at T=Tc. For T>Tc it increases as T-squared to a good
approximation, and the k-string tension ratios closely satisfy Casimir Scaling.
Within very small errors, we find a single Tc at which all the k-strings
deconfine, i.e. a step-by-step breaking of the relevant centre symmetry does
not occur. We calculate the interface tension but are unable to distinguish
between linear or quadratic in N variations, each of which can lead to a
striking but different N=oo deconfinement scenario. We remark on the location
of the bulk phase transition, which bounds the range of our large-N
calculations on the strong coupling side, and within whose hysteresis some of
our larger-N calculations are performed.Comment: 50 pages, 14 figure
Chiral Symmetry Breaking and Cooling in Lattice QCD
Chiral symmetry breaking is calculated as a function of cooling in quenched
lattice QCD. A non-zero signal is found for the chiral condensate beyond one
hundred cooling steps, suggesting that there is chiral symmetry breaking
associated with instantons. Quantitatively, the chiral condensate in cooled
gauge field configurations is small compared to the value without cooling.Comment: 11 pages in REVTEX including 4 PS figures embedded using psfig.sty,
uuencode
Fast cavity-enhanced atom detection with low noise and high fidelity
Cavity quantum electrodynamics describes the fundamental interactions between
light and matter, and how they can be controlled by shaping the local
environment. For example, optical microcavities allow high-efficiency detection
and manipulation of single atoms. In this regime fluctuations of atom number
are on the order of the mean number, which can lead to signal fluctuations in
excess of the noise on the incident probe field. Conversely, we demonstrate
that nonlinearities and multi-atom statistics can together serve to suppress
the effects of atomic fluctuations when making local density measurements on
clouds of cold atoms. We measure atom densities below 1 per cavity mode volume
near the photon shot-noise limit. This is in direct contrast to previous
experiments where fluctuations in atom number contribute significantly to the
noise. Atom detection is shown to be fast and efficient, reaching fidelities in
excess of 97% after 10 us and 99.9% after 30 us.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 1 table; extensive changes to format and
discussion according to referee comments; published in Nature Communications
with open acces
Quantum fluctuations of Wilson loops from string models
We discuss the impact of quadratic quantum fluctuations on the Wilson loop
extracted from classical string theory. We show that a large class of models,
which includes the near horizon limit of D_p branes with 16 supersymmetries,
admits a L\"{u}scher type correction to the classical potential. We confirm
that the quantum determinant associated with a BPS configuration of a single
quark in the AdS_5 \times S^5 model is free from divergences. We find that for
the Wilson loop in that model, unlike the situation in flat space-time, the
fermionic determinant does not cancel the bosonic one. For string models that
correspond to gauge theories in the confining phase, we show that the
correction to the potential is of a L\"{u}scher type and is attractive.Comment: 1+33 pages, 3 figures, a minor correction, references adde
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