2,098 research outputs found
Infinite Volume and Continuum Limits of the Landau-Gauge Gluon Propagator
We extend a previous improved action study of the Landau gauge gluon
propagator, by using a variety of lattices with spacings from to
0.41 fm, to more fully explore finite volume and discretization effects. We
also extend a previously used technique for minimizing lattice artifacts, the
appropriate choice of momentum variable or ``kinematic correction'', by
considering it more generally as a ``tree-level correction''. We demonstrate
that by using tree-level correction, determined by the tree-level behavior of
the action being considered, it is possible to obtain scaling behavior over a
very wide range of momenta and lattice spacings. This makes it possible to
explore the infinite volume and continuum limits of the Landau-gauge gluon
propagator.Comment: 24 pages RevTex, 18 figures; Responses to referee comments, minor
change
Comparing the Ancient Star Formation Histories of the Magellanic Clouds
We present preliminary results from a new HST archival program aimed at
tightly constraining the ancient (>4 Gyr ago) star formation histories (SFHs)
of the field populations of the SMC and LMC. We demonstrate the quality of the
archival data by constructing HST/WFPC2-based color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs;
M_{F555W} ~ +8) for 7 spatially diverse fields in the SMC and 8 fields in the
LMC. The HST-based CMDs are >2 magnitudes deeper than any from ground based
observations, and are particularly superior in high surface brightness regions,
e.g., the LMC bar, which contain a significant fraction of star formation and
are crowding limited from ground based observations. To minimize systematic
uncertainties, we derive the SFH of each field using an identical maximum
likelihood CMD fitting technique. We then compute an approximate mass weighted
average SFH for each galaxy. We find that both galaxies lack a dominant burst
of early star formation, which suggests either a suppression or an
under-fueling of early star formation. From 10-12 Gyr ago, the LMC experienced
a period of enhanced stellar mass growth relative to the SMC. Similar to some
previous studies, we find two notable peaks in the SFH of the SMC at ~4.5 and 9
Gyr ago, which could be due to repeated close passages with the LMC, implying
an interaction history that has persisted for at least 9 Gyr. We find little
evidence for strong periodic behavior in the lifetime SFHs of both MCs,
suggesting that repeated encounters with the Milky Way are unlikely. Beginning
~3.5 Gyr ago, both galaxies show increases in their SFHs, in agreement with
previous studies, and thereafter, track each other remarkably well. (abridged)Comment: 9 pages, 5 Figures, Accepted for Publication in MNRA
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