1,620 research outputs found
Static quark anti-quark free energy and the running coupling at finite temperature
We analyze the free energy of a static quark anti-quark pair in quenched QCD
at short and large distances. From this we deduce running couplings, g^2(r,T),
and determine the length scale that separates at high temperature the short
distance perturbative regime from the large distance non-perturbative regime in
the QCD plasma phase. Ambiguities in the definition of a coupling beyond the
perturbative regime are discussed in their relation to phenomenological
considerations on heavy quark bound states in the quark gluon plasma. Our
analysis suggests that it is more appropriate to characterize the
non-perturbative properties of the QCD plasma phase close to T_c in terms
remnants of the confinement part of the QCD force rather than a strong
Coulombic force.Comment: 8 pages, 9 EPS-files, revtex
Perturbative calculation of improvement coefficients to O(g^2a) for bilinear quark operators in lattice QCD
We calculate the O(g^2 a) mixing coefficients of bilinear quark operators in
lattice QCD using a standard perturbative evaluation of on-shell Green's
functions. Our results for the plaquette gluon action are in agreement with
those previously obtained with the Schr\"odinger functional method. The
coefficients are also calculated for a class of improved gluon actions having
six-link terms.Comment: 14 pages, REVTe
One-Loop Self Energy and Renormalization of the Speed of Light for some Anisotropic Improved Quark Actions
One-loop corrections to the fermion rest mass M_1, wave function
renormalization Z_2 and speed of light renormalization C_0 are presented for
lattice actions that combine improved glue with clover or D234 quark actions
and keep the temporal and spatial lattice spacings, a_t and a_s, distinct. We
explore a range of values for the anisotropy parameter \chi = a_s/a_t and treat
both massive and massless fermions.Comment: 45 LaTeX pages with 4 postscript figure
A quark action for very coarse lattices
We investigate a tree-level O(a^3)-accurate action, D234c, on coarse
lattices. For the improvement terms we use tadpole-improved coefficients, with
the tadpole contribution measured by the mean link in Landau gauge.
We measure the hadron spectrum for quark masses near that of the strange
quark. We find that D234c shows much better rotational invariance than the
Sheikholeslami-Wohlert action, and that mean-link tadpole improvement leads to
smaller finite-lattice-spacing errors than plaquette tadpole improvement. We
obtain accurate ratios of lattice spacings using a convenient ``Galilean
quarkonium'' method.
We explore the effects of possible O(alpha_s) changes to the improvement
coefficients, and find that the two leading coefficients can be independently
tuned: hadron masses are most sensitive to the clover coefficient, while hadron
dispersion relations are most sensitive to the third derivative coefficient
C_3. Preliminary non-perturbative tuning of these coefficients yields values
that are consistent with the expected size of perturbative corrections.Comment: 22 pages, LaTe
Perturbative Renormalization Factors of Bilinear Quark Operators for Improved Gluon and Quark Actions in Lattice QCD
We calculate one-loop renormalization factors of bilinear quark operators for
gluon action including six-link loops and -improved quark action in the
limit of massless quark. We find that finite parts of one-loop coefficients of
renormalization factors diminish monotonically as either of the coefficients
or of the six-link terms are decreased below zero. Detailed
numerical results are given, for general values of the clover coefficient, for
the tree-level improved gluon action in the Symanzik approach and for the choices suggested by Wilson and by Iwasaki and from renormalization-group analyses. Compared with the case of
the standard plaquette gluon action, finite parts of one-loop coefficients are
reduced by 10--20% for the Symanzik action, and approximately by a factor two
for the renormalization-group improved gluon actions.Comment: 19 pages, REVTeX, with 3 epsf figure
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
A Dramatic Decrease in Carbon Star Formation in M31
We analyze resolved stellar near-infrared photometry of 21 HST fields in M31
to constrain the impact of metallicity on the formation of carbon stars.
Observations of nearby galaxies show that the carbon stars are increasingly
rare at higher metallicity. Models indicate that carbon star formation
efficiency drops due to the decrease in dredge-up efficiency in metal-rich
thermally-pulsing Asymptotic Giant Branch (TP-AGB) stars, coupled to a higher
initial abundance of oxygen. However, while models predict a metallicity
ceiling above which carbon stars cannot form, previous observations have not
yet pinpointed this limit. Our new observations reliably separate carbon stars
from M-type TP-AGB stars across 2.6-13.7 kpc of M31's metal-rich disk using HST
WFC3/IR medium-band filters. We find that the ratio of C to M stars (C/M)
decreases more rapidly than extrapolations of observations in more metal-poor
galaxies, resulting in a C/M that is too low by more than a factor of 10 in the
innermost fields and indicating a dramatic decline in C star formation
efficiency at metallicities higher than [M/H] -0.1 dex. The
metallicity ceiling remains undetected, but must occur at metallicities higher
than what is measured in M31's inner disk ([M/H] +0.06 dex).Comment: 16 pages, 13 Figures; text clarifications in response to the referee.
Results are unchanged; accepted for publication in Ap
Scaling, asymptotic scaling and Symanzik improvement. Deconfinement temperature in SU(2) pure gauge theory
We report on a high statistics simulation of SU(2) pure gauge field theory at
finite temperature, using Symanzik action. We determine the critical coupling
for the deconfinement phase transition on lattices up to 8 x 24, using Finite
Size Scaling techniques. We find that the pattern of asymptotic scaling
violation is essentially the same as the one observed with conventional, not
improved action. On the other hand, the use of effective couplings defined in
terms of plaquette expectation values shows a precocious scaling, with respect
to an analogous analysis of data obtained by the use of Wilson action, which we
interpret as an effect of improvement.Comment: 43 pages ( REVTeX 3.0, self-extracting shell archive, 13 PostScript
figs.), report IFUP-TH 21/93 (2 TYPOS IN FORMULAS CORRECTED,1 CITATION
UPDATED,CITATIONS IN TEXT ADDED
Host Population Genetics and Biogeography Structure the Microbiome of the Sponge Cliona delitrix
Sponges occur across diverse marine biomes and host internal microbial communities that can provide critical ecological functions. While strong patterns of host specificity have been observed consistently in sponge microbiomes, the precise ecological relationships between hosts and their symbiotic microbial communities remain to be fully delineated. In the current study, we investigate the relative roles of host population genetics and biogeography in structuring the microbial communities hosted by the excavating sponge Cliona delitrix. A total of 53 samples, previously used to demarcate the population genetic structure of C. delitrix, were selected from two locations in the Caribbean Sea and from eight locations across the reefs of Florida and the Bahamas. Microbial community diversity and composition were measured using Illuminaâbased highâthroughput sequencing of the 16S rRNA V4 region and related to host population structure and geographic distribution. Most operational taxonomic units (OTUs) specific to Cliona delitrix microbiomes were rare, while other OTUs were shared with congeneric hosts. Across a large regional scale (\u3e1,000 km), geographic distance was associated with considerable variability of the sponge microbiome, suggesting a distanceâdecay relationship, but little impact over smaller spatial scales (\u3c300 km) was observed. Host population structure had a moderate effect on the structure of these microbial communities, regardless of geographic distance. These results support the interplay between geographic, environmental, and host factors as forces determining the community structure of microbiomes associated with C. delitrix. Moreover, these data suggest that the mechanisms of host regulation can be observed at the population genetic scale, prior to the onset of speciation
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