8 research outputs found
Utilising optimised operators and distillation to extract scattering phase shifts
In this investigation, we examine how the precision of energy spectra and scattering phase shifts, extracted in lattice QCD, depend upon the degree of distillation type smearing. We use the variational method to extract energy spectra for the isospin-1, J = 1 channel and use the
Lüscher method to compute scattering amplitudes, relevant for the ρ resonance, in ππ elastic scattering. Optimised interpolating operators for a single ground state pion are constructed and these are used to construct two pion operators. Calculations are performed on an anisotropic lattice with a pion mass of m = 236MeV. We provide a comprehensive comparison of energy spectra and scattering phase shifts across distillation spaces of varying rank.AW is supported by the U.K. Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC). CET acknowledges support from STFC [grant ST/L000385/1]. Computations were performed at Jefferson Laboratory under the USQCD Initiative and the LQCD ARRA project. The software codes Chroma, QUDA, QPhiX, and QOPQDP were used to compute the propagators required for this project. This research was supported in part under an ALCC award, and used resources of the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, which is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC05-00OR22725. This research is also part of the Blue Waters sustained-petascale computing project, which is supported by the National Science Foundation (awards OCI-0725070 and ACI-1238993) and the state of Illinois. Blue Waters is a joint effort of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and its National Center for Supercomputing Applications. This work is also part of the PRAC “Lattice QCD on Blue Waters”. This research used resources of the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), a DOE Office of Science User Facility supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DEAC02-05CH11231. The authors acknowledge the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at The University of Texas at Austin for providing HPC resources that have contributed to the research results reported within this paper. Gauge configurations were generated using resources awarded from the U.S. Department of Energy INCITE program at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility, the NERSC, the NSF Teragrid at the TACC and the Pittsburgh Supercomputer Center, as well as at Jefferson Lab
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Efficient solution of the multichannel Lüscher determinant condition through eigenvalue decomposition
We present a method for efficiently finding solutions of L\"uscher's
quantisation condition, the equation which relates two-particle scattering
amplitudes to the discrete spectrum of states in a periodic spatial volume of
finite extent such as that present in lattice QCD. The approach proposed is
based on an eigenvalue decomposition in the space of coupled-channels and
partial-waves, which proves to have several desirable and simplifying features
that are of great benefit when considering problems beyond simple elastic
scattering of spinless particles. We illustrate the method with a toy model of
vector-vector scattering featuring a high density of solutions, and with an
application to explicit lattice QCD energy level data describing and
scattering in several coupled channels
Decays of an exotic 1-+ hybrid meson resonance in QCD
We present the first determination of the hadronic decays of the lightest
exotic resonance in lattice QCD. Working with SU(3) flavor
symmetry, where the up, down and strange quark masses approximately match the
physical strange-quark mass giving MeV, we compute
finite-volume spectra on six lattice volumes which constrain a scattering
system featuring eight coupled channels. Analytically continuing the scattering
amplitudes into the complex energy plane, we find a pole singularity
corresponding to a narrow resonance which shows relatively weak coupling to the
open pseudoscalar--pseudoscalar, vector--pseudoscalar and vector--vector decay
channels, but large couplings to at least one kinematically-closed
axial-vector--pseudoscalar channel. Attempting a simple extrapolation of the
couplings to physical light-quark mass suggests a broad resonance
decaying dominantly through the mode with much smaller decays into
, , and . A large total width is
potentially in agreement with the experimental candidate state,
observed in , , which we suggest may be heavily suppressed
decay channels
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B1 resonance in coupled πω, πφ scattering from lattice QCD
We present the first lattice QCD calculation of coupled and
scattering, incorporating coupled and -wave in
. Finite-volume spectra in three volumes are determined via a
variational analysis of matrices of two-point correlation functions, computed
using large bases of operators resembling single-meson, two-meson and
three-meson structures, with the light-quark mass corresponding to a pion mass
of MeV. Utilizing the relationship between the discrete
spectrum of finite-volume energies and infinite-volume scattering amplitudes,
we find a narrow axial-vector resonance (), the analogue of the
meson, with mass MeV and width
MeV. The resonance is found to couple dominantly to -wave , with
a much-suppressed coupling to -wave , and a negligible coupling
to consistent with the `OZI rule'. No resonant behavior is observed
in , indicating the absence of a putative low-mass analogue of
the claimed in . In order to minimally present the contents
of a unitary three-channel scattering matrix, we introduce an -channel
generalization of the traditional two-channel Stapp parameterization
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High-speed measurement of rotational anisotropy nonlinear optical harmonic generation using position-sensitive detection.
We present a method of performing high-speed rotational anisotropy nonlinear optical harmonic generation experiments at rotational frequencies of several hertz by projecting the harmonic light reflected at different angles from a sample onto a stationary position-sensitive detector. The high rotational speed of the technique, 10(3) to 10(4) times larger than existing methods, permits precise measurements of the crystallographic and electronic symmetries of samples by averaging over low frequency laser-power, beam-pointing, and pulse-width fluctuations. We demonstrate the sensitivity of our technique by resolving the bulk fourfold rotational symmetry of GaAs about its [001] axis using second-harmonic generation
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Dynamically-coupled partial-waves in ρπ isospin-2 scattering from lattice QCD
We present the first determination of scattering, incorporating
dynamically-coupled partial-waves, using lattice QCD, a first-principles
numerical approach to QCD. Considering the case of isospin-2 , we
calculate partial-wave amplitudes with and determine the degree of
dynamical mixing between the coupled and -wave channels with .
The analysis makes use of the relationship between scattering amplitudes and
the discrete spectrum of states in the finite volume lattice. Constraints on
the scattering amplitudes are provided by over one hundred energy levels
computed on two lattice volumes at various overall momenta and in several
irreducible representations of the relevant symmetry groups. The spectra follow
from variational analyses of matrices of correlations functions computed with
large bases of meson-meson operators. Calculations are performed with
degenerate light and strange quarks tuned to the physical strange quark mass so
that MeV, ensuring that the is stable against strong
decay. This work demonstrates the successful application of techniques, opening
the door to calculations of scattering processes that incorporate the effects
of dynamically-coupled partial-waves, including those involving resonances or
bound states