2,895 research outputs found
Non-perturbative determination of anisotropy coefficients in lattice gauge theories
We propose a new non-perturbative method to compute derivatives of gauge
coupling constants with respect to anisotropic lattice spacings (anisotropy
coefficients), which are required in an evaluation of thermodynamic quantities
from numerical simulations on the lattice. Our method is based on a precise
measurement of the finite temperature deconfining transition curve in the
lattice coupling parameter space extended to anisotropic lattices by applying
the spectral density method. We test the method for the cases of SU(2) and
SU(3) gauge theories at the deconfining transition point on lattices with the
lattice size in the time direction -- 6. In both cases, there is a
clear discrepancy between our results and perturbative values. A longstanding
problem, when one uses the perturbative anisotropy coefficients, is a
non-vanishing pressure gap at the deconfining transition point in the SU(3)
gauge theory. Using our non-perturbative anisotropy coefficients, we find that
this problem is completely resolved: we obtain and
on and 6 lattices, respectively.Comment: 24pages,7figures,5table
Non-perturbative determination of anisotropy coefficients and pressure gap at the deconfining transition of QCD
We propose a new non-perturbative method to compute derivatives of gauge
coupling constants with respect to anisotropic lattice spacings (anisotropy
coefficients). Our method is based on a precise measurement of the finite
temperature deconfining transition curve in the lattice coupling parameter
space extended to anisotropic lattices by applying the spectral density method.
We determine the anisotropy coefficients for the cases of SU(2) and SU(3) gauge
theories. A longstanding problem, when one uses the perturbative anisotropy
coefficients, is a non-vanishing pressure gap at the deconfining transition
point in the SU(3) gauge theory. Using our non-perturbative anisotropy
coefficients, we find that this problem is completely resolved.Comment: LATTICE98(hightemp
OH 12.8-0.9: A New Water-Fountain Source
We present observational evidence that the OH/IR star OH 12.8-0.9 is the
fourth in a class of objects previously dubbed "water-fountain" sources. Using
the Very Long Baseline Array, we produced the first images of the water maser
emission associated with OH 12.8-0.9. We find that the masers are located in
two compact regions with an angular separation of ~109 mas on the sky. The axis
of separation between the two maser regions is at a position angle of 1.5 deg.
East of North with the blue-shifted (-80.5 to -85.5 km/s) masers located to the
North and the red-shifted (-32.0 to -35.5 km/s) masers to the South. In
addition, we find that the blue- and red-shifted masers are distributed along
arc-like structures ~10-12 mas across oriented roughly perpendicular to the
separation axis. The morphology exhibited by the water masers is suggestive of
an axisymmetric wind with the masers tracing bow shocks formed as the wind
impacts the ambient medium. This bipolar jet-like structure is typical of the
three other confirmed water-fountain sources. When combined with the previously
observed spectral characteristics of OH 12.8-0.9, the observed spatio-kinematic
structure of the water masers provides strong evidence that OH 12.8-0.9 is
indeed a member of the water-fountain class.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures (1 color), accepted for publication in the Ap J
Letter
Dual Ginzburg-Landau Theory for Nonperturbative QCD
Nonperturbative QCD is studied with the dual Ginzburg-Landau theory, where
color confinement is realized through the dual Higgs mechanism by QCD-monopole
condensation. We obtain a general analytic formula for the string tension. A
compact formula is derived for the screened inter-quark potential in the
presence of light dynamical quarks. The QCD phase transition at finite
temperature is studied using the effective potential formalism. The string
tension and the QCD-monopole mass are largely reduced near the critical
temperature, . The surface tension is estimated from the effective
potential at . We propose also a new scenario of the quark-gluon-plasma
creation through the color-electric flux-tube annihilation. Finally, we discuss
a close relation between instantons and QCD-monopoles.Comment: Talk presented by H. Suganuma at the Int. Conf. ``CONFINEMENT95'',
March 22-24, 1995, Osaka, Japan, 12 pages, uses PHYZZ
Hadronic Spectral Functions above the QCD Phase Transition
We extract the spectral functions in the scalar, pseudo-scalar, vector, and
axial vector channels above the deconfinement phase transition temperature (Tc)
using the maximum entropy method (MEM). We use anisotropic lattices, 32^3 * 32,
40, 54, 72, 80, and 96 (corresponding to T = 2.3 Tc --> 0.8 Tc), with the
renormalized anisotropy xi = 4.0 to have enough temporal data points to carry
out the MEM analysis. Our result suggests that the spectral functions continue
to possess non-trivial structures even above Tc and in addition that there is a
qualitative change in the state of the deconfined matter between 1.5 Tc and 2
Tc.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, Lattice2002(nonzerot
Thermodynamics of SU(3) gauge theory on anisotropic lattices
Finite temperature SU(3) gauge theory is studied on anisotropic lattices
using the standard plaquette gauge action. The equation of state is calculated
on , and lattices with
the anisotropy , where and are the
spatial and temporal lattice spacings. Unlike the case of the isotropic lattice
on which data deviate significantly from the leading scaling behavior,
the pressure and energy density on an anisotropic lattice are found to satisfy
well the leading scaling from our coarsest lattice, . With
three data points at , 5 and 6, we perform a well controlled
continuum extrapolation of the equation of state. Our results in the continuum
limit agree with a previous result from isotropic lattices using the same
action, but have smaller and more reliable errors.Comment: RevTeX, 21 pages, 17 PS figures. A quantitative test about the
benefit of anisotropic lattices added, minor errors corrected. Final version
for PR
H2O Maser Observations of Candidate Post-AGB Stars and Discovery of Three High-velocity Water Sources
We present the results of 22 GHz H_2O maser observations of a sample of 85
post-Asymptotic Giant Branch (post-AGB) candidate stars, selected on the basis
of their OH 1612 MHz maser and far-infrared properties. All sources were
observed with the Tidbinbilla 70-m radio telescope and 21 detections were made.
86 GHz SiO Mopra observations of a subset of the sample are also presented. Of
the 21 H_2O detections, 15 are from sources that are likely to be massive AGB
stars and most of these show typical, regular H_2O maser profiles. In contrast,
nearly all the detections of more evolved stars exhibited high-velocity H_2O
maser emission. Of the five sources seen, v223 (W43A, IRAS 18450-0148) is a
well known `water-fountain' source which belongs to a small group of post-AGB
stars with highly collimated, high-velocity H_2O maser emission. A second
source in our sample, v270 (IRAS 18596+0315), is also known to have
high-velocity emission. We report the discovery of similar emission from a
further three sources, d46 (IRAS 15445-5449), d62 (IRAS 15544-5332) and b292
(IRAS 18043-2116). The source d46 is an evolved post-AGB star with highly
unusual maser properties. The H_2O maser emission from d62 is probably
associated with a massive star. The source b292 is a young post-AGB star that
is highly likely to be a water-fountain source, with masers detected over a
velocity range of 210 km s^{-1}.Comment: 47 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables, accepted by Ap
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