158 research outputs found

    Perturbative improvement of staggered fermions using fat links

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    We study possibility of improving staggered fermions using various fat links in order to reduce perturbative corrections to the gauge-invariant staggered fermion operators. We prove five theorems on SU(3) projection, triviality in renormalization, multiple SU(3) projections, uniqueness and equivalence. As a result of these theorems, we show that, at one loop level, the renormalization of staggered fermion operators is identical between SU(3) projected Fat7 links and hypercubic links, as long as the action and operators are constructed by imposing the same perturbative improvement condition. In addition, we propose a new view of SU(3) projection as a tool of tadpole improvement for the staggered fermion doublers. As a conclusion, we present alternative choices of constructing fat links to improve the staggered fermion action and operators, which deserve further investigation.Comment: 11 page, no figure (typo corrected, references added, conclusion clarified

    Re(A0)Re(A_0), Re(A2)Re(A_2) and RG evolution for Nf=3N_f=3

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    We present results of Re(A0)Re (A_0) and Re(A2)Re (A_2) calculated using HYP staggered fermions on the lattice of 163×6416^3 \times 64 at β=6.0\beta=6.0. These results are obtained using leading order chiral perturbation in quenched QCD. Buras's original RG evolution matrix develops a removable singularity for Nf=3N_f=3. This subtlety is resolved by finding a finite solution to RG equation and the results are presented.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, contribution to Lattice 2004 International Symposiu

    The eigSUMR inverter for overlap fermion

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    We discuss the usage and applicability of deflation methods for the overlap lattice Dirac operator, focussing on calculating the eigenvalues using a method similar to the eigCG algorithm used for other Dirac operators. The overlap operator, which contains several theoretical advantages over other formulations of lattice Quantum Chromodynamics, is more computationally expensive because it requires the computation of the matrix sign function. The principle change made compared to deflation methods for other formulations of lattice QCD is that it is necessary for best performance to tune or relax the accuracy of the matrix sign function as the computation proceeds. We adapt the eigCG algorithm for two inversion algorithms for overlap fermions, GMRESR(relCG) and GMRESR(relSUMR). Before deflation, the rate of convergence of these routines in terms of iterations is similar, but, since the Shifted Unitary Minimal Residual (SUMR) algorithm only requires one call to the matrix sign function compared to the two calls required for Conjugate Gradient (CG), SUMR is usually preferred for single inversions of the Dirac operator. We construct bounds for the required accuracy of the matrix sign function during the eigenvalue calculation. For the SUMR algorithm, we use a Galerkin projection to perform the deflation; while for the CG algorithm, we are able to use a considerably superior spectral pre-conditioner. The superior performance of the spectral preconditioner, and its need for less accurate eigenvalues, almost erodes SUMR's advantage over CG as an inversion algorithm. We see factor of three gains for the inversion algorithm from the deflation on our small test lattices. There is, however, a significant cost in the eigenvalue calculation because we cannot relax the accuracy of the matrix sign function as aggressively when calculating the eigenvalues as we do while performing the inversions

    Numerical Study of K0 K^0--Kˉ0\bar{K}^0 Mixing and BK B_K

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    We have computed BK B_K with staggered fermions, using two different methods: both in the one spin trace form and two spin trace form. Renormalized results in both forms are in good agreement. The numerical simulations were performed on a 163×40 16^3 \times 40 lattice in full QCD with β=5.7 \beta = 5.7 . We also tried an improved wall source method in order to select only the pseudo-Goldstone bosons and compare the numerical results obtained with those from the conventional wall source method. We have studied BK B_K with a series of non-degenerate quark anti-quark pairs and saw no effect on BK B_K , although dramatic effects in the chiral limit were seen on the individual terms making up BK B_K .Comment: 51 pages, latex, 21 figures, uses epsf.sty, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Overlap fermions on GPUs

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    We report on our efforts to implement overlap fermions on NVIDIA GPUs using CUDA, commenting on the algorithms used, implemetation details, and the performance of our code.Comment: 7 Pages, 2 figures, Lattice 2015(Algorithms and Machines); v2 minor updates to plot

    Gell-Mann-Oakes-Renner relation for multiple chiral symmetries

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    As a first step towards considering a chiral perturbation theory for overlap fermions, we investigate whether there are any ambiguities in the expression for the pion mass resulting from multiple chiral symmetries. The concern is that, calculating the conserved current for Ginsparg Wilson chiral symmetries in the usual way, different expressions of the chiral symmetries lead to different currents. This implies an ambiguity in the definition of the pion and pion decay constant for all Ginsparg-Wilson expressions of the Dirac operator, including the overlap operator. We use a renormalisation group mapping procedure to consider local chiral symmetry transformations for a continuum Ginsparg-Wilson "Dirac-operator." We find that this naturally leads to an expression for the conserved current that differs from the standard expression by cut-off artefacts, but is independent of which of the Ginsparg-Wilson symmetries is chosen. We recover the standard expressions for the massive Dirac operator, propagator, and chiral condensate. With this in place, we proceed to calculate the pion mass in the mapped theory as a function of the quark mass, and discover a unique expression for FπF_\pi and mπm_\pi, recovering the usual Gell-Mann-Oakes-Renner relation, baring the substitution of the chiral condensate with its modified value. We hypothesise that the argument can be carried directly over to the lattice theory.Comment: Lattice 2011 (Chiral symmetry), 7 page

    Current Status of Indirect CP Violation in Neutral Kaon System

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    In the standard model (SM), the CP violation is introduced through a single phase in the CKM matrix. The neutral kaon system is one of the most precise channels to test how the SM theory describes the experiment data such as ϵK\epsilon_K accurately. The indirect CP violation is parametrized into ϵK\epsilon_{K}, which can be calculated directly using lattice QCD. In this calculation, the largest uncertainty comes from two sources: one is B^K\hat{B}_K and the other is VcbV_{cb}. We use the lattice results of B^K\hat{B}_K and exclusive VcbV_{cb} to calculate the theoretical estimate of ϵK\epsilon_K, which turns out to be 3.1σ3.1\sigma away from its experimental value. Here, the error is evaluated using the standard error propagation method.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, Lattice 2012 conference proceedin

    Eradication of singularities in the next-to-leading order RG evolution for the \Delta S = 1 effective Hamiltonian with 3 quark flavours

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    We consider the renormalization group evolution for the operators in the ΔS=1\Delta S=1 effective Hamiltonian with 3 active quark flavors, which is needed in the numerical analysis of data sets for ϵ′/ϵ\epsilon'/\epsilon calculated in lattice QCD. Singularities are present in the original solution of Buras et al. at next-to-leading order. We show how these can be eradicated through a method of analytic continuation to obtain the correct finite solution in this case. Furthermore, we trace the origin of the singularities to a breakdown of the approach of Buras et al. in the 3 flavour case, and show how it can be rectified so that singularitites are absent from the beginning.Comment: 7 pages, presented at the XXV International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory, July 30 - August 4 2007, Regensbur

    The conserved axial current in the presence of multiple chiral symmetries

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    In response to a recent work by Mandula, we investigate whether there are any ambiguities in the expression for the pion mass resulting from multiple chiral symmetries. If the conserved current for Ginsparg Wilson chiral symmetries is calculated in the usual way, different expressions of the chiral symmetry lead to different currents. This implies an ambiguity in the definition of the pion and pion decay constant for all Ginsparg-Wilson expressions of the Dirac operator, including the overlap operator on the lattice (although all these currents would have the same continuum limit). We use a renormalisation group mapping procedure to consider local chiral symmetry transformations for a continuum Ginsparg-Wilson "Dirac-operator." We find that this naturally leads to an expression for the conserved current which is independent of which of the Ginsparg-Wilson symmetries is chosen. We recover the standard expressions for the massive Dirac operator, propagator, and chiral condensate. Our main conclusion is that, when the currents are properly constructed and consistently applied, no observable depends on which Mandula symmetry is used; at least in these continuum Ginsparg-Wilson theories. We will consider whether the same argument applies to lattice theories in a subsequent paper.Comment: 8 page

    B7B_7, B8B_8 and chiral Ward identities

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    We present recent progress in understanding weak matrix elements on the lattice. We use HYP staggered fermions in quenched QCD to study numerically various properties of the K+→π+K^+\to\pi^+ amplitudes of the electroweak penguin operators Q7Q_7 and Q8Q_8. We check chiral Ward identities to probe the validity of using improved staggered fermions in the calculation of weak matrix elements. We address the issue of mixing with unphysical lower dimension operators, which causes a divergent term in the case of the ΔI=1/2\Delta I = 1/2 amplitudes. We propose a particular subtraction method as the best choice. We also measure the gold-plated ratio RR originally suggested by Becirevic and Villadoro.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, lattice 2005 proceedin
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