4,549 research outputs found

    Minneci v. Pollard and the Uphill Climb to Bivens Relief

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    Coupling Constants for Scalar Glueball Decay

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    We evaluate the partial decay widths of the lightest scalar glueball to pairs of pseudoscalar quark-antiquark states. The calculation is done in the valence (quenched) approximation on a 16^3 \time 24 lattice at β=5.7\beta = 5.7. These predictions and values obtained earlier for the infinite volume continuum limit of the scalar glueball's mass are in good agreement with the observed properties of fJ(1710)f_J(1710) and inconsistent with all other observed meson resonances.Comment: 8 pages of Latex, 12 PostScript figures, 2 macros included, plenary talk given by D. Weingarten at Lattice 95, to appear in conference proceeding

    Meson Decay Constants from the Valence Approximation to Lattice QCD

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    We evaluate fπ/mρf_{\pi}/ m_{\rho}, fK/mρf_K/ m_{\rho}, 1/fρ1/f_{\rho}, and mϕ/(fϕmρ) m_{\phi}/(f_{\phi} m_{\rho}), extrapolated to physical quark mass, zero lattice spacing and infinite volume, for lattice QCD with Wilson quarks in the valence (quenched) approximation. The predicted ratios differ from experiment by amounts ranging from 12\% to 17\% equivalent to between 0.9 and 2.8 times the corresponding statistical uncertainties.Comment: uufiles encoded copy of 40 page Latex article, including 14 figures in Postscript. The long version of hep-lat/9302012, IBM/HET 93-

    Numerical Evidence for the Observation of a Scalar Glueball

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    We compute from lattice QCD in the valence (quenched) approximation the partial decay widths of the lightest scalar glueball to pairs of pseudoscalar quark-antiquark states. These predictions and values obtained earlier for the scalar glueball's mass are in good agreement with the observed properties of fJ(1710)f_J(1710) and inconsistent with all other observed meson resonances.Comment: 12 pages of Latex, 3 PostsScript figures as separate uufil

    Hadron Masses from the Valence Approximation to Lattice QCD

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    We evaluate pseudoscalar, vector, spin 1/2 and spin 3/2 baryon masses predicted by lattice QCD with Wilson quarks in the valence (quenched) approximation for a range of different values of lattice spacing, lattice volume and quark mass. Extrapolating these results to physical quark mass, then to zero lattice spacing and infinite volume we obtain values for eight mass ratios. We also determine the zero lattice spacing, infinite volume limit of an alternate set of five quantities found without extrapolation in quark mass. Both sets of predictions differ from the corresponding observed values by amounts consistent with the predicted quantities' statistical uncertainties.Comment: 108 pages of Latex, including 50 PostScript figures, tarred, compressed and uuencoded. IBM-HET-94-3. (The first version of this posting exceeded the size limit. I squeezed the second version in by dropping out the figues. This version gets the figures in but has to be run through Latex and dvips.

    “A Half-Understood Massiveness”: Revisiting John Newlove’s “The Pride”

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    John Newlove’s poem “The Pride” appeared in 1964 at a pivotal juncture in the development of Canadian literature and of prairie writing in particular. The poem demonstrated that a poetic treatment of the prairies and its history could be both aesthetically and thematically rich without misrepresenting the cultural or historical conditions of the region. “The Pride” is read here in the context of its composition, its modernist influences, and its use of allusion; contributing to the sophistication and multivocality of the poem are references to T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land and to the historical writings of G.E. Hyde and David Thompson. Hyde’s unsympathetic portrayal of culture being negatively affected by colonialism and Thompson’s more sympathetic observations inform a clash of perspectives in Newlove’s poem. The speaker comes to regard the prairie past, like Eliot’s wasteland of allusions, as a “half-understood massiveness” that needs more diverse historical and literary perspectives
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