17,275 research outputs found
High-loop perturbative renormalization constants for Lattice QCD (III): three-loop quark currents for Iwasaki gauge action and n_f=4 Wilson fermions
This is the third of a series of papers on three-loop computation of
renormalization constants for Lattice QCD. Our main point of interest are
results for the regularization defined by Iwasaki gauge action and n_f=4 Wilson
fermions. Our results for quark bilinears renormalized according to the RI'-MOM
scheme can be compared to non-perturbative results. The latter are available
for Twisted Mass QCD: being defined in the chiral limit, renormalization
constants must be the same. We also address more general problems. In
particular, we discuss a few methodological issues connected to summing the
perturbative series such as the effectiveness of Boosted Perturbation Theory
and the disentanglement of irrelevant and finite volume contributions.
Discussing these issues we consider ont only the new results of this paper, but
also those for the regularization defined by tree-level Symanzik improved gauge
action and n_f=2 Wilson fermions, which we presented in a recent paper of ours.
We finally comment to which extent the techniques we put at work in the NSPT
context can provide a fresher look into the lattice version of the RI'-MOM
scheme.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures, pdflatex The Section on different ways of
summing the series has been updated: a few extra informations have been
provided and a clearer notation has been introduce
Large mass expansion in two-loop QCD corrections of para-charmonium decay
We calculate the two-loop QCD corrections to paracharmonium decays and involving light-by-light
scattering diagrams with light quark loops. Artificial large mass expansion and
convergence improvement techniques are used to evaluate these corrections. The
obtained corrections to the decays and
account for and of the leading
order contribution, respectively.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures; REVTeX version; Version to appear in Phys. Rev.
D, 9 pages, 4 figure
Roles of proton-neutron interactions in alpha-like four-nucleon correlations
An extended pairing plus QQ force model, which has been shown to successfully
explain the nuclear binding energy and related quantities such as the symmetry
energy, is applied to study the alpha-like four-nucleon correlations in
1f_{7/2} shell nuclei.
The double difference of binding energies, which displays a characteristic
behavior at , is interpreted in terms of the alpha-like
correlations. Important roles of proton-neutron interactions forming the
alpha-like correlated structure are discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, RevTex, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Comment on "PIC simulations of circularly polarised Alfv\'en wave phase mixing: A new mechanism for electron acceleration in collisionless plasmas" by Tsiklauri et al
Tsiklauri et al. recently published a theoretical model of electron
acceleration by Alfv\'en waves in a nonuniform collisionless plasmas. We
compare their work with a series of results published earlier by an another
team, of which Tsiklauri et al. were probably unaware. We show that these two
series of works, apparently conducted independently, lead to the same
conclusions. This reinforces the theoretical consistency of the model.Comment: 2 pages. Accepted at "Astronomy and Astrophysics
Commuting difference operators arising from the elliptic C_2^{(1)}-face model
We study a pair of commuting difference operators arising from the elliptic
C_2^{(1)}-face model. The operators, whose coefficients are expressed in terms
of the Jacobi's elliptic theta function, act on the space of meromorphic
functions on the weight space of the C_2 type simple Lie algebra. We show that
the space of functions spanned by the level one characters of the affine Lie
algebra sp(4,C) is invariant under the action of the difference operators.Comment: latex2e file, 19 pages, no figures; added reference
Molecular signatures distinguish human central memory from effector memory CD8 T cell subsets
Abstract
Memory T cells are heterogeneous in terms of their phenotype and functional properties. We investigated the molecular profiles of human CD8 naive central memory (TCM), effector memory (TEM), and effector memory RA (TEMRA) T cells using gene expression microarrays and phospho-protein-specific intracellular flow cytometry. We demonstrate that TCM have a gene expression and cytokine signaling signature that lies between that of naive and TEM or TEMRA cells, whereas TEM and TEMRA are closely related. Our data define the molecular basis for the different functional properties of central and effector memory subsets. We show that TEM and TEMRA cells strongly express genes with known importance in CD8 T cell effector function. In contrast, TCM are characterized by high basal and cytokine-induced STAT5 phosphorylation, reflecting their capacity for self-renewal. Altogether, our results distinguish TCM and TEM/TEMRA at the molecular level and are consistent with the concept that TCM represent memory stem cells.</jats:p
Quantum interference from sums over closed paths for electrons on a three-dimensional lattice in a magnetic field: total energy, magnetic moment, and orbital susceptibility
We study quantum interference effects due to electron motion on a
three-dimensional cubic lattice in a continuously-tunable magnetic field of
arbitrary orientation and magnitude. These effects arise from the interference
between magnetic phase factors associated with different electron closed paths.
The sums of these phase factors, called lattice path-integrals, are
``many-loop" generalizations of the standard ``one-loop" Aharonov-Bohm-type
argument. Our lattice path integral calculation enables us to obtain various
important physical quantities through several different methods. The spirit of
our approach follows Feynman's programme: to derive physical quantities in
terms of ``sums over paths". From these lattice path-integrals we compute
analytically, for several lengths of the electron path, the half-filled
Fermi-sea ground-state energy of noninteracting spinless electrons in a cubic
lattice. Our results are valid for any strength of the applied magnetic field
in any direction. We also study in detail two experimentally important
quantities: the magnetic moment and orbital susceptibility at half-filling, as
well as the zero-field susceptibility as a function of the Fermi energy.Comment: 14 pages, RevTe
Photogenerated Carriers in SrTiO3 Probed by Mid-Infrared Absorption
Infrared absorption spectra of SrTiO have been measured under
above-band-gap photoexcitations to study the properties of photogenerated
carriers, which should play important roles in previously reported photoinduced
phenomena in SrTiO. A broad absorption band appears over the entire
mid-infrared region under photoexcitation. Detailed energy, temperature, and
excitation power dependences of the photoinduced absorption are reported. This
photo-induced absorption is attributed to the intragap excitations of the
photogenerated carriers. The data show the existence of a high density of
in-gap states for the photocarriers, which extends over a wide energy range
starting from the conduction and valence band edges.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
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