1,569 research outputs found
Perturbative Renormalization of Wilson line operators
We present results for the renormalization of gauge invariant nonlocal
fermion operators which contain a Wilson line, to one loop level in lattice
perturbation theory. Our calculations have been performed for Wilson/clover
fermions and a wide class of Symanzik improved gluon actions. The extended
nature of such `long-link' operators results in a nontrivial renormalization,
including contributions which diverge linearly as well as logarithmically with
the lattice spacing, along with additional finite factors. We present
nonperturbative prescriptions to extract the linearly divergent contributions.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. Talk presented at the 35th International
Symposium on Lattice Field Theory, 18-24 June 2017, Granada, Spai
Gauge theories with overlap fermions in an arbitrary representation: Evaluation of the 3-loop beta-function
This work presents the calculation of the relation between the bare coupling
constant g_0 and the MSbar-renormalized coupling g_MS, g_0 = Z_g(g_0,a\mu)
g_MS, to 2 loops in perturbation theory, with fermions in an arbitrary
representation of the gauge group SU(N). Our calculation is performed using
overlap fermions and Wilson gluons, and the background field technique has been
chosen for convenience. The corresponding results in the fundamental
representation appear in our longer publication [arXiv:0709.4368].
The 3-loop coefficient of the bare beta-function, b_2^L, is extracted using
the 2-loop expression for Z_g, and it is presented as a function of the overlap
parameter rho, the number of fermion flavors (N_f) and the number of colors
(N). We also provide the expression for the ratio Lambda_L/Lambda_MS, in an
arbitrary representation. A plot of Lambda_L/Lambda_MS is given in the adjoint
representation.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Dense matter equation of state for neutron star mergers
In simulations of binary neutron star mergers, the dense matter equation of
state (EOS) is required over wide ranges of density and temperature as well as
under conditions in which neutrinos are trapped, and the effects of magnetic
fields and rotation prevail. Here we assess the status of dense matter theory
and point out the successes and limitations of approaches currently in use. A
comparative study of the excluded volume (EV) and virial approaches for the
system using the equation of state of Akmal, Pandharipande and
Ravenhall for interacting nucleons is presented in the sub-nuclear density
regime. Owing to the excluded volume of the -particles, their mass
fraction vanishes in the EV approach below the baryon density 0.1 fm,
whereas it continues to rise due to the predominantly attractive interactions
in the virial approach. The EV approach of Lattimer et al. is extended here to
include clusters of light nuclei such as d, H and He in addition to
-particles. Results of the relevant state variables from this
development are presented and enable comparisons with related but slightly
different approaches in the literature. We also comment on some of the sweet
and sour aspects of the supra-nuclear EOS. The extent to which the neutron star
gravitational and baryon masses vary due to thermal effects, neutrino trapping,
magnetic fields and rotation are summarized from earlier studies in which the
effects from each of these sources were considered separately. Increases of
about occur for rigid (differential) rotation with
comparable increases occurring in the presence of magnetic fields only for
fields in excess of Gauss. Comparatively smaller changes occur due to
thermal effects and neutrino trapping. Some future studies to gain further
insight into the outcome of dynamical simulations are suggested.Comment: Revised manuscript with one additional figure and previous Fig. 4
replaced, 19 additional references and new tex
Degenerate limit thermodynamics beyond leading order for models of dense matter
Analytical formulas for next-to-leading order temperature corrections to the
thermal state variables of interacting nucleons in bulk matter are derived in
the degenerate limit. The formalism developed is applicable to a wide class of
non-relativistic and relativistic models of hot and dense matter currently used
in nuclear physics and astrophysics (supernovae, proto-neutron stars and
neutron star mergers) as well as in condensed matter physics. We consider the
general case of arbitrary dimensionality of momentum space and an arbitrary
degree of relativity (for relativistic mean-field theoretical models). For
non-relativistic zero-range interactions, knowledge of the Landau effective
mass suffices to compute next-to-leading order effects, but in the case of
finite-range interactions, momentum derivatives of the Landau effective mass
function up to second order are required. Numerical computations are performed
to compare results from our analytical formulas with the exact results for
zero- and finite-range potential and relativistic mean-field theoretical
models. In all cases, inclusion of next-to-leading order temperature effects
substantially extends the ranges of partial degeneracy for which the analytical
treatment remains valid.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figure
Improved Perturbation Theory for Improved Lattice Actions
We study a systematic improvement of perturbation theory for gauge fields on
the lattice; the improvement entails resumming, to all orders in the coupling
constant, a dominant subclass of tadpole diagrams.
This method, originally proposed for the Wilson gluon action, is extended
here to encompass all possible gluon actions made of closed Wilson loops; any
fermion action can be employed as well. The effect of resummation is to replace
various parameters in the action (coupling constant, Symanzik coefficients,
clover coefficient) by ``dressed'' values; the latter are solutions to certain
coupled integral equations, which are easy to solve numerically.
Some positive features of this method are: a) It is gauge invariant, b) it
can be systematically applied to improve (to all orders) results obtained at
any given order in perturbation theory, c) it does indeed absorb in the dressed
parameters the bulk of tadpole contributions.
Two different applications are presented: The additive renormalization of
fermion masses, and the multiplicative renormalization Z_V (Z_A) of the vector
(axial) current. In many cases where non-perturbative estimates of
renormalization functions are also available for comparison, the agreement with
improved perturbative results is significantly better as compared to results
from bare perturbation theory.Comment: 17 pages, 3 tables, 6 figure
- …