107 research outputs found
Proton-proton fusion in lattice effective field theory
The proton-proton fusion rate is calculated at low energy in a lattice
effective field theory (EFT) formulation. The strong and the Coulomb
interactions are treated non-perturbatively at leading order in the EFT. The
lattice results are shown to accurately describe the low energy cross section
within the validity of the theory at energies relevant to solar physics. In
prior work in the literature, Coulomb effects were generally not included in
non-perturbative lattice calculations. Work presented here is of general
interest in nuclear lattice EFT calculations that involve Coulomb effects at
low energy. It complements recent developments of the adiabatic projection
method for lattice calculations of nuclear reactions.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Chiral perturbation theory for the Wilson lattice action
We extend chiral perturbation theory to include linear dependence on the
lattice spacing for the Wilson action. The perturbation theory is written
as a double expansion in the small quark mass and lattice spacing . We
present formulae for the mass and decay constant of a flavor-non-singlet meson
in this scheme to order and . The extension to the partially
quenched theory is also described.Comment: 9 pages LaTeX2
Adiabatic projection method for scattering and reactions on the lattice
We demonstrate and test the adiabatic projection method, a general new
framework for calculating scattering and reactions on the lattice. The method
is based upon calculating a low-energy effective theory for clusters which
becomes exact in the limit of large Euclidean projection time. As a detailed
example we calculate the adiabatic two-body Hamiltonian for elastic
fermion-dimer scattering in lattice effective field theory. Our calculation
corresponds to neutron-deuteron scattering in the spin-quartet channel at
leading order in pionless effective field theory. We show that the spectrum of
the adiabatic Hamiltonian reproduces the spectrum of the original Hamiltonian
below the inelastic threshold to arbitrary accuracy. We also show that the
calculated s-wave phase shift reproduces the known exact result in the
continuum and infinite-volume limits. When extended to more than one scattering
channel, the adiabatic projection method can be used to calculate inelastic
reactions on the lattice in future work.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, version to appear in Eur. Phys. J.
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