4,810 research outputs found
Renormalization of infrared contributions to the QCD pressure
Thanks to dimensional reduction, the infrared contributions to the QCD
pressure can be obtained from two different three-dimensional effective field
theories, called the Electrostatic QCD (Yang-Mills plus adjoint Higgs) and the
Magnetostatic QCD (pure Yang-Mills theory). Lattice measurements have been
carried out within these theories, but a proper interpretation of the results
requires renormalization, and in some cases also improvement, i.e. the removal
of terms of O(a) or O(a^2). We discuss how these computations can be
implemented and carried out up to 4-loop level with the help of Numerical
Stochastic Perturbation Theory.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, talk presented at Lattice 2006 (High temperature
and density
The leading non-perturbative coefficient in the weak-coupling expansion of hot QCD pressure
Using Numerical Stochastic Perturbation Theory within three-dimensional pure
SU(3) gauge theory, we estimate the last unknown renormalization constant that
is needed for converting the vacuum energy density of this model from lattice
regularization to the MSbar scheme. Making use of a previous non-perturbative
lattice measurement of the plaquette expectation value in three dimensions,
this allows us to approximate the first non-perturbative coefficient that
appears in the weak-coupling expansion of hot QCD pressure.Comment: 16 pages. v2: published versio
Potencialidade do uso de imagens orbitais para detecção de mudanças temporais: estudo de caso no municĂpio de Montenegro-RS, 1993 - 2008.
bitstream/item/36418/1/comunicado-240.pd
Classificação de imagens orbitais com auxĂlio da análise por componentes principais no municĂpio de Montenegro, RS, 2009.
bitstream/item/36320/1/comunicado-242.pd
3-d lattice SU(3) free energy to four loops
We report on the perturbative computation of the 3d lattice Yang-Mills free
energy to four loops by means of Numerical Stochastic Perturbation Theory. The
known first and second orders have been correctly reproduced; the third and
fourth order coefficients are new results and the known logarithmic IR
divergence in the fourth order has been correctly identified. Progress is being
made in switching to the gluon mass IR regularization and the related inclusion
of the Faddeev-Popov determinant.Comment: Lattice2004(non-zero), 3 pages, 2 figure
3-d Lattice QCD Free Energy to Four Loops
We compute the expansion of the 3-d Lattice QCD free energy to four loop
order by means of Numerical Stochastic Perturbation Theory. The first and
second order are already known and are correctly reproduced. The third and
fourth order coefficients are new results. The known logarithmic divergence in
the fourth order is correctly identified. We comment on the relevance of our
computation in the context of dimensionally reduced finite temperature QCD.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, latex typeset with JHEP3.cl
Towards 4-loop NSPT result for a 3-dimensional condensate-contribution to hot QCD pressure
Thanks to dimensional reduction, the contributions to the hot QCD pressure
coming from so-called soft modes can be studied via an effective
three-dimensional theory named Electrostatic QCD (spatial Yang-Mills fields
plus an adjoint Higgs scalar). The poor convergence of the perturbative series
within EQCD suggests to perform lattice measurements of some of the associated
gluon condensates. These turn out, however, to be plagued by large
discretization artifacts. We discuss how Numerical Stochastic Perturbation
Theory can be exploited to determine the full lattice spacing dependence of one
of these condensates up to 4-loop order, and sharpen our tools on a concrete
2-loop example.Comment: Presented at 25th International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory,
Regensburg, Germany, 30 Jul - 4 Aug 2007, 7 page
Comparing single-frequency bioelectrical impedance analysis against deuterium dilution to assess total body water.
Background/Objectives: In this study, we aimed to validate the accuracy of single-frequency bioelectrical impedance analysis (SF-BIA) at 50 kHz to assess total body water (TBW) against the reference technique deuterium dilution (D(2)O) and to explore if the simple clinical parameters extracellular fluid (ECF) composition and body shape explain individual differences between D(2)O and SF-BIA (Diff(BIA-D(2)O)). Subjects/Methods: We assessed TBW with D(2)O and SF-BIA in 26 women and 26 men without known disease or anomalous body shapes. In addition, we measured body shape with anthropometry and ECF composition (osmolality, albumin, glucose, urea, creatinine, sodium and potassium). Results: On group average, SF-BIA to predict TBW agreed well with D(2)O (SF-BIA, 39.8±10.1 l; D(2)O, 40.4±10.2 l; and Diff(BIA-D(2)O) -0.7 l). In four individuals ('outliers'; 15% of the study population), Diff(BIA-D(2)O) was high (-6.8 to +3.8 l). Diff(BIA-D(2)O) was associated with individual variations in body shape rather than ECF composition. Using gender-specific analysis, we found that individual variability of waist circumference in men and arm length in women significantly contributed to Diff(BIA-D(2)O). When removing the four 'outliers', these associations were lost. Conclusions: In the majority of our sample, BIA agreed well with D(2)O. Adjusting for individual variability in body shape by anthropometrical assessment could possibly improve the accuracy of SF-BIA for individuals who deviate from mean values with respect to body shape. However, further studies with higher subject numbers are needed to confirm our findings
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