1,446 research outputs found
Lattice chirality and the decoupling of mirror fermions
We show, using exact lattice chirality, that partition functions of lattice
gauge theories with vectorlike fermion representations can be split into
"light" and "mirror" parts, such that the "light" and "mirror" representations
are chiral. The splitting of the full partition function into "light" and
"mirror" is well defined only if the two sectors are separately anomaly free.
We show that only then is the generating functional, and hence the spectrum, of
the mirror theory a smooth function of the gauge field background. This
explains how ideas to use additional non-gauge, high-scale mirror-sector
dynamics to decouple the mirror fermions without breaking the gauge
symmetry--for example, in symmetric phases at strong mirror Yukawa
coupling--are forced to respect the anomaly-free condition when combined with
the exact lattice chiral symmetry. Our results also explain a paradox posed by
a recent numerical study of the mirror-fermion spectrum in a toy
would-be-anomalous two-dimensional theory. In passing, we prove some general
properties of the partition functions of arbitrary chiral theories on the
lattice that should be of interest for further studies in this field.Comment: 29 pages, 2 figures; published version, new addendu
Development of relativistic shock waves in viscous gluon matter
To investigate the formation and the propagation of relativistic shock waves
in viscous gluon matter we solve the relativistic Riemann problem using a
microscopic parton cascade. We demonstrate the transition from ideal to viscous
shock waves by varying the shear viscosity to entropy density ratio .
We show that an ratio larger than 0.2 prevents the development of
well-defined shock waves on time scales typical for ultrarelativistic heavy-ion
collisions. These findings are confirmed by viscous hydrodynamic calculations.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures - To appear in the conference proceedings for
Quark Matter 2009, March 30 - April 4, Knoxville, Tennesse
Axial anomaly with the overlap-Dirac operator in arbitrary dimensions
We evaluate for arbitrary even dimensions the classical continuum limit of
the lattice axial anomaly defined by the overlap-Dirac operator. Our
calculational scheme is simple and systematic. In particular, a powerful
topological argument is utilized to determine the value of a lattice integral
involved in the calculation. When the Dirac operator is free of species
doubling, the classical continuum limit of the axial anomaly in various
dimensions is combined into a form of the Chern character, as expected.Comment: 9 pages, uses JHEP.cls and amsfonts.sty, the final version to appear
in JHE
Self-consistent description of nuclear compressional modes
Isoscalar monopole and dipole compressional modes are computed for a variety
of closed-shell nuclei in a relativistic random-phase approximation to three
different parametrizations of the Walecka model with scalar self-interactions.
Particular emphasis is placed on the role of self-consistency which by itself,
and with little else, guarantees the decoupling of the spurious
isoscalar-dipole strength from the physical response and the conservation of
the vector current. A powerful new relation is introduced to quantify the
violation of the vector current in terms of various ground-state form-factors.
For the isoscalar-dipole mode two distinct regions are clearly identified: (i)
a high-energy component that is sensitive to the size of the nucleus and scales
with the compressibility of the model and (ii) a low-energy component that is
insensitivity to the nuclear compressibility. A fairly good description of both
compressional modes is obtained by using a ``soft'' parametrization having a
compression modulus of K=224 MeV.Comment: 28 pages and 10 figures; submitted to PR
Slow-roll Inflation with the Gauss-Bonnet and Chern-Simons Corrections
We study slow-roll inflation with the Gauss-Bonnet and Chern-Simons
corrections. We obtain general formulas for the observables: spectral indices,
tensor-to-scalar ratio and circular polarization of gravitational waves. The
Gauss-Bonnet term violates the consistency relation r = -8n_T. Particularly,
blue spectrum n_T > 0 and scale invariant spectrum |8n_T|/r << 1 of tensor
modes are possible. These cases require the Gauss-Bonnet coupling function of
\xi _{,\phi } \sim 10^8/M_{Pl}. We use examples to show new-inflation-type
potential with 10M_{Pl} symmetry breaking scale and potential with flat region
in \phi \gtrsim 10M_{Pl} lead to observationally consistent blue and scale
invariant spectra, respectively. Hence, these interesting cases can actually be
realized. The Chern-Simons term produce circularly polarized tensor modes. We
show an observation of these signals supports existence of the Chern-Simons
coupling function of \omega _{,\phi } \sim 10^8/M_{Pl}. Thus, with future
observations, we can fix or constrain the value of these coupling functions, at
the CMB scale.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figure
Anisotropic Flow from RHIC to the LHC
Anisotropic flow is recognized as one of the main observables providing
information on the early stage of a heavy-ion collision. At RHIC the large
observed anisotropic flow and its successful description by ideal hydrodynamics
is considered evidence for an early onset of thermalization and almost ideal
fluid properties of the produced strongly coupled Quark Gluon Plasma. This
write-up discusses some key RHIC anisotropic flow measurements and for
anisotropic flow at the LHC some predictions.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, hotquarks 200
A geometric discretisation scheme applied to the Abelian Chern-Simons theory
We give a detailed general description of a recent geometrical discretisation
scheme and illustrate, by explicit numerical calculation, the scheme's ability
to capture topological features. The scheme is applied to the Abelian
Chern-Simons theory and leads, after a necessary field doubling, to an
expression for the discrete partition function in terms of untwisted
Reidemeister torsion and of various triangulation dependent factors. The
discrete partition function is evaluated computationally for various
triangulations of and of lens spaces. The results confirm that the
discretisation scheme is triangulation independent and coincides with the
continuum partition functionComment: 27 pages, 5 figures, 6 tables. in late
Rapidly-Varying Speed of Sound, Scale Invariance and Non-Gaussian Signatures
We show that curvature perturbations acquire a scale invariant spectrum for
any constant equation of state, provided the fluid has a suitably
time-dependent sound speed. In order for modes to exit the physical horizon,
and in order to solve the usual problems of standard big bang cosmology, we
argue that the only allowed possibilities are inflationary (albeit not
necessarily slow-roll) expansion or ekpyrotic contraction. Non-Gaussianities
offer many distinguish features. As usual with a small sound speed,
non-Gaussianity can be relatively large, around current sensitivity levels. For
DBI-like lagrangians, the amplitude is negative in the inflationary branch, and
can be either negative or positive in the ekpyrotic branch. Unlike the power
spectrum, the three-point amplitude displays a large tilt that, in the
expanding case, peaks on smallest scales. While the shape is predominantly of
the equilateral type in the inflationary branch, as in DBI inflation, it is of
the local form in the ekpyrotic branch. The tensor spectrum is also generically
far from scale invariant. In the contracting case, for instance, tensors are
strongly blue tilted, resulting in an unmeasurably small gravity wave amplitude
on cosmic microwave background scales.Comment: 41 pages, 12 figures. v4: Few typos in equations (7.39) correcte
Parity violating target asymmetry in electron - proton scattering
We analyze the parity-violating (PV) components of the analyzing power in
elastic electron-proton scattering and discuss their sensitivity to the strange
quark contributions to the proton weak form factors. We point out that the
component of the analyzing power along the momentum transfer is independent of
the electric weak form factor and thus compares favorably with the PV beam
asymmetry for a determination of the strangeness magnetic moment. We also show
that the transverse component could be used for constraining the strangeness
radius. Finally, we argue that a measurement of both components could give
experimental information on the strangeness axial charge.Comment: 24 pages, Latex, 5 eps figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.
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