532 research outputs found
Two-flavour Schwinger model with dynamical fermions in the L\"uscher formalism
We report preliminary results for 2D massive QED with two flavours of Wilson
fermions, using the Hermitean variant of L\"uscher's bosonization technique.
The chiral condensate and meson masses are obtained. The simplicity of the
model allows for high statistics simulations close to the chiral and continuum
limit, both in the quenched approximation and with dynamical fermions.Comment: Talk presented at LATTICE96(algorithms), 3 pages, 3 Postscript
figures, uses twoside, fleqn, espcrc2, epsf, revised version (details of
approx. polynomial
Ordering monomial factors of polynomials in the product representation
The numerical construction of polynomials in the product representation (as
used for instance in variants of the multiboson technique) can become
problematic if rounding errors induce an imprecise or even unstable evaluation
of the polynomial. We give criteria to quantify the effects of these rounding
errors on the computation of polynomials approximating the function . We
consider polynomials both in a real variable and in a Hermitian matrix. By
investigating several ordering schemes for the monomials of these polynomials,
we finally demonstrate that there exist orderings of the monomials that keep
rounding errors at a tolerable level.Comment: Latex2e file, 7 figures, 32 page
Lattice QCD with mixed actions
We discuss some of the implications of simulating QCD when the action used
for the sea quarks is different from that used for the valence quarks. We
present exploratory results for the hadron mass spectrum and pseudoscalar meson
decay constants using improved staggered sea quarks and HYP-smeared overlap
valence quarks. We propose a method for matching the valence quark mass to the
sea quark mass and demonstrate it on UKQCD clover data in the simpler case
where the sea and valence actions are the same.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures some minor modification to text and figures.
Accepted for publicatio
Boosting Image Forgery Detection using Resampling Features and Copy-move analysis
Realistic image forgeries involve a combination of splicing, resampling,
cloning, region removal and other methods. While resampling detection
algorithms are effective in detecting splicing and resampling, copy-move
detection algorithms excel in detecting cloning and region removal. In this
paper, we combine these complementary approaches in a way that boosts the
overall accuracy of image manipulation detection. We use the copy-move
detection method as a pre-filtering step and pass those images that are
classified as untampered to a deep learning based resampling detection
framework. Experimental results on various datasets including the 2017 NIST
Nimble Challenge Evaluation dataset comprising nearly 10,000 pristine and
tampered images shows that there is a consistent increase of 8%-10% in
detection rates, when copy-move algorithm is combined with different resampling
detection algorithms
The mechanism for the 3 x 3 distortion of Sn/ge (111)
We show that two distinct ground states, one nonmagnetic,
metallic, and distorted, the other magnetic, semimetallic (or insulating) and
undistorted, compete in -phase adsorbates on semiconductor (111)
surfaces. In Sn/Ge(111), LSDA/GGA calculations indicate, in agreement with
experiment, that the distorted metallic ground state prevails. The reason for
stability of this state is analysed, and is traced to a sort of bond density
wave, specifically a modulation of the antibonding state filling between the
adatom and a Ge-Ge bond directly underneath
Possible evidence of non-Fermi liquid behavior from quasi-one-dimensional indium nanowires
We report possible evidence of non-Fermi liquid (NFL) observed at room
temperature from the quasi one-dimensional (1D) indium (In) nanowires
self-assembled on Si(111)-77 surface. Using high-resolution
electron-energy-loss spectroscopy, we have measured energy and width
dispersions of a low energy intrasubband plasmon excitation in the In
nanowires. We observe the energy-momentum dispersion (q) in the low q
limit exactly as predicted by both NFL theory and the
random-phase-approximation. The unusual non-analytic width dispersion measured with an exponent =1.400.24, however,
is understood only by the NFL theory. Such an abnormal width dispersion of low
energy excitations may probe the NFL feature of a non-ideal 1D interacting
electron system despite the significantly suppressed spin-charge separation
(40 meV).Comment: 11 pages and 4 figure
Metal-insulator transition in the In/Si(111) surface
The metal-insulator transition observed in the In/Si(111)-4x1 reconstruction
is studied by means of ab initio calculations of a simplified model of the
surface. Different surface bands are identified and classified according to
their origin and their response to several structural distortions. We support
the, recently proposed [New J. of Phys. 7 (2005) 100], combination of a shear
and a Peierls distortions as the origin of the metal-insulator transition. Our
results also seem to favor an electronic driving force for the transition.Comment: Presented in the 23 European Conference in Surface Science, Berlin,
September 2005. Submitted to Surface Science (proceedings of the conference)
in August 200
Phase transitions in two dimensions - the case of Sn adsorbed on Ge(111) surfaces
Accurate atomic coordinates of the room-temperature (root3xroot3)R30degree
and low-temperature (3x3) phases of 1/3 ML Sn on Ge(111) have been established
by grazing-incidence x-ray diffraction with synchrotron radiation. The Sn atoms
are located solely at T4-sites in the (root3xroot3)R30degree structure. In the
low temperature phase one of the three Sn atoms per (3x3) unit cell is
displaced outwards by 0.26 +/- 0.04 A relative to the other two. This
displacement is accompanied by an increase in the first to second double-layer
spacing in the Ge substrate.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages including 2 figure
Speeding up finite step-size updating of full QCD on the lattice
We propose various improvements of finite step-size updating for full QCD on
the lattice that might turn finite step-size updating into a viable alternative
to the hybrid Monte Carlo algorithm. These improvements are noise reduction of
the noisy estimator of the fermion determinant, unbiased inclusion of the
hopping parameter expansion and a multi-level Metropolis scheme. First
numerical tests are performed for the 2 dimensional Schwinger model with two
flavours of Wilson fermions and for QCD two flavours of Wilson fermions and
Schr"odinger functional boundary conditions.Comment: 22 pages, 1 figur
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