17,701 research outputs found
Numerical Exploration of the RI/MOM Scheme Gauge Dependence
The gauge dependence of some fermion bilinear RI/MOM renormalization
constants is studied by comparing data which have been gauge-fixed in two
different realizations of the Landau gauge and in a generic covariant gauge.
The very good agreement between the various sets of results and the theory
indicates that the numerical uncertainty induced by the lattice gauge-fixing
procedure is below the statistical errors of our data sample which is of the
order of (1-1.5)%.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, Lattice2002(theoretical
Logical Specification and Analysis of Fault Tolerant Systems through Partial Model Checking
This paper presents a framework for a logical characterisation of fault tolerance and its formal analysis based on partial model checking techniques. The framework requires a fault tolerant system to be modelled using a formal calculus, here the CCS process algebra. To this aim we propose a uniform modelling scheme in which to specify a formal model of the system, its failing behaviour and possibly its fault-recovering procedures. Once a formal model is provided into our scheme, fault tolerance - with respect to a given property - can be formalized as an equational µ-calculus formula. This formula expresses in a logic formalism, all the fault scenarios satisfying that fault tolerance property. Such a characterisation understands the analysis of fault tolerance as a form of analysis of open systems and thank to partial model checking strategies, it can be made independent on any particular fault assumption. Moreover this logical characterisation makes possible the fault-tolerance verification problem be expressed as a general µ-calculus validation problem, for solving which many theorem proof techniques and tools are available. We present several analysis methods showing the flexibility of our approach
A possible theoretical explanation of metallicity gradients in elliptical galaxies
Models of chemical evolution of elliptical galaxies taking into account
different escape velocities at different galactocentric radii are presented. As
a consequence of this, the chemical evolution develops differently in different
galactic regions; in particular, we find that the galactic wind, powered by
supernovae (of type II and I) starts, under suitable conditions, in the outer
regions and successively develops in the central ones. The rate of star
formation (SFR) is assumed to stop after the onset of the galactic wind in each
region. The main result found in the present work is that this mechanism is
able to reproduce metallicity gradients, namely the gradients in the
index, in good agreement with observational data. We also find that in order to
honor the constant [Mg/Fe] ratio with galactocentric distance, as inferred from
metallicity indices, a variable initial mass function as a function of
galactocentric distance is required. This is only a suggestion since trends on
abundances inferred just from metallicity indices are still uncertain.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX file with 4 figures using mn.sty, submitted to MNRA
Non-perturbative improvement of composite operators with Wilson fermions
We propose a method to improve lattice operators composed of Wilson fermions
which allows the removal of all corrections of , including those
proportional to the quark mass, leaving only errors of . The method
exploits the fact that chiral symmetry is restored at short distances. By
imposing this requirement on correlation functions of improved lattice
operators at short distances, the coefficients which appear in these operators
can be determined. The method is an extension of the improvement program of the
ALPHA collaboration, which, up to now, has only been applicable in the chiral
limit. The extension to quarks with non-zero masses is particularly important
for applications in heavy quark physics.Comment: 15 pages, Late
Electromagnetic and strong isospin-breaking corrections to the muon from Lattice QCD+QED
We present a lattice calculation of the leading-order electromagnetic and
strong isospin-breaking corrections to the hadronic vacuum polarization (HVP)
contribution to the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon. We employ the gauge
configurations generated by the European Twisted Mass Collaboration (ETMC) with
dynamical quarks at three values of the lattice spacing ( fm) with pion masses between and
MeV. The results are obtained adopting the RM123 approach in the
quenched-QED approximation, which neglects the charges of the sea quarks. Quark
disconnected diagrams are not included. After the extrapolations to the
physical pion mass and to the continuum and infinite-volume limits the
contributions of the light, strange and charm quarks are respectively equal to
, and . At leading order in and we obtain , which is currently the most accurate determination of the
isospin-breaking corrections to .Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures, 5 tables. Version to appear in PRD. A bug in the
update of the strange and charm contributions is removed and an extended
discussion on the identification of the ground-state is included. arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1808.00887, arXiv:1707.0301
The phase diagrams of iron-based superconductors: theory and experiments
Phase diagrams play a primary role in the understanding of materials
properties. For iron-based superconductors (Fe-SC), the correct definition of
their phase diagrams is crucial because of the close interplay between their
crystallo-chemical and magnetic properties, on one side, and the possible
coexistence of magnetism and superconductivity, on the other. The two most
difficult issues for understanding the Fe-SC phase diagrams are: 1) the origin
of the structural transformation taking place during cooling and its
relationship with magnetism; 2) the correct description of the region where a
crossover between the magnetic and superconducting electronic ground states
takes place. Hence a proper and accurate definition of the structural, magnetic
and electronic phase boundaries provides an extremely powerful tool for
material scientists. For this reason, an exact definition of the thermodynamic
phase fields characterizing the different structural and physical properties
involved is needed, although it is not easy to obtain in many cases. Moreover,
physical properties can often be strongly dependent on the occurrence of
micro-structural and other local-scale features (lattice micro-strain, chemical
fluctuations, domain walls, grain boundaries, defects), which, as a rule, are
not described in a structural phase diagram. In this review, we critically
summarize the results for the most studied 11-, 122- and 1111-type compound
systems, providing a correlation between experimental evidence and theory
Non perturbative renormalization in coordinate space
We present an exploratory study of a gauge-invariant non-perturbative
renormalization technique. The renormalization conditions are imposed on
correlation functions of composite operators in coordinate space on the
lattice. Numerical results for bilinears obtained with overlap and
O(a)-improved Wilson fermions are presented. The measurement of the quark
condensate is also discussed.Comment: Lattice2003(improve), 3 page
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