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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
81

Deep inelastic scattering and bag model

Signal, Anthony Ian. January 1988 (has links) (PDF)
Typescript. Copies of three papers (2 published), co-authored by the author, in back. Bibliography: leaves 179-186.
82

Improved actions in lattice QCD.

Bonnet, Frédéric D. R. January 2002 (has links)
In this thesis I explore the physical effects of improved actions combined with improved operators in the framework of lattice QCD. All calculations are done in the quenched approximation, that is, when all of the dynamical fermion interactions have been suppressed by setting the determinant of the fermion matrix to a constant. The thesis first briefly introduces lattice QCD to familiarize the reader with the basic concepts. It then describes the common numerical procedures used. It is made up of three major sections. The first is the exploration of gauge field configurations and the study of the role of instantons in lattice QCD. In this work the Wilson gauge action and a standard 1 loop topological charge operator are used to determine the relative rates of standard cooling and smearing algorithms in pure SUc(3)-color gauge theory. I consider representative gauge field configurations on 16³ × 32 lattices at β = 5.70 and 24³ × 36 lattices at β = 6.00. I find the relative rate of variation in the action and topological charge under various algorithms may be succinctly described in terms of simple formulae ¹. The results are in accord with recent suggestions from fat-link perturbation theory. This work is then extended to O(a²)-improved gauge action and O(a²)-improved operators ². In particular, an O(a²)-improved version of APE smearing is motivated by considerations of smeared link projection and cooling. The extent to which the established benefits of improved cooling carry over to improved smearing is critically examined. I consider representative gauge field configurations generated with an O(a²)-improved gauge field action on 16³ × 32 lattices at β = 4.38 and 24³ × 36 lattices at β = 5.00 having lattice spacings of 0.165(2) fm and 0.077(1) fm respectively. While the merits of improved algorithms are clearly displayed for the coarse lattice spacing, the fine lattice results put the various algorithms on a more equal footing and allow a quantitative calibration of the smoothing rates for the various algorithms. I find that the relative rate of variation in the action may also be described in terms of simple calibration formulae for O(a²)-improvement which accurately describes the relative smoothness of the gauge field configurations at a microscopic level. In the second section the first calculation of the gluon propagator using an O(a²)- improved action with the corresponding O(a²)-improved Landau gauge fixing ³ condition is presented ⁴. The gluon propagator obtained from the improved action and improved Landau gauge condition is compared with earlier unimproved results on similar physical lattice volumes of 3.2³ × 6.4⁴ fm. It is found that there is good agreement between the improved propagator calculated on a coarse lattice with lattice spacing a = 0.35 fm and the unimproved propagator calculated on a fine lattice with spacing a = 0.10 fm. This motivated us to calculate the gluon propagator on a coarse very large-volume lattice of 5.6³ × 11.2⁴fm. The infrared behavior observed in previous studies is confirmed. The gluon propagator is enhanced at intermediate momenta and suppressed at infrared momenta. The observed infrared suppression of the Landau gauge gluon propagator is not a finite volume effect. This work is then extended to a variety of lattices with spacing ranging from a = 0.17 to a = 0.4 fm ⁵ to further explore finite volume and discretization effects. In this work a technique previously used for minimizing lattice artifacts, known as “tree-level correction”, has also been extended. It is demonstrated that by using tree-level correction, determined by the tree-level behavior of the action being considered, it is possible to obtain scaling behavior over a very wide range of momenta and lattice spacings. This makes it possible to explore the infinite volume and continuum limits of the Landau-gauge gluon propagator. As a final part of this thesis I present the first results for the quark propagator using an Overlap fermionic quark action ⁶. I compare the results with those obtained from the standard Wilson fermion. The overlap quark action is O(a)-improved compared with the Wilson fermion. This action realizes exact chiral symmetry on the lattice unlike the Wilson fermion and it demonstrates that the fastest way forward in this field is with improved lattice operators. The idea of studying improved actions in lattice gauge theory was suggested to me by A/Prof. Anthony G. Williams during the “Nonperturbative Methods in Quantum Field Theory” workshop in early February 1998. Initially it was suggested to me that a calculation of the gluon propagator using improved action on large volumes, following a study just done with standard gauge action in Ref. [62]. The point of interest was to study the effect an improved gauge field action would have on the gluon propagator. This study would then be extended to quark actions. In the meantime when generating gauge field configurations using a computer code written in Fortran 77 (provided by Dr. Derek B. Leinweber), it occurred to me that it would be good to explore the content of these gauge field configurations. In order to do realistic calculations on large lattices we needed a gauge field configuration generator that would run on our CM5 computer and so Connection Machine Fortran (CMF) became the adopted language. I started writing the computer code to generate the gauge field configuration in the SUc(2) with the help of Dr. Derek B. Leinweber, who introduced me to the basic concepts in lattice QCD. I then extended this code to the SUc(3) gauge group. This is commonly known as the standard Wilson gauge action. After investigating with some of the optimization possibilities, I moved on to code an O(a²)-improved gauge action. The code uses a masking procedure for the link update. I have generalized the masking procedure for any planar gauge field action in SUc(N), Ref. [18]. From there it was very obvious that by applying a continuous repetition of some sections of code that I written, that some bigger Wilson loops could easily be included in the action and hence highly improved actions could be easily constructed. The only difficulty was to calculate the improvement coefficients. I then moved on to study smearing algorithms. I adapted the gauge field configuration code to a cooling and a 1 × 2 and 2 × 1 improved cooling code in which we inserted higher order loop operators. This was the tool used to explore gauge field configurations and their topological structures. Once the short range quantum fluctuations are removed it is possible to see instantons. Instantons are believed to play a crucial role in the spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking mechanism. We improved the topological charge operator from the clover term to an (1 × 2 and 2 × 1) O(a²)–improved topological charge operator (see Appendices, Sections E.16 and E.17). This code was subsequently adapted by Sundance Bilson-Thompson so that he could insert higher order loops. I have also inserted my O(a²)–improved operator to construct an O(a²)–improved smearing algorithm. Using these tools I have calibrated the relative rates of cooling and smearing. Another piece of work on gauge fixing, reviewed in Chapter 8, was led by Dr. Patrick O. Bowman, Ref. [63]. There I supplied the gauge field configurations and checked some of the analytical work. For the gluon propagator work I supplied all of the lattice configurations with the exception of the 32³ × 64 used in Ref. [62]. The analysis was primarily carried out by Dr. Patrick O. Bowman and partly inspired by the one carried out in hep-lat/0106023. While this gluon propagator work is not being presented here as my own Ph. D. qualifying work, I am a co author on the subsequent papers and so I have therefore decided to include a review of this work in Chapter 9. I have also made some contribution in the construction of the Fat–link quark action (with and without the clover term) developed by James M. Zanotti. These contributions involve the code for the Reunitarization of the smeared links, Appendix E.21. Because of the code developed for the improved lattice definition of the Fµν(x) term I have also made some contribution to the Fat–link clover quark action although I will not discuss about this work in the following thesis. My main contribution for the overlap quark propagator study was in the analysis of the propagator data. The overlap propagators were generated by Dr. Jianbo Zhang and the research was also carried out in collaboration with A/Prof. Anthony G. Williams and Dr. Derek B. Leinweber. The quark propagators for the Wilson fermion were generated by a computer code parallelized by James M. Zanotti and originally written by Prof. Frank X. Lee. The anisotropic lattice code has not been used in any calculations yet although it has been tested and verified. The code was extended from the isotropic improved generator code in SUc(3). After a literature search, we decided to implement the action described in Ref. [31] for the anisotropic Wilson action and in Ref. [11, 32] for the improved anisotropic case. Apart from the work on the gauge fixing and the gluon propagator, done in collaboration with Dr. Patrick O. Bowman, and which for completeness is briefly reviewed in Chapters 8 and 9 respectively, this thesis contains no material which has been accepted for the award of any other degree or diploma in any university or other institution and to the best of knowledge and belief, contains no material previously published or written by another person, except where due reference has been made in the text. I give consent to this copy of my thesis, when deposited in the University Library, being available for loan and photocopying. Fr´ed´eric D. R. Bonnet Date: 20th of September 2001. ____________ [Footnotes]: ¹F. D. R. Bonnet, P. Fitzhenry, D. B. Leinweber, M. R. Stanford & A. G. Williams, Phys. Rev. D 62, 094509 (2000) [hep lat/0001018]. ²F. D. R. Bonnet, D. B. Leinweber, A. G. Williams & J. M. Zanotti, Submitted to Phys. Rev. D. [hep-lat/0106023]. ³F. D. R. Bonnet, P. O. Bowman, D. B. Leinweber, D. G. Richards & A. G. Williams, Aust. J. Phys. 52, 939 (1999). ⁴F. D. R. Bonnet, P. O. Bowman, D. B. Leinweber & A. G. Williams, Infrared behavior of the gluon propagator on a large volume lattice, Phys. Rev. D 62, 051501, (2000). ⁵F. D. R. Bonnet, P. O. Bowman, D. B. Leinweber, A. G. Williams & J. M. Zanotti, Infinite volume and continuum limits of the landau gauge gluon propagator, Phys. Rev. D 64, 034501 (2001) [hep-lat/0101013]. ⁶F. D. R. Bonnet, P. O. Bowman, D. B. Leinweber, A. G. Williams & J. Zhang, Overlap Propagator in Landau Gauge, to be Submitted to Phys. Rev. D. / Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Chemistry and Physics, 2002
83

A cloudy Quark Bag Model of S, P, and D wave interactions for the coupled channel antikaon-nucleon system

He, Guangliang 15 May 1992 (has links)
Graduation date: 1993
84

Current-current correlators in NRQCD and supersymmetric field theory on the lattice

Wells, Robert Edward January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
85

The calculation of some decay rates of heavy pseudoscalar quarkonium states /

Legault, Alain. January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
86

Two-quark processes in a scalar model of deep inelastic scattering

Walton, Mark, 1960- January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
87

A theoretical model for the in-medium spectral density of vector mesons /

Vujanovic, Gojko. January 2008 (has links)
We study the hadronic phase of Quantum Chromodynamics within a formalism that uses strongly interacting resonances in the Regge theory approach. Our aim is to investigate the properties of the medium created in a relativistic nucleus-nucleus collision, using the electromagnetic decays of vector mesons as probe. To do so, we first layout the foundations of Regge theory, which is then used to calculate the in-medium properties of vector mesons. This methodology will be used to calculate for the first time the properties of the &phis; meson in a hadronic medium. The properties are contained within the imaginary part of the propagator (IMPP). Since it is related to electromagnetic decay via vector meson dominance, the IMPP is a probe of strongly interacting hadron gas created in the collision.
88

Calculation of the meson decays of vector Πvector + pseudoscalar using Q.C.D.

Irwin, Blake A. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
89

Probes of quark matter formation in high energy 16O-nucleus collisions

Sirois, Yves January 1988 (has links)
I present the measurements, analysis and results obtained with the NA34 experiment at the CERN European laboratory, on the global characteristics of particle production in ultra-relativistic oxygen-nucleus collisions, at incident energies of 60 and 200 GeV/nucleon. The observed properties of the particle flow are analysed in the framework of phenomenological models inspired by quantum chromodynamics. From this analysis, novel information emerges concerning the mechanisms and space-time evolution of the soft-hadronic processes in short-lived extended volumes of matter at extreme densities and temperature. We consequently study the parameters and critical conditions under which nuclear collisions could allow the observation of a phase transition from hadronic matter towards a new state of deconfined quark-gluon plasma matter.
90

Small x physics

Askew, Adrian John January 1995 (has links)
We study the small-z limit of the structure functions for deep inelastic scattering in Quantum Chromodynamics. The standard approach to this process, based on the DGLAP equations, runs into difficulties in the small-x region due to the higher order corrections becoming large. As an attempt to overcome these obstacles we reinterpret the small-z limit in terms of high energy asymptotics. The relevant high energy formalism is developed in terms of Reggeon Field Theory, which leads to the BFKL equation for the scattering amplitude. These results are reviewed fully, for completeness. We then apply the resulting formalism to structure functions at small-z to determine the phenomenological implications of this high energy resummation. The DESY electron-proton collider HERA is presently exploring the region of the structure functions for x ≤ 10(^-3), Q(^2) ~ 10 GeV(^2) and the results of these experiments are compared with our theoretical analysis. The structure functions are a very inclusive measurement; so in order to try and focus on some cleaner indication of the BFKL behaviour we then turn to an analysis of dijet production in deep inelastic scattering. The results of the BFKL formalism are compared with standard analysis in terms of the DGLAP equations.

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