TRANSVERSITY DISTRIBUTION AND TENSOR CHARGE OF THE NUCLEON

2003 ◽  
Vol 18 (08) ◽  
pp. 1289-1296
Author(s):  
HAN-XIN HE

We study the transversity distribution and the tensor charge of the nucleon based on the QCD sum rule approach. We also discuss the spin physics in the effective theory, and then analyse the quark contributions to the flavour-singlet axial charge and the tensor charge by means of the quark model. How to build a consistent nonperturbative approach for studying the spin physics and other hadronic physics at low-energy scale is also briefly introduced.

2001 ◽  
Vol 16 (03) ◽  
pp. 377-408 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Y. WANG ◽  
Y. L. WU

Within the complete heavy quark effective field theory (HQEFT), the QCD sum rule approach is used to evaluate the decay constants including 1/mQcorrections and the Isgur–Wise function and other additional important wave functions concerned at 1/mQfor the heavy–light mesons. The number of unknown wave functions or form factors in HQEFT is shown to be much less than the one in the usual heavy quark effective theory (HQET). The values of wave functions at zero recoil are found to be consistent with the ones extracted from the interesting relations (which are resulted from the HQEFT) between the hadron masses and wave functions at zero recoil. The results for the decay constants are consistent with the ones from full QCD sum rule and Lattice calculations. The 1/mQcorrections to the scaling law [Formula: see text] are found to be small in HQEFT, which demonstrates again the validity of 1/mQexpansion in HQEFT. It is also shown that the residual momentum v·k of heavy quark within heavy–light hadrons is indeed around the binding energy [Formula: see text] of the heavy hadrons, which turns out to be in agreement with the expected one in the HQEFT. Therefore such a calculation provides a consistent check on the HQEFT and shows that the HQEFT is more reliable than the usual HQET for describing a slightly off-mass shell heavy quark within hadron as the usual HQET seems to lead to large 1/mQcorrections in evaluating the meson decay constants. It is emphasized that the introduction of the "dressed heavy quark" mass is useful for the heavy–light mesons (Qq) with [Formula: see text], while for heavy–heavy bound states (ψ1ψ2) with masses m1, [Formula: see text], like bottom-charm hadrons or similarly for muonium in QED, one needs to treat both particles as heavy effective particles via 1/m1and 1/m2expansions and redefine the effective bound states and modified "dressed heavy quark" masses within the HQEFT.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-114
Author(s):  
Johannes Bausch

AbstractFundamentally, it is believed that interactions between physical objects are two-body. Perturbative gadgets are one way to break up an effective many-body coupling into pairwise interactions: a Hamiltonian with high interaction strength introduces a low-energy space in which the effective theory appears k-body and approximates a target Hamiltonian to within precision $$\epsilon $$ϵ. One caveat of existing constructions is that the interaction strength generally scales exponentially in the locality of the terms to be approximated. In this work we propose a many-body Hamiltonian construction which introduces only a single separate energy scale of order $$\Theta (1/N^{2+\delta })$$Θ(1/N2+δ), for a small parameter $$\delta >0$$δ>0, and for N terms in the target Hamiltonian $$\mathbf H_\mathrm {t}=\sum _{i=1}^N \mathbf h_i$$Ht=∑i=1Nhi to be simulated: in its low-energy subspace, our constructed system can approximate any such target Hamiltonian $$\mathbf H_t$$Ht with norm ratios $$r=\max _{i,j\in \{1,\ldots ,N\}}\Vert \mathbf h_i\Vert / \Vert \mathbf h_j \Vert ={{\,\mathrm{O}\,}}(\exp (\exp ({{\,\mathrm{poly}\,}}N)))$$r=maxi,j∈{1,…,N}‖hi‖/‖hj‖=O(exp(exp(polyN))) to within relative precision $${{\,\mathrm{O}\,}}(N^{-\delta })$$O(N-δ). This comes at the expense of increasing the locality by at most one, and adding an at most poly-sized ancillary system for each coupling; interactions on the ancillary system are geometrically local, and can be translationally invariant. In order to prove this claim, we borrow a technique from high energy physics—where matter fields obtain effective properties (such as mass) from interactions with an exchange particle—and employ a tiling Hamiltonian to discard all cross-terms at higher expansion orders of a Feynman–Dyson series expansion. As an application, we discuss implications for QMA-hardness of the Local Hamiltonian problem, and argue that “almost” translational invariance—defined as arbitrarily small relative variations of the strength of the local terms—is as good as non-translational invariance in many of the constructions used throughout Hamiltonian complexity theory. We furthermore show that the choice of geared limit of many-body systems, where e.g. width and height of a lattice are taken to infinity in a specific relation, can have different complexity-theoretic implications: even for translationally invariant models, changing the geared limit can vary the hardness of finding the ground state energy with respect to a given promise gap from computationally trivial, to QMAEXP-, or even BQEXPSPACE-complete.


2010 ◽  
Vol 25 (23) ◽  
pp. 4339-4384 ◽  
Author(s):  
SHAMAYITA RAY

We consider different extensions of the Standard Model which can give rise to the small active neutrino masses through seesaw mechanisms, and their mixing. These tiny neutrino masses are generated at some high energy scale by the heavy seesaw fields which then get sequentially decoupled to give an effective dimension-5 operator at the low energy. The renormalization group evolution of the masses and the mixing parameters of the three active neutrinos in the high energy as well as the low energy effective theory is reviewed in this paper.


2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (02) ◽  
pp. 1950018
Author(s):  
A. N. Efremov

We make progress towards a derivation of a low energy effective theory for SU(2) Yang–Mills theory. This low energy action is computed to 1-loop using the renormalization group technique, taking proper care of the Slavnov–Taylor identities in the Maximal Abelian Gauge. After that, we perform the Spin-Charge decomposition in a way proposed by Faddeev and Niemi. The resulting action describes a pair of nonlinear O(3) and [Formula: see text]-models interacting with a scalar field. The potential of the scalar field is a Mexican hat and the location of the minima sets the energy scale of solitonic configurations of the [Formula: see text]-model fields whose excitations correspond to glueball states.


2009 ◽  
Vol 18 (08) ◽  
pp. 1801-1807
Author(s):  
MINGHAI LI ◽  
JUEPING LIU

Within the framework of the low-energy effective theory arising from the instanton vacuum model of QCD, the twist-four virtual photon wavefunction, gγ3(u, P2), corresponding to the nonlocal quark–antiquark vector current is calculated at the low-energy scale. The coupling constant, fγ(P2), of the quark–antiquark vector current to the virtual photon state is also obtained. The behavior of the coupling as well as the obtained photon wave function especially at the end points is discussed.


2006 ◽  
Vol 15 (04) ◽  
pp. 889-898 ◽  
Author(s):  
KAI ZHU ◽  
JUEPING LIU ◽  
RAN YU

The leading twist longitudinal virtual photon light-cone wave function, ϕγ‖(u, P2), is calculated within the framework of the low-energy effective theory arising from the instanton model of QCD vacuum. Corresponding to the non-perturbative effects at low-energy scale, a suitable regularization scale T is fixed by analysing the differential behavior of the photon wave function on the internal transverse momentum cut-off in the light-cone frame. The coupling constant, Fγ(P2), of the quark-antiquark vector current to the virtual photon state is also obtained by imposing the normalization condition. The feature of the obtained photon wave function has been discussed at the end as well as the coupling constant.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Bauer ◽  
Matthias Neubert ◽  
Sophie Renner ◽  
Marvin Schnubel ◽  
Andrea Thamm

Abstract Axions and axion-like particles (ALPs) are well-motivated low-energy relics of high-energy extensions of the Standard Model, which interact with the known particles through higher-dimensional operators suppressed by the mass scale Λ of the new-physics sector. Starting from the most general dimension-5 interactions, we discuss in detail the evolution of the ALP couplings from the new-physics scale to energies at and below the scale of electroweak symmetry breaking. We derive the relevant anomalous dimensions at two-loop order in gauge couplings and one-loop order in Yukawa interactions, carefully considering the treatment of a redundant operator involving an ALP coupling to the Higgs current. We account for one-loop (and partially two-loop) matching contributions at the weak scale, including in particular flavor-changing effects. The relations between different equivalent forms of the effective Lagrangian are discussed in detail. We also construct the effective chiral Lagrangian for an ALP interacting with photons and light pseudoscalar mesons, pointing out important differences with the corresponding Lagrangian for the QCD axion.


Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 191
Author(s):  
Alexander Bednyakov ◽  
Alfiia Mukhaeva

Flavour anomalies have attracted a lot of attention over recent years as they provide unique hints for possible New Physics. Here, we consider a supersymmetric (SUSY) extension of the Standard Model (SM) with an additional anomaly-free gauge U(1) group. The key feature of our model is the particular choice of non-universal charges to the gauge boson Z′, which not only allows a relaxation of the flavour discrepancies but, contrary to previous studies, can reproduce the SM mixing matrices both in the quark and lepton sectors. We pay special attention to the latter and explicitly enumerate all parameters relevant for our calculation in the low-energy effective theory. We find regions in the parameter space that satisfy experimental constraints on meson mixing and LHC Z′ searches and can alleviate the flavour anomalies. In addition, we also discuss the predictions for lepton-flavour violating decays B+→K+μτ and B+→K+eτ.


2000 ◽  
Vol 61 (19) ◽  
pp. 12799-12809 ◽  
Author(s):  
Th. Pruschke ◽  
R. Bulla ◽  
M. Jarrell

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