The maximal center gauge, combined with center projection, is a means to associate Yang-Mills lattice gauge configurations with closed center vortex world-surfaces. This technique allows to study center vortex physics in lattice gauge experiments. In the present work, the continuum analogue of the maximal center gauge is constructed. This sheds new light on the meaning of the procedure on the lattice and leads to a sketch of an effective vortex theory in the continuum. Furthermore, the manner in which center vortex configurations generate the Pontryagin index is investigated. The Pontryagin index is built up from self-intersections of the vortex world-surfaces, where it is crucial that the surfaces be globally non-oriented. V x,µ c V 0,µ (x) 2 (5) 3 Generalizations and applications to SU (3) color were discussed in [21],[25].
We calculate the light hadron spectrum in full QCD using two plus one flavor Asqtad sea quarks and domain wall valence quarks. Meson and baryon masses are calculated on a lattice of spatial size L ≈ 2.5 fm, and a lattice spacing of a ≈ 0.124 fm, for pion masses as light as mπ ≈ 300 MeV, and compared with the results by the MILC collaboration with Asqtad valence quarks at the same lattice spacing. Two-and three-flavor chiral extrapolations of the baryon masses are performed using both continuum and mixed-action heavy baryon chiral perturbation theory. Both the threeflavor and two-flavor functional forms describe our lattice results, although the low-energy constants from the next-to-leading order SU (3) fits are inconsistent with their phenomenological values. Nextto-next-to-leading order SU (2) continuum formulae provide a good fit to the data and yield and extrapolated nucleon mass consistent with experiment, but the convergence pattern indicates that even our lightest pion mass may be at the upper end of the chiral regime. Surprisingly, our nucleon masses are essentially lineaer in mπ over our full range of pion masses, and we show this feature is common to all recent dynamical calculations of the nucleon mass. The origin of this linearity is not presently understood, and lighter pion masses and increased control of systematic errors will be needed to resolve this puzzling behavior.
We present a first calculation of transverse momentum dependent nucleon observables in dynamical lattice QCD employing non-local operators with staple-shaped, "process-dependent" Wilson lines. The use of staple-shaped Wilson lines allows us to link lattice simulations to TMD effects determined from experiment, and in particular to access non-universal, naively time-reversal odd TMD observables. We present and discuss results for the generalized Sivers and Boer-Mulders transverse momentum shifts for the SIDIS and DY cases. The effect of staple-shaped Wilson lines on T-even observables is studied for the generalized tensor charge and a generalized transverse shift related to the worm gear function g1T . We emphasize the dependence of these observables on the staple extent and the Collins-Soper evolution parameter. Our numerical calculations use an n f = 2+1 mixed action scheme with domain wall valence fermions on an Asqtad sea and pion masses 369 MeV as well as 518 MeV.
We present a comprehensive study of the lowest moments of nucleon generalized parton distributions in N f = 2 + 1 lattice QCD using domain wall valence quarks and improved staggered sea quarks. Our investigation includes helicity dependent and independent generalized parton distributions for pion masses as low as 350 MeV and volumes as large as (3.5 fm) 3 , for a lattice spacing of 0.124 fm. We use perturbative renormalization at one-loop level with an improvement based on the non-perturbative renormalization factor for the axial vector current, and only connected diagrams are included in the isosinglet channel.
In the framework of quantum chromodynamics (QCD), parton distribution functions (PDFs) quantify how the momentum and spin of a hadron are divided among its quark and gluon constituents. Two main approaches exist to determine PDFs. The first approach, based on QCD factorization theorems, realizes a QCD analysis of a suitable set of hard-scattering measurements, often using a variety of hadronic observables. The second approach, based on first-principle operator definitions of PDFs, uses lattice QCD to compute directly some PDF-related quantities, such as their moments. Motivated by recent progress in both approaches, in this document we present an overview of lattice-QCD and globalanalysis techniques used to determine unpolarized and polarized proton PDFs and their moments. We provide benchmark numbers to validate present and future lattice-QCD calculations and we illustrate how they could be used to reduce the PDF uncertainties in current unpolarized and polarized global analyses. This document represents a first step towards establishing a common language between the two communities, to foster dialogue and to further improve our knowledge of PDFs.The detailed understanding of the inner structure of nucleons is an active research field with phenomenological implications in high-energy, hadron, nuclear and astroparticle physics. Within quantum chromodynamics (QCD), information on this structure -specifically on how the nucleon's momentum and spin are divided among quarks and gluons -is encoded in parton distribution functions (PDFs).There exist two main methods to determine PDFs. 1 The first method is the global QCD analysis [3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]. It is based on QCD factorization of physical observables, i.e. the fact that a class of hard-scattering cross-sections can be expressed as a convolution between short-distance, perturbative, matrix elements and long-distance, nonperturbative, PDFs. By combining a variety of available hard-scattering experimental data with state-of-the-art perturbative calculations, complete PDF sets, including the gluon and various combinations of quark flavors, are currently determined for protons, in both the unpolarized [13][14][15][16][17] and the polarized [18][19][20][21] case.Recent progress in global QCD analyses has been driven, on the one hand, by the increasing availability of a wealth of high-precision measurements from Jefferson Lab, HERA, RHIC, the Tevatron and the LHC and, on the other hand, by the advancement in perturbative calculations of QCD and electroweak (EW) higher-order corrections. Parton distributions are now determined with unprecedented precision, in many cases at the few-percent level. A paradigmatic illustration of this progress is provided by both the unpolarized and polarized gluon PDFs, which were affected by rather large uncertainties until recently, due to the limited experimental information available. In the unpolarized case, the gluon PDF is now constrained quite accurately from small to large x thanks to the inclusion of processes such a...
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