2,587 research outputs found
Specific Heat Exponent for the 3-d Ising Model from a 24-th Order High Temperature Series
We compute high temperature expansions of the 3-d Ising model using a
recursive transfer-matrix algorithm and extend the expansion of the free energy
to 24th order. Using ID-Pade and ratio methods, we extract the critical
exponent of the specific heat to be alpha=0.104(4).Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX with 5 eps-figures using epsf.sty, IASSNS-93/83 and
WUB-93-4
Series expansions without diagrams
We discuss the use of recursive enumeration schemes to obtain low and high
temperature series expansions for discrete statistical systems. Using linear
combinations of generalized helical lattices, the method is competitive with
diagramatic approaches and is easily generalizable. We illustrate the approach
using the Ising model and generate low temperature series in up to five
dimensions and high temperature series in three dimensions. The method is
general and can be applied to any discrete model. We describe how it would work
for Potts models.Comment: 24 pages, IASSNS-HEP-93/1
How to Put a Heavier Higgs on the Lattice
Lattice work, exploring the Higgs mass triviality bound, seems to indicate
that a strongly interacting scalar sector in the minimal standard model cannot
exist while low energy QCD phenomenology seems to indicate that it could. We
attack this puzzle using the 1/N expansion and discover a simple criterion for
selecting a lattice action that is more likely to produce a heavy Higgs
particle. Our large calculation suggests that the Higgs mass bound might be
around , which is about 30% higher than previously obtained
Critical behaviour of SU(2) lattice gauge theory. A complete analysis with the -method
We determine the critical point and the ratios and
of critical exponents of the deconfinement transition in gauge theory
by applying the -method to Monte Carlo data of the modulus and the
square of the Polyakov loop. With the same technique we find from the Binder
cumulant its universal value at the critical point in the thermodynamical
limit to and for the next-to-leading exponent .
From the derivatives of the Polyakov loop dependent quantities we estimate then
. The result from the derivative of is , in
complete agreement with that of the Ising model.Comment: 11 pages, 3 Postscript figures, uses Plain Te
Discretization Errors and Rotational Symmetry: The Laplacian Operator on Non-Hypercubical Lattices
Discretizations of the Laplacian operator on non-hypercubical lattices are
discussed in a systematic approach. It is shown that order errors always
exist for discretizations involving only nearest neighbors. Among all lattices
with the same density of lattice sites, the hypercubical lattices always have
errors smaller than other lattices with the same number of spacetime
dimensions. On the other hand, the four dimensional checkerboard lattice (also
known as the Celmaster lattice) is the only lattice which is isotropic at order
. Explicit forms of the discretized Laplacian operators on root lattices
are presented, and different ways of eliminating order errors are
discussed.Comment: 30 pages in REVTe
“Stock PIKs”- Taking a firm by its tails
Payment-in-kind bonds (PIKs) make interest payments in the form of an issue of additional bonds rather than cash. This research provides a rationale for the recent PIK issuance by firms with low credit ratings. PIKs offer a financially constrained firm in need of restructuring both an immediate automatic stay and a prepackaged bankruptcy procedure, features that make PIKs better than alternative debt instruments. In many instances PIKs are structured to facilitate a contingent transfer of control to PIK holders, and provide an avenue of obtaining equity in the firm whether the firm value is high or low in the future. The barbell strategy of acquisition that involves a deal with the equity holders (if the firm prospects improve), and a deal with the debt holders (if the firm defaults) dominates the cost of acquisition before the firm defaults, or after the firm goes bankrupt.Monetary Policy, Stock Market, Economic Development
Regularization dependence of the Higgs mass triviality bound
We calculate the triviality bound on the Higgs mass in scalar field theory
models whose global symmetry group has been replaced by and has been taken to infinity.
Limits on observable cutoff effects at four percent in several regularized
models with tunable couplings in the bare action yield triviality bounds
displaying a large degree of universality. Extrapolating from to
we conservatively estimate that a Higgs particle with mass up to
and width up to is realizable without large cutoff
effects, indicating that strong scalar self interactions in the standard model
are not ruled out. We also present preliminary numerical results of the
physical case for the lattice that are in agreement with the large
expectations. Note: The full ps file is also available via anonymous ftp to
ftp.scri.fsu.edu. To get the ps file, ftp to this address and use for username
"anonymous" and for password your name. The file is in the directory pub/vranas
(to go to that directory type: cd pub/vranas) and is called lat92_proc.ps (to
get it type: get lat92_proc.ps)Comment: 5 pages with 5 ps figures included. LaTex file. Contribution to the
LAT92 proceedings. Preprint, FSU-SCRI-92-150, RU-92-4
Large Nc Continuum Reduction and the Thermodynamics of QCD
It is noted that if large Nc continuum reduction applies to an observable,
then that observable is independent of temperature for all temperatures below
some critical value. This fact, plus the fact that mesons and glueballs are
weakly interacting at large Nc is used as the basis for a derivation of large
Nc continuum reduction for the chiral condensate. The structure of this
derivation is quite general and can be extended to a wide class of observables
Thermostatistics of extensive and non-extensive systems using generalized entropies
We describe in detail two numerical simulation methods valid to study systems
whose thermostatistics is described by generalized entropies, such as Tsallis.
The methods are useful for applications to non-trivial interacting systems with
a large number of degrees of freedom, and both short-range and long-range
interactions. The first method is quite general and it is based on the
numerical evaluation of the density of states with a given energy. The second
method is more specific for Tsallis thermostatistics and it is based on a
standard Monte Carlo Metropolis algorithm along with a numerical integration
procedure. We show here that both methods are robust and efficient. We present
results of the application of the methods to the one-dimensional Ising model
both in a short-range case and in a long-range (non-extensive) case. We show
that the thermodynamic potentials for different values of the system size N and
different values of the non-extensivity parameter q can be described by scaling
relations which are an extension of the ones holding for the Boltzmann-Gibbs
statistics (q=1). Finally, we discuss the differences in using standard or
non-standard mean value definitions in the Tsallis thermostatistics formalism
and present a microcanonical ensemble calculation approach of the averages.Comment: Submitted to Physica A. LaTeX format, 38 pages, 17 EPS figures.
IMEDEA-UIB, 07071 Palma de Mallorca, Spain, http://www.imedea.uib.e
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