1,534 research outputs found
The Zero Temperature Chiral Phase Transition in SU(N) Gauge Theories
We investigate the zero temperature chiral phase transition in an SU(N) gauge
theory as the number of fermions is varied. We argue that there exists a
critical number of fermions , above which there is no chiral symmetry
breaking or confinement, and below which both chiral symmetry breaking and
confinement set in. We estimate and discuss the nature of the phase
transition.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX, version published in PR
Postmodern Technicolor
Using new insights into strongly coupled gauge theories arising from analytic
calculations and lattice simulations, we explore a framework for technicolor
model building that relies on a non-trivial infrared fixed point, and an
essential role for QCD. Interestingly, the models lead to a simple relation
between the electroweak scale and the QCD confinement scale, and to the
possible existence of exotic leptoquarks with masses of several hundred GeV.Comment: LaTeX, 13 pages, version published in PR
Universal Extra Dimensions and the Higgs Boson Mass
We study the combined constraints on the compactification scale 1/R and the
Higgs mass m_H in the standard model with one or two universal extra
dimensions. Focusing on precision measurements and employing the
Peskin-Takeuchi S and T parameters, we analyze the allowed region in the (m_H,
1/R) parameter space consistent with current experiments. For this purpose, we
calculate complete one-loop KK mode contributions to S, T, and U, and also
estimate the contributions from physics above the cutoff of the
higher-dimensional standard model. A compactification scale 1/R as low as 250
GeV and significantly extended regions of m_H are found to be consistent with
current precision data.Comment: 21 pages, Latex, 6 eps figures, an error in calculations was
corrected and results of analysis changed accordingly, references adde
The Phase Structure of an SU(N) Gauge Theory with N_f Flavors
We investigate the chiral phase transition in SU(N) gauge theories as the
number of quark flavors, , is varied. We argue that the transition takes
place at a large enough value of so that it is governed by the infrared
fixed point of the function. We study the nature of the phase
transition analytically and numerically, and discuss the spectrum of the theory
as the critical value of is approached in both the symmetric and broken
phases. Since the transition is governed by a conformal fixed point, there are
no light excitations on the symmetric side. We extend previous work to include
higher order effects by developing a renormalization group estimate of the
critical coupling.Comment: 34 pages, 1 figure. More references adde
2+1 Dimensional QED and a Novel Phase Transition
We investigate the chiral phase transition in 2+1 dimensional QED. Previous
gap equation and lattice Monte-Carlo studies of symmetry breaking have found
that symmetry breaking ceases to occur when the number of fermion flavors
exceeds a critical value. Here we focus on the order of the transition. We find
that there are no light scalar degrees of freedom present as the critical
number of flavors is approached from above (in the symmetric phase). Thus the
phase transition is not second order, rendering irrelevant the renormalization
group arguments for a fluctuation induced transition. However, the order
parameter vanishes continuously in the broken phase, so this transition is also
unlike a conventional first order phase transition.Comment: 11 pages, Late
Maximum Wavelength of Confined Quarks and Gluons and Properties of Quantum Chromodynamics
Because quarks and gluons are confined within hadrons, they have a maximum
wavelength of order the confinement scale. Propagators, normally calculated for
free quarks and gluons using Dyson-Schwinger equations, are modified by
bound-state effects in close analogy to the calculation of the Lamb shift in
atomic physics. Because of confinement, the effective quantum chromodynamic
coupling stays finite in the infrared. The quark condensate which arises from
spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking in the bound state Dyson-Schwinger
equation is the expectation value of the operator evaluated in the
background of the fields of the other hadronic constituents, in contrast to a
true vacuum expectation value. Thus quark and gluon condensates reside within
hadrons. The effects of instantons are also modified. We discuss the
implications of the maximum quark and gluon wavelength for phenomena such as
deep inelastic scattering and annihilation, the decay of heavy quarkonia, jets,
and dimensional counting rules for exclusive reactions. We also discuss
implications for the zero-temperature phase structure of a vectorial SU()
gauge theory with a variable number of massless fermions.Comment: 6 pages, late
Infrared behaviour of massless QED in space-time dimensions 2 < d < 4
We show that the logarithmic infrared divergences in electron self-energy and
vertex function of massless QED in 2+1 dimensions can be removed at all orders
of 1/N by an appropriate choice of a non-local gauge. Thus the infrared
behaviour given by the leading order in 1/N is not modified by higher order
corrections. Our analysis gives a computational scheme for the Amati-Testa
model, resulting in a non-trivial conformal invariant field theory for all
space-time dimensions 2 < d < 4.Comment: 12 pages, uses axodraw.sty; added comments at the end, and one
reference; to appear in Phys. Lett.
On the Unification of Gauge Symmetries in Theories with Dynamical Symmetry Breaking
We analyze approaches to the partial or complete unification of gauge
symmetries in theories with dynamical symmetry breaking. Several types of
models are considered, including those that (i) involve sufficient unification
to quantize electric charge, (ii) attempt to unify the three standard-model
gauge interactions in a simple Lie group that forms a direct product with an
extended technicolor group, and, most ambitiously, (iii) attempt to unify the
standard-model gauge interactions with (extended) technicolor in a simple Lie
group.Comment: 24 pages, ReVTe
Limit on the fermion masses in technicolor models
Recently it has been pointed out that no limits can be put on the scale of
fermion mass generation in technicolor models, because the relation
between the fermion masses and depends on the dimensionality of the
interaction responsible for generating the fermion mass. Depending on this
dimensionality it may happens that does not depend on at all. We show
that exactly in this case may reach its largest value, which is almost
saturated by the top quark mass. We make few comments on the question of how
large can be a dynamically generated fermion mass.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, RevTeX
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