6,561 research outputs found
Mod-discrete expansions
In this paper, we consider approximating expansions for the distribution of
integer valued random variables, in circumstances in which convergence in law
cannot be expected. The setting is one in which the simplest approximation to
the 'th random variable is by a particular member of a given
family of distributions, whose variance increases with . The basic
assumption is that the ratio of the characteristic function of and that
of R_n$ converges to a limit in a prescribed fashion. Our results cover a
number of classical examples in probability theory, combinatorics and number
theory
Towards the Unification of Gravity and other Interactions: What has been Missed?
Faced with the persisting problem of the unification of gravity with other
fundamental interactions we investigate the possibility of a new paradigm,
according to which the basic space of physics is a multidimensional space
associated with matter configurations. We consider general
relativity in . In spacetime, which is a 4-dimensional subspace of
, we have not only the 4-dimensional gravity, but also other
interactions, just as in Kaluza-Klein theories. We then consider a finite
dimensional description of extended objects in terms of the center of mass,
area, and volume degrees of freedom, which altogether form a 16-dimensional
manifold whose tangent space at any point is Clifford algebra Cl(1,3). The
latter algebra is very promising for the unification, and it provides
description of fermions.Comment: 11 pages; Talk presented at "First Mediterranean Conference on
Classical and Quantum Gravity", Kolymbari, Crete, Greece, 14-18 September
200
Lessons from the 3d U(1) Gross-Neveu Model
The effectiveness of the Glasgow algorithm is explored via implementation in
the 3d U(1) Gross-Neveu model and the realisation of the Goldstone mechanism in
this model is compared and contrasted with its realisation in QCD.Comment: 6 pages, 5 eps figs, To appear in Proceedings of "QCD at Finite
Baryon Density" workshop, Bielefeld, 27-30 April 199
The geometry of the Barbour-Bertotti theories II. The three body problem
We present a geometric approach to the three-body problem in the
non-relativistic context of the Barbour-Bertotti theories. The Riemannian
metric characterizing the dynamics is analyzed in detail in terms of the
relative separations. Consequences of a conformal symmetry are exploited and
the sectional curvatures of geometrically preferred surfaces are computed. The
geodesic motions are integrated. Line configurations, which lead to curvature
singularities for , are investigated. None of the independent scalars
formed from the metric and curvature tensor diverges there.Comment: 16 pages, 2 eps figures, to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravit
Strongly coupled lattice gauge theory with dynamical fermion mass generation in three dimensions
We investigate the critical behaviour of a three-dimensional lattice
\chiU\phi_3 model in the chiral limit. The model consists of a staggered
fermion field, a U(1) gauge field (with coupling parameter ) and a
complex scalar field (with hopping parameter ). Two different methods
are used: 1) fits of the chiral condensate and the mass of the neutral
unconfined composite fermion to an equation of state and 2) finite size scaling
investigations of the Lee-Yang zeros of the partition function in the complex
fermion mass plane. For strong gauge coupling () the critical
exponents for the chiral phase transition are determined. We find strong
indications that the chiral phase transition is in one universality class in
this interval: that of the three-dimensional Gross-Neveu model with two
fermions. Thus the continuum limit of the \chiU\phi_3 model defines here a
nonperturbatively renormalizable gauge theory with dynamical mass generation.
At weak gauge coupling and small , we explore a region in which the
mass in the neutral fermion channel is large but the chiral condensate on
finite lattices very small. If it does not vanish in the infinite volume limit,
then a continuum limit with massive unconfined fermion might be possible in
this region, too.Comment: 27 pages, 16 figure
The Definition of Mach's Principle
Two definitions of Mach's principle are proposed. Both are related to gauge
theory, are universal in scope and amount to formulations of causality that
take into account the relational nature of position, time, and size. One of
them leads directly to general relativity and may have relevance to the problem
of creating a quantum theory of gravity.Comment: To be published in Foundations of Physics as invited contribution to
Peter Mittelstaedt's 80th Birthday Festschrift. 30 page
Einstein gravity as a 3D conformally invariant theory
We give an alternative description of the physical content of general
relativity that does not require a Lorentz invariant spacetime. Instead, we
find that gravity admits a dual description in terms of a theory where local
size is irrelevant. The dual theory is invariant under foliation preserving
3-diffeomorphisms and 3D conformal transformations that preserve the 3-volume
(for the spatially compact case). Locally, this symmetry is identical to that
of Horava-Lifshitz gravity in the high energy limit but our theory is
equivalent to Einstein gravity. Specifically, we find that the solutions of
general relativity, in a gauge where the spatial hypersurfaces have constant
mean extrinsic curvature, can be mapped to solutions of a particular gauge
fixing of the dual theory. Moreover, this duality is not accidental. We provide
a general geometric picture for our procedure that allows us to trade foliation
invariance for conformal invariance. The dual theory provides a new proposal
for the theory space of quantum gravity.Comment: 27 pages. Published version (minor changes and corrections
Interacting vector fields in Relativity without Relativity
Barbour, Foster and \'{O} Murchadha have recently developed a new framework,
called here {\it{the 3-space approach}}, for the formulation of classical
bosonic dynamics. Neither time nor a locally Minkowskian structure of spacetime
are presupposed. Both arise as emergent features of the world from
geodesic-type dynamics on a space of 3-dimensional metric--matter
configurations. In fact gravity, the universal light cone and Abelian gauge
theory minimally coupled to gravity all arise naturally through a single common
mechanism. It yields relativity -- and more -- without presupposing relativity.
This paper completes the recovery of the presently known bosonic sector within
the 3-space approach. We show, for a rather general ansatz, that 3-vector
fields can interact among themselves only as Yang--Mills fields minimally
coupled to gravity.Comment: Replaced with final version accepted by Classical and Quantum Gravity
(14 pages, no figures
Leptons, quarks, and their antiparticles from a phase-space perspective
It is argued that antiparticles may be interpreted in macroscopic terms
without explicitly using the concept of time and its reversal. The appropriate
framework is that of nonrelativistic phase space. It is recalled that a quantum
version of this approach leads also, alongside the appearance of antiparticles,
to the emergence of `internal' quantum numbers identifiable with weak isospin,
weak hypercharge and colour, and to the derivation of the Gell-Mann-Nishijima
relation, while simultaneously offering a preonless interpretation of the
Harari-Shupe rishon model. Furthermore, it is shown that - under the assumption
of the additivity of canonical momenta - the approach entails the emergence of
string-like structures resembling mesons and baryons, thus providing a
different starting point for the discussion of quark unobservability.Comment: Talk given at Fifth Int. Workshop DICE2010 Space-Time-Matter,
Castiglioncello, Italy, September 13-17, 201
- …
