490 research outputs found
Wilson loops in the adjoint representation and multiple vacua in two-dimensional Yang-Mills theory
with fermions in the adjoint representation is invariant under
and thereby is endowed with a non-trivial vacuum structure
(k-sectors). The static potential between adjoint charges, in the limit of
infinite mass, can be therefore obtained by computing Wilson loops in the pure
Yang-Mills theory with the same non-trivial structure. When the (Euclidean)
space-time is compactified on a sphere , Wilson loops can be exactly
expressed in terms of an infinite series of topological excitations
(instantons). The presence of k-sectors modifies the energy spectrum of the
theory and its instanton content. For the exact solution, in the limit in which
the sphere is decompactified, a k-sector can be mimicked by the presence of
k-fundamental charges at , according to a Witten's suggestion. However
this property neither holds before decompactification nor for the genuine
perturbative solution which corresponds to the zero-instanton contribution on
.Comment: RevTeX, 46 pages, 1 eps-figur
Light--like Wilson loops and gauge invariance of Yang--Mills theory in 1+1 dimensions
A light-like Wilson loop is computed in perturbation theory up to for pure Yang--Mills theory in 1+1 dimensions, using Feynman and
light--cone gauges to check its gauge invariance. After dimensional
regularization in intermediate steps, a finite gauge invariant result is
obtained, which however does not exhibit abelian exponentiation. Our result is
at variance with the common belief that pure Yang--Mills theory is free in 1+1
dimensions, apart perhaps from topological effects.Comment: 10 pages, plain TeX, DFPD 94/TH/
Multiple vacua in two-dimensional Yang-Mills theory
Two-dimensional SU(N) Yang-Mills theory is endowed with a non-trivial vacuum
structure (k-sectors). The presence of k-sectors modifies the energy spectrum
of the theory and its instanton content, the (Euclidean) space-time being
compactified on a sphere. For the exact solution, in the limit in which the
sphere is decompactified, a k-sector can be mimicked by the presence of
k-fundamental charges at infinity, according to a Witten's suggestion. However,
this property neither holds before decompactification nor for the genuine
perturbative solution which corresponds to the zero-instanton contribution on
the sphere.Comment: 4 pages, elsart.sty, to appear in the proceedings of `Light-Cone
Meeting on Non-Perturbative QCD and Hadron Phenomenology', Heidelberg, June
200
A Bayesian model for identifying hierarchically organised states in neural population activity
Neural population activity in cortical circuits is not solely driven by external inputs, but is also modulated by endogenous states. These cortical states vary on multiple time-scales and also across areas and layers of the neocortex. To understand information processing in cortical circuits, we need to understand the statistical structure of internal states and their interaction with sensory inputs. Here, we present a statistical model for extracting hierarchically organized neural population states from multi-channel recordings of neural spiking activity. We model population states using a hidden Markov decision tree with state-dependent tuning parameters and a generalized linear observation model. Using variational Bayesian inference, we estimate the posterior distribution over parameters from population recordings of neural spike trains. On simulated data, we show that we can identify the underlying sequence of population states over time and reconstruct the ground truth parameters. Using extracellular population recordings from visual cortex, we find that a model with two levels of population states outperforms a generalized linear model which does not include state-dependence, as well as models which only including a binary state. Finally, modelling of state-dependence via our model also improves the accuracy with which sensory stimuli can be decoded from the population response
On General Axial Gauges for QCD
General Axial Gauges within a perturbative approach to QCD are plagued by
'spurious' propagator singularities. Their regularisation has to face major
conceptual and technical problems. We show that this obstacle is naturally
absent within a Wilsonian or 'Exact' Renormalisation Group approach and explain
why this is so. The axial gauge turns out to be a fixed point under the flow,
and the universal 1-loop running of the gauge coupling is computed.Comment: 4 pages, latex, talk presented by DFL at QCD'98, Montpellier, July
2-8, 1998; to be published in Nucl. Phys. B (Proc. Suppl.
The 2-period Balanced Traveling Salesman Problem
In the 2-period Balanced Traveling Salesman Problem (2B-TSP), the customers
must be visited over a period of two days: some must be visited daily, and the others on
alternate days (even or odd days); moreover, the number of customers visited in every tour
must be âbalancedâ, i.e. it must be the same or, alternatively, the difference between the
maximum and the minimum number of visited customers must be less than a given
threshold. The salesmanâs objective is to minimize the total distance travelled over the two
tours. Although this problem may be viewed as a particular case of the Period Traveling
Salesman Problem, in the 2-period Balanced TSP the assumptions allow for emphasizing
on routing aspects, more than on the assignment of the customers to the various days of the
period. The paper proposes two heuristic algorithms particularly suited for the case of
Euclidean distances between the customers. Computational experiences and a comparison
between the two algorithms are also given
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