1,499 research outputs found

    Non Perturbative Renormalization Group, momentum dependence of nn-point functions and the transition temperature of the weakly interacting Bose gas

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    We propose a new approximation scheme to solve the Non Perturbative Renormalization Group equations and obtain the full momentum dependence of nn-point functions. This scheme involves an iteration procedure built on an extension of the Local Potential Approximation commonly used within the Non Perturbative Renormalization Group. Perturbative and scaling regimes are accurately reproduced. The method is applied to the calculation of the shift ΔTc\Delta T_c in the transition temperature of the weakly repulsive Bose gas, a quantity which is very sensitive to all momenta intermediate between these two regions. The leading order result is in agreement with lattice calculations, albeit with a theoretical uncertainty of about 25%. The next-to-leading order differs by about 10% from the best accepted result

    Stars and statistical physics: a teaching experience

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    The physics of stars, their workings and their evolution, is a goldmine of problems in statistical mechanics and thermodynamics. We discuss many examples that illustrate the possibility of deepening student's knowledge of statistical mechanics by an introductory study of stars. The matter constituting the various stellar objects provides examples of equations of state for classical or quantal and relativistic or non-relativistic gases. Maximum entropy can be used to characterize thermodynamic and gravitational equilibrium which determines the structure of stars and predicts their instability above a certain mass. Contraction accompanying radiation induces either heating or cooling, which explains the formation of stars above a minimum mass. The characteristics of the emitted light are understood from black-body radiation and more precisely from the Boltzmann-Lorentz kinetic equation for photons. The luminosity is governed by the transport of heat by photons from the center to the surface. Heat production by thermonuclear fusion is determined by microscopic balance equations. The stability of the steady state of stars is controlled by the interplay of thermodynamics and gravitation.Comment: latex gould_last.tex, 4 files, submitted to Am. J. Phy

    DCC: Attractive Idea Seeks Serious Confirmation

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    The theoretical ideas relevant for the physics of the disoriented chiral condensate (DCC) are reviewed.Comment: 18 pages LaTex, based on invited lecture given by A.Krzywicki at the workshop "Quark, plasma and beyond", Zif, Bielefeld, May 1996 ; a reference is correcte

    Confinement, Turbulence and Diffraction Catastrophes

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    Many features of large N_c transition that occurs in the spectral density of Wilson loops as a function of loop area (observed recently in numerical simulations of Yang-Mills theory by Narayanan and Neuberger) can be captured by a simple Burgers equation used to model turbulence. Spectral shock waves that precede this asymptotic limit exhibit universal scaling with N_c, with indices that can be related to Berry indices for diffraction catastrophes.Comment: Presented at PANIC 200

    Quark number susceptibilities from HTL-resummed thermodynamics

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    We compute analytically the diagonal quark number susceptibilities for a quark-gluon plasma at finite temperature and zero chemical potential, and compare with recent lattice results. The calculation uses the approximately self-consistent resummation of hard thermal and dense loops that we have developed previously. For temperatures between 1.5 to 5 TcT_c, our results follow the same trend as the lattice data, but exceed them in magnitude by about 5-10%. We also compute the lowest order contribution, of order αs3log⁥(1/αs)\alpha_s^3\log(1/\alpha_s), to the off-diagonal susceptibility. This contribution, which is not a part of our self-consistent calculation, is numerically small, but not small enough to be compatible with a recent lattice simulation.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, uses elsart.cls; v2: minor corrections; v3: sign in eq.(1) correcte

    Comparing different hard-thermal-loop approaches to quark number susceptibilities

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    We compare our previously proposed hard-thermal-loop (HTL) resummed calculation of quark number susceptibilities using a self-consistent two-loop approximation to the quark density with a recent calculation of the same quantity at the one-loop level in a variant of HTL-screened perturbation theory. Besides pointing out conceptual problems with the latter approach, we show that it severely over-includes the leading-order interaction effects while including none of the plasmon term which after all is the reason to construct improved resummation schemes.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. Revised version to appear in Eur. J. Phys.

    Proton-nucleus collisions in the color glass condensate framework

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    We discuss proton-nucleus collisions in the framework of the color glass condensate. By assuming that the proton can be described as a low density color source, we solve exactly the Yang-Mills equations corresponding to this type of collision, and then use this solution in order to calculate inclusive gluon production or quark-antiquark production. Our result shows that k_T-factorization, while valid for gluon production, is violated for quark pair production in proton-nucleus collisions.Comment: Talk given at SEWM2004, Helsinki, June 200

    Non-Perturbative Renormalization Group calculation of the scalar self-energy

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    We present the first numerical application of a method that we have recently proposed to solve the Non Perturbative Renormalization Group equations and obtain the n-point functions for arbitrary external momenta. This method leads to flow equations for the n-point functions which are also differential equations with respect to a constant background field. This makes them, a priori, difficult to solve. However, we demonstrate in this paper that, within a simple approximation which turns out to be quite accurate, the solution of these flow equations is not more complicated than that of the flow equations obtained in the derivative expansion. Thus, with a numerical effort comparable to that involved in the derivative expansion, we can get the full momentum dependence of the n-point functions. The method is applied, in its leading order, to the calculation of the self-energy in a 3-dimensional scalar field theory, at criticality. Accurate results are obtained over the entire range of momenta.Comment: 29 page
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