1,677 research outputs found
Recursive Graphical Construction of Feynman Diagrams in phi^4 Theory: Asymmetric Case and Effective Energy
The free energy of a multi-component scalar field theory is considered as a
functional W[G,J] of the free correlation function G and an external current J.
It obeys non-linear functional differential equations which are turned into
recursion relations for the connected Greens functions in a loop expansion.
These relations amount to a simple proof that W[G,J] generates only connected
graphs and can be used to find all such graphs with their combinatoric weights.
A Legendre transformation with respect to the external current converts the
functional differential equations for the free energy into those for the
effective energy Gamma[G,Phi], which is considered as a functional of the free
correlation function G and the field expectation Phi. These equations are
turned into recursion relations for the one-particle irreducible Greens
functions. These relations amount to a simple proof that Gamma[G,J] generates
only one-particle irreducible graphs and can be used to find all such graphs
with their combinatoric weights. The techniques used also allow for a
systematic investigation into resummations of classes of graphs. Examples are
given for resumming one-loop and multi-loop tadpoles, both through all orders
of perturbation theory. Since the functional differential equations derived are
non-perturbative, they constitute also a convenient starting point for other
expansions than those in numbers of loops or powers of coupling constants. We
work with general interactions through four powers in the field.Comment: 34 pages; abstract expanded; section IV.E about absorption of
tadpoles and one related reference added; eqs. (20) and (23) corrected;
further references added; some minor beautifications; to be published by
Phys.Rev.
Tricritical Point in Quantum Phase Transitions of the Coleman-Weinberg Model at Higgs Mass
The tricritical point, which separates first and second order phase
transitions in three-dimensional superconductors, is studied in the
four-dimensional Coleman-Weinberg model, and the similarities as well as the
differences with respect to the three-dimensional result are exhibited. The
position of the tricritical point in the Coleman-Weinberg model is derived and
found to be in agreement with the Thomas-Fermi approximation in the
three-dimensional Ginzburg-Landau theory. From this we deduce a special role of
the tricritical point for the Standard Model Higgs sector in the scope of the
latest experimental results, which suggests the unexpected relevance of
tricritical behavior in the electroweak interactions.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, published in Phys. Lett.
Strings with Negative Stiffness and Hyperfine Structure
We propose a new string model by adding a higher-order gradient term to the
rigid string, so that the stiffness can be positive or negative without loosing
stability. In the large-D approximation, the model has three phases, one of
which with a new type of generalized "antiferromagnetic" orientational
correlations. We find an infrared-stable fixed point describing world-sheets
with vanishing tension and Hausdorff dimension D_H=2. Crumpling is prevented by
the new term which suppresses configurations with rapidly changing extrinsic
curvature.Comment: Author Information under
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/institution.html . Latest update of
paper also at http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/kleiner_re27
Monopoles in the presence of the Chern-Simons term via the Julia-Toulouse approach
We study with magnetic-like defects using the Julia-Toulouse
condensation mechanism (JTM). By a careful treatment of the symmetries we
suggest a geometrical interpretation for distinct debatable issues in the
MCS-monopole system: (i) the induction of the non-conserved electric current
together with the Chern-Simons term (CS), (ii) the deconfinement transition
and, (iii) the computation of the fermionic determinant in the presence of
Dirac string singularities. The JTM leads to proper interpretation of the
non-conserved current as originating from Dirac brane symmetry breaking. The
mechanism behind this symmetry breaking is clarified. The physical origin of
the deconfinement transition becomes evident in the low energy effective theory
induced by the JTM. The proper procedure to compute the fermionic determinant
in the presence of Dirac branes will be presented. A byproduct of this approach
is the possible appearance of statistical transmutation and the clarification
for the different quantization rules for the topological mass.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, minor changes, references added, accepted for
publication in Physics Letters
Superconducting transition in disordered granular superconductors in magnetic fields
Motivated by a recent argument that the superconducting (SC) transition field
of three-dimensional (3D) disordered superconductors with granular structure in
a nonzero magnetic field should lie above in low limit, the
glass transition (or, in 2D, crossover) curve of disordered quantum
Josephson junction arrays is examined by incorporating SC fluctuations. It is
found that the glass transition or crossover in the granular materials can be
described on the same footing as the vortex-glass (VG) transition in
amorphous-like (i.e., nongranular) materials. In most of 3D granular systems,
the vanishing of resistivity upon cooling should occur even above ,
while the corresponding sharp drop of the resistivity in 2D case may appear
only below as a result of an enhanced quantum fluctuation.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. B. The content of sec.3 in v.2
was removed from here and presented more extensively in a separate paper
(cond-mat/0606522) where the argument of nonsuperconducting vortex-glass in
cond-mat/0512432 is shown to be fals
The Dislocation Stress Functions From the Double Curl T(3)-Gauge Equation: Linearity and a Look Beyond
T(3)-gauge model of defects based on the gauge Lagrangian quadratic in the
gauge field strength is considered. The equilibrium equation of the medium is
fulfilled by the double curl Kroner's ansatz for stresses. The problem of
replication of the static edge dislocation along third axis is analysed under a
special, though conventional, choice of this ansatz. The translational gauge
equation is shown to constraint the functions parametrizing the ansatz (the
stress functions) so that the resulting stress component is not
that of the edge defect. Another translational gauge equation with the double
curl differential operator is shown to reproduce both the stress functions, as
well as the stress tensors, of the standard edge and screw dislocations.
Non-linear extension of the newly proposed translational gauge equation is
given to correct the linear defect solutions in next orders. New gauge
Lagrangian is suggested in the Hilbert-Einstein form.Comment: 21 pages, LaTeX, no figure
A General Expression for Symmetry Factors of Feynman Diagrams
The calculation of the symmetry factor corresponding to a given Feynman
diagram is well known to be a tedious problem. We have derived a simple formula
for these symmetry factors. Our formula works for any diagram in scalar theory
( and interactions), spinor QED, scalar QED, or QCD.Comment: RevTex 11 pages with 10 figure
Stability of 3D Cubic Fixed Point in Two-Coupling-Constant \phi^4-Theory
For an anisotropic euclidean -theory with two interactions [u
(\sum_{i=1^M {\phi}_i^2)^2+v \sum_{i=1}^M \phi_i^4] the -functions are
calculated from five-loop perturbation expansions in
dimensions, using the knowledge of the large-order behavior and Borel
transformations. For , an infrared stable cubic fixed point for
is found, implying that the critical exponents in the magnetic phase
transition of real crystals are of the cubic universality class. There were
previous indications of the stability based either on lower-loop expansions or
on less reliable Pad\'{e approximations, but only the evidence presented in
this work seems to be sufficently convincing to draw this conclusion.Comment: Author Information under
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/institution.html . Paper also at
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/kleiner_re250/preprint.htm
Manufacturing a thin wire electrostatic trap (TWIST) for ultracold polar molecules
We present a detailed description on how to build a Thin WIre electroStatic
Trap (TWIST) for ultracold polar molecules. It is the first design of an
electrostatic trap that can be superimposed directly onto a magneto optical
trap (MOT). We can thus continuously produce ultracold polar molecules via
photoassociation from a two species MOT and instantaneously trap them in the
TWIST without the need for complex transfer schemes. Despite the spatial
overlap of the TWIST and the MOT, the two traps can be operated and optimized
completely independently due to the complementary nature of the utilized
trapping mechanisms.Comment: 5 pages, 8 figures, updated conten
Five-Loop Vacuum Energy Beta Function in phi^4 Theory with O(N)-Symmetric and Cubic Interactions
The beta function of the vacuum energy density is analytically computed at
the five-loop level in O(N)-symmetric phi^4 theory, using dimensional
regularization in conjunction with the MSbar scheme. The result for the case of
a cubic anisotropy is also given. It is pointed out how to also obtain the beta
function of the coupling and the gamma function of the mass from vacuum graphs.
This method may be easier than traditional approaches.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX; "note added" fixe
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