93 research outputs found
A Survey of Star Product Geometry
A brief pedagogical survey of the star product is provided, through
Groenewold's original construction based on the Weyl correspondence. It is then
illustrated how simple Landau orbits in a constant magnetic field, through
their Dirac Brackets, define a noncommutative structure since these brackets
exponentiate to a star product---a circumstance rarely operative for generic
Dirac Brackets. The geometric picture of the star product based on its Fourier
representation kernel is utilized in the evaluation of chains of star products.
The intuitive appreciation of their associativity and symmetries is thereby
enhanced. This construction is compared and contrasted with the remarkable
phase-space polygon construction of Almeida.Comment: 14p, LateX/crckapb.sty, proceedings of NATO ARW: UIC 2000, July 22-2
Branes, Quantum Nambu Brackets, and the Hydrogen Atom
The Nambu Bracket quantization of the Hydrogen atom is worked out as an
illustration of the general method. The dynamics of topological open branes is
controlled classically by Nambu Brackets. Such branes then may be quantized
through the consistent quantization of the underlying Nambu brackets: properly
defined, the Quantum Nambu Brackets comprise an associative structure, although
the naive derivation property is mooted through operator entwinement. For
superintegrable systems, such as the Hydrogen atom, the results coincide with
those furnished by Hamiltonian quantization--but the method is not limited to
Hamiltonian systems.Comment: 6 pages, LateX2e. Invited talk by CZ at the XIII International
Colloquium on Integrable Systems and Quantum Groups, Prague, June 18, 200
Semileptonic B Decays at BABAR
We present results on semileptonic B decays obtained with the BABAR detector.
The large data set accumulated at the PEP-II asymmetric-energy B-Factory allows
a new measurement technique, where the hadronic decay of one B meson is fully
reconstructed and the semileptonic decay of the recoiling B meson is studied.
Traditional analysis techniques of inclusive and exclusive B decays complement
this approach with very high statistics data samples. These measurements play
an important role in the tests of the description of CP violation in the
Standard Model: The determinations of the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix
elements |Vcb| and |Vub| provide constraints on the unitarity of the CKM
triangle. Furthermore, the experimental measurement of parameters of Heavy
Quark Effective Theory test the consistency of the theoretical description of
semileptonic B decays.Comment: Invited Brief Review, to appear in Modern Physics Letters
Phase-space Quantization of Field Theory
In this lecture, a limited introduction of gauge invariance in phase-space is
provided, predicated on canonical transformations in quantum phase-space. Exact
characteristic trajectories are also specified for the time-propagating Wigner
phase-space distribution function: they are especially simple - indeed,
classical - for the quantized simple harmonic oscillator. This serves as the
underpinning of the field theoretic Wigner functional formulation introduced.
Scalar field theory is thus reformulated in terms of distributions in field
phase-space. This is a pedagogical selection from work published in J Phys A32
(1999) 771 and Phys Rev D58 (1998) 025002, reported at the Yukawa Institute
Workshop "Gauge Theory and Integrable Models", 26-29 January, 1999.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX, 1 eps figure, epsf.sty, ptptex.sty, ptp-text.sty
Reported at the YITP Workshop "Gauge Theory and Integrable Models", 26-29
January, 1999. References added and graphics update
Deformation Quantization of Nambu Mechanics
Phase Space is the framework best suited for quantizing superintegrable
systems--systems with more conserved quantities than degrees of freedom. In
this quantization method, the symmetry algebras of the hamiltonian invariants
are preserved most naturally, as illustrated on nonlinear -models,
specifically for Chiral Models and de Sitter -spheres. Classically, the
dynamics of superintegrable models such as these is automatically also
described by Nambu Brackets involving the extra symmetry invariants of them.
The phase-space quantization worked out then leads to the quantization of the
corresponding Nambu Brackets, validating Nambu's original proposal, despite
excessive fears of inconsistency which have arisen over the years. This is a
pedagogical talk based on hep-th/0205063 and hep-th/0212267, stressing points
of interpretation and care needed in appreciating the consistency of Quantum
Nambu Brackets in phase space. For a parallel discussion in Hilbert space, see
T Curtright's contribution in these Proceedings [hep-th 0303088].Comment: Invited talk by the first author at the Coral Gables Conference
(C02/12/11.2), Ft Lauderdale, Dec 2002. 14p, LateX2e, aipproc, amsfont
Dimensional Deconstruction and Wess-Zumino-Witten Terms
A new technique is developed for the derivation of the Wess-Zumino-Witten
terms of gauged chiral lagrangians. We start in D=5 with a pure (mesonless)
Yang-Mills theory, which includes relevant gauge field Chern-Simons terms. The
theory is then compactified, and the effective D=4 lagrangian is derived using
lattice techniques, or ``deconstruction,'' where pseudoscalar mesons arise from
the lattice Wilson links. This yields the WZW term with the correct Witten
coefficient by way of a simple heuristic argument. We discover a novel WZW term
for singlet currents, that yields the full Goldstone-Wilczek current, and a
U(1) axial current for the skyrmion, with the appropriate anomaly structures. A
more detailed analysis is presented of the dimensional compactification of
Yang-Mills in D=5 into a gauged chiral lagrangian in D=4, heeding the
consistency of the D=4 and D=5 Bianchi identities. These dictate a novel
covariant derivative structure in the D=4 gauge theory, yielding a field
strength modified by the addition of commutators of chiral currents. The
Chern-Simons term of the pure D=5 Yang-Mills theory then devolves into the
correct form of the Wess-Zumino-Witten term with an index (the analogue of
N_{colors}=3) of N=D=5. The theory also has a Skyrme term with a fixed
coefficient.Comment: 29 pages, no figures; replacement fixes a typographical minus sign
error in eq.(16), an errant normalization factor, and clarifies some
discussion issue
Umbral Vade Mecum
In recent years the umbral calculus has emerged from the shadows to provide
an elegant correspondence framework that automatically gives systematic
solutions of ubiquitous difference equations --- discretized versions of the
differential cornerstones appearing in most areas of physics and engineering
--- as maps of well-known continuous functions. This correspondence deftly
sidesteps the use of more traditional methods to solve these difference
equations. The umbral framework is discussed and illustrated here, with special
attention given to umbral counterparts of the Airy, Kummer, and Whittaker
equations, and to umbral maps of solitons for the Sine-Gordon, Korteweg--de
Vries, and Toda systems.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:0710.230
Branched Hamiltonians and Supersymmetry
Some examples of branched Hamiltonians are explored both classically and in
the context of quantum mechanics, as recently advocated by Shapere and Wilczek.
These are in fact cases of switchback potentials, albeit in momentum space, as
previously analyzed for quasi-Hamiltonian chaotic dynamical systems in a
classical setting, and as encountered in analogous renormalization group flows
for quantum theories which exhibit RG cycles. A basic two-worlds model, with a
pair of Hamiltonian branches related by supersymmetry, is considered in detail.Comment: Minor changes to conform to published version. PACS: 03.65.Ca,
03.65.Ta, 45.20.J
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