530 research outputs found
A strong-coupling analysis of two-dimensional O(N) sigma models with on square, triangular and honeycomb lattices
Recently-generated long strong-coupling series for the two-point Green's
functions of asymptotically free lattice models are
analyzed, focusing on the evaluation of dimensionless renormalization-group
invariant ratios of physical quantities and applying resummation techniques to
series in the inverse temperature and in the energy . Square,
triangular, and honeycomb lattices are considered, as a test of universality
and in order to estimate systematic errors. Large- solutions are carefully
studied in order to establish benchmarks for series coefficients and
resummations. Scaling and universality are verified. All invariant ratios
related to the large-distance properties of the two-point functions vary
monotonically with , departing from their large- values only by a few per
mille even down to .Comment: 53 pages (incl. 5 figures), tar/gzip/uuencode, REVTEX + psfi
Eliminating leading corrections to scaling in the 3-dimensional O(N)-symmetric phi^4 model: N=3 and 4
We study corrections to scaling in the O(3)- and O(4)-symmetric phi^4 model
on the three-dimensional simple cubic lattice with nearest neighbour
interactions. For this purpose, we use Monte Carlo simulations in connection
with a finite size scaling method. We find that there exists a finite value of
the coupling lambda^*, for both values of N, where leading corrections to
scaling vanish. As a first application, we compute the critical exponents
nu=0.710(2) and eta=0.0380(10) for N=3 and nu=0.749(2) and eta=0.0365(10) for
N=4.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figure
Infrared Renormalons and Finite Volume
We analyze the perturbative expansion of a condensate in the O(N) non-linear
sigma model for large N on a two dimensional finite lattice. On an infinite
volume this expansion is affected by an infrared renormalon. We extrapolate
this analysis to the case of the gluon condensate of Yang-Mills theory and
argue that infrared renormalons can be detected by performing perturbative
studies even on relatively small lattices.Comment: LaTeX file, 6 figures in postscrip
The Abelianicity of Cooled SU(2) Lattice Configurations
We introduce a gauge-invariant measure of the local "abelianicity" of any
given lattice configuration in non-abelian lattice gauge theory; it is
essentially a comparison of the magnitude of field strength commutators to the
magnitude of the field strength itself. This measure, in conjunction with the
cooling technique, is used to probe the SU(2) lattice vacuum for a possible
large-scale abelian background, underlying the local short-range field
fluctuations. We do, in fact, find a substantial rise in abelianicity over 10
cooling steps or so, after which the abelianicity tends to drop again.Comment: 10 pages, Latex, uses psfi
Seismic vulnerability assessment on a territorial scale based on a Bayesian approach
Italian historical centres are mostly characterized by aggregate buildings. As defined by
the Italian codes (Norme Tecniche per le Costruzioni 2008 and Circolare n. 617), the analysis of the most
representative local mechanisms of collapse must be performed in order to assess their vulnerability. In
this article, the out-of-plane local mechanisms of collapse analysis is implemented by applying a new
method of analysis based on a probabilistic approach. Usually information which are necessary for the
implementation of the local mechanisms analyses are affected by uncertainty or are missing, therefore
in lots of cases it is only possible to hypothesize them on the basis of the other buildings information
collected during the on-site survey. In this context, the implementation of a Bayesian approach allows to
deduce buildings lacking information (i.e. wall thickness and interstorey height) starting from certain collected
data (i.e. facades height). The historical centre of Timisoara (Romania) is selected as the case study
for the implementation of this new method of analysis, given the extension of the on-site survey already
carried out in the area (information about more than 200 structural units have been collected) and the
seismic vulnerability assessment on an urban scale already performed by applying a traditional method.
Results obtained by adopting the two approaches are then compared and a validation and a calibration
of the new one is carried out
Topology in 2D CP**(N-1) models on the lattice: a critical comparison of different cooling techniques
Two-dimensional CP**(N-1) models are used to compare the behavior of
different cooling techniques on the lattice. Cooling is one of the most
frequently used tools to study on the lattice the topological properties of the
vacuum of a field theory. We show that different cooling methods behave in an
equivalent way. To see this we apply the cooling methods on classical
instantonic configurations and on configurations of the thermal equilibrium
ensemble. We also calculate the topological susceptibility by using the cooling
technique.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures (from 16 eps files
The application of a Bayesian approach to assess the seismic vulnerability of historical centers
The seismic vulnerability of historical centers at a territorial scale cannot be assessed performing
detailed analysis which are usually adopted at the single building scale. In fact, a traditional complete survey
would be extremely time-consuming and not sustainable for this purpose.
The approach described in this paper is based on the idea that it is possible to infer quantities which cannot be directly
detected from buildings outside inspection starting from parameters that can be measured. In order to
achieve this purpose, a Bayesian approach is applied, updating initial hypotheses when new data become available.
In this context, the procedure herein proposed aims at applying a probabilistic approach instead of a deterministic
one to define facades inter-storey height starting from buildings height knowledge. In order to validate the method,
for out of plane local mechanisms of collapse (walls overturning), horizontal loads multiplier \uf0610 values are calculated
and compared to results obtained by using data collected on-site
Critical renormalized coupling constants in the symmetric phase of the Ising models
Using a novel finite size scaling Monte Carlo method, we calculate the four,
six and eight point renormalized coupling constants defined at zero momentum in
the symmetric phase of the three dimensional Ising system. The results of the
2D Ising system that were directly measured are also reported. Our values of
the six and eight point coupling constants are significantly different from
those obtained from other methods.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Large-N phase transition in lattice 2-d principal chiral models
We investigate the large-N critical behavior of 2-d lattice chiral models by
Monte Carlo simulations of U(N) and SU(N) groups at large N. Numerical results
confirm strong coupling analyses, i.e. the existence of a large-N second order
phase transition at a finite .Comment: 12 pages, Revtex, 8 uuencoded postscript figure
The three-dimensional XY universality class: A high precision Monte Carlo estimate of the universal amplitude ratio A_+/A_-
We simulate the improved three-dimensional two-component phi^4 model on the
simple cubic lattice in the low and the high temperature phase for reduced
temperatures down to |T-T_c|/T_c \approx 0.0017 on lattices of a size up to
350^3. Our new results for the internal energy and the specific heat are
combined with the accurate estimates of beta_c and data for the internal energy
and the specific heat at \beta_c recently obtained in cond-mat/0605083. We find
R_{\alpha} = (1-A_+/A_-)/\alpha = 4.01(5), where alpha is the critical exponent
of the specific heat and A_{\pm} is the amplitude of the specific heat in the
high and the low temperature phase, respectively.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
- âŠ