348 research outputs found
Gauge Fixing and the Gibbs Phenomenon
We address the question of why global gauge fixing, specifically to the
lattice Landau gauge, becomes an extremely lengthy process for large lattices.
We construct an artificial "gauge-fixing" problem which has the essential
features encountered in actuality. In the limit in which the size of the system
to be gauge fixed becomes infinite, the problem becomes equivalent to finding a
series expansion in functions which are related to the Jacobi polynomials. The
series converges slowly, as expected. It also converges non-uniformly, which is
an observed characteristic of gauge fixing. In the limiting example, the
non-uniformity arises through the Gibbs phenomenon.Comment: 3 Pages; Talk at Lattice '98; Postscript version only - not available
in te
Coulomb Energy, Remnant Symmetry, and the Phases of Non-Abelian Gauge Theories
We show that the confining property of the one-gluon propagator, in Coulomb
gauge, is linked to the unbroken realization of a remnant gauge symmetry which
exists in this gauge. An order parameter for the remnant gauge symmetry is
introduced, and its behavior is investigated in a variety of models via
numerical simulations. We find that the color-Coulomb potential, associated
with the gluon propagator, grows linearly with distance both in the confined
and - surprisingly - in the high-temperature deconfined phase of pure
Yang-Mills theory. We also find a remnant symmetry-breaking transition in SU(2)
gauge-Higgs theory which completely isolates the Higgs from the
(pseudo)confinement region of the phase diagram. This transition exists despite
the absence, pointed out long ago by Fradkin and Shenker, of a genuine
thermodynamic phase transition separating the two regions.Comment: 18 pages, 19 figures, revtex
Nonperturbative contributions to the QCD pressure
We summarize the most important arguments why a perturbative description of
finite-temperature QCD is unlikely to be possible and review various
well-established approaches to deal with this problem. Then, using a recently
proposed method, we investigate nonperturbative contributions to the QCD
pressure and other observables (like energy, anomaly and bulk viscosity)
obtained by imposing a functional cutoff at the Gribov horizon. Finally, we
discuss how such contributions fit into the picture of consecutive effective
theories, as proposed by Braaten and Nieto, and give an outline of the next
steps necessary to improve this type of calculation.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, uses xcolor.sty; in v2 quality of some figures
has been improved, discussion of other approaches has been extende
Landau gauge ghost and gluon propagators and the Faddeev-Popov operator spectrum
In this talk we report on a recent lattice investigation of the Landau gauge
gluon and ghost propagators in pure SU(3) lattice gauge theory with a special
emphasis on the Gribov copy problem. In the (infrared) region of momenta we find the corresponding MOM scheme running coupling
to rise in . We also report on a first SU(3) computation of
the ghost-gluon vertex function showing that it deviates only weakly from being
constant. In addition we study the spectrum of low-lying eigenvalues and
eigenfunctions of the Faddeev-Popov operator as well as the spectral
representation of the ghost propagator.Comment: talk given by M. M.-P. at the Workshop on Computational Hadron
Physics, Cyprus, September 200
Non-perturbative Landau gauge and infrared critical exponents in QCD
We discuss Faddeev-Popov quantization at the non-perturbative level and show
that Gribov's prescription of cutting off the functional integral at the Gribov
horizon does not change the Schwinger-Dyson equations, but rather resolves an
ambiguity in the solution of these equations. We note that Gribov's
prescription is not exact, and we therefore turn to the method of stochastic
quantization in its time-independent formulation, and recall the proof that it
is correct at the non-perturbative level. The non-perturbative Landau gauge is
derived as a limiting case, and it is found that it yields the Faddeev-Popov
method in Landau gauge with a cut-off at the Gribov horizon, plus a novel term
that corrects for over-counting of Gribov copies inside the Gribov horizon.
Non-perturbative but truncated coupled Schwinger-Dyson equations for the gluon
and ghost propagators and in Landau gauge are solved
asymptotically in the infrared region. The infrared critical exponents or
anomalous dimensions, defined by and are obtained in space-time dimensions . Two
possible solutions are obtained with the values, in dimensions, , or .Comment: 26 pages. Modified 2.25.02 to update references and to clarify
Introduction and Conclusio
Hyper-Raman scattering from vitreous boron oxide: coherent enhancement of the boson peak
Hyper-Raman scattering spectra of vitreous BO are reported and
compared to Raman scattering results. The main features are indexed in terms of
vibrations of structural units. Particular attention is given to the low
frequency boson peak which is shown to relate to out-of-plane librations of
BO boroxol rings and BO triangles. Its hyper-Raman strength is
comparable to that of cooperative polar modes. It points to a sizeable coherent
enhancement of the hyper-Raman signal compared to the Raman one. This is
explained by the symmetry of the structural units.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Landau gauge within the Gribov horizon
We consider a model which effectively restricts the functional integral of
Yang--Mills theories to the fundamental modular region. Using algebraic
arguments, we prove that this theory has the same divergences as ordinary Yang
Mills theory in the Landau gauge and that it is unitary. The restriction of the
functional integral is interpreted as a kind of spontaneous breakdown of the
symmetry.Comment: 17 pages, NYU-TH-93/10/0
Residual internal stress in partially crystallized photothermorefractive glass: Evaluation by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and first principles calculations
In some circumstances, the mechanical and optical properties of multiphase brittle materials strongly depend on the level of residual micromechanical stresses that arise upon cooling due to thermal and elastic mismatch between the constituent phases. Here we study the residual internal stress in a partially crystallized oxyfluoride glass, best known as photothermorefractive (PTR) glass. This material is composed of a glass matrix with embedded nanosize sodium fluoride (NaF) crystals. Using both the Selsing model and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance in combination with first principles calculations we found that the crystals are under a tensile stress field of approximately 610-800 MPa. For this stress level the estimated critical crystal diameter for spontaneous cracking is about 2300-1900 nm, which greatly exceeds the observed diameters of 7-35 nm. Hence no spontaneous cracking is expected for the PTR glasses. First principles calculations indicate that the stress induced change of the refractive index of the NaF crystals is about -0.08%, which agrees with the observed refractive index changes
The Gribov horizon and the one-loop color-Coulomb potential
We recalculate the color-Coulomb potential to one-loop order, under the
assumption that the effect of the Gribov horizon is to make i) the transverse
gluon propagator less singular; and ii) the color-Coulomb potential more
singular, than their perturbative behavior in the low-momentum limit. As a
first guess, the effect of the Gribov horizon is mimicked by introducing a
transverse momentum-dependent gluon mass term, leading to a propagator of the
Gribov form, with the prescription that the mass parameter should be adjusted
to the unique value where the infrared behavior of the Coulomb potential is
enhanced. We find that this procedure leads to a Coulomb potential rising
asymptotically as a linear term modified by a logarithm.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure
The gluon and ghost propagator and the influence of Gribov copies
The dependence of the Landau gauge gluon and ghost propagators on the choice
of Gribov copies is studied in pure SU(3) lattice gauge theory. Whereas the
influence on the gluon propagator is small, the ghost propagator becomes
clearly affected by the copies in the infrared region. We compare our data with
the infrared exponents predicted by the Dyson-Schwinger equation approachComment: Talk presented at Lattice2004(topology), Fermilab, June 21-26, 2004,
3 pages, 3 figure
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