320 research outputs found
Holographic non-relativistic fermionic fixed point and bulk dipole coupling
Inspired by the recently discovered non-relativistic fermionic fixed points,
we investigate how the presence of bulk dipole coupling modifies the spectral
function at one of these novel fixed points. As a result, although the infinite
flat band is always visible in the presence of the bulk dipole coupling as well
as chemical potential, the band is modified in a remarkable way at small
momenta up to the order of magnitude of bulk dipole coupling. On the other
hand, like a phoenix, a new Fermi surface sprouts from the formed gap when the
bulk dipole coupling is pushed up further such as to overshadow the charge
parameter, which is obviously different from what is found at the relativistic
fixed points.Comment: JHEP style, 1+17 pages, 9 figures, 1 table, typos corrected,
references added, version to appear in JHE
Understanding Confinement in QCD: Elements of a Big Picture
I give a brief review of advances in the strong interaction theory. This talk
was delivered at the Conference in honor of Murray Gell-Mann's 80th birthday,
24-26 February 2010, Singapore.Comment: I give a brief review of advances in the strong interaction theory.
This talk was delivered at the Conference in honor of Murray Gell-Mann's 80th
birthday, 24-26 February 2010, Singapor
Collective Effects of Fire Intensity and Sloped Terrain on Wind-Driven Surface Fire and Its Impact on a Cubic Structure
The combined effects of percent slope and fire intensity of a wind driven line fire on an idealized building has been numerically investigated in this paper. The simulations were done using the large eddy simulation (LES) solver of an open source CFD toolbox called FireFOAM. A set of three fire intensity values representing different heat release rates of grassland fuels on different inclined fuel beds have been modeled to analyze the impact of factors, such as fuel and topography on wind-fire interaction of a built area. An idealized cubic structure representing a simplified building was considered downstream of the fire source. The numerical results have been verified with the aerodynamic measurements of a full-scale building model in the absence of fire effects. There is a fair consistency between the modeled findings and empirical outcomes with maximum error of 18%, which acknowledge the validity and precision of the proposed model. The results show that concurrent increase of fire intensity and terrain slope causes an expansion of the surface temperature of the building which is partially due to the increase of flame tilt angle upslope on the hilly terrains. In addition, increasing fire intensity leads to an increase in the flow velocity, which is associated with the low-pressure area observed behind the fire front. Despite limitations of the experimental results in the area of wind-fire interaction the result of the present work is an attempt to shed light on this very important problem of fire behavior prediction. This article is a primary report on this subject in CFD modeling of the collective effects of fire intensity and sloped terrain on wind driven wildfire and its interaction on buildings
Open Wilson Lines and Chiral Condensates in Thermal Holographic QCD
We investigate various aspects of a proposal by Aharony and Kutasov
arXiv:0803.3547 [hep-th] for the gravity dual of an open Wilson line in the
Sakai-Sugimoto model or its non-compact version. In particular, we use their
proposal to determine the effect of finite temperature, as well as background
electric and magnetic fields, on the chiral symmetry breaking order parameter.
We also generalize their prescription to more complicated worldsheets and
identify the operators dual to such worldsheets.Comment: 45 pages, 18 figures; added reference
Holographic non-relativistic fermionic fixed point by the charged dilatonic black hole
Driven by the landscape of garden-variety condensed matter systems, we have
investigated how the dual spectral function behaves at the non-relativistic as
well as relativistic fermionic fixed point by considering the probe Dirac
fermion in an extremal charged dilatonic black hole with zero entropy. Although
the pattern for both of the appearance of flat band and emergence of Fermi
surface is qualitatively similar to that given by the probe fermion in the
extremal Reissner-Nordstrom AdS black hole, we find a distinctly different low
energy behavior around the Fermi surface, which can be traced back to the
different near horizon geometry. In particular, with the peculiar near horizon
geometry of our extremal charged dilatonic black hole, the low energy behavior
exhibits the universal linear dispersion relation and scaling property, where
the former indicates that the dual liquid is a Fermi one while the latter
implies that the dual liquid is not exactly of Landau Fermi type
The Quantum Dynamics of Heterotic Vortex Strings
We study the quantum dynamics of vortex strings in N=1 SQCD with U(N_c) gauge
group and N_f=N_c quarks. The classical worldsheet of the string has N=(0,2)
supersymmetry, but this is broken by quantum effects. We show how the pattern
of supersymmetry breaking and restoration on the worldsheet captures the
quantum dynamics of the underlying 4d theory. We also find qualitative matching
of the meson spectrum in 4d and the spectrum on the worldsheet.Comment: 13 page
Heterotic Vortex Strings
We determine the low-energy N=(0,2) worldsheet dynamics of vortex strings in
a large class of non-Abelian N=1 supersymmetric gauge theories.Comment: 44 pages, 3 figures. v2: typos corrected, reference adde
Bosonic excitations of the AdS4 Reissner-Nordstrom black hole
We study the long-lived modes of the charge density and energy density
correlators in the strongly-coupled, finite density field theory dual to the
AdS4 Reissner-Nordstrom black hole. For small momenta q<<\mu, these correlators
contain a pole due to sound propagation, as well as a pole due to a long-lived,
purely imaginary mode analogous to the \mu=0 hydrodynamic charge diffusion
mode. As the temperature is raised in the range T\lesssim\mu, the sound
attenuation shows no significant temperature dependence. When T\gtrsim\mu, it
quickly approaches the \mu=0 hydrodynamic result where it decreases like 1/T.
It does not share any of the temperature-dependent properties of the 'zero
sound' of Landau Fermi liquids observed in the strongly-coupled D3/D7 field
theory. For such small momenta, the energy density spectral function is
dominated by the sound mode at all temperatures, whereas the charge density
spectral function undergoes a crossover from being dominated by the sound mode
at low temperatures to being dominated by the diffusion mode when T \mu^2/q.
This crossover occurs due to the changing residue at each pole. We also compute
the momentum dependence of these spectral functions and their corresponding
long-lived poles at fixed, low temperatures T<<\mu.Comment: 33 pages, 21 figures, 6 animation
Large-density field theory, viscosity, and "" singularities from string duals
We analyze systems where an effective large-N expansion arises naturally in
gauge theories without a large number of colors: a sufficiently large charge
density alone can produce a perturbative string ('tHooft) expansion. One
example is simply the well-known NS5/F1 system dual to , here viewed as a 5+1 dimensional theory at finite density. This model is
completely stable, and we find that the existing string-theoretic solution of
this model yields two interesting results. First, it indicates that the shear
viscosity is not corrected by effects in this system. For flow
perpendicular to the F1 strings the viscosity to entropy ratio take the usual
value , but for flow parallel to the F1's it vanishes as at low
temperature. Secondly, it encodes singularities in correlation functions coming
from low-frequency modes at a finite value of the momentum along the
directions. This may provide a strong coupling analogue of finite density
condensed matter systems for which fermionic constituents of larger operators
contribute so-called "" singularities. In the NS5/F1 example, stretched
strings on the gravity side play the role of these composite operators. We
explore the analogue for our system of the Luttinger relation between charge
density and the volume bounded by these singular surfaces. This model provides
a clean example where the string-theoretic UV completion of the gravity dual to
a finite density field theory plays a significant and calculable role.Comment: 28 pages. v2: added reference
The quantum mechanics of perfect fluids
We consider the canonical quantization of an ordinary fluid. The resulting
long-distance effective field theory is derivatively coupled, and therefore
strongly coupled in the UV. The system however exhibits a number of
peculiarities, associated with the vortex degrees of freedom. On the one hand,
these have formally a vanishing strong-coupling energy scale, thus suggesting
that the effective theory's regime of validity is vanishingly narrow. On the
other hand, we prove an analog of Coleman's theorem, whereby the semiclassical
vacuum has no quantum counterpart, thus suggesting that the vortex premature
strong-coupling phenomenon stems from a bad identification of the ground state
and of the perturbative degrees of freedom. Finally, vortices break the usual
connection between short distances and high energies, thus potentially
impairing the unitarity of the effective theory.Comment: 35 page
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