164 research outputs found
Phase Transitions of Charged Scalars at Finite Temperature and Chemical Potential
We calculate the grand canonical partition function at the one-loop level for
scalar quantum electrodynamics at finite temperature and chemical potential. A
classical background charge density with a charge opposite that of the scalars
ensures the neutrality of the system. For low density systems we find evidence
of a first order phase transition. We find upper and lower bounds on the
transition temperature below which the charged scalars form a condensate. A
first order phase transition may have consequences for helium-core white dwarf
stars in which it has been argued that such a condensate of charged helium-4
nuclei could exist.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figures. Version accepted for publication in JHE
Field Theory for a Deuteron Quantum Liquid
Based on general symmetry principles we study an effective Lagrangian for a
neutral system of condensed spin-1 deuteron nuclei and electrons, at
greater-than-atomic but less-than-nuclear densities. We expect such matter to
be present in thin layers within certain low-mass brown dwarfs. It may also be
produced in future shock-wave-compression experiments as an effective fuel for
laser induced nuclear fusion. We find a background solution of the effective
theory describing a net spin zero condensate of deuterons with their spins
aligned and anti-aligned in a certain spontaneously emerged preferred
direction. The spectrum of low energy collective excitations contains two spin
waves with linear dispersions -- like in antiferromagnets -- as well as gapped
longitudinal and transverse modes related to the Meissner effect -- like in
superconductors. We show that counting of the Nambu-Goldstone modes of
spontaneously broken internal and space-time symmetries obeys, in a nontrivial
way, the rules of the Goldstone theorem for Lorentz non-invariant systems. We
discuss thermodynamic properties of the condensate, and its potential
manifestation in the low-mass brown dwarfs.Comment: 19 LaTeX pages; v2: 2 refs added, JHEP versio
Softly Massive Gravity
Large-distance modification of gravity may be the mechanism for solving the
cosmological constant problem. A simple model of the large-distance
modification -- four-dimensional (4D) gravity with the hard mass term-- is
problematic from the theoretical standpoint. Here we discuss a different model,
the brane-induced gravity, that effectively introduces a soft graviton mass. We
study the issues of unitarity, analyticity and causality in this model in more
than five dimensions. We show that a consistent prescription for the poles of
the Green's function can be specified so that 4D unitarity is preserved.
However, in certain instances 4D analyticity cannot be maintained when theory
becomes higher dimensional. As a result, one has to sacrifice 4D causality at
distances of the order of the present-day Hubble scale. This is a welcome
feature for solving the cosmological constant problem, as was recently argued
in the literature. We also show that, unlike the 4D massive gravity, the model
has no strong-coupling problem at intermediate scales.Comment: 33 LaTex page
Metastable Gravitons and Infinite Volume Extra Dimensions
We address the issue of whether extra dimensions could have an infinite
volume and yet reproduce the effects of observable four-dimensional gravity on
a brane. There is no normalizable zero-mode graviton in this case, nevertheless
correct Newton's law can be obtained by exchanging bulk gravitons. This can be
interpreted as an exchange of a single {\it metastable} 4D graviton. Such
theories have remarkable phenomenological signatures since the evolution of the
Universe becomes high-dimensional at very large scales. Furthermore, the bulk
supersymmetry in the infinite volume limit might be preserved while being
completely broken on a brane. This gives rise to a possibility of controlling
the value of the bulk cosmological constant. Unfortunately, these theories have
difficulties in reproducing certain predictions of Einstein's theory related to
relativistic sources. This is due to the van Dam-Veltman-Zakharov discontinuity
in the propagator of a massive graviton. This suggests that all theories in
which contributions to effective 4D gravity come predominantly from the bulk
graviton exchange should encounter serious phenomenological difficulties.Comment: 9 LaTex pages; One reference and a comment adde
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