187,454 research outputs found
Negative heat-capacity at phase-separations in microcanonical thermostatistics of macroscopic systems with either short or long-range interactions
Conventional thermo-statistics address infinite homogeneous systems within
the canonical ensemble. However, some 170 years ago the original motivation of
thermodynamics was the description of steam engines, i.e. boiling water. Its
essential physics is the separation of the gas phase from the liquid. Of
course, boiling water is inhomogeneous and as such cannot be treated by
conventional thermo-statistics. Then it is not astonishing, that a phase
transition of first order is signaled canonically by a Yang-Lee singularity.
Thus it is only treated correctly by microcanonical Boltzmann-Planck
statistics. This was elaborated in the talk presented at this conference. It
turns out that the Boltzmann-Planck statistics is much richer and gives
fundamental insight into statistical mechanics and especially into entropy.
This can be done to a far extend rigorously and analytically. The deep and
essential difference between ``extensive'' and ``intensive'' control
parameters, i.e. microcanonical and canonical statistics, was exemplified by
rotating, self-gravitating systems. In the present paper the necessary
appearance of a convex entropy and the negative heat capacity at phase
separation in small as well macroscopic systems independently of the range of
the force is pointed out.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, 1 table; contribution to the international
conference "Next Sigma Phi" on news, expectations, and trends in statistical
physics, Crete 200
Two-dimensional dynamics of QCD_3
Exact loop-variables formulation of pure gauge lattice QCD_3 is derived from
the Wilson version of the model. The observation is made that the resulting
model is two-dimensional. This significant feature is shown to be a unique
property of the gauge field. The model is defined on the infinite genus surface
which covers regularly the original three-dimensional lattice. Similar
transformation applied to the principal chiral field model in two and three
dimensions for comparison with QCD.Comment: 6 pages, LaTeX (revision: references added
Zero-norm states and High-energy Symmetries of String Theory
We derive stringy Ward identities from the decoupling of two types of
zero-norm states in the old covariant first quantized (OCFQ) spectrum of open
bosonic string. These Ward identities are valid to all energy and all loop
orders in string perturbation theory. The high-energy limit of these stringy
Ward identities can then be used to fix the proportionality constants between
scattering amplitudes of different string states algebraically without
referring to Gross and Mende's saddle point calculation of high-energy
string-loop amplitudes. As examples, all Ward identities for the mass level 4
and 6 are derived, their high-energy limits are calculated and the
proportionality constants between scattering amplitudes of different string
states are determined. In addition to those identified before, we discover some
new nonzero components of high-energy amplitudes not found previously by Gross
and Manes. These components are essential to preserve massive gauge invariances
or decouple massive zero-norm states of string theory. A set of massive
scattering amplitudes and their high energy limits are calculated explicitly
for each mass level to justify our results
Stringy Symmetries and Their High-energy Limits
We derive stringy symmetries with conserved charges of arbitrarily high spins
from the decoupling of two types of zero-norm states in the old covariant first
quantized (OCFQ) spectrum of open bosonic string. These symmetries are valid to
all energy and all loop orders in string perturbation theory. The high-energy
limit of these stringy symmetries can then be used to fix the proportionality
constants between scattering amplitudes of different string states
algebraically without referring to Gross and Mende's saddle point calculation
of high-energy string-loop amplitudes. These proportionality constants are, as
conjectured by Gross, independent of the scattering angle and the order of
string perturbation theory. However, we also discover some new nonzero
components of high-energy amplitudes not found previously by Gross and Manes.
These components are essential to preserve massive gauge invariances or
decouple massive zero-norm states of string theory. A set of massive scattering
amplitudes and their high energy limit are calculated explicitly to justify our
results.Comment: 10 pages. A corrected version of hep-th/0303012. Final version to
appear in Phys. Lett.
Electromagnetic interactions for the two-body spectator equations
This paper presents a new non-associative algebra which is used to (i) show
how the spectator (or Gross) two-body equations and electromagnetic currents
can be formally derived from the Bethe-Salpeter equation and currents if both
are treated to all orders, (ii) obtain explicit expressions for the Gross
two-body electromagnetic currents valid to any order, and (iii) prove that the
currents so derived are exactly gauge invariant when truncated consistently to
any finite order. In addition to presenting these new results, this work
complements and extends previous treatments based largely on the analysis of
sums of Feynman diagrams.Comment: 44 pages, 14 figure
Trade flows and the international business cycle
We investigate into the role of the trade channel as important determinant of a country's current account position and the degree of business cycle synchronization with the rest of the world by comparing the predictions of two types of DGE models. It is shown that the behavior of a country's external balance and the international transmission of shocks depends amongst other things on two factors: i) the magnitude of trade interdependence, ii) the degree of substitutability between importable and domestically-produced goods. Using time series data on bilateral trade flows, we estimate the magnitude of trade interdependence and the elasticity of substitution between importable and domestic goods for the G7 countries. Given these estimates, idiosyncratic supply shocks potentially induce changes in the current account and foreign output that vary in direction and magnitude across G7 countries. The relationship between the magnitude of foreign trade and the import substitutability with various correlation measures is examined empirically in a cross-sectional dimension. First Draft, July 2001. Final Draft, November 2001. Klassifikation: E32, F4
Loop Equations as a Generalized Virasoro Constraints
The loop equations in the lattice gauge theory are represented in the
form of constraints imposed on a generating functional for the Wilson loop
correlators. These constraints form a closed algebra with respect to
commutation. This algebra generalizes the Virasoro one, which is known to
appear in one-matrix models in the same way. The realization of this algebra in
terms of the infinitesimal changes of generators of the loop space is given.
The representations on the tensor fields on the loop space, generalizing the
integer spin conformal fields, are constructed. The structure constants of the
algebra under consideration being independent of the coupling constants, almost
all the results are valid in the continuum.Comment: 7 pages, LaTex (3 LaTex figures), SMI-94-
Lattice QCD as a theory of interacting surfaces
Pure gauge lattice QCD at arbitrary D is considered. Exact integration over
link variables in an arbitrary D-volume leads naturally to an appearance of a
set of surfaces filling the volume and gives an exact expression for functional
of their boundaries. The interaction between each two surfaces is proportional
to their common area and is realized by a non-local matrix differential
operator acting on their boundaries. The surface self-interaction is given by
the QCD functional of boundary. Partition functions and observables (Wilson
loop averages) are written as an averages over all configurations of an
integer-valued field living on a surfaces.Comment: TAUP-2204-94, 12pp., LaTe
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