84 research outputs found
Spontaneous Breaking of Flavor Symmetry and Parity in the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio Model with Wilson Fermions
We study the lattice \njl~model with two flavors of Wilson fermions in the
large limit, where is the number of `colors'. For large values of the
four-fermion coupling we find a phase in which both, flavor symmetry and
parity, are spontaneously broken. In accordance with general expectations there
are three massless pions on the phase boundary, but only two of them remain
massless inside the broken phase. This is analogous to earlier results obtained
in lattice QCD, indicating that this behavior is a very general feature of the
Wilson term.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, LATEX, tared and uuencode
Finite Density QCD in the Chiral Limit
We present the first results of an exact simulation of full QCD at finite
density in the chiral limit. We have used a MFA (Microcanonical Fermionic
Average) inspired approach for the reconstruction of the Grand Canonical
Partition Function of the theory; using the fugacity expansion of the fermionic
determinant we are able to move continuously in the () plane with
.Comment: 3 pages, LaTeX, 3 figures, uses espcrc2.sty, psfig. Talk presented by
A. Galante at Lattice 97. Correction of some reference
Monte Carlo Study of SU(4) Gauge Theory at Finite Temperature
The pure SU(4) Yang-Mills theory is studied at finite temperature. We observe a first-order transition at 8/gc2=10.50±0.02
Monte Carlo Study of Two-Color QCD with Finite Chemical Potential - Status report of Wilson fermion simulation
Using Wilson fermions, we study SU(2) lattice QCD with the chemical potential
at . The ratio of fermion determinants is evaluated at each
Metropolis link update step. We calculate the baryon number density, the
Polyakov loops and the pseudoscalar and vector masses on and lattices. Preliminary data show the pseudoscalar meson becomes massive
around , which indicates the chiral symmetry restoration. The
calculation is broken down when approaching to the transition region. We
analyze the behavior of the fermion determinant and eigen value distributions
of the determinant, which shows a peculiar ``Shell-and-Bean'' pattern near the
transition.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, Lattice 2000 (Finite Density
A Study of the Kazakov-Migdal Model
We study numerically the SU(2) Kazakov-Migdal model of `induced QCD'. In
contrast to our earlier work on the subject we have chosen here {\it not} to
integrate out the gauge fields but to keep them in the Monte Carlo simulation.
This allows us to measure observables associated with the gauge fields and
thereby address the problem of the local symmetry present in the model.
We confirm our previous result that the model has a line of first order phase
transitions terminating in a critical point. The adjoint plaquette has a clear
discontinuity across the phase transition, whereas the plaquette in the
fundamental representation is always zero in accordance with Elitzur's theorem.
The density of small monopoles shows very little variation and is always
large. We also find that the model has extra local U(1) symmetries which do not
exist in the case of the standard adjoint theory. As a result, we are able to
show that two of the angles parameterizing the gauge field completely decouple
from the theory and the continuum limit defined around the critical point can
therefore not be `QCD'.Comment: 11 pages, UTHEP-24
Free energy for parameterized Polyakov loops in SU(2) and SU(3) lattice gauge theory
We present a study of the free energy of parameterized Polyakov loops P in
SU(2) and SU(3) lattice gauge theory as a function of the parameters that
characterize P. We explore temperatures below and above the deconfinement
transition, and for our highest temperatures T > 5 T_c we compare the free
energy to perturbative results.Comment: Minor changes. Final version to appear in JHE
Difficulties in Inducing a Gauge Theory at Large N
It is argued that the recently proposed Kazakov-Migdal model of induced gauge
theory, at large , involves only the zero area Wilson loops that are
effectively trees in the gauge action induced by the scalars. This retains only
a constant part of the gauge action excluding plaquettes or anything like them
and the gauge variables drop out.Comment: 6 pages, Latex, AZPH-TH/93-01, COLO-HEP/30
- …