5,300 research outputs found
Chiral anomalies in the reduced model
On the basis of an observation due to Kiskis, Narayanan and Neuberger, we
show that there is a remnant of chiral anomalies in the reduced model when a
Dirac operator which obeys the Ginsparg-Wilson relation is employed for the
fermion sector. We consider fermions belonging to the fundamental
representation of the gauge group U(N) or SU(N). For vector-like theories, we
determine a general form of the axial anomaly or the topological charge within
a framework of a U(1) embedding. For chiral gauge theories with the gauge group
U(N), a remnant of gauge anomaly emerges as an obstruction to a smooth fermion
integration measure. The pure gauge action of gauge-field configurations which
cause these non-trivial phenomena always diverges in the 't Hooft
limit when d>2.Comment: 20 pages, uses JHEP.cls and amsfonts.sty, the final version to appear
in JHE
Effects of prolonged caloric stimulation upon oculomotor, vestibulospinal, and segmental spinal activity
Prolonged hot or cold stimulation effects on eye movements, vestibulospinal, and segmental spinal activities in monkey
On the construction of QED using ERG
It has been known for some time that a smooth momentum cutoff is compatible
with local gauge symmetries. In this paper we show concretely how to construct
QED using the exact renormalization group (ERG). First, we give a new
derivation of the Ward identity for the Wilson action using the technique of
composite operators. Second, parameterizing the theory by its asymptotic
behavior for a large cutoff, we show how to fine-tune the parameters to satisfy
the identity. Third, we recast the identity as invariance of the Wilson action
under a non-linear BRST transformation.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX2e; added appendix A to improve sects. 2 and 4; added
ref. 1
Twist Symmetry and Classical Solutions in Open String Field Theory
We construct classical solutions of open string field theory which are not
invariant under ordinary twist operation. From detailed analysis of the moduli
space of the solutions, it turns out that our solutions become nontrivial at
boundaries of the moduli space. The cohomology of the modified BRST operator
and the CSFT potential evaluated by the level truncation method strongly
support the fact that our nontrivial solutions correspond to the closed string
vacuum. We show that the nontrivial solutions are equivalent to the twist even
solution which was found by Takahashi and Tanimoto, and twist invariance of
open string field theory remains after the shift of the classical backgrounds.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figures; v2: errors fixe
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