1,202 research outputs found
Efficient simulation of relativistic fermions via vertex models
We have developed an efficient simulation algorithm for strongly interacting
relativistic fermions in two-dimensional field theories based on a formulation
as a loop gas. The loop models describing the dynamics of the fermions can be
mapped to statistical vertex models and our proposal is in fact an efficient
simulation algorithm for generic vertex models in arbitrary dimensions. The
algorithm essentially eliminates critical slowing down by sampling two-point
correlation functions and it allows simulations directly in the massless limit.
Moreover, it generates loop configurations with fluctuating topological
boundary conditions enabling to simulate fermions with arbitrary periodic or
anti-periodic boundary conditions. As illustrative examples, the algorithm is
applied to the Gross-Neveu model and to the Schwinger model in the strong
coupling limit.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Non-Gaussian wave functionals in Coulomb gauge Yang--Mills theory
A general method to treat non-Gaussian vacuum wave functionals in the
Hamiltonian formulation of a quantum field theory is presented. By means of
Dyson--Schwinger techniques, the static Green functions are expressed in terms
of the kernels arising in the Taylor expansion of the exponent of the vacuum
wave functional. These kernels are then determined by minimizing the vacuum
expectation value of the Hamiltonian. The method is applied to Yang--Mills
theory in Coulomb gauge, using a vacuum wave functional whose exponent contains
up to quartic terms in the gauge field. An estimate of the cubic and quartic
interaction kernels is given using as input the gluon and ghost propagators
found with a Gaussian wave functional.Comment: 27 pages, 21 figure
Time-reversal symmetric Kitaev model and topological superconductor in two dimensions
A time-reversal invariant Kitaev-type model is introduced in which spins
(Dirac matrices) on the square lattice interact via anisotropic
nearest-neighbor and next-nearest-neighbor exchange interactions. The model is
exactly solved by mapping it onto a tight-binding model of free Majorana
fermions coupled with static Z_2 gauge fields. The Majorana fermion model can
be viewed as a model of time-reversal invariant superconductor and is
classified as a member of symmetry class DIII in the Altland-Zirnbauer
classification. The ground-state phase diagram has two topologically distinct
gapped phases which are distinguished by a Z_2 topological invariant. The
topologically nontrivial phase supports both a Kramers' pair of gapless
Majorana edge modes at the boundary and a Kramers' pair of zero-energy Majorana
states bound to a 0-flux vortex in the \pi-flux background. Power-law decaying
correlation functions of spins along the edge are obtained by taking the
gapless Majorana edge modes into account. The model is also defined on the
one-dimension ladder, in which case again the ground-state phase diagram has
Z_2 trivial and non-trivial phases.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
Critical correlators of three-dimensional gauge theories at finite temperature: exact results from universality
According to the Svetitsky-Yaffe conjecture, a three-dimensional gauge theory
undergoing a continuous deconfinement transition is in the same universality
class as a two-dimensional statistical model with order parameter taking values
in the center of the gauge group. This allows us to use conformal field theory
techniques to evaluate exactly various correlation functions at the critical
point. In particular, we show that the plaquette operator of the gauge theory
is mapped into the energy operator of the dimensionally reduced model. The
plaquette expectation value in presence of static sources for three-dimensional
SU(2) and SU(3) theories at the deconfinement temperature can be exactly
evaluated, providing some new insight about the structure of the color flux
tube in mesons and baryons.Comment: LATTICE98(hightemp
DRA method: Powerful tool for the calculation of the loop integrals
We review the method of the calculation of multiloop integrals suggested in
Ref.\cite{Lee2010}.Comment: 6 pages, contribution to ACAT2011 proceedings, Uxbridge, London,
September 5-9, 2011, typos are correcte
Calculation of the One- and Two-Loop Lamb Shift for Arbitrary Excited Hydrogenic States
General expressions for quantum electrodynamic corrections to the one-loop
self-energy [of order alpha(Zalpha)^6] and for the two-loop Lamb shift [of
order alpha^2(Z\alpha)^] are derived. The latter includes all diagrams with
closed fermion loops. The general results are valid for arbitrary excited non-S
hydrogenic states and for the normalized Lamb shift difference of S states,
defined as Delta_n = n^3 DeltaE(nS) - DeltaE(1S). We present numerical results
for one-loop and two-loop corrections for excited S, P and D states. In
particular, the normalized Lamb shift difference of S states is calculated with
an uncertainty of order 0.1 kHz.Comment: 4 pages, RevTe
Survival probability of a diffusing test particle in a system of coagulating and annihilating random walkers
We calculate the survival probability of a diffusing test particle in an
environment of diffusing particles that undergo coagulation at rate lambda_c
and annihilation at rate lambda_a. The test particle dies at rate lambda' on
coming into contact with the other particles. The survival probability decays
algebraically with time as t^{-theta}. The exponent theta in d<2 is calculated
using the perturbative renormalization group formalism as an expansion in
epsilon=2-d. It is shown to be universal, independent of lambda', and to depend
only on delta, the ratio of the diffusion constant of test particles to that of
the other particles, and on the ratio lambda_a/lambda_c. In two dimensions we
calculate the logarithmic corrections to the power law decay of the survival
probability. Surprisingly, the log corrections are non-universal. The one loop
answer for theta in one dimension obtained by setting epsilon=1 is compared
with existing exact solutions for special values of delta and
lambda_a/lambda_c. The analytical results for the logarithmic corrections are
verified by Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Collective polarization exchanges in collisions of photon clouds
The one-loop "vacuum" Heisenberg-Euler coupling of four electromagnetic
fields can lead to interesting collective effects in the collision of two
photon clouds, on a time scale orders of magnitude faster than one estimates
from the cross-section and density. We estimate the characteristic time for
macroscopic transformation of positive to negative helicity in clouds that are
initially totally polarized and for depolarization of a polarized beam
traversing an unpolarized cloud.Comment: Recapitulates much that is in hep-ph/0402127, with new results in the
last section, and the first section drastically reduced in view of the
previous work of Kotkin and Serbo. Typo corrected in eq. 1
A Maximally Symmetric Vector Propagator
We derive the propagator for a massive vector field on a de Sitter background
of arbitrary dimension. This propagator is de Sitter invariant and possesses
the proper flat spacetime and massless limits. Moreover, the retarded Green's
function inferred from it produces the correct classical response to a test
source. Our result is expressed in a tensor basis which is convenient for
performing quantum field theory computations using dimensional regularization.Comment: 21 pages, no figures, uses LaTeX 2 epsilon, version 2 has an error in
eqn (86) corrected and an updated reference lis
Reply to `Can infrared gravitons screen ?'
We reply to the recent criticism by Garriga and Tanaka of our proposal that
quantum gravitational loop corrections may lead to a secular screening of the
effective cosmological constant. Their argument rests upon a renormalization
scheme in which the composite operator is defined to be the trace of the renormalized field equations.
Although this is a peculiar prescription, we show that it {\it does not
preclude secular screening}. Moreover, we show that a constant Ricci scalar
{\it does not even classically} imply a constant expansion rate. Other
important points are: (1) the quantity of Garriga and Tanaka is
neither a properly defined composite operator, nor is it constant; (2) gauge
dependence does not render a Green's function devoid of physical content; (3)
scalar models on a non-dynamical de Sitter background (for which there is no
gauge issue) can induce arbitrarily large secular contributions to the stress
tensor; (4) the same secular corrections appear in observable quantities in
quantum gravity; and (5) the prospects seem good for deriving a simple
stochastic formulation of quantum gravity in which the leading secular effects
can be summed and for which the expectation values of even complicated, gauge
invariant operators can be computed at leading order.Comment: 17 pages, no figures, uses LaTeX 2epsilon. Version 2 adds important
points about R_ren being neither finite nor constant, and that a constant
Ricci scalar is not even classically an indicator of de Sitter expansion.
Version 3 corrects some typoes and updates the reference
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