5,783 research outputs found
Two-Loop Crossover Scaling Functions of the O(N) Model
Using Environmentally Friendly Renormalization, we present an analytic
calculation of the series for the renormalization constants that describe the
equation of state for the model in the whole critical region. The
solution of the beta-function equation, for the running coupling to order two
loops, exhibits crossover between the strong coupling fixed point, associated
with the Goldstone modes, and the Wilson-Fisher fixed point. The Wilson
functions , and , and thus the
effective critical exponents associated with renormalization of the transverse
vertex functions, also exhibit non-trivial crossover between these fixed
points.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures, version to appears in IJMPL
A first order Tsallis theory
We investigate first-order approximations to both i) Tsallis' entropy
and ii) the -MaxEnt solution (called q-exponential functions ). It is
shown that the functions arising from the procedure ii) are the MaxEnt
solutions to the entropy emerging from i). The present treatment is free of the
poles that, for classic quadratic Hamiltonians, appear in Tsallis' approach, as
demonstrated in [Europhysics Letters {\bf 104}, (2013), 60003]. Additionally,
we show that our treatment is compatible with extant date on the ozone layer.Comment: 4 figures adde
Characterization of digital dispersive spectrometers by low coherence interferometry
We propose a procedure to determine the spectral response of digital dispersive spectrometers without previous knowledge of any parameter of the system. The method consists of applying the Fourier transform spectroscopy technique to each pixel of the detection plane, a CCD camera, to obtain its individual spectral response. From this simple procedure, the system-point spread function and the effect of the finite pixel width are taken into account giving rise to a response matrix that fully characterizes the spectrometer. Using the response matrix information we find the resolving power of a given spectrometer, predict in advance its response to any virtual input spectrum and improve numerically the spectrometer's resolution. We consider that the presented approach could be useful in most spectroscopic branches such as in computational spectroscopy, optical coherence tomography, hyperspectral imaging, spectral interferometry and analytical chemistry, among others.Fil: Martínez Matos, Ó.. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: Rickenstorff, C.. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: Zamora, S.. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: Izquierdo, J. G.. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: Vaveliuk, Pablo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata. Centro de Investigaciones Ópticas. Provincia de Buenos Aires. Gobernación. Comisión de Investigaciones Científicas. Centro de Investigaciones Ópticas. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Centro de Investigaciones Ópticas; Argentin
On the critical end point in a two-flavor linear sigma model coupled to quarks
We use the linear sigma model coupled to quarks to explore the location of
the phase transition lines in the QCD phase diagram from the point of view of
chiral symmetry restoration at high temperature and baryon chemical potential.
We compute analytically the effective potential in the high- and
low-temperature approximations up to sixth order, including the contribution of
the ring diagrams to account for the plasma screening properties. We determine
the model parameters, namely, the couplings and mass-parameter, from conditions
valid at the first order phase transition at vanishing temperature and, using
the Hagedorn limiting temperature concept applied to finite baryon density, for
a critical baryochemical potential of order of the nucleon mass. We show that
when using the set of parameters thus determined, the second order phase
transition line (our proxy for the crossover transition) that starts at finite
temperature and zero baryon chemical potential converges to the line of first
order phase transitions that starts at zero temperature and finite baryon
chemical potential to determine the critical end point to lie in the region
5.02<\mu_B^{\mbox{CEP}}/T_c<5.18, 0.14, where
is the critical transition temperature at zero baryon chemical potential.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, discussion extended, explicit calculations
included in appendices and version accepted for publication in EPJ
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