1,446 research outputs found
Monopole Percolation in the Compact Abelian Higgs Model
We have studied the monopole-percolation phenomenon in the four dimensional
Abelian theory that contains compact U(1) gauge fields coupled to unitary norm
Higgs fields. We have determined the location of the percolation transition
line in the plane . This line overlaps the confined-Coulomb
and the confined-Higgs phase transition lines, originated by a
monopole-condensation mechanism, but continues away from the end-point where
this phase transition line stops. In addition, we have determined the critical
exponents of the monopole percolation transition away from the phase transition
lines. We have performed the finite size scaling in terms of the monopole
density instead of the coupling, because the density seems to be the natural
parameter when dealing with percolation phenomena.Comment: 13 pages. REVTeX. 16 figs. included using eps
Monopole Percolation in pure gauge compact QED
The role of monopoles in quenched compact QED has been studied by measuring
the cluster susceptibility and the order parameter previously
introduced by Hands and Wensley in the study of the percolation transition
observed in non-compact QED. A correlation between these parameters and the
energy (action) at the phase transition has been observed. We conclude that the
order parameter is a sensitive probe for studying the phase
transition of pure gauge compact QED.Comment: LaTeX file + 4 PS figures, 12 pag., Pre-UAB-FT-308 ILL-(TH)-94-1
The Phases and Triviality of Scalar Quantum Electrodynamics
The phase diagram and critical behavior of scalar quantum electrodynamics are
investigated using lattice gauge theory techniques. The lattice action fixes
the length of the scalar (``Higgs'') field and treats the gauge field as
non-compact. The phase diagram is two dimensional. No fine tuning or
extrapolations are needed to study the theory's critical behovior. Two lines of
second order phase transitions are discovered and the scaling laws for each are
studied by finite size scaling methods on lattices ranging from through
. One line corresponds to monopole percolation and the other to a
transition between a ``Higgs'' and a ``Coulomb'' phase, labelled by divergent
specific heats. The lines of transitions cross in the interior of the phase
diagram and appear to be unrelated. The monopole percolation transition has
critical indices which are compatible with ordinary four dimensional
percolation uneffected by interactions. Finite size scaling and histogram
methods reveal that the specific heats on the ``Higgs-Coulomb'' transition line
are well-fit by the hypothesis that scalar quantum electrodynamics is
logarithmically trivial. The logarithms are measured in both finite size
scaling of the specific heat peaks as a function of volume as well as in the
coupling constant dependence of the specific heats measured on fixed but large
lattices. The theory is seen to be qualitatively similar to .
The standard CRAY random number generator RANF proved to be inadequateComment: 25pages,26figures;revtex;ILL-(TH)-94-#12; only hardcopy of figures
availabl
Multiple copy 2-state discrimination with individual measurements
We address the problem of non-orthogonal two-state discrimination when
multiple copies of the unknown state are available. We give the optimal
strategy when only fixed individual measurements are allowed and show that its
error probability saturates the collective (lower) bound asymptotically. We
also give the optimal strategy when adaptivity of individual von Neumann
measurements is allowed (which requires classical communication), and show that
the corresponding error probability is exactly equal to the collective one for
any number of copies. We show that this strategy can be regarded as Bayesian
updating.Comment: 5 pages, RevTe
String tension in gonihedric 3D Ising models
For the 3D gonihedric Ising models defined by Savvidy and Wegner the bare
string tension is zero and the energy of a spin interface depends only on the
number of bends and self-intersections, in antithesis to the standard
nearest-neighbour 3D Ising action. When the parameter kappa weighting the
self-intersections is small the model has a first order transition and when it
is larger the transition is continuous.
In this paper we investigate the scaling of the renormalized string tension,
which is entirely generated by fluctuations, using Monte Carlo simulations This
allows us to obtain an estimate for the critical exponents alpha and nu using
both finite-size-scaling and data collapse for the scaling function.Comment: Latex + postscript figures. 8 pages text plus 7 figures, spurious
extra figure now removed
First-order transition of tethered membranes in 3d space
We study a model of phantom tethered membranes, embedded in three-dimensional
space, by extensive Monte Carlo simulations. The membranes have hexagonal
lattice structure where each monomer is interacting with six nearest-neighbors
(NN). Tethering interaction between NN, as well as curvature penalty between NN
triangles are taken into account. This model is new in the sense that NN
interactions are taken into account by a truncated Lennard-Jones potential
including both repulsive and attractive parts. The main result of our study is
that the system undergoes a first-order crumpling transition from low
temperature flat phase to high temperature crumpled phase, in contrast with
early numerical results on models of tethered membranes.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Thermal performance of two heat exchangers for thermoelectric generators
Thermal performance of heat exchanger is important for potential application in integrated solar cell/module and
thermoelectric generator (TEG) system. Usually, thermal performance of a heat exchanger for TEGs is analysed
by using a 1D heat conduction theory which ignores the detailed phenomena associated with thermo-hydraulics.
In this paper, thermal and mass transports in two different exchangers are simulated by means of a steady-state,
3D turbulent flow k -e model with a heat conduction module under various flow rates. In order to simulate an
actual working situation of the heat exchangers, hot block with an electric heater is included in the model. TEG
model is simplified by using a 1D heat conduction theory, so its thermal performance is equivalent to a real TEG.
Natural convection effect on the outside surfaces of the computational model is considered. Computational
models and methods used are validated under transient thermal and electrical experimental conditions of a TEG.
It is turned out that the two heat exchangers designed have a better thermal performance compared with an
existing heat exchanger for TEGs, and more importantly, the fin heat exchanger is more compact and has nearly
half temperature rise compared with the tube heat exchanger
Chiral transition and monopole percolation in lattice scalar QED with quenched fermions
We study the interplay between topological observables and chiral and Higgs
transitions in lattice scalar QED with quenched fermions. Emphasis is put on
the chiral transition line and magnetic monopole percolation at strong gauge
coupling. We confirm that at infinite gauge coupling the chiral transition is
described by mean field exponents. We find a rich and complicated behaviour at
the endpoint of the Higgs transition line which hampers a satisfactory analysis
of the chiral transition. We study in detail an intermediate coupling, where
the data are consistent both with a trivial chiral transition clearly separated
from monopole percolation and with a chiral transition coincident with monopole
percolation, and characterized by the same critical exponent .
We discuss the relevance (or lack thereof) of these quenched results to our
understanding of the \chupiv\ model. We comment on the interplay of magnetic
monopoles and fermion dynamics in more general contexts.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figures included, LaTeX2e (elsart
Communicating about cigarette smoke constituents: an experimental comparison of two messaging strategies
Federal law now requires FDA to disseminate information on chemicals in cigarette smoke, but it is unclear how best to do so. In a 2 × 2 between-subjects experiment, participants received a message about chemicals in cigarette smoke (e.g., “Cigarette smoke has benzene.”) along with an additional randomly assigned messaging strategy: a “found-in” (e.g., “This is found in gasoline.”), a health effect (e.g., “This causes heart disease.”), both, or neither. Participants were U.S. probability phone samples of 5000 adults and 1123 adolescents, and an online convenience sample of 4130 adults. Adding a health effect elicited greater discouragement from wanting to smoke cigarettes (all p < .05) as did adding a found-in (all p < .05). However, including both messaging strategies added little or nothing above including just one. These findings can help the FDA and other agencies develop effective and parsimonious messages about cigarette smoke constituents
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