5,301 research outputs found

    General Analysis of Inflation in the Jordan frame Supergravity

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    We study various inflation models in the Jordan frame supergravity with a logarithmic Kahler potential. We find that, in a class of inflation models containing an additional singlet in the superpotential, three types of inflation can be realized: the Higgs-type inflation, power-law inflation, and chaotic inflation with/without a running kinetic term. The former two are possible if the holomorphic function dominates over the non-holomorphic one in the frame function, while the chaotic inflation occurs when both are comparable. Interestingly, the fractional-power potential can be realized by the running kinetic term. We also discuss the implication for the Higgs inflation in supergravity.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figur

    Non-trivial Center Dominance in High Temperature QCD

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    We investigate the properties of quarks and gluons above the chiral phase transition temperature Tc,T_c, using the RG improved gauge action and the Wilson quark action with two degenerate quarks mainly on a 323×1632^3\times 16 lattice. In the one-loop perturbation theory, the thermal ensemble is dominated by the gauge configurations with effectively Z(3)Z(3) center twisted boundary conditions, making the thermal expectation value of the spatial Polyakov loop take a non-trivial Z(3)Z(3) center. This is in agreement with our lattice simulation of high temperature QCD. We further observe that the temporal propagator of massless quarks at extremely high temperature β=100.0 (T≃1058Tc)\beta=100.0 \, (T \simeq10^{58} T_c) remarkably agrees with the temporal propagator of free quarks with the Z(3)Z(3) twisted boundary condition for t/Lt≥0.2t/L_t \geq 0.2, but differs from that with the Z(3)Z(3) trivial boundary condition. As we increase the mass of quarks mqm_q, we find that the thermal ensemble continues to be dominated by the Z(3)Z(3) twisted gauge field configurations as long as mq≤3.0 Tm_q \le 3.0 \, T and above that the Z(3)Z(3) trivial configurations come in. The transition is essentially identical to what we found in the departure from the conformal region in the zero-temperature many-flavor conformal QCD on a finite lattice by increasing the mass of quarks. We argue that the behavior is consistent with the renormalization group analysis at finite temperature.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures; 4 tables, an appendix adde

    IR fixed points in SU(3)SU(3) gauge Theories

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    We propose a novel RG method to specify the location of the IR fixed point in lattice gauge theories and apply it to the SU(3)SU(3) gauge theories with NfN_f fundamental fermions. It is based on the scaling behavior of the propagator through the RG analysis with a finite IR cut-off, which we cannot remove in the conformal field theories in sharp contrast with the confining theories. The method also enables us to estimate the anomalous mass dimension in the continuum limit at the IR fixed point. We perform the program for Nf=16,12,8N_f=16, 12, 8 and Nf=7N_f=7 and indeed identify the location of the IR fixed points in all cases.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, 1 table: the scale of the y axis in Figs..1-4 change; minor modifications as appear in PL

    Higgs Chaotic Inflation in Standard Model and NMSSM

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    We construct a chaotic inflation model in which the Higgs fields play the role of the inflaton in the standard model as well as in the singlet extension of the supersymmetric standard model. The key idea is to allow a non-canonical kinetic term for the Higgs field. The model is a realization of the recently proposed running kinetic inflation, in which the coefficient of the kinetic term grows as the inflaton field. The inflaton potential depends on the structure of the Higgs kinetic term. For instance, the inflaton potential is proportional to phi^2 and phi^{2/3} in the standard model and NMSSM, respectively. It is also possible to have a flatter inflaton potential.Comment: 5 pages. v2:discussion and references adde

    Orbital Compass Model as an Itinerant Electron System

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    Two-dimensional orbital compass model is studied as an interacting itinerant electron model. A Hubbard-type tight-binding model, from which the orbital compass model is derived in the strong coupling limit, is identified. This model is analyzed by the random-phase approximation (RPA) and the self-consistent RPA methods from the weak coupling. Anisotropy for the orbital fluctuation in the momentum space is qualitatively changed by the on-site Coulomb interaction. This result is explained by the fact that the dominant fluctuation is changed from the intra-band nesting to the inter-band one by increasing the interaction.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
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