32 research outputs found
Ferromagnetism in quark matter
We investigate the magnetic property of the cold quark matter employing the
magnetic moment as the order parameter. Through analysis of the
effective potential , we find that, at relatively high
densities , the quark matter is in the normal phase. At , the magnetic phase transition takes place and, in the low-density
region , the quark matter is in the ferromagnetic phase. For up,
down and strange quarks, , and ( the nuclear density), respectively. We also find that the
leptons ( and ) inside the quark matter are in the normal phase.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figure
Quantum Field Theories in Nonextensive Tsallis Statistics
Within the framework of Tsallis statistics with q ~ 1, we construct a
perturbation theory for treating relativistic quantum field systems. We find
that there appear initial correlations, which do not exist in the
Boltzmann-Gibbs statistics. Applying this framework to a quark-gluon plasma, we
find that the so-called thermal masses of quarks and gluons are smaller than in
the case of Boltzmann-Gibbs statistics.Comment: 16 pages, no figure
Improvement of the hot QCD pressure by the minimal sensitivity criterion
The principles of minimal sensitivity (PMS) criterion is applied to the
perturbative free energy density, or pressure, of hot QCD, which include the
and part of the terms. Applications are made
separately to the short- and long-distance parts of the pressure. Comparison
with the lattice results, at low temperatures, shows that the resultant ``
optimal'' approximants are substantially improved when compared to the
results. In particular, for the realistic case of three quark
flavors, the `` optimal'' approximants are comparable with the lattice results.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, LaTe
Angular intricacies in hot gauge field theories
It is argued that in hot gauge field theories, "Hard Thermal Loops" leading
order calculations call for a definite sequence of angular averages and
discontinuity (or Imaginary part prescription) operations, and run otherwise
into incorrect results. The ten years old collinear singularity problem of hot
, provides a striking illustration of that fate.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figur
Self-energy-part resummed quark and gluon propagators in a spin-polarized quark matter and generalized Boltzmann equations
We construct perturbative frameworks for studying nonequilibrium
spin-polarized quark matter. We employ the closed-time-path formalism and use
the gradient approximation in the derivative expansion. After constructing
self-energy-part resummed quark and gluon propagators, we formulate two kind of
mutually equivalent perturbative frameworks: The first one is formulated on the
basis of the initial-particle distribution function, and the second one is
formulated on the basis of `` physical''-particle distribution function. In the
course of construction of the second framework, the generalized Boltzmann
equations and their relatives {\em directly} come out, which describe the
evolution of the system. The frameworks are relevant to the study of a magnetic
character of quark matters, e.g., possible quark stars.Comment: 57 page
Two-loop Compton and annihilation processes in thermal QCD
We calculate the Compton and annihilation production of a soft static lepton
pair in a quark-gluon plasma in the two-loop approximation. We work in the
context of the effective perturbative expansion based on the resummation of
hard thermal loops. Double counting is avoided by subtracting appropriate
counterterms. It is found that the two-loop diagrams give contributions of the
same order as the one-loop diagram. Furthermore, these contributions are
necessary to obtain agreement with the naive perturbative expansion in the
limit of vanishing thermal masses.Comment: Latex, 24 pages, postscript figures included with the package
graphic
Scattering amplitudes at finite temperature
We present a simple set of rules for obtaining the imaginary part of a self
energy diagram at finite temperature in terms of diagrams that correspond to
physical scattering amplitudes.Comment: 23 pages in Revtex, with 33 eps-figure
Real time thermal propagtors for massive gauge bosons
We derive Feynman rules for gauge theories exhibiting spontaneous symmetry
breaking using the real-time formalism of finite temperature field theory. We
also derive the thermal propagators where only the physical degrees of freedom
are given thermal boundary conditions. We analyse the abelian Higgs model and
find that these new propagators simplify the calculation of the thermal
contribution to the self energy.Comment: 7 pages, late