2,183 research outputs found
Langevin Simulation of the Chirally Decomposed Sine-Gordon Model
A large class of quantum and statistical field theoretical models,
encompassing relevant condensed matter and non-abelian gauge systems, are
defined in terms of complex actions. As the ordinary Monte-Carlo methods are
useless in dealing with these models, alternative computational strategies have
been proposed along the years. The Langevin technique, in particular, is known
to be frequently plagued with difficulties such as strong numerical
instabilities or subtle ergodic behavior. Regarding the chirally decomposed
version of the sine-Gordon model as a prototypical case for the failure of the
Langevin approach, we devise a truncation prescription in the stochastic
differential equations which yields numerical stability and is assumed not to
spoil the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition. This conjecture is
supported by a finite size scaling analysis, whereby a massive phase ending at
a line of critical points is clearly observed for the truncated stochastic
model.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Equilibrium valleys in spin glasses at low temperature
We investigate the 3-dimensional Edwards-Anderson spin glass model at low
temperature on simple cubic lattices of sizes up to L=12. Our findings show a
strong continuity among T>0 physical features and those found previously at
T=0, leading to a scenario with emerging mean field like characteristics that
are enhanced in the large volume limit. For instance, the picture of space
filling sponges seems to survive in the large volume limit at T>0, while
entropic effects play a crucial role in determining the free-energy degeneracy
of our finite volume states. All of our analysis is applied to equilibrium
configurations obtained by a parallel tempering on 512 different disorder
realizations. First, we consider the spatial properties of the sites where
pairs of independent spin configurations differ and we introduce a modified
spin overlap distribution which exhibits a non-trivial limit for large L.
Second, after removing the Z_2 (+-1) symmetry, we cluster spin configurations
into valleys. On average these valleys have free-energy differences of O(1),
but a difference in the (extensive) internal energy that grows significantly
with L; there is thus a large interplay between energy and entropy
fluctuations. We also find that valleys typically differ by sponge-like space
filling clusters, just as found previously for low-energy system-size
excitations above the ground state.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, RevTeX format. Clarifications and additional
reference
Amorphous-amorphous transition and the two-step replica symmetry breaking phase
The nature of polyamorphism and amorphous-to-amorphous transition is
investigated by means of an exactly solvable model with quenched disorder, the
spherical s+p multi-spin interaction model. The analysis is carried out in the
framework of Replica Symmetry Breaking theory and leads to the identification
of low temperature glass phases of different kinds. Besides the usual
`one-step' solution, known to reproduce all basic properties of structural
glasses, also a physically consistent `two-step' solution arises. More
complicated phases are found as well, as temperature is further decreased,
expressing a complex variety of metastable states structures for amorphous
systems.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, longer version, new references adde
An approach to NLO QCD analysis of the semi-inclusive DIS data with modified Jacobi polynomial expansion method
It is proposed the modification of the Jacobi polynomial expansion method
(MJEM) which is based on the application of the truncated moments instead of
the full ones. This allows to reconstruct with a high precision the local quark
helicity distributions even for the narrow accessible for measurement Bjorken
region using as an input only four first moments extracted from the data in
NLO QCD. It is also proposed the variational (extrapolation) procedure allowing
to reconstruct the distributions outside the accessible Bjorken region
using the distributions obtained with MJEM in the accessible region. The
numerical calculations encourage one that the proposed variational
(extrapolation) procedure could be applied to estimate the full first
(especially important) quark moments
On the Phase Structure of the 3D Edwards Anderson Spin Glass
We characterize numerically the properties of the phase transition of the
three dimensional Ising spin glass with Gaussian couplings and of the low
temperature phase. We compute critical exponents on large lattices. We study in
detail the overlap probability distribution and the equilibrium overlap-overlap
correlation functions. We find a clear agreement with off-equilibrium results
from previous work. These results strongly support the existence of a
continuous spontaneous replica symmetry breaking in three dimensional spin
glasses.Comment: 30 pages and 17 figures. Final version to be published in PR
Multiplicative Noise: Applications in Cosmology and Field Theory
Physical situations involving multiplicative noise arise generically in
cosmology and field theory. In this paper, the focus is first on exact
nonlinear Langevin equations, appropriate in a cosmologica setting, for a
system with one degree of freedom. The Langevin equations are derived using an
appropriate time-dependent generalization of a model due to Zwanzig. These
models are then extended to field theories and the generation of multiplicative
noise in such a context is discussed. Important issues in both the cosmological
and field theoretic cases are the fluctuation-dissipation relations and the
relaxation time scale. Of some importance in cosmology is the fact that
multiplicative noise can substantially reduce the relaxation time. In the field
theoretic context such a noise can lead to a significant enhancement in the
nucleation rate of topological defects.Comment: 21 pages, LaTex, LA-UR-93-210
Ensemble Inequivalence and the Spin-Glass Transition
We report on the ensemble inequivalence in a many-body spin-glass model with
integer spin. The spin-glass phase transition is of first order for certain
values of the crystal field strength and is dependent whether it was derived in
the microcanonical or the canonical ensemble. In the limit of infinitely
many-body interactions, the model is the integer-spin equivalent of the
random-energy model, and is solved exactly. We also derive the integer-spin
equivalent of the de Almeida-Thouless line.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figure
Renormalization Group Running of Newton's G: The Static Isotropic Case
Corrections are computed to the classical static isotropic solution of
general relativity, arising from non-perturbative quantum gravity effects. A
slow rise of the effective gravitational coupling with distance is shown to
involve a genuinely non-perturbative scale, closely connected with the
gravitational vacuum condensate, and thereby, it is argued, related to the
observed effective cosmological constant. Several analogies between the
proposed vacuum condensate picture of quantum gravitation, and non-perturbative
aspects of vacuum condensation in strongly coupled non-abelian gauge theories
are developed. In contrast to phenomenological approaches, the underlying
functional integral formulation of the theory severely constrains possible
scenarios for the renormalization group evolution of couplings. The expected
running of Newton's constant is compared to known vacuum polarization
induced effects in QED and QCD. The general analysis is then extended to a set
of covariant non-local effective field equations, intended to incorporate the
full scale dependence of , and examined in the case of the static isotropic
metric. The existence of vacuum solutions to the effective field equations in
general severely restricts the possible values of the scaling exponent .Comment: 61 pages, 3 figure
Lattice simulations of real-time quantum fields
We investigate lattice simulations of scalar and nonabelian gauge fields in
Minkowski space-time. For SU(2) gauge-theory expectation values of link
variables in 3+1 dimensions are constructed by a stochastic process in an
additional (5th) ``Langevin-time''. A sufficiently small Langevin step size and
the use of a tilted real-time contour leads to converging results in general.
All fixed point solutions are shown to fulfil the infinite hierarchy of
Dyson-Schwinger identities, however, they are not unique without further
constraints. For the nonabelian gauge theory the thermal equilibrium fixed
point is only approached at intermediate Langevin-times. It becomes more stable
if the complex time path is deformed towards Euclidean space-time. We analyze
this behavior further using the real-time evolution of a quantum anharmonic
oscillator, which is alternatively solved by diagonalizing its Hamiltonian.
Without further optimization stochastic quantization can give accurate
descriptions if the real-time extend of the lattice is small on the scale of
the inverse temperature.Comment: 36 pages, 15 figures, Late
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