300 research outputs found
Impact of Dynamical Fermions on QCD Vacuum Structure
We examine how dynamical fermions affect both the UV and infrared structure
of the QCD vacuum. We consider large lattices from the MILC
collaboration, using a gluonic definition of the topological charge density,
founded on a new over-improved stout-link smearing algorithm. The algorithm
reproduces established results from the overlap formalism and is designed to
preserve nontrivial topological objects including instantons. At short
distances we focus on the topological charge correlator, , where
negative values at small $x$ reveal a sign-alternating layered structure to the
topological-charge density of the QCD vacuum. We find that the magnitudes of
the negative dip in the correlator and the positive
contact term are both increased with the introduction of dynamical fermion
degrees of freedom. This is in accord with expectations based on charge
renormalization and the vanishing of the topological susceptibility in the
chiral limit. At large distances we examine the extent to which instanton-like
objects are found on the lattice, and how their distributions vary between
quenched and dynamical gauge fields. We show that dynamical gauge fields
contain more instanton-like objects with an average size greater than in the
quenched vacuum. Finally, we directly visualize the topological charge density
in order to investigate the effects of dynamical sea-quark degrees of freedom
on topology.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Probing for Instanton Quarks with epsilon-Cooling
We use epsilon-cooling, adjusting at will the order a^2 corrections to the
lattice action, to study the parameter space of instantons in the background of
non-trivial holonomy and to determine the presence and nature of constituents
with fractional topological charge at finite and zero temperature for SU(2). As
an additional tool, zero temperature configurations were generated from those
at finite temperature with well-separated constituents. This is achieved by
"adiabatically" adjusting the anisotropic coupling used to implement finite
temperature on a symmetric lattice. The action and topological charge density,
as well as the Polyakov loop and chiral zero-modes are used to analyse these
configurations. We also show how cooling histories themselves can reveal the
presence of constituents with fractional topological charge. We comment on the
interpretation of recent fermion zero-mode studies for thermalized ensembles at
small temperatures.Comment: 26 pages, 14 figures in 33 part
Improved superposition schemes for approximate multi-caloron configurations
Two improved superposition schemes for the construction of approximate
multi-caloron-anticaloron configurations, using exact single (anti)caloron
gauge fields as underlying building blocks, are introduced in this paper. The
first improvement deals with possible monopole-Dirac string interactions
between different calorons with non-trivial holonomy. The second one, based on
the ADHM formalism, improves the (anti-)selfduality in the case of small
caloron separations. It conforms with Shuryak's well-known ratio-ansatz when
applied to instantons. Both superposition techniques provide a higher degree of
(anti-)selfduality than the widely used sum-ansatz, which simply adds the
(anti)caloron vector potentials in an appropriate gauge. Furthermore, the
improved configurations (when discretized onto a lattice) are characterized by
a higher stability when they are exposed to lattice cooling techniques.Comment: New version accepted for publication in Nucl. Phys. B. Text partly
shortened, changes in the introduction, new results added on the comparison
with exact solution
Calorons, Nahm's equations on S^1 and bundles over P^1xP^1
The moduli space of solutions to Nahm's equations of rank (k,k+j) on the
circle, and hence, of SU(2) calorons of charge (k,j), is shown to be equivalent
to the moduli of holomorphic rank 2 bundles on P^1xP^1 trivialized at infinity
with c_2=k and equipped with a flag of degree j along P^1x{0}. An explicit
matrix description of these spaces is given by a monad constructio
Writhe of center vortices and topological charge -- an explicit example
The manner in which continuum center vortices generate topological charge
density is elucidated using an explicit example. The example vortex
world-surface contains one lone self-intersection point, which contributes a
quantum 1/2 to the topological charge. On the other hand, the surface in
question is orientable and thus must carry global topological charge zero due
to general arguments. Therefore, there must be another contribution, coming
from vortex writhe. The latter is known for the lattice analogue of the example
vortex considered, where it is quite intuitive. For the vortex in the
continuum, including the limit of an infinitely thin vortex, a careful analysis
is performed and it is shown how the contribution to the topological charge
induced by writhe is distributed over the vortex surface.Comment: 33 latex pages, 10 figures incorporating 14 ps files. Furthermore,
the time evolution of the vortex line discussed in this work can be viewed as
a gif movie, available for download by following the PostScript link below --
watch for the cute feature at the self-intersection poin
An SU(2) KvBLL caloron gas model and confinement
A semi-classical model is developed to describe pure SU(2) Yang-Mills
gluodynamics at finite temperature as a dilute, non-interacting gas of
Kraan-van Baal-Lee-Lu calorons including the case of non-trivial holonomy.
Temperature dependent parameters of the model (asymptotic caloron holonomy,
caloron density and caloron size distribution) are discussed from the point of
view of lattice observations and of in-medium modifications of the one-loop
caloron amplitude. Space-like string tensions running into plateaux at
distances R \approx 0.8 - 1.3 fm are obtained and compared to lattice results
in order to find more precisely the average caloron size. Then, the
quark-antiquark free energy as predicted by the model is considered. In the
confined phase a linear rise with the separation can be observed up to R
\approx 4 fm, whereas it runs into plateaux above T_c. Screening effects in the
adjoint potentials are observed together with an approximate Casimir scaling of
the caloron contribution to the fundamental and adjoint forces. In Abelian
projection, space-like percolation of monopoles is found in the confined phase
only. Thus, taking the non-trivial holonomy into account, confinement
properties of pure SU(2) Yang-Mills gluodynamics can be described by a
semi-classical approach up to distances one order of magnitude larger than the
caloron size.Comment: 26 pages, 14 figures, textheight change
Dressed Polyakov loop and flavor dependent phase transitions
The chiral condensate and dressed Polyakov loop at finite temperature and
density have been investigated in the framework of Nf = 2+1 Nambu-Jona-Lasinio
(NJL) model with two degenerate u, d quarks and one strange quark. In the case
of explicit chiral symmetry breaking with physical quark masses, it is found
that the phase transitions for light u, d quarks and s quark are sequentially
happened, and the separation between the transition lines for different flavors
becomes wider and wider with the increase of baryon density. For each flavor,
the pseudo-critical temperatures for chiral condensate and dressed Polyakov
loop differ in a narrow transition range in the lower baryon density region,
and the two transitions coincide in the higher baryon density region.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures; Version accepted in Phys. Rev.
A study of the zero modes of the Faddeev-Popov operator in Euclidean Yang-Mills theories in the Landau gauge in d=2,3,4 dimensions
Examples of normalizable zero modes of the Faddeev-Popov operator in SU(2)
Euclidean Yang-Mills theories in the Landau gauge are constructed in d=2,3,4
dimensions.Comment: 18 pages. Text modifications. References added. Version accepted for
publication in the EPJ
Numerical properties of staggered quarks with a taste-dependent mass term
The numerical properties of staggered Dirac operators with a taste-dependent
mass term proposed by Adams [1,2] and by Hoelbling [3] are compared with those
of ordinary staggered and Wilson Dirac operators. In the free limit and on
(quenched) interacting configurations, we consider their topological
properties, their spectrum, and the resulting pion mass. Although we also
consider the spectral structure, topological properties, locality, and
computational cost of an overlap operator with a staggered kernel, we call
attention to the possibility of using the Adams and Hoelbling operators without
the overlap construction. In particular, the Hoelbling operator could be used
to simulate two degenerate flavors without additive mass renormalization, and
thus without fine-tuning in the chiral limit.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures. V2: published version; important note added
regarding Hoelbling fermions, otherwise minor change
Ghost Condensates and Dynamical Breaking of SL(2,R) in Yang-Mills in the Maximal Abelian Gauge
Ghost condensates of dimension two in SU(N) Yang-Mills theory quantized in
the Maximal Abelian Gauge are discussed. These condensates turn out to be
related to the dynamical breaking of the SL(2,R) symmetry present in this gaugeComment: 16 pages, LaTeX2e, final version to appear in J. Phys.
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