40 research outputs found
Temperature Renormalization Group and Resummation
The temperature renormalization group equation (TRGE) is compared with a
diagrammatic expansion for the -theory. It is found that the
one-loop TRGE resums the leading powers of temperature for the effective mass.
A two-loop contribution to TRGE is required to do the leading resummation for
the coupling constant. It is also shown that the higher order TRGE resums
subleading powers of temperature.Comment: 17pp, LATEX and FEYNMAN, NORDITA 92/63
Dispersion relations from the Hard Thermal Loop effective action in a magnetic field
Dispersion relations for fermions at high temperature and in a background
magnetic field are calculated in two different ways. First from a
straightforward one-loop calculation where, in the weak field limit, we find an
expression closely related to the standard dispersion relations in the absence
of the magnetic field. Secondly, we derive the dispersion relations directly
from the Hard Thermal Loop effective action, which allows for an exact solution
(i.e. to all orders in the external field), up to the last numerical integrals.Comment: Latex+epsf with uuencoded ps-figure
Derivatives as an IR Regulator for Massless Fields
The free propagator for the scalar --theory is calculated
exactly up to the second derivative of a background field. Using this
propagator I compute the one--loop effective action, which then contains all
powers of the field but with at most two derivatives acting on each field. The
standard derivative expansion, which only has a finite number of derivatives in
each term, breaks down for small fields when the mass is zero, while the
expression obtained here has a well--defined expansion in . In this way
the resummation of derivatives cures the naive IR divergence. The extension to
finite temperature is also discussed.Comment: Late
Hard thermal loops in a magnetic field and the chiral anomaly
The fermionic dispersion relation in the presence of a background magnetic
field and a high temperature QED plasma is calculated exactly in the external
field, using the Hard Thermal Loop effective action. As the field strength
increases there is a smooth transition from the weak-field ()
thermal dispersion relations to the vacuum Landau levels when the background
field is much stronger than any thermal effects (). The
self-energy at finite field strength acquires an imaginary part. The spectral
width becomes important for critical field strengths (),
necessitating the use of the full spectral function. It is shown that the
spectral function satisfies the usual condition of normalization and causality.
Using the exact spectral function I also show that the production of chirality
in an external electromagnetic field at high temperature is unaffected by the
presence of the thermal masses of the fermions.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, late
Thermally induced photon splitting
We calculate thermal corrections to the non-linear QED effective action for
low-energy photon interactions in a background electromagnetic field. The
high-temperature expansion shows that at the vacuum contribution is
exactly cancelled to all orders in the external field except for a non-trivial
two-point function contribution. The high-temperature expansion derived reveals
a remarkable cancellation of infrared sensitive contributions. As a result
photon-splitting in the presence of a magnetic field is suppressed in the
presence of an electron-positron QED-plasma at very high temperatures. In a
cold and dense plasma a similar suppression takes place. At the same time
Compton scattering dominates for weak fields and the suppression is rarely
important in physical situations.Comment: 15 pages, 2 ps figures, Late
Atomic beam correlations and the quantum state of the micromaser
Correlation measurements on the states of two-level atoms having passed
through a micromaser at different times can be used to infer properties of the
quantum state of the radiation field in the cavity. Long(short) correlation
length in time is to some extent associated with super(sub)-Poissonian photon
statistics. The correlation length is also an indicator of a phase structure
much richer than what is revealed by the usual single-time observables, like
the atomic inversion or the Mandel quality factor. In realistic experimental
situations the correlations may extend over many times the decay time of the
cavity. Our assertions are verified by comparing theoretical calculations with
a high-precision Monte-Carlo simulation of the micromaser system.Comment: 4 pages, styles: aps, latex, times, epsf, More physical insight
added, title and figures changed, more references. The paper can be retrieved
as compressed file called elmfors.maser.ps.Z from
http://connect.nbi.dk/pub/lautrup/ or via anonymous ftp at
ftp://connect.nbi.dk/pub/lautrup
Condensation and Magnetization of the Relativistic Bose Gas
We present a simple proof of the absence of Bose--Einstein condensation of a
relativistic boson gas, in any finite local magnetic field in less than five
dimensions. We show that the relativistic charged boson gas exhibit a genuine
Meissner--Ochsenfeld effect of the Schafroth form at fixed supercritical
density. As in the well--known non--relativistic case, this total expulsion of
a magnetic field is caused by the condensation of the Bose gas at vanishing
magnetic field. The result is discussed in the context of kaon condensation in
neutron stars.Comment: 8 pages, Late
Thermal Fermionic Dispersion Relations in a Magnetic Field
The thermal self-energy of an electron in a static uniform magnetic field
is calculated to first order in the fine structure constant and to
all orders in . We use two methods, one based on the Furry picture and
another based on Schwinger's proper-time method. As external states we consider
relativistic Landau levels with special emphasis on the lowest Landau level. In
the high-temperature limit we derive self-consistent dispersion relations for
particle and hole excitations, showing the chiral asymmetry caused by the
external field. For weak fields, earlier results on the ground- state energy
and the anomalous magnetic moment are discussed and compared with the present
analysis. In the strong-field limit the appearance of a field-independent
imaginary part of the self-energy, related to Landau damping in the
plasma, is pointed out.Comment: Latex+FEYNMAN.tex. 5 figures and special files are submitted using
Figure
Thermalization of the Higgs Field at the Electroweak Phase Transition
The thermalization rate for long wavelength fluctuations in the Higgs field
is calculated from the imaginary part of the finite temperature effective
action in the unbroken phase of the Standard Model. We use improved propagators
including a resummation of hard thermal loops. The thermalization rate is
computed at one loop level, but an estimate of the two--loop contribution
appears to give an indication that they are comparable to the one--loop result
for small thermal higgs mass. We show also that the Higgs field fluctuations
are likely to thermalize very fast compared with the electroweak phase
transition time.Comment: (21 pp, 5 figures available upon request). NORDITA--93/48