14,629 research outputs found
Traversable wormhole in the deformed Ho\v{r}ava-Lifshitz gravity
Asymptotically flat wormhole solutions are found in the deformed
Ho\v{r}ava-Lifshitz gravity. It turns out that higher curvature terms can not
play the role of exotic matters which are crucial to form a traversable
wormhole, and external exotic sources are still needed. In particular, the
exotic matter behaves like phantom energy if Kehagias-Sfetsos vacuum is
considered outside the wormhole. Interestingly, the spherically symmetric
setting makes the matter and the higher curvature contribution satisfy
four-dimensional conservation of energy in the covariant form.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, version published in Phys. Rev.
Asymptotic deconfinement in high-density QCD
We discuss QCD with two light flavors at large baryon chemical potential mu.
Color superconductivity leads to partial breaking of the color SU(3) group. We
show that the infrared physics is governed by the gluodynamics of the remaining
SU(2) group with an exponentially soft confinement scale Lambda_QCD'
Delta*exp[-a*mu/(g*Delta)], where Delta<<mu is the superconducting gap, g is
the strong coupling, and a=0.81... We estimate that at moderate baryon
densities Lambda_QCD' is O(10 MeV) or smaller. The confinement radius increases
exponentially with density, leading to "asymptotic deconfinement." The velocity
of the SU(2) gluons is small due to the large dielectric constant of the
medium.Comment: 4 pages; restructured, published versio
Charged and superconducting vortices in dense quark matter
Quark matter at astrophysical densities may contain stable vortices due to
the spontaneous breaking of hypercharge symmetry by kaon condensation. We argue
that these vortices could be both charged and electrically superconducting.
Current carrying loops (vortons) could be long lived and play a role in the
magnetic and transport properties of this matter. We provide a scenario for
vorton formation in protoneutron stars.Comment: Replaced with the published version. A typographical error in Eq. 2
is correcte
Domain walls of high-density QCD
We show that in very dense quark matter there must exist metastable domain
walls where the axial U(1) phase of the color-superconducting condensate
changes by 2pi. The decay rate of the domain walls is exponentially suppressed
and we compute it semiclassically. We give an estimate of the critical chemical
potential above which our analysis is under theoretical control.Comment: 4 pages; Eq. (16) corrected, 2 new references added, published
versio
Real-time pion propagation in finite-temperature QCD
We argue that in QCD near the chiral limit, at all temperatures below the
chiral phase transition, the dispersion relation of soft pions can be expressed
entirely in terms of three temperature-dependent quantities: the pion screening
mass, a pion decay constant, and the axial isospin susceptibility. The
definitions of these quantities are given in terms of equal-time (static)
correlation functions. Thus, all three quantities can be determined directly by
lattice methods. The precise meaning of the Gell-Mann--Oakes--Renner relation
at finite temperature is given.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figures; v2: discussion on the region of applicability
expanded, to be published in PR
QCD and the eta prime Mass: Instantons or Confinement?
We argue that lattice calculations of the mass in QCD with
colors performed at non-zero baryon chemical potential can be used to study the
mechanism responsible for the mass of the . QCD with two colors is an
ideal laboratory because it exhibits confinement, chiral symmetry breaking and
a would-be Goldstone boson at all densities. Since the instanton
density and the confinement scale vary with density in a very different way,
instantons are clearly distinguishable from other possible mechanisms. There is
an instanton prediction for the mass at large density that can be
compared to lattice results. The density dependence of the instanton
contribution is a simple consequence of the integer topological charge carried
by the instanton. We also argue that color QCD at finite isospin
density can be used in order to study the origin of OZI-violation in the scalar
sector.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Combined electrical transport and capacitance spectroscopy of a field effect transistor
We have measured both the current-voltage (-)
and capacitance-voltage (-) characteristics of a
field effect transistor. From the measured capacitance
we calculate the electron surface density and show that its gate voltage
dependence follows the theoretical prediction resulting from the
two-dimensional free electron model. This model allows us to fit the measured
- characteristics over the \emph{entire range} of
. Combining this experimental result with the measured
current-voltage characteristics, we determine the field effect mobility as a
function of gate voltage. We show that for our device this improved combined
approach yields significantly smaller values (more than a factor of 4) of the
electron mobility than the conventional analysis of the current-voltage
characteristics only.Comment: to appear in Applied Physics Letter
Hall viscosity from gauge/gravity duality
In (2+1)-dimensional systems with broken parity, there exists yet another
transport coefficient, appearing at the same order as the shear viscosity in
the hydrodynamic derivative expansion. In condensed matter physics, it is
referred to as "Hall viscosity". We consider a simple holographic realization
of a (2+1)-dimensional isotropic fluid with broken spatial parity. Using
techniques of fluid/gravity correspondence, we uncover that the holographic
fluid possesses a nonzero Hall viscosity, whose value only depends on the
near-horizon region of the background. We also write down a Kubo's formula for
the Hall viscosity. We confirm our results by directly computing the Hall
viscosity using the formula.Comment: 12 page
The Sound of Topology in the AdS/CFT Correspondence
Using the gauge/gravity correspondence, we study the properties of 2-point
correlation functions of finite-temperature strongly coupled gauge field
theories, defined on a curved space of general spatial topology with a dual
black hole description. We derive approximate asymptotic expressions for the
correlation functions and their poles, supported by exact numerical
calculations, and study their dependence on the dimension of spacetime and the
spatial topology. The asymptotic structure of the correlation functions depends
on the relation between the spatial curvature and the temperature, and is
noticeable when they are of the same order. In the case of a hyperbolic
topology, a specific temperature is identified for which exact analytical
solutions exist for all types of perturbations. The asymptotic structure of the
correlation functions poles is found to behave in a non-smooth manner when
approaching this temperature.Comment: 65 pages, LaTeX, 21 figures, 1 table; fixed a small error in
subsection 3.
QCD at finite isospin density
QCD at finite isospin chemical potential mu_I has no fermion sign problem and
can be studied on the lattice. We solve this theory analytically in two limits:
at low mu_I where chiral perturbation theory is applicable, and at
asymptotically high mu_I where perturbative QCD works. At low isospin density
the ground state is a pion condensate, whereas at high density it is a Fermi
liquid with Cooper pairing. The pairs carry the same quantum numbers as the
pion. This leads us to a conjecture that the transition from hadron to quark
matter is smooth, which passes several tests. Our results imply a nontrivial
phase diagram in the space of temperature and chemical potentials of isospin
and baryon number.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, version to appear in PR
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