3,565 research outputs found
Meron-Cluster Simulation of a Chiral Phase Transition with Staggered Fermions
We examine a (3+1)-dimensional model of staggered lattice fermions with a
four-fermion interaction and Z(2) chiral symmetry using the Hamiltonian
formulation. This model cannot be simulated with standard fermion algorithms
because those suffer from a very severe sign problem. We use a new fermion
simulation technique - the meron-cluster algorithm - which solves the sign
problem and leads to high-precision numerical data. We investigate the finite
temperature chiral phase transition and verify that it is in the universality
class of the 3-d Ising model using finite-size scaling.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figure
An Introduction to Chiral Symmetry on the Lattice
The chiral symmetry of QCD is of central
importance for the nonperturbative low-energy dynamics of light quarks and
gluons. Lattice field theory provides a theoretical framework in which these
dynamics can be studied from first principles. The implementation of chiral
symmetry on the lattice is a nontrivial issue. In particular, local lattice
fermion actions with the chiral symmetry of the continuum theory suffer from
the fermion doubling problem. The Ginsparg-Wilson relation implies L\"uscher's
lattice variant of chiral symmetry which agrees with the usual one in the
continuum limit. Local lattice fermion actions that obey the Ginsparg-Wilson
relation have an exact chiral symmetry, the correct axial anomaly, they obey a
lattice version of the Atiyah-Singer index theorem, and still they do not
suffer from the notorious doubling problem. The Ginsparg-Wilson relation is
satisfied exactly by Neuberger's overlap fermions which are a limit of Kaplan's
domain wall fermions, as well as by Hasenfratz and Niedermayer's classically
perfect lattice fermion actions. When chiral symmetry is nonlinearly realized
in effective field theories on the lattice, the doubling problem again does not
arise. This review provides an introduction to chiral symmetry on the lattice
with an emphasis on the basic theoretical framework.Comment: (41 pages, to be published in Prog. Part. Nucl. Phys. Vol. 53, issue
1 (2004)
On certain finiteness questions in the arithmetic of modular forms
We investigate certain finiteness questions that arise naturally when
studying approximations modulo prime powers of p-adic Galois representations
coming from modular forms. We link these finiteness statements with a question
by K. Buzzard concerning p-adic coefficient fields of Hecke eigenforms.
Specifically, we conjecture that for fixed N, m, and prime p with p not
dividing N, there is only a finite number of reductions modulo p^m of
normalized eigenforms on \Gamma_1(N). We consider various variants of our basic
finiteness conjecture, prove a weak version of it, and give some numerical
evidence.Comment: 25 pages; v2: one of the conjectures from v1 now proved; v3:
restructered parts of the article; v4: minor corrections and change
Size distributions of shocks and static avalanches from the Functional Renormalization Group
Interfaces pinned by quenched disorder are often used to model jerky
self-organized critical motion. We study static avalanches, or shocks, defined
here as jumps between distinct global minima upon changing an external field.
We show how the full statistics of these jumps is encoded in the
functional-renormalization-group fixed-point functions. This allows us to
obtain the size distribution P(S) of static avalanches in an expansion in the
internal dimension d of the interface. Near and above d=4 this yields the
mean-field distribution P(S) ~ S^(-3/2) exp(-S/[4 S_m]) where S_m is a
large-scale cutoff, in some cases calculable. Resumming all 1-loop
contributions, we find P(S) ~ S^(-tau) exp(C (S/S_m)^(1/2) -B/4 (S/S_m)^delta)
where B, C, delta, tau are obtained to first order in epsilon=4-d. Our result
is consistent to O(epsilon) with the relation tau = 2-2/(d+zeta), where zeta is
the static roughness exponent, often conjectured to hold at depinning. Our
calculation applies to all static universality classes, including random-bond,
random-field and random-periodic disorder. Extended to long-range elastic
systems, it yields a different size distribution for the case of contact-line
elasticity, with an exponent compatible with tau=2-1/(d+zeta) to
O(epsilon=2-d). We discuss consequences for avalanches at depinning and for
sandpile models, relations to Burgers turbulence and the possibility that the
above relations for tau be violated to higher loop order. Finally, we show that
the avalanche-size distribution on a hyper-plane of co-dimension one is in
mean-field (valid close to and above d=4) given by P(S) ~ K_{1/3}(S)/S, where K
is the Bessel-K function, thus tau=4/3 for the hyper plane.Comment: 34 pages, 30 figure
Green's Functions from Quantum Cluster Algorithms
We show that cluster algorithms for quantum models have a meaning independent
of the basis chosen to construct them. Using this idea, we propose a new method
for measuring with little effort a whole class of Green's functions, once a
cluster algorithm for the partition function has been constructed. To explain
the idea, we consider the quantum XY model and compute its two point Green's
function in various ways, showing that all of them are equivalent. We also
provide numerical evidence confirming the analytic arguments. Similar
techniques are applicable to other models. In particular, in the recently
constructed quantum link models, the new technique allows us to construct
improved estimators for Wilson loops and may lead to a very precise
determination of the glueball spectrum.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX, with four figures. Added preprint numbe
Computational complexity and fundamental limitations to fermionic quantum Monte Carlo simulations
Quantum Monte Carlo simulations, while being efficient for bosons, suffer
from the "negative sign problem'' when applied to fermions - causing an
exponential increase of the computing time with the number of particles. A
polynomial time solution to the sign problem is highly desired since it would
provide an unbiased and numerically exact method to simulate correlated quantum
systems. Here we show, that such a solution is almost certainly unattainable by
proving that the sign problem is NP-hard, implying that a generic solution of
the sign problem would also solve all problems in the complexity class NP
(nondeterministic polynomial) in polynomial time.Comment: 4 page
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