868 research outputs found
A solution to the fermion doubling problem for supersymmetric theories on the transverse lattice
Species doubling is a problem that infects most numerical methods that use a
spatial lattice. An understanding of species doubling can be found in the
Nielsen-Ninomiya theorem which gives a set of conditions that require species
doubling. The transverse lattice approach to solving field theories, which has
at least one spatial lattice, fails one of the conditions of the
Nielsen-Ninomiya theorem nevertheless one still finds species doubling for the
standard Lagrangian formulation of the transverse lattice. We will show that
the Supersymmetric Discrete Light Cone Quantization (SDLCQ) formulation of the
transverse lattice does not have species doubling.Comment: 4 pages, v2: a reference and comments added, the version to appear in
Phys. Rev.
Gaussian and Mean Field Approximations for Reduced 4D Supersymmetric Yang-Mills Integral
In this paper, we consider a reduced supersymmetric Yang-Mills integral with four supercharges by using a Gaussian approximation scheme and its improved version. We calculate the free energy and the expectation values of Polyakov loop and Wilson loop operators by extending the method employed in the bosonic case in the previous paper. Our results nicely match to the exact and the numerical results obtained before. The loop amplitudes exhibit good scaling behaviors similarly as in the bosonic case. The 't Hooft like large limit leads simple formulas for the case of the loop length smaller. Also, the Polyakov loop and the Wilson loop are computed for the case of the loop length sufficiently large, where we see that the behavior of the Wilson loop reproduces the result simulated for a few smaller values of at least qualitatively
Exact Ward-Takahashi identity for the lattice N=1 Wess-Zumino model
The lattice Wess-Zumino model written in terms of the Ginsparg-Wilson
relation is invariant under a generalized supersymmetry transformation which is
determined by an iterative procedure in the coupling constant. By studying the
associated Ward-Takahashi identity up to order we show that this lattice
supersymmetry automatically leads to restoration of continuum supersymmetry
without fine tuning. In particular, the scalar and fermion renormalization wave
functions coincide.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Talk given at QG05, Cala Gonone, Sardinia, Italy.
12-16 September 200
Geometrical Construction of Heterogeneous Loop Amplitudes in 2D Gravity
We study a disk amplitude which has a complicated heterogeneous matter
configuration on the boundary in a system of the (3,4) conformal matter coupled
to two-dimensional gravity. It is analyzed using the two-matrix chain model in
the large N limit. We show that the disk amplitude calculated by
Schwinger-Dyson equations can completely be reproduced through purely
geometrical consideration. From this result, we speculate that all
heterogeneous loop amplitudes can be derived from the geometrical consideration
and the consistency among relevant amplitudes.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figure
Symmetric Tensor Decomposition Description of Fermionic Many-Body Wavefunctions
The configuration interaction (CI) is a versatile wavefunction theory for
interacting fermions but it involves an extremely long CI series. Using a
symmetric tensor decomposition (STD) method, we convert the CI series into a
compact and numerically tractable form. The converted series encompasses the
Hartree-Fock state in the first term and rapidly converges to the full-CI
state, as numerically tested using small molecules. Provided that the length of
the STD-CI series grows only moderately with the increasing complexity of the
system, the new method will serve as one of the alternative variational methods
to achieve full-CI with enhanced practicability.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Relations among Supersymmetric Lattice Gauge Theories via Orbifolding
We show how to derive Catterall's supersymmetric lattice gauge theories
directly from the general principle of orbifolding followed by a variant of the
usual deconstruction. These theories are forced to be complexified due to a
clash between charge assignments under U(1)-symmetries and lattice assignments
in terms of scalar, vector and tensor components for the fermions. Other
prescriptions for how to discretize the theory follow automatically by
orbifolding and deconstruction. We find that Catterall's complexified model for
the two-dimensional N=(2,2) theory has two independent preserved
supersymmetries. We comment on consistent truncations to lattice theories
without this complexification and with the correct continuum limit. The
construction of lattice theories this way is general, and can be used to derive
new supersymmetric lattice theories through the orbifolding procedure. As an
example, we apply the prescription to topologically twisted four-dimensional
N=2 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory. We show that a consistent truncation is
closely related to the lattice formulation previously given by Sugino.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX2e, no figur
Two-dimensional N=(2,2) super Yang-Mills theory on computer
We carry out preliminary numerical study of Sugino's lattice formulation
\cite{Sugino:2004qd,Sugino:2004qdf} of the two-dimensional
super Yang-Mills theory (2d SYM) with the gauge group
\SU(2). The effect of dynamical fermions is included by re-weighting a
quenched ensemble by the pfaffian factor. It appears that the complex phase of
the pfaffian due to lattice artifacts and flat directions of the classical
potential are not problematic in Monte Carlo simulation. Various one-point
supersymmetric Ward-Takahashi (WT) identities are examined for lattice spacings
up to with the fixed physical lattice size , where
denotes the gauge coupling constant in two dimensions. WT identities implied by
an exact fermionic symmetry of the formulation are confirmed in fair accuracy
and, for most of these identities, the quantum effect of dynamical fermions is
clearly observed. For WT identities expected only in the continuum limit, the
results seem to be consistent with the behavior expected from supersymmetry,
although we do not see clear distintion from the quenched simulation. We
measure also the expectation values of renormalized gauge-invariant bi-linear
operators of scalar fields.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures, the distribution of the complex phase of the
pffafian is also measured, the final version to appear in JHE
Lattice formulation of super Yang-Mills theory
We construct a lattice action for super Yang-Mills theory in
four dimensions which is local, gauge invariant, free of spectrum doubling and
possesses a single exact supersymmetry. Our construction starts from the
observation that the fermions of the continuum theory can be mapped into the
component fields of a single real anticommuting Kahler-Dirac field. The
original supersymmetry algebra then implies the existence of a nilpotent scalar
supercharge and a corresponding set of bosonic superpartners. Using this
field content we write down a -exact action and show that, with an
appropriate change of variables, it reduces to a well-known twist of super Yang-Mills theory due to Marcus. Using the discretization
prescription developed in an earlier paper on the theory in two
dimensions we are able to translate this geometrical action to the lattice.Comment: 15 pages. 1 reference correcte
Compact Gauge Fields for Supersymmetric Lattices
We show that a large class of Euclidean extended supersymmetric lattice gauge
theories constructed in [hep-lat/0302017 - hep-lat/0503039] can be regarded as
compact formulations by using the polar decomposition of the complex link
fields. In particular, the gauge part of the supersymmetric lattice action is
the standard Wilson action. This formulation facilitates the construction of
gauge invariant operators.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures. Minor change
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