2,511 research outputs found
Calculating the Fierz Transformation for Higher Orders
We consider the higher-order Fierz transformation, which corresponds to
expanding a product of terms into a sum of products of
Dirac densities and currents. It is shown that the Fierz transformation can be
obtained by solving a large system of linear equations with fractional complex
coefficients, which is practical at least up to fourth power.Comment: 6 pages, 3 table
On different actions for the vacuum of bosonic string field theory
We study a family of kinetic operators in string field theory describing the
theory around the closed string vacuum. Those operators are based on the
analytical classical solutions of Takahashi and Tanimoto and are analogous to
the pure ghost action usually referred to as "vacuum string field theory," but
are much more general, and less singular than the pure ghost operator. The
closed string vacuum is related to the D-brane vacuum by large, singular, gauge
transformations or field redefinition, and all those different representations
are related to each other by small gauge transformations. We try to clarify the
nature of this singular gauge transformation. We also show that by choosing the
Siegel gauge one recovers the propagator proposed in hep-th/0207266 that
generates closed string surfaces.Comment: 15 page
Closed String Amplitudes from Gauge Fixed String Field Theory
Closed string diagrams are derived from cubic open string field theory using
a gauge fixed kinetic operator. The basic idea is to use a string propagator
that does not generate a boundary to the world sheet. Using this propagator and
the closed string vertex, the moduli space of closed string surfaces is
covered, so closed string scattering amplitudes should be reproduced. This
kinetic operator could be a gauge fixed form of the string field theory action
around the closed string vacuum.Comment: 10 pages, revtex, 3 figures. Discussion on the covering of moduli
expanded, version to appear in PR
Brane Decay and Death of Open Strings
We show how open strings cease to propagate when unstable D-branes decay. The
information on the propagation is encoded in BSFT two-point functions for
arbitrary profiles of open string excitations. We evaluate them in tachyon
condensation backgrounds corresponding to (i) static spatial tachyon kink (=
lower dimensional BPS D-brane) and (ii) homogeneous rolling tachyon. For (i)
the propagation is restricted to the directions along the tachyon kink, while
for (ii) all the open string excitations cease to propagate at late time and
are subject to a collapsed light cone characterized by Carrollian contraction
of Lorentz group.Comment: 19 pages, published version (typos corrected, a reference added
Time Dependent Solution in Cubic String Field Theory
We study time dependent solutions in cubic open string field theory which are
expected to describe the configuration of the rolling tachyon. We consider the
truncated system consisting of component fields of level zero and two, which
are expanded in terms of cosh n x^0 modes. For studying the large time behavior
of the solution we need to know the coefficients of all and, in particular,
large n modes. We examine numerically the coefficients of the n-th mode, and
find that it has the leading n-dependence of the form (-\beta)^n \lambda^{-n^2}
multiplied by a peculiar subleading part with peaks at
n=2^m=4,8,16,32,64,128,.... This behavior is also reproduced analytically by
solving simplified equations of motion of the tachyon system.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures, LaTeX2e, v3:minor correction
Statistical methods applied to composition studies of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays
The mass composition of high energy cosmic rays above eV is a
crucial issue to solve some open questions in astrophysics such as the
acceleration and propagation mechanisms. Unfortunately, the standard procedures
to identify the primary particle of a cosmic ray shower have low efficiency
mainly due to large fluctuations and limited experimental observables. We
present a statistical method for composition studies based on several
measurable features of the longitudinal development of the CR shower such as
, , asymmetry, skewness and kurtosis. Principal component
analysis (PCA) was used to evaluate the relevance of each parameter in the
representation of the overall shower features and a linear discriminant
analysis (LDA) was used to combine the different parameters to maximize the
discrimination between different particle showers. The new parameter from LDA
provides a separation between primary gammas, proton and iron nuclei better
than the procedures based on only. The method proposed here was
successfully tested in the energy range from to eV even
when limitations of shower track length were included in order to simulate the
field of view of fluorescence telescopes
Spin oscillations in transient diffusion of a spin pulse in n-type semiconductor quantum wells
By studying the time and spatial evolution of a pulse of the spin
polarization in -type semiconductor quantum wells, we highlight the
importance of the off-diagonal spin coherence in spin diffusion and transport.
Spin oscillations and spin polarization reverse along the the direction of spin
diffusion in the absence of the applied magnetic field are predicted from our
investigation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in PR
The Tachyon Potential in the Sliver Frame
We evaluate the tachyon potential in the Schnabl gauge through off-shell
computations in the sliver frame. As an application of the results of our
computations, we provide a strong evidence that Schnabl's analytic solution for
tachyon condensation in open string field theory represents a saddle point
configuration of the full tachyon potential. Additionally we verify that
Schnabl's analytic solution lies on the minimum of the effective tachyon
potential.Comment: v1: 19 pages, 1 figure, 1 table; v2: 20 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables, 1
reference added, comments added; v3: 21 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables, 4
references added, comments adde
Specific heat and high-temperature series of lattice models: interpolation scheme and examples on quantum spin systems in one and two dimensions
We have developed a new method for evaluating the specific heat of lattice
spin systems. It is based on the knowledge of high-temperature series
expansions, the total entropy of the system and the low-temperature expected
behavior of the specific heat as well as the ground-state energy. By the choice
of an appropriate variable (entropy as a function of energy), a stable
interpolation scheme between low and high temperature is performed. Contrary to
previous methods, the constraint that the total entropy is log(2S+1) for a spin
S on each site is automatically satisfied. We present some applications to
quantum spin models on one- and two- dimensional lattices. Remarkably, in most
cases, a good accuracy is obtained down to zero temperature.Comment: 10 pages (RevTeX 4) including 11 eps figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Patterns in Open String Field Theory Solutions
In open string field theory the kinetic operator mixes matter and ghost
sectors, and thus the ghost structure of classical solutions is not universal.
Nevertheless, we have found from numerical analysis that certain ratios of
expectation values for states involving pure ghost excitations appear to be
universal. We give an analytic expression for these ratios and find good
evidence that they are common to all known solutions of open string field
theory, including the tachyon vacuum solution, lump solutions and string fields
representing marginal deformations. We also draw attention to a close
correspondence between the expectation values for the pure matter components in
the tachyon vacuum solution and those in the solution of a simpler equation for
a ghost number zero string field. Finally we observe that the action of L_0 on
the tachyon condensate gives a state that is approximately factorized into a
matter and a ghost part.Comment: 21 pages, LaTe
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