39 research outputs found

    The Spatial String Tension in the Deconfined Phase of the (3+1)-Dimensional SU(2) Gauge Theory

    Get PDF
    We present results of a detailed investigation of the temperature dependence of the spatial string tension in SU(2) gauge theory. We show, for the first time, that the spatial string tension is scaling on the lattice and thus is non-vanishing in the continuum limit. It is temperature independent below Tc and rises rapidly above. For temperatures larger than 2Tc we find a scaling behaviour consistent with sigma_s(T) = 0.136(11) g^4(T) T^2, where g(T) is the 2-loop running coupling constant with a scale parameter determined as Lambda_T = 0.076(13) Tc.Comment: 8 pages (Latex, shell archive, 3 PostScript figures), HLRZ-93-43, BI-TP 93/30, FSU-SCRI-93-76, WUB 93-2

    Adjoint Wilson Line in SU(2) Lattice Gauge Theory

    Full text link
    The behavior of the adjoint Wilson line in finite-temperature, SU(2)SU(2), lattice gauge theory is discussed. The expectation value of the line and the associated excess free energy reveal the response of the finite-temperature gauge field to the presence of an adjoint source. The value of the adjoint line at the critical point of the deconfining phase transition is highlighted. This is not calculable in weak or strong coupling. It receives contributions from all scales and is nonanalytic at the critical point. We determine the general form of the free energy. It includes a linearly divergent term that is perturbative in the bare coupling and a finite, nonperturbative piece. We use a simple flux tube model to estimate the value of the nonperturbative piece. This provides the normalization needed to estimate the behavior of the line as one moves along the critical curve into the weak coupling region.Comment: 21 pages, no figures, Latex/Revtex 3, UCD-93-1

    Towards an engineering model for curve squeal

    Get PDF
    Curve squeal is a strong tonal noise that may arise when a railway vehicle negotiates a curve. The wheel/rail contact model is the central part of prediction models, describing the frictional instability occurring in the contact during squeal. A previously developed time-domain squeal model considers the wheel and rail dynamics, and the wheel/rail contact is solved using Kalker’s nonlinear transient CONTACT algorithm with Coulomb friction. In this paper, contact models with different degree of simplification are compared to CONTACT within the previously developed squeal model in order to determine a suitable contact algorithm for an engineering curve squeal model. Kalker’s steady-state FASTSIM is evaluated, and, without further modification, shows unsatisfying results. An alternative transient single-point contact algorithm named SPOINT is formulated with the friction model derived from CONTACT. Comparing with the original model results, the SPOINT implementation results are promising and similar to results from CONTACT

    Phase Transitions in SO(3) Lattice Gauge Theory

    Get PDF
    The phase diagram of SO(3) lattice gauge theory is investigated by Monte Carlo techniques on both symmetric and asymmetric lattices with a view (i) to understanding the relationship between the bulk transition and the deconfinement transition, and (ii) to resolving the current ambiguity about the nature of the high temperature phase. A number of tests, including an introduction of a magnetic field and measurement of different correlation functions in the phases with positive and negative values for the adjoint Polyakov line, lead to the conclusion that the two phases correspond to the same physical state. Studies on lattices of different sizes reveal only one phase transition for this theory on all of them and it appears to have a deconfining nature.Comment: Latex 19 pages, 9 figures. Minor changes in introduction and summary sections. The version that appeared in journa

    Quarkonium Suppression

    Get PDF
    I discuss quarkonium suppression in equilibriated strongly interacting matter. After a brief review of basic features of quarkonium production I discuss the application of recent lattice data on the heavy quark potential to the problem of quarkonium dissociation as well as the problem of direct lattice determination of quarkonium properties in finite temperature lattice QCD.Comment: Invited plenary talk presented on 4th International Conference on Physics and Astrophysics of Quark Gluon Plasma (ICPAQGP-2001), November 26-30, 2001, Jaipur; 12 pp, LaTeX, uses pramana.st

    Free energy of an SU(2) monopole-antimonopole pair

    Full text link
    We present a high-statistic numerical study of the free energy of a monopole-antimonopole pair in pure SU(2) theory. We find that the monopole-antimonopole interaction potential exhibits a screened behavior, as one would expect in presence of a monopole condensate. Screening occurs both in the low-temperature, confining phase of the theory, and in the high-temperature deconfined phase, with no evidence of a discontinuity of the screening mass across the transition. The mass of the object responsible for the screening at low temperature is approximately twice the established value for the lightest glueball, indicating a prevalent coupling to glueball excitations. At high temperature, the screening mass increases. We contrast the behavior of the quantum system with that of the corresponding classical system, where the monopole-antimonopole potential is of the Coulomb type.Comment: Latex, 22 pages, 8 figures. A mistake in the computer program implementing the multihistogram method has been corrected and all the affected numerical data have been revised. The main conclusions of the paper are unchanged, but the screening masses turn out somehow larger. (We thank Philippe de Forcrand for correspondence which helped us find the error.

    Scaling and Asymptotic Scaling in the SU(2) Gauge Theory

    Get PDF
    We determine the critical couplings for the deconfinement phase transition in SU(2)SU(2) gauge theory on Nτ×Nσ3N_\tau \times N_\sigma^3 lattices with Nτ=8N_\tau = 8 and 16 and NσN_\sigma varying between 16 and 48. A comparison with string tension data shows scaling of the ratio Tc/σT_c / \sqrt{\sigma} in the entire coupling regime β=2.302.75\beta =2.30-2.75, while the individual quantities still exhibit large scaling violations. We find Tc/σ=0.69(2)T_c / \sqrt{\sigma}=0.69(2). We also discuss in detail the extrapolation of Tc/LambdaMˉSˉT_c / Lambda_{\rm{\bar{M} \bar{S}}} and σ/LambdaMˉSˉ\sqrt{\sigma} / Lambda_{\rm{\bar{M}\bar{S}}} to the continuum limit. Our result, which is consistent with the above ratio, is Tc/LambdaMˉSˉ=1.23(11)T_c / Lambda_{\rm{\bar{M}\bar{S}}} = 1.23(11) and σ/LambdaMˉSˉ=1.79(12)\sqrt{\sigma} / Lambda_{\rm{\bar{M}\bar{S}}} = 1.79(12). We also comment upon corresponding results for SU(3)SU(3) gauge theory and four flavour QCD.Comment: 27 pages with 9 postscript figures included. Plain TeX file (needed macros are included). BI-TP 92-26, FSU-SCRI-92-103, HLRZ-92-39 (Quote of UKQCD string tension, and accordingly Figs. 5 and 7a, plus a few typo's corrected.

    Ab Initio Calculation of Relativistic Corrections to the Static Interquark potential I: SU(2) Gauge Theory

    Get PDF
    We test the capability of state-of-the-art lattice techniques for a precise determination of relativistic corrections to the static interquark potential, by use of SU(2) gauge theory. Emphasis is put on the short range structure of the spin dependent potentials, with lattice resolution a ranging from a approx 0.04 fm (at beta=2.74) down to a approx 0.02 fm (at beta=2.96) on volumes of 32^4 and 48^4 lattice sites. We find a new short range Coulomb-like contribution to the spin-orbit potential V_1'.Comment: 37 pages REVTeX with 20 encapsuled ps figure

    Infrared behavior of the gluon propagator in lattice Landau gauge: the three-dimensional case

    Full text link
    We evaluate numerically the three-momentum-space gluon propagator in the lattice Landau gauge, for three-dimensional pure-SU(2) lattice gauge theory with periodic boundary conditions. Simulations are done for nine different values of the coupling β\beta, from β=0\beta = 0 (strong coupling) to β=6.0\beta = 6.0 (in the scaling region), and for lattice sizes up to V=643V = 64^3. In the limit of large lattice volume we observe, in all cases, a gluon propagator decreasing for momenta smaller than a constant value pdecp_{dec}. From our data we estimate pdec350p_{dec} \approx 350 MeV. The result of a gluon propagator decreasing in the infrared limit has a straightforward interpretation as resulting from the proximity of the so-called first Gribov horizon in the infrared directions.Comment: 14 pages, BI-TP 99/03 preprint, correction in the Acknowledgments section. To appear in Phys.Rev.

    SU(2) Landau gluon propagator on a 140^3 lattice

    Full text link
    We present a numerical study of the gluon propagator in lattice Landau gauge for three-dimensional pure-SU(2) lattice gauge theory at couplings beta = 4.2, 5.0, 6.0 and for lattice volumes V = 40^3, 80^3, 140^3. In the limit of large V we observe a decreasing gluon propagator for momenta smaller than p_{dec} = 350^{+ 100}_{- 50} MeV. Data are well fitted by Gribov-like formulae and seem to indicate an infra-red critical exponent kappa slightly above 0.6, in agreement with recent analytic results.Comment: 5 pages with 2 figures and 3 tables; added a paragraph on discretization effect
    corecore