4,453 research outputs found

    Decomposition of entanglement entropy in lattice gauge theory

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    We consider entanglement entropy between regions of space in lattice gauge theory. The Hilbert space corresponding to a region of space includes edge states that transform nontrivially under gauge transformations. By decomposing the edge states in irreducible representations of the gauge group, the entropy of an arbitrary state is expressed as the sum of three positive terms: a term associated with the classical Shannon entropy of the distribution of boundary representations, a term that appears only for non-Abelian gauge theories and depends on the dimension of the boundary representations, and a term representing nonlocal correlations. The first two terms are the entropy of the edge states, and depend only on observables measurable at the boundary. These results are applied to several examples of lattice gauge theory states, including the ground state in the strong coupling expansion of Kogut and Susskind. In all these examples we find that the entropy of the edge states is the dominant contribution to the entanglement entropy.Comment: 8 pages. v2: added references, expanded derivation, matches PRD versio

    Scale Separation Scheme for Simulating Superfluid Turbulence: Kelvin-Wave Cascade

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    A Kolmogorov-type cascade of Kelvin waves--the distortion waves on vortex lines--plays a key part in the relaxation of superfluid turbulence at low temperatures. We propose an efficient numeric scheme for simulating the Kelvin wave cascade on a single vortex line. The idea is likely to be generalizable for a full-scale simulation of different regimes of superfluid turbulence. With the new scheme, we are able to unambiguously resolve the cascade spectrum exponent, and thus to settle the controversy between recent simulations [1] and recently developed analytic theory [2]. [1] W.F. Vinen, M. Tsubota and A. Mitani, Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 135301 (2003). [2] E.V. Kozik and B.V. Svistunov, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 035301 (2004).Comment: 4 pages, RevTe

    Geometric Symmetries in Superfluid Vortex Dynamics

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    Dynamics of quantized vortex lines in a superfluid feature symmetries associated with the geometric character of the complex-valued field, w(z)=x(z)+iy(z)w(z)=x(z)+iy(z), describing the instant shape of the line. Along with a natural set of Noether's constants of motion, which---apart from their rather specific expressions in terms of w(z)w(z)---are nothing but components of the total linear and angular momenta of the fluid, the geometric symmetry brings about crucial consequences for kinetics of distortion waves on the vortex lines---the Kelvin waves. It is the geometric symmetry that renders Kelvin-wave cascade local in the wavenumber space. Similar considerations apply to other systems with purely geometric degrees of freedom.Comment: 4 REVTeX pages, minor stylistic changes, references to recent related preprints adde

    Scanning Superfluid-Turbulence Cascade by Its Low-Temperature Cutoff

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    On the basis of recently proposed scenario of the transformation of the Kolmogorov cascade into the Kelvin-wave cascade, we develop a theory of low-temperature cutoff. The theory predicts a specific behavior of the quantized vortex line density, LL, controlled by the frictional coefficient, α(T)1\alpha(T) \ll 1, responsible for the cutoff. The curve lnL(lnα)\ln L(\ln \alpha) is found to directly reflect the structure of the cascade, revealing four qualitatively distinct wavenumber regions. Excellent agreement with recent experiment by Walmsley {\it et al.} [arXiv:0710.1033]--in which L(T)L(T) has been measured down to T0.08T \sim 0.08 K--implies that the scenario of low-temperature superfluid turbulence is now experimentally validated, and allows to quantify the Kelvin-wave cascade spectrum.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, v2: extended introduction, the controversy with the scenario by L'vov et al. [13] is discussed in conclusio

    Spectral Geometry and One-loop Divergences on Manifolds with Conical Singularities

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    Geometrical form of the one-loop divergences induced by conical singularities of background manifolds is studied. To this aim the heat kernel asymptotic expansion on spaces having the structure Cα×ΣC_{\alpha}\times \Sigma near singular surface Σ\Sigma is analysed. Surface corrections to standard second and third heat coefficients are obtained explicitly in terms of angle α\alpha of a cone CαC_{\alpha} and components of the Riemann tensor. These results are compared to ones to be already known for some particular cases. Physical aspects of the surface divergences are shortly discussed.Comment: preprint DSF-13/94, 13 pages, latex fil

    Avoided intersections of nodal lines

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    We consider real eigen-functions of the Schr\"odinger operator in 2-d. The nodal lines of separable systems form a regular grid, and the number of nodal crossings equals the number of nodal domains. In contrast, for wave functions of non integrable systems nodal intersections are rare, and for random waves, the expected number of intersections in any finite area vanishes. However, nodal lines display characteristic avoided crossings which we study in the present work. We define a measure for the avoidance range and compute its distribution for the random waves ensemble. We show that the avoidance range distribution of wave functions of chaotic systems follow the expected random wave distributions, whereas for wave functions of classically integrable but quantum non-separable wave functions, the distribution is quite different. Thus, the study of the avoidance distribution provides more support to the conjecture that nodal structures of chaotic systems are reproduced by the predictions of the random waves ensemble.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
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