178 research outputs found
The phase diagram of an Ising model on a polymerized random surface
We construct a random surface model with a string susceptibility exponent one
quarter by taking an Ising model on a random surface and introducing an
additional degree of freedom which amounts to allowing certain outgrowths on
the surfaces. Fine tuning the Ising temperature and the weight factor for
outgrowths we find a triple point where the susceptibility exponent is one
quarter. At this point magnetized and nonmagnetized gravity phases meet a
branched polymer phase.Comment: Latex file, 10 pages, macros included. Two EPS figure
Avalanche size distribution in a random walk model
We introduce a simple model for the size distribution of avalanches based on
the idea that the front of an avalanche can be described by a directed random
walk. The model captures some of the qualitative features of earthquakes,
avalanches and other self-organized critical phenomena in one dimension. We
find scaling laws relating the frequency, size and width of avalanches and an
exponent in the size distribution law.Comment: 16 pages Latex, macros included, 3 postscript figure
Bottleneck Surfaces and Worldsheet Geometry of Higher-Curvature Quantum Gravity
We describe a simple lattice model of higher-curvature quantum gravity in two
dimensions and study the phase structure of the theory as a function of the
curvature coupling. It is shown that the ensemble of flat graphs is
entropically unstable to the formation of baby universes. In these simplified
models the growth in graphs exhibits a branched polymer behaviour in the phase
directly before the flattening transition.Comment: 18 pages LaTeX, 3 .eps figures, uses epsf.tex; clarifying comments
added and typos correcte
Symmetries in QFT
This document contains notes from the graduate lecture course, "Symmetries in
QFT" given by J.F.Wheater at Oxford University in Hilary term. The course gives
an informal introduction to QFT.Comment: Lecture note
A restricted dimer model on a 2-dimensional random causal triangulation
We introduce a restricted hard dimer model on a random causal triangulation
that is exactly solvable and generalizes a model recently proposed by Atkin and
Zohren. We show that the latter model exhibits unusual behaviour at its
multicritical point; in particular, its Hausdorff dimension equals 3 and not
3/2 as would be expected from general scaling arguments. When viewed as a
special case of the generalized model introduced here we show that this
behaviour is not generic and therefore is not likely to represent the true
behaviour of the full dimer model on a random causal triangulation.Comment: 26 pages, typos corrected, slight generalization adde
Quasi-Topological Field Theories in Two Dimensions as Soluble Models
We study a class of lattice field theories in two dimensions that includes
gauge theories. Given a two dimensional orientable surface of genus , the
partition function is defined for a triangulation consisting of
triangles of area . The reason these models are called
quasi-topological is that depends on , and but not on the
details of the triangulation. They are also soluble in the sense that the
computation of their partition functions can be reduced to a soluble one
dimensional problem. We show that the continuum limit is well defined if the
model approaches a topological field theory in the zero area limit, i.e.,
with finite . We also show that the universality classes of
such quasi-topological lattice field theories can be easily classified.
Yang-Mills and generalized Yang-Mills theories appear as particular examples of
such continuum limits.Comment: 23 pages, 16 figures, uses psbox.te
Surface tension in an intrinsic curvature model with fixed one-dimensional boundaries
A triangulated fixed connectivity surface model is investigated by using the
Monte Carlo simulation technique. In order to have the macroscopic surface
tension \tau, the vertices on the one-dimensional boundaries are fixed as the
edges (=circles) of the tubular surface in the simulations. The size of the
tubular surface is chosen such that the projected area becomes the regular
square of area A. An intrinsic curvature energy with a microscopic bending
rigidity b is included in the Hamiltonian. We found that the model undergoes a
first-order transition of surface fluctuations at finite b, where the surface
tension \tau discontinuously changes. The gap of \tau remains constant at the
transition point in a certain range of values A/N^\prime at sufficiently large
N^\prime, which is the total number of vertices excluding the fixed vertices on
the boundaries. The value of \tau remains almost zero in the wrinkled phase at
the transition point while \tau remains negative finite in the smooth phase in
that range of A/N^\prime.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
First-order transition of tethered membranes in 3d space
We study a model of phantom tethered membranes, embedded in three-dimensional
space, by extensive Monte Carlo simulations. The membranes have hexagonal
lattice structure where each monomer is interacting with six nearest-neighbors
(NN). Tethering interaction between NN, as well as curvature penalty between NN
triangles are taken into account. This model is new in the sense that NN
interactions are taken into account by a truncated Lennard-Jones potential
including both repulsive and attractive parts. The main result of our study is
that the system undergoes a first-order crumpling transition from low
temperature flat phase to high temperature crumpled phase, in contrast with
early numerical results on models of tethered membranes.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Random walks on combs
We develop techniques to obtain rigorous bounds on the behaviour of random
walks on combs. Using these bounds we calculate exactly the spectral dimension
of random combs with infinite teeth at random positions or teeth with random
but finite length. We also calculate exactly the spectral dimension of some
fixed non-translationally invariant combs. We relate the spectral dimension to
the critical exponent of the mass of the two-point function for random walks on
random combs, and compute mean displacements as a function of walk duration. We
prove that the mean first passage time is generally infinite for combs with
anomalous spectral dimension.Comment: 42 pages, 4 figure
The spectral dimension of generic trees
We define generic ensembles of infinite trees. These are limits as
of ensembles of finite trees of fixed size , defined in terms
of a set of branching weights. Among these ensembles are those supported on
trees with vertices of a uniformly bounded order. The associated probability
measures are supported on trees with a single spine and Hausdorff dimension
. Our main result is that their spectral dimension is , and
that the critical exponent of the mass, defined as the exponential decay rate
of the two-point function along the spine, is 1/3
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