654 research outputs found

    Restricting affine Toda theory to the half-line

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    We restrict affine Toda field theory to the half-line by imposing certain boundary conditions at x=0x=0. The resulting theory possesses the same spectrum of solitons and breathers as affine Toda theory on the whole line. The classical solutions describing the reflection of these particles off the boundary are obtained from those on the whole line by a kind of method of mirror images. Depending on the boundary condition chosen, the mirror must be placed either at, in front, or behind the boundary. We observe that incoming solitons are converted into outgoing antisolitons during reflection. Neumann boundary conditions allow additional solutions which are interpreted as boundary excitations (boundary breathers). For an(1)a_n^{(1)} and cn(1)c_n^{(1)} Toda theories, on which we concentrate mostly, the boundary conditions which we study are among the integrable boundary conditions classified by Corrigan et.al. As applications of our work we study the vacuum solutions of real coupling Toda theory on the half-line and we perform semiclassical calculations which support recent conjectures for the a2(1)a_2^{(1)} soliton reflection matrices by Gandenberger.Comment: 39 pages, 4 ps figure

    Quantum group symmetry of integrable models on the half-line

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    This contribution to the Proceedings of the Workshop on Integrable Theories, Solitons and Duality in Sao Paulo in July 2002 summarizes results from the papers hep-th/0112023 and math.QA/0208043. We derive the non-local conserved charges in the sine-Gordon model and affine Toda field theories on the half-line. They generate new kinds of symmetry algebras that are coideals of the usual quantum groups. We show how intertwiners of tensor product representations of these algebras lead to solutions of the reflection equation. We describe how this method for finding solutions to the reflection equation parallels the previously known method of using intertwiners of quantum groups to find solutions to the Yang-Baxter equation.Comment: Contribution to the Proceedings of the Workshop on Integrable Theories, Solitons and Duality in Sao Paulo in July 2002, 11 pages, JHEP3 latex styl

    The Problem of Differential Calculus on Quantum Groups

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    The bicovariant differential calculi on quantum groups of Woronowicz have the drawback that their dimensions do not agree with that of the corresponding classical calculus. In this paper we discuss the first-order differential calculus which arises from a simple quantum Lie algebra. This calculus has the correct dimension and is shown to be bicovariant and complete. But it does not satisfy the Leibniz rule. For sl_n this approach leads to a differential calculus which satisfies a simple generalization of the Leibniz rule.Comment: Contribution to the proceedings of the Colloquium on Quantum Groups and Integrable Systems Prague, June 1996. amslatex, 9 pages. For related information see http://www.mth.kcl.ac.uk/~delius/q-lie.htm

    Quantum Lie algebras; their existence, uniqueness and qq-antisymmetry

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    Quantum Lie algebras are generalizations of Lie algebras which have the quantum parameter h built into their structure. They have been defined concretely as certain submodules of the quantized enveloping algebras. On them the quantum Lie bracket is given by the quantum adjoint action. Here we define for any finite-dimensional simple complex Lie algebra g an abstract quantum Lie algebra g_h independent of any concrete realization. Its h-dependent structure constants are given in terms of inverse quantum Clebsch-Gordan coefficients. We then show that all concrete quantum Lie algebras are isomorphic to an abstract quantum Lie algebra g_h. In this way we prove two important properties of quantum Lie algebras: 1) all quantum Lie algebras associated to the same g are isomorphic, 2) the quantum Lie bracket of any quantum Lie algebra is qq-antisymmetric. We also describe a construction of quantum Lie algebras which establishes their existence.Comment: 18 pages, amslatex. Files also available from http://www.mth.kcl.ac.uk/~delius/q-lie/qlie_biblio/qlieuniq.htm
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