560 research outputs found
No confinement without Coulomb confinement
We compare the physical potential of an external quark-antiquark
pair in the representation of SU(N), to the color-Coulomb potential which is the instantaneous part of the 44-component of the gluon
propagator in Coulomb gauge, D_{44}(\vx,t) = V_{\rm coul}(|\vx|) \delta(t) +
(non-instantaneous). We show that if is confining, , then the inequality holds asymptotically at large , where is the Casimir in
the representation . This implies that is also
confining.Comment: 9 page
Renormalization-group Calculation of Color-Coulomb Potential
We report here on the application of the perturbative renormalization-group
to the Coulomb gauge in QCD. We use it to determine the high-momentum
asymptotic form of the instantaneous color-Coulomb potential and
of the vacuum polarization . These quantities are
renormalization-group invariants, in the sense that they are independent of the
renormalization scheme. A scheme-independent definition of the running coupling
constant is provided by , and of , where , and
is a finite QCD mass scale. We also show how to calculate the
coefficients in the expansion of the invariant -function , where all coefficients are scheme-independent.Comment: 24 pages, 1 figure, TeX file. Minor modifications, incorporating
referee's suggestion
Lattice Gauge Fixing as Quenching and the Violation of Spectral Positivity
Lattice Landau gauge and other related lattice gauge fixing schemes are known
to violate spectral positivity. The most direct sign of the violation is the
rise of the effective mass as a function of distance. The origin of this
phenomenon lies in the quenched character of the auxiliary field used to
implement lattice gauge fixing, and is similar to quenched QCD in this respect.
This is best studied using the PJLZ formalism, leading to a class of covariant
gauges similar to the one-parameter class of covariant gauges commonly used in
continuum gauge theories. Soluble models are used to illustrate the origin of
the violation of spectral positivity. The phase diagram of the lattice theory,
as a function of the gauge coupling and the gauge-fixing parameter
, is similar to that of the unquenched theory, a Higgs model of a type
first studied by Fradkin and Shenker. The gluon propagator is interpreted as
yielding bound states in the confined phase, and a mixture of fundamental
particles in the Higgs phase, but lattice simulation shows the two phases are
connected. Gauge field propagators from the simulation of an SU(2) lattice
gauge theory on a lattice are well described by a quenched mass-mixing
model. The mass of the lightest state, which we interpret as the gluon mass,
appears to be independent of for sufficiently large .Comment: 28 pages, 14 figures, RevTeX
Relations between the Gribov-horizon and center-vortex confinement scenarios
We review numerical evidence on connections between the center-vortex and
Gribov-horizon confinement scenarios.Comment: Plenary talk presented by S. Olejnik at "Quark Confinement and the
Hadron Spectrum VI", Villasimius, Sardinia, Italy, Sep. 21-25, 2004; 10
pages, 11 EPS figures, uses AIP Proceedings style file
Coulomb Energy, Remnant Symmetry, and the Phases of Non-Abelian Gauge Theories
We show that the confining property of the one-gluon propagator, in Coulomb
gauge, is linked to the unbroken realization of a remnant gauge symmetry which
exists in this gauge. An order parameter for the remnant gauge symmetry is
introduced, and its behavior is investigated in a variety of models via
numerical simulations. We find that the color-Coulomb potential, associated
with the gluon propagator, grows linearly with distance both in the confined
and - surprisingly - in the high-temperature deconfined phase of pure
Yang-Mills theory. We also find a remnant symmetry-breaking transition in SU(2)
gauge-Higgs theory which completely isolates the Higgs from the
(pseudo)confinement region of the phase diagram. This transition exists despite
the absence, pointed out long ago by Fradkin and Shenker, of a genuine
thermodynamic phase transition separating the two regions.Comment: 18 pages, 19 figures, revtex
Properties of Color-Coulomb String Tension
We study the properties of the color-Coulomb string tension obtained from the
instantaneous part of gluon propagators in Coulomb gauge using quenched SU(3)
lattice simulation.
In the confinement phase, the dependence of the color-Coulomb string tension
on the QCD coupling constant is smaller than that of the Wilson loop string
tension. On the other hand, in the deconfinement phase, the color-Coulomb
string tension does not vanish even for , the temperature
dependence of which is comparable with the magnetic scaling, dominating the
high temperature QCD. Thus, the color-Coulomb string tension is not an order
parameter of QGP phase transition.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures; one new figure added, typos corrected, version
to appear in PR
Numerical Study of Gluon Propagator and Confinement Scenario in Minimal Coulomb Gauge
We present numerical results in SU(2) lattice gauge theory for the
space-space and time-time components of the gluon propagator at equal time in
the minimal Coulomb gauge. It is found that the equal-time would-be physical
3-dimensionally transverse gluon propagator vanishes at
when extrapolated to infinite lattice volume, whereas the
instantaneous color-Coulomb potential is strongly enhanced at
. This has a natural interpretation in a confinement scenario in
which the would-be physical gluons leave the physical spectrum while the
long-range Coulomb force confines color. Gribov's formula provides an excellent fit to our data
for the 3-dimensionally transverse equal-time gluon propagator
for relevant values of .Comment: 23 pages, 12 figures, TeX file. Minor modifications, incorporating
referee's suggestion
- …