1,702 research outputs found
Selected inversion as key to a stable Langevin evolution across the QCD phase boundary
We present new results of full QCD at nonzero chemical potential. In PRD 92,
094516 (2015) the complex Langevin method was shown to break down when the
inverse coupling decreases and enters the transition region from the deconfined
to the confined phase. We found that the stochastic technique used to estimate
the drift term can be very unstable for indefinite matrices. This may be
avoided by using the full inverse of the Dirac operator, which is, however, too
costly for four-dimensional lattices. The major breakthrough in this work was
achieved by realizing that the inverse elements necessary for the drift term
can be computed efficiently using the selected inversion technique provided by
the parallel sparse direct solver package PARDISO. In our new study we show
that no breakdown of the complex Langevin method is encountered and that
simulations can be performed across the phase boundary.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, Proceedings of the 35th International Symposium
on Lattice Field Theory, Granada, Spai
Evading the sign problem in random matrix simulations
We show how the sign problem occurring in dynamical simulations of random
matrices at nonzero chemical potential can be avoided by judiciously combining
matrices into subsets. For each subset the sum of fermionic determinants is
real and positive such that importance sampling can be used in Monte Carlo
simulations. The number of matrices per subset is proportional to the matrix
dimension. We measure the chiral condensate and observe that the statistical
error is independent of the chemical potential and grows linearly with the
matrix dimension, which contrasts strongly with its exponential growth in
reweighting methods.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, minor corrections, as published in Phys. Rev.
Let
Reweighted complex Langevin and its application to two-dimensional QCD
We present the reweighted complex Langevin method, which enlarges the
applicability range of the complex Langevin method by reweighting the complex
trajectories. In this reweighting procedure both the auxiliary and target
ensembles have a complex action. We validate the method by applying it to
two-dimensional strong-coupling QCD at nonzero chemical potential, and observe
that it gives access to parameter regions that could otherwise not be reached
with the complex Langevin method.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the 34th International Symposium
on Lattice Field Theory, Southampton, U
Sign problem and subsets in one-dimensional QCD
We present a subset method that solves the sign problem for QCD at nonzero
quark chemical potential in 0+1 dimensions. The subsets of gauge configurations
are constructed using the center symmetry of the SU(3) group. These subsets
completely solve the sign problem for up to five flavors. For a larger number
of flavors the sign problem slowly reappears, and we propose an extension of
the subsets that also solves the sign problem for these cases. The subset
method allows for numerical simulations of the model at nonzero chemical
potential. We also present some preliminary results on subsets for QCD in two,
three, and four dimensions.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, presented at the 31st International Symposium on
Lattice Field Theory (Lattice 2013), 29 July - 3 August 2013, Mainz, Germany;
one reference added, Table 1 update
A nested Krylov subspace method to compute the sign function of large complex matrices
We present an acceleration of the well-established Krylov-Ritz methods to
compute the sign function of large complex matrices, as needed in lattice QCD
simulations involving the overlap Dirac operator at both zero and nonzero
baryon density. Krylov-Ritz methods approximate the sign function using a
projection on a Krylov subspace. To achieve a high accuracy this subspace must
be taken quite large, which makes the method too costly. The new idea is to
make a further projection on an even smaller, nested Krylov subspace. If
additionally an intermediate preconditioning step is applied, this projection
can be performed without affecting the accuracy of the approximation, and a
substantial gain in efficiency is achieved for both Hermitian and non-Hermitian
matrices. The numerical efficiency of the method is demonstrated on lattice
configurations of sizes ranging from 4^4 to 10^4, and the new results are
compared with those obtained with rational approximation methods.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, minor corrections, extended analysis of the
preconditioning ste
Progress on Complex Langevin simulations of a finite density matrix model for QCD
We study the Stephanov model, which is an RMT model for QCD at finite
density, using the Complex Langevin algorithm. Naive implementation of the
algorithm shows convergence towards the phase quenched or quenched theory
rather than to intended theory with dynamical quarks. A detailed analysis of
this issue and a potential resolution of the failure of this algorithm are
discussed. We study the effect of gauge cooling on the Dirac eigenvalue
distribution and time evolution of the norm for various cooling norms, which
were specifically designed to remove the pathologies of the complex Langevin
evolution. The cooling is further supplemented with a shifted representation
for the random matrices. Unfortunately, none of these modifications generate a
substantial improvement on the complex Langevin evolution and the final results
still do not agree with the analytical predictions.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, Proceedings of the 35th International Symposium
on Lattice Field Theory, Granada, Spai
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