1,602 research outputs found
The Microscopic Dirac Operator Spectrum
We review the exact results for microscopic Dirac operator spectra based on
either Random Matrix Theory, or, equivalently, chiral Lagrangians. Implications
for lattice calculations are discussed.Comment: Lattice2001(Plenary), 9 page
The Dirac Operator Spectrum and Effective Field Theory
When chiral symmetry is spontaneously broken, the low-energy part of the
Dirac operator spectrum can be computed analytically in the chiral limit. The
tool is effective field theory or, equivalently in this case, Random Matrix
Theory.Comment: LaTeX, 12 page
QCD Dirac Spectra With and Without Random Matrix Theory
Recent work on the spectrum of the Euclidean Dirac operator spectrum show
that the exact microscopic spectral density can be computed in both random
matrix theory, and directly from field theory. Exact relations to effective
Lagrangians with additional quark species form the bridge between the two
formulations. Taken together with explicit computations in the chGUE random
matrix ensemble, a series of universality theorems are used to prove that the
finite-volume QCD partition function coincides exactly with the universal
double-microscopic limit of chUE random matrix partition functions. In the
limit where N_f and N_c both go to infinity with the ratio N_f/N_c fixed, the
relevant effective Lagrangian undergoes a third order phase transition of
Gross-Witten type.Comment: LaTeX, 6 page
Quenched and Unquenched Chiral Perturbation Theory in the \epsilon-Regime
The chiral limit of finite-volume QCD is the -regime of the theory.
We discuss how this regime can be used for determining low-energy observables
of QCD by means of comparisons between lattice simulations and quenched and
unquenched chiral perturbation theory. The quenched theory suffers in the
-regime from ``quenched finite volume logs'', the finite-volume
analogs of quenched chiral logs.Comment: LaTeX, 7 pages, contribution to LHP200
Dirac Operator Spectra from Finite-Volume Partition Functions
Based on the relation to random matrix theory, exact expressions for all
microscopic spectral correlators of the Dirac operator can be computed from
finite-volume partition functions. This is illustrated for the case of
gauge theories with and fermions in the fundamental
representation.Comment: LaTeX, 6 page
Spectral Sum Rules of the Dirac operator and Partially Quenched Chiral Condensates
Exploiting Virasoro constraints on the effective finite-volume partition
function, we derive generalized Leutwyler-Smilga spectral sum rules of the
Dirac operator to high order. By introducing fermion species of equal
masses, we next use the Virasoro constraints to compute two (low-mass and
large-mass) expansions of the partially quenched chiral condensate through the
replica method of letting . The low-mass expansion can only be
pushed to a certain finite order due to de Wit-'t Hooft poles, but the
large-mass expansion can be carried through to arbitrarily high order. Results
agree exactly with earlier results obtained through both Random Matrix Theory
and the supersymmetric method.Comment: LaTeX, 19 pages, misprints correcte
Generalized Lagrangian Master Equations
We discuss the geometry of the Lagrangian quantization scheme based on
(generalized) Schwinger-Dyson BRST symmetries. When a certain set of ghost
fields are integrated out of the path integral, we recover the
Batalin-Vilkovisky formalism, now extended to arbitrary functional measures for
the classical fields. Keeping the ghosts reveals the crucial role played by a
natural connection on the space of fields.Comment: LaTeX, 12 pages, CERN--TH-7247/9
Partition Function Zeros of an Ising Spin Glass
We study the pattern of zeros emerging from exact partition function
evaluations of Ising spin glasses on conventional finite lattices of varying
sizes. A large number of random bond configurations are probed in the framework
of quenched averages. This study is motivated by the relationship between
hierarchical lattice models whose partition function zeros fall on Julia sets
and chaotic renormalization flows in such models with frustration, and by the
possible connection of the latter with spin glass behaviour. In any finite
volume, the simultaneous distribution of the zeros of all partition functions
can be viewed as part of the more general problem of finding the location of
all the zeros of a certain class of random polynomials with positive integer
coefficients. Some aspects of this problem have been studied in various
branches of mathematics, and we show how polynomial mappings which are used in
graph theory to classify graphs, may help in characterizing the distribution of
zeros. We finally discuss the possible limiting set as the volume is sent to
infinity.Comment: LaTeX, 18 pages, hardcopies of 15 figures by request to
[email protected], CERN--TH-7383/94 (a note and a reference added
Qualitons from QCD
Qualitons, topological excitations with the quantum numbers of quarks, may
provide an accurate description of what is meant by constituent quarks in QCD.
Their existence hinges crucially on an effective Lagrangian description of QCD
in which a pseudoscalar colour-octet of fields enters as a new variable. We
show here how such new fields may be extracted from the fundamental QCD
Lagrangian using the gauge-symmetric collective field technique.Comment: LaTeX, 12 pages, CERN--TH-7073/9
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