SU(N) Yang-Mills theory in three dimensions, with a Chern-Simons term of
level k (an integer) added, has two dimensionful coupling constants, g2k
and g2N; its possible phases depend on the size of k relative to N. For
k≫N, this theory approaches topological Chern-Simons theory with no
Yang-Mills term, and expectation values of multiple Wilson loops yield Jones
polynomials, as Witten has shown; it can be treated semiclassically. For k=0,
the theory is badly infrared singular in perturbation theory, a
non-perturbative mass and subsequent quantum solitons are generated, and Wilson
loops show an area law. We argue that there is a phase transition between these
two behaviors at a critical value of k, called kc, with kc/N≈2±.7. Three lines of evidence are given: First, a gauge-invariant one-loop
calculation shows that the perturbative theory has tachyonic problems if k≤29N/12.The theory becomes sensible only if there is an additional dynamic
source of gauge-boson mass, just as in the k=0 case. Second, we study in a
rough approximation the free energy and show that for k≤kc there is a
non-trivial vacuum condensate driven by soliton entropy and driving a
gauge-boson dynamical mass M, while both the condensate and M vanish for k≥kc. Third, we study possible quantum solitons stemming from an effective
action having both a Chern-Simons mass m and a (gauge-invariant) dynamical
mass M. We show that if M \gsim 0.5 m, there are finite-action quantum
sphalerons, while none survive in the classical limit M=0, as shown earlier
by D'Hoker and Vinet. There are also quantum topological vortices smoothly
vanishing as M→0.Comment: 36 pages, latex, two .eps and three .ps figures in a gzipped
uuencoded fil