We investigate properties of low-energy QCD in a finite spatial volume, but
with arbitrary temperature. In the limit of small temperature and small cube
size compared to the pion Compton wavelength, Leutwyler has shown that the
effective theory describing low-energy QCD reduces to that of quantum mechanics
on the coset manifold, which is the so-called delta regime of chiral
perturbation theory. We solve this quantum mechanics analytically for the case
of a U(1)L×U(1)R subgroup of chiral symmetry, and numerically for
the case of SU(2)L×SU(2)R. We utilize the quantum mechanical
spectrum to compute the mass gap and chiral condensate, and investigate
symmetry restoration in a finite spatial volume as a function of temperature.
Because we obtain the spectrum for non-zero values of the quark mass, we are
able to interpolate between the rigid rotor limit, which emerges at vanishing
quark mass, and the harmonic approximation, which is referred to as the
p-regime. We find that the applicability of perturbation theory about the rotor
limit largely requires lighter-than-physical quarks. As a stringent check of
our results, we raise the temperature to that of the inverse cube size. When
this condition is met, the quantum mechanics reduces to a matrix model. The
condensate we obtain in this limit agrees with that determined analytically in
the epsilon regime.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figure