36,279 research outputs found
Normalization of the covariant three-body bound state vertex function
The normalization condition for the relativistic three nucleon Bethe-Salpeter
and Gross bound state vertex functions is derived, for the first time, directly
from the three body wave equations. It is also shown that the relativistic
normalization condition for the two body Gross bound state vertex function is
identical to the requirement that the bound state charge be conserved, proving
that charge is automatically conserved by this equation.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures, published version, minor typos correcte
Matrix product operators and states: NP-hardness and undecidability
Tensor network states constitute an important variational set of quantum
states for numerical studies of strongly correlated systems in condensed-matter
physics, as well as in mathematical physics. This is specifically true for
finitely correlated states or matrix-product operators, designed to capture
mixed states of one-dimensional quantum systems. It is a well-known open
problem to find an efficient algorithm that decides whether a given
matrix-product operator actually represents a physical state that in particular
has no negative eigenvalues. We address and answer this question by showing
that the problem is provably undecidable in the thermodynamic limit and that
the bounded version of the problem is NP-hard in the system size. Furthermore,
we discuss numerous connections between tensor network methods and (seemingly)
different concepts treated before in the literature, such as hidden Markov
models and tensor trains.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures; published version with improved presentatio
The stability of the spectator, Dirac, and Salpeter equations for mesons
Mesons are made of quark-antiquark pairs held together by the strong force.
The one channel spectator, Dirac, and Salpeter equations can each be used to
model this pairing. We look at cases where the relativistic kernel of these
equations corresponds to a time-like vector exchange, a scalar exchange, or a
linear combination of the two. Since the model used in this paper describes
mesons which cannot decay physically, the equations must describe stable
states. We find that this requirement is not always satisfied, and give a
complete discussion of the conditions under which the various equations give
unphysical, unstable solutions
Microscopic theory of the Andreev gap
We present a microscopic theory of the Andreev gap, i.e. the phenomenon that
the density of states (DoS) of normal chaotic cavities attached to
superconductors displays a hard gap centered around the Fermi energy. Our
approach is based on a solution of the quantum Eilenberger equation in the
regime , where and are the classical dwell time and
Ehrenfest-time, respectively. We show how quantum fluctuations eradicate the
DoS at low energies and compute the profile of the gap to leading order in the
parameter .Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; revised version, more details, extra figure, new
titl
Interacting Higher Spins and the High Energy Limit of the Bosonic String
In this note, we construct a BRST invariant cubic vertex for massless fields
of arbitrary mixed symmetry in flat space-time. The construction is based on
the vertex given in bosonic Open String Field Theory. The algebra of gauge
transformations is closed without any additional, higher than cubic, couplings
due to the presence of an infinite tower of massless fields. We briefly discuss
the generalization of this result to a curved space-time and other possible
implications.Comment: Published Version; typos corrected, references added; (v3) Some typos
corrected and a minor clarification about eq. (3.29
Confinement and the analytic structure of the one body propagator in Scalar QED
We investigate the behavior of the one body propagator in SQED. The self
energy is calculated using three different methods: i) the simple bubble
summation, ii) the Dyson-Schwinger equation, and iii) the Feynman-Schwinger
represantation. The Feynman-Schwinger representation allows an {\em exact}
analytical result. It is shown that, while the exact result produces a real
mass pole for all couplings, the bubble sum and the Dyson-Schwinger approach in
rainbow approximation leads to complex mass poles beyond a certain critical
coupling. The model exhibits confinement, yet the exact solution still has one
body propagators with {\it real} mass poles.Comment: 5 pages 2 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
The microcanonical thermodynamics of finite systems: The microscopic origin of condensation and phase separations; and the conditions for heat flow from lower to higher temperatures
Microcanonical thermodynamics allows the application of statistical mechanics
both to finite and even small systems and also to the largest, self-gravitating
ones. However, one must reconsider the fundamental principles of statistical
mechanics especially its key quantity, entropy. Whereas in conventional
thermostatistics, the homogeneity and extensivity of the system and the
concavity of its entropy are central conditions, these fail for the systems
considered here. For example, at phase separation, the entropy, S(E), is
necessarily convex to make exp[S(E)-E/T] bimodal in E. Particularly, as
inhomogeneities and surface effects cannot be scaled away, one must be careful
with the standard arguments of splitting a system into two subsystems, or
bringing two systems into thermal contact with energy or particle exchange. Not
only the volume part of the entropy must be considered. As will be shown here,
when removing constraints in regions of a negative heat capacity, the system
may even relax under a flow of heat (energy) against a temperature slope. Thus
the Clausius formulation of the second law: ``Heat always flows from hot to
cold'', can be violated. Temperature is not a necessary or fundamental control
parameter of thermostatistics. However, the second law is still satisfied and
the total Boltzmann entropy increases. In the final sections of this paper, the
general microscopic mechanism leading to condensation and to the convexity of
the microcanonical entropy at phase separation is sketched. Also the
microscopic conditions for the existence (or non-existence) of a critical
end-point of the phase-separation are discussed. This is explained for the
liquid-gas and the solid-liquid transition.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figures, Accepted for publication in the Journal of
Chemical Physic
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