2+1 D Yang Mills
Leigh, Minic and Yelnikov have a very interesting announcement of new results on 2+1 D Yang Mills Theory. Using a formalism pioneered by Karabali and Nair, they compute the glueball spectrum analytically at large-. The result is expressed in terms of zeroes of the Bessel function.
In gauge, Karabali and Nair parametrize the gauge field in the plane, using complex coordinates, as where is an matrix-valued function. The usual gauge symmetry becomes simply , so that is gauge-invariant. This parametrization has an additional redundancy
where is an -valued holomorphic function.
The Yang-Mills Hamiltonian, can be written as a (nonlocal, but relatively simple) functional of the “current”, (and its conjugate momentum), where is gauge-invariant, and transforms inhomogeneously under (1). transforms homogeneously, as does the “covariant derivative”,
Leigh et al claim to have found the ground state wave functional1, where and . is given by a ratio of Bessel functions.
In the large- limit, this wave functional is essentially a Gaussian, and one can trivially compute glueball masses by studying the falloff, for large separation, of the equal-time 2-point correlation function. From the identity, where are the ordered zeroes of , one has The glueballs couple to So the masses of the glueballs are given as sums .
Similarly, the glueballs couple to , and so their masses are given as sums
Update (12/13/2005):
Georg von Hippel (the new proprietor of Life on the Lattice) has some interesting comments about this paper, including the following observation.For large , and hence, for , the zeroes of the Bessel function that enter into the formulæ for the masses of the and glueballs above go like2 So, for large , one has a large number () of nearly-degenerate glueballs of mass , corresponding to different ways of partitioning into a pair of positive integers, . And, similarly, for the glueballs.
1 Here and below, everything that looks like a 2-form has been converted to a scalar by dividing by the area element, .
2 Actually, you don’t need to go to very large . For , the deviation from this simple linear formula is, at most, a 1% effect.
Re: 2+1 D Yang Mills
I know what i want to tell u has nothing to do with the subject of the note.
but please help me as matematician.
are likely all the facts that lies behind the “hidden messages” of the bible?
i dont mean about faith..i mean about the statistics of the that subjects.
bonhamled
http://almadormida.blogspot.com