1 / 27

Neda Sadooghi Department of Physics Sharif University of Technology Tehran-Iran

Improved ring potential of QED at finite temperature and in the presence of weak and strong magnetic field. Neda Sadooghi Department of Physics Sharif University of Technology Tehran-Iran Prepared for PASCOS-08, Waterloo, ON, Canada June 2 – 6, 2008.

junius
Download Presentation

Neda Sadooghi Department of Physics Sharif University of Technology Tehran-Iran

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Improved ring potential of QED at finite temperature and in the presence of weak and strong magnetic field Neda Sadooghi Department of Physics Sharif University of Technology Tehran-Iran Prepared for PASCOS-08, Waterloo, ON, Canada June 2 – 6, 2008

  2. QED Effective Potential at Nonzero T and B

  3. QED Effective (Thermodynamic) Potential at Finite T and in a Background Magnetic Field Approximation beyondthe static limit k = 0 • Full QED effective potential consists of two parts • The one-loop effective potential • The ring potential

  4. QED One-Loop Effective Potential at Finite T and B • T independent part • T dependent part

  5. QED Ring Potential at Finite T and B • QED ring potential • Using a certain basis vectors defined by the eigenvalue equation of the VPT(Perez Rojas & Shabad ‘79)

  6. The free photon propagator in the Euclidean space • VPT at finite T and in a constant B field( Perez Rojas et al. ‘79) • Orthonormality properties of eigenvectors  Ring potential  Ring potential in the IR limit (n=0)

  7. Ring Potential of QED for Finite B and T • IR limit (n=0)

  8. The integrals ( Alexandre 2001)

  9. IR vs. Static Limit • Ring potential in the IR limit • In the static limitk 0 

  10. QED Ring Potential in Weak B Field Limit

  11. Weak B Field Limit • Characterized by: and • Evaluating in eB 0 limit • In the IR limit • In the static limit

  12. QED ring potential in the IR limit and weak magnetic field  In the high temperature expansion  In the limit • Comparing to the static limit, an additional term appears • Well-known terms in QCD at finite T HTL expansionBraaten+Pisarski (’90)

  13. QED Ring Potential in Strong B Field Limit

  14. QED in a Strong Magnetic Field at zero T • Characterized by Landau levels as in non-relativistic QM • For strong enough magnetic fields the levels are well separated and Lowest Landau Level (LLL) approximation is justified  In the LLLA, an effective QFT replaces the full QFT

  15. Properties at zero T: • Dynamical mass generation • Dynamical chiral symmetry breaking • Bound state formation • Dimensional reduction from D  D-2 • Two regimes of dynamical mass • Photon is massive in the 2nd regime:

  16. QED Ring Potential in Strong B Field Limit at nonzero T • Characterized by: • Evaluating in limit • QED ring potential in the IR limit with

  17. QED ring potential in the IR limit and strong magnetic field  In the high temperature limit  Comparing to the static limit • From QCD at finite T  Toimela (’83)

  18. Dynamical Chiral Symmetry Breaking in the LLL

  19. QED Gap Equation in the LLL • QED in the LLL Dynamical mass generation • The corresponding (mass) gap equation • Using • Gap equation  where

  20. One-loop Contribution: • Dynamical mass • Critical temperature Tc of DSB is determined by

  21. Ring Contribution • Dynamical mass • Critical temperature of DSB • Tc in the: • IR Limit • Static Limit  

  22. Critical Temperature of DSB in the IR Limit • Using • The critical temperature Tc in the IR limit • where is a fixed, T independent mass (IR cutoff) • and

  23. Critical Temperature of DSB in the Static Limit • Using • The critical temperature Tc in the static limit

  24. IR vs. Static Limit Question: How efficient is the ring contribution in the IR or static limits in decreasing the Tc of DSB arising from one-loop EP? • The general structure of Tc  To compare Tc in the IR and static limits, define • IR limit • Static limit

  25. Define the efficiency factor where and the Lambert W(z) function, staisfying • It is known that

  26. Numerical Results Choosing , and • Astrophysics of neutron stars • RHIC experiment (heavy ion collisions)

  27. Concluding Remarks

More Related