scholarly journals Stochastic motion of finite-size immiscible impurities in a dilute quantum fluid at finite temperature

2021 ◽  
Vol 103 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Umberto Giuriato ◽  
Giorgio Krstulovic
Author(s):  
Jean Zinn-Justin

Some equilibrium properties in statistical quantum field theory (QFT), that is, relativistic QFT at finite temperature are reviewed. Study of QFT at finite temperature is motivated by cosmological problems, high energy heavy ion collisions, and speculations about possible phase transitions, also searched for in numerical simulations. In particular, the situation of finite temperature phase transitions, or the limit of high temperature (an ultra-relativistic limit where the temperature is much larger than the physical masses of particles) are discussed. The concept of dimensional reduction emerges, in many cases, statistical properties of finite-temperature QFT in (1, d − 1) dimensions can be described by an effective classical statistical field theory in (d − 1) dimensions. Dimensional reduction generalizes a property already observed in the non-relativistic example of the Bose gas, and indicates that quantum effects are less important at high temperature. The corresponding technical tools are a mode-expansion of fields in the Euclidean time variable, singling out the zero modes of boson fields, followed by a local expansion of the resulting (d − 1)-dimensional effective field theory (EFT). Additional physical intuition about QFT at finite temperature in (1, d−1) dimensions can be gained by considering it as a classical statistical field theory in d dimensions, with finite size in one dimension. This identification makes an analysis of finite temperature QFT in terms of the renormalization group (RG), and the theory of finite-size effects of the classical theory, possible. These ideas are illustrated with several simple examples, the φ4 field theory, the non-linear σ-model, the Gross–Neveu model and some gauge theories.


1999 ◽  
Vol 14 (29) ◽  
pp. 2003-2010
Author(s):  
LINA PARIA ◽  
AFSAR ABBAS ◽  
M. G. MUSTAFA

By imposing the SU(3) color-singletness constraint on a gluonic system, a heavy gluon–plasma giant resonance is shown to arise at finite temperature. This is made possible through the proper incorporation of the finite size correction brought in by the color-singletness restriction.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdelâali Boudjemâa

AbstractWe study the equilibrium properties of self-bound droplets in two-dimensional Bose mixtures employing the time-dependent Hartree–Fock–Bogoliubov theory. This theory allows one to understand both the many-body and temperature effects beyond the Lee–Huang–Yang description. We calculate higher-order corrections to the excitations, the sound velocity, and the energy of the droplet. Our results for the ground-state energy are compared with the diffusion Monte Carlo data and good agreement is found. The behavior of the depletion and anomalous density of the droplet is also discussed. At finite temperature, we show that the droplet emerges at temperatures well below the Berezinskii–Kosterlitz–Thouless transition temperature. The critical temperature strongly depends on the interspecies interactions. Our study is extended to the finite size droplet by numerically solving the generalized finite-temperature Gross-Pitaevskii equation which is obtained self-consistently from our formalism in the framework of the local density approximation.


Author(s):  
Jean Zinn-Justin

Chapter 21 is devoted to quantum field theory at finite temperature, a topic that is relevant, for example, to high energy heavy ion collisions. Some similarity with finite size systems is pointed out with the relevance of zero modes. Finite temperature phase transitions are studied. An interesting issue concerns the conditions for dimensional reduction, that is, when can the initial field theory be replaced by an effective field theory without time dimension? The results of one–loop reduced action are presented. The solutions of RG equations are discussed. A few models with O(N) symmetry are investigated in the large N limit, which makes it possible to study directly crossover scale and the problem of dimensional crossover. The problem of dimensional reduction in Abelian gauge theories is examined.


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