Acessibilidade / Reportar erro

The <FONT FACE=Symbol>d</font> Expansion and the Principle of Minimal Sensitivity

Abstract

The <FONT FACE="Symbol">d</font>-expansion is a nonperturbative approach for field theoretic models wich combines the techniques of perturbation theory and the variational principle. Different ways of implemeting the principle of minimal sensitivity to the <FONT FACE="Symbol">d</font>-expansion produce in general different results for observables. For illustration we use the Nambu- Jona-Lasinio model for chiral symmetry restoration at finite density and compare results with those obtained with the Hartree-Fock approximation.


The d Expansion and the Principle of Minimal Sensitivity

G. Kreina* * Alexander von Humboldt research fellow. , D.P. Menezesb, M. Nielsenc and M.B. Pintob

a Institut für Kernphysik, Universität Mainz, D-55099 Mainz, Germany and

Instituto de Física Teórica, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Rua Pamplona 145,

01405-900 São Paulo-SP, Brazil

b Departamento de Fí sica, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina

88.040-900 Florianópolis, S.C., Brazil

c Instituto de Física, Universidade de São Paulo, Caixa Postal 66318

05315-970 São Paulo, S.P., Brazil

Received December 5, 1997

The d-expansion is a nonperturbative approach for field theoretic models wich combines the techniques of perturbation theory and the variational principle. Different ways of implemeting the principle of minimal sensitivity to the d-expansion produce in general different results for observables. For illustration we use the Nambu- Jona-Lasinio model for chiral symmetry restoration at finite density and compare results with those obtained with the Hartree-Fock approximation.

The standard application of the linear d-expansion [1] to a theory with action S starts with an interpolation defined by S(d) = (1-d)S0(m) + dS , where S0(m) is the action of a solvable theory. The action S(d) interpolates between the solvable S0(m) (when d = 0) and the original S (when d = 1). Since S0 is quadratic in the fields, arbitrary parameters (m) with mass dimensions are required for dimensional balance. At the end one sets d = 1 fixing m according to the principle of minimal sensitivity (PMS) [2] which requires a physical quantity F(m) to satisfy

Within this method, the general procedure is to apply the PMS directly to each different quantity of interest so as to adjust m to the different energy scales of the theory [2]. A natural question which arises at this point is the uniqueness of the value of m since different physical quantities might generate different values for the optimal m. Of course this would not be catastrophic if the spread of the values of m determined from different observables were not too large.

Alternatively, one could select only one among those observables to optimize the theory. This selection could be done by using some physical criterion or constraint (for example, in the case were only one of the calculated quantities satisfies the PMS equation). However, this strategy (referred as PMS1) does not completely specify a unique procedure and, as we shall see, can be misleading. One of our goals is to show that all these potential uncertanties could be avoided by demanding that fundamental quantities, such as the energy density, be used to fix m whose optimal values are then used to calculate other observables. Using the energy momentum tensor of the original theory one can obtain the exact energy density written in terms of full vertices and propagators. Next, one uses the interpolated theory to evaluate self energies as well as vertex corrections perturbatively in powers of d. These m-dependent quantities are then plugged back into the energy density to which the PMS is applied. This approach (referred as PMS2) has been succesfully applied to the Walecka model for nuclear matter [3]. The fact that it is natural to demand stationarity of the energy with respect to unknow parameters uniquely selects this quantity as the generator of so that all physical observables are determined from the same propagator.

In this paper we illustrate the problem with the PMS1 prescription by using the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio (NJL) model [4] for chiral symmetry restoration in a medium of finite density. Conventionally, the finite density chiral symmetry restoration problem within the NJL model has been tackled with the Hartree-Fock (HF) approximation. For the SU(2) case, this analytical approach shows that chiral symmetry is restored through a first-order phase transition at a critical density whose values depend on the choice of the parameters [5,6]. We then follow the two alternatives, PMS1 and PMS2, and compare results with the traditional HF approach.

Some physical quantities of interest, whose values characterize the chiral symmetry restoration, are the quark condensate , the pion decay constant fp and the constituent quark mass Mq. We calculate these quantities both with PMS1 and PMS2 and compare our results with the ones obtained in Ref. [5] with the HF approximation, where vertex corrections are neglected. Therefore, we shall also neglect vertex corrections. Of course, since the NJL model is essentially phenomenological, we shall pay more atention to the qualitative results (like the order of the phase transition) than to the quantitative ones (like the precise value of the critical density for which the phase transition takes place).

In the limit of zero current quark masses, the two-flavor Lagrangian density of the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model is given by

where the quark field operators q = q(x) represent the doublet of u and d quarks.

Let us start by deriving the energy density from the energy-momentum tensor of the original theory since this quantity will be necessary when using the PMS2. Using the Lagrangian density, Eq. (2), we have the energy-momentum tensor,

Note that we have not used the equation of motion for the quark field operator. Neglecting vertex corrections, the energy density is given by

where S(q) represents the dressed quark propagator.

The quark condensate, which is taken to be the parameter of order of the phase transition, is given by

where the trace is taken over spinor and color indices. As in Refs. [5, 6] we employ the Pagels-Stokar formula [7] to evaluate the pion decay constant (fp),

where the trace is now over spinor, flavor and color. The quark-pion coupling can be obtained from the Golberger-Treiman relation. Of course, we could use other, perhaps more precise formulas for fp, but for our purposes of comparing PMS1 and PMS2 results, Eq. (6) is sufficient.

To define the interpolated Lagrangian one needs to choose a solvable theory. Since we are looking for solutions which break chiral symmetry, the natural choice for L0 is

where m is an arbitrary mass parameter. Therefore, the interpolated NJL Lagrangian density can be written as

Expressed in terms of self energy Sd(p) the quark propagator reads S-1(p) = S0-1(p) - Sd(p) where S0-1(p) is the inverse of the quark propagator corresponding to , and the quark self-energy Sd(p) is calculated as a power series in d.

At zeroth order in d, one is treating the free Lagrangian and hence S(0)(p) = 0. The bare (zeroth order) in-medium quark propagator is then given by

where E0(p) = (p2+m2)1/2, and PF is the Fermi momentum which, for Nf = 2, relates to the quark density r via PF = (p2r/2)1/3.

At this order in d, no dynamical content from the model has been used. The dynamics of the model starts to show up at order d. To O(d) the self-energy (S(1) (p)) is given by

where a sum over the isospin index a is implied. Substituting Eq. (9) into this equation, we obtain for S(1) the expression

S(1)(p) = - dm+M1-g0S0 , (11)

where

and

One should note that, at this order, direct and exchange terms are treated at equal footing as implied by the factor (NcNf+1/2) in Eq. (12). Since the effect of S0 is just to shift the chemical potential [6], one may write the constituent quark mass to O(d) as

Mq = m- dm+ M1 . (14)

Substituting Eq. (9) into Eqs. (5) and (6), one gets for the order parameter per flavor and for the pion decay constant the following lowest order expressions,

and

where the lowest order Goldberger-Treiman relation (gpq = m/fp(0)) has been used.

We now have the three quantites of interest (Mq, 0 and fp) obtained at lowest order in d and the next step is the optimization procedure. Let us start with the PMS1. Of the three calculated quantities the only one which satisfies the PMS condition (the one which has extremum points) is fp. Moreover, at zero density, this quantity has a well established empirical value and can be chosen to fix m. A direct application of the PMS condition to fp gives = 0.97 ×L. Using the zero density empirical value fp = 93 MeV one gets the noncovariant cut-off L = 571 MeV. In principle, the fact that the cut-off can be fixed (with a value which agrees with the ones used in the literature) without any previous knowledge of the quark mass could be seen as an advantage of the method. However, one must be careful with the interpretation of this result since it has been obtained without any information about the model, because the coupling constant G does not appear at this lowest order evaluation of fp. If one takes this value for L and proceeds blindly by applying the PMS to fp for different values of PF one obtains as a function of the density as shown by the continuous line of Fig. 1. We note that obtained with the PMS1 has a very peculiar behavior increasing with the density. This odd behavior is reflected in Fig. 2 where one sees that fp goes smoothly to zero, indicating chiral symmetry restoration, through a second-order phase transition, contrary to the HF predictions. The same values of can be used to evaluate the quark condensate and quark mass. The numerical zero density results for these quantities, 0 = -(250 MeV)3 and Mq = 574 MeV ( where the value G = 8.86 ×10-6 MeV-2 was used in Eq. (12) for Mq) are not far from the ones predicted in the literature when a noncovariant cut-off is used. However, the finite density behavior of these two quantities again points out towards a smooth second-order phase transition.



Let us now evaluate the same quantities using the PMS2 to generate the density dependent optimal values for [()]. Substituting the lowest order quark propagator given by Eq. (9) into Eq.(4), we obtain

The requirement that E be stationary with respect to variations in m leads to

from where we immediately see that, even at zeroth order in d, the value of m depends on G, in contrast to the result obtained with PMS1. Note that this is the familiar Hartree-Fock gap equation of the model, where has the interpretation of the dynamically generated mass as can also be seen from its behavior at finite densities displayed in Fig. 1 (dashed line). As expected, when these optimal values are injected in fp, 0 and Mq, one predicts the restoration of chiral symmetry through a first-order phase transition in agreement with the HF results as can be seen by the dotted line in Fig. 2.

Next, one could try to improve these results by using the O(d) quark propagator in the evaluation of the energy density. Inversion of Dyson's equation leads to

where

with S0 given by Eq. (13). The superscript (1) in S(1) indicates that the propagator has been obtained with a self-energy calculated up to first-order in d (note that the term m- dm appearing in Eq. (14) has already been discarded in Eq. (19)). Using the first-order quark propagator in the evaluation of the energy density one gets

An application of the PMS to E(1)NJL,

leads to

Again, we have obtained the familiar Hartree-Fock gap equation for the dynamically generated mass.

2 Higher-order corrections will in general introduce a momentum dependence for the dynamically generated mass. However, if one proceeds to higher orders in d but neglect those graphs that correspond to vertex corrections, the higher-order quark propagator will always be of the form of Eq. (19), with M1 replaced by another constant, say M, which is a function of m. However, because of the PMS condition on E , M at each order will always be given by the same value. This value is the one that satisfies the usual gap equation

where

Therefore, the PMS condition on the energy density (PMS2) is equivalent to the usual Hartree-Fock solution for the dynamically generated mass, when vertex corrections are neglected.

To conclude, in this paper we have used the NJL model to illustrate potential problems with the application of the PMS in the d expansion. In order to specify a unique prescription to fix arbitrary parameters introduced by the d expansion, we have studied two ways of introducing the PMS procedure. We have applied the PMS directly to fp following the standard procedure (PMS1) [2]. We found that PMS1 leads to results for chiral symmetry restoration that disagree with the HF results. Having a close look in the way the PMS1 trades m by the model parameters (the cut-off in this case) and its finite density behavior, we were able to identify the origin of this misleading result. We have also applied the PMS to the energy density (PMS2). We have shown that this prescription reproduces, already at lowest order, the HF results for chiral symmetry restoration at finite density within the NJL model. Moreover, this result can be reproduced at any order in d provided that one ignores vertex contributions. This result should be compared with the one presented in Ref. [8] where, in the context of the effective potential, it was found that the d expansion and the 1/N expansion are identical in the large N limit. Therefore, the PMS2 seems to be an adequate way of fixing the arbitrary parameters to generate nonperturbative results, and it is a promissing procedure since it allows the introduction of vertex corrections in a very direct way. Work in this direction is in progress [9].

Acknowledgments

This work was partially supported by the Alexander von Hulboldt Foundation, CNPq, and FAPESP, (contract # 93/2463-2).

References

[1] A. Okopinska, Phys. Rev. D35, 1835 (1987); A. Duncan and M. Moshe, Phys. Lett. B215, 352 (1988).

[2] P. M. Stevenson, Phys. Rev. D23, 2916 (1981).

[3] G. Krein, D.P. Menezes and M.B. Pinto, Phys. Lett. B 370, 5 (1996); G. Krein, R. Marques de Carvalho, D.P. Menezes, M. Nielsen and M. B. Pinto, Eur. Phys. Jour. A1, 45 (1998).

[4] Y. Nambu and G. Jona-Lasinio, Phys. Rev. 122, 345 (1961).

[5] T. Hatsuda and T. Kunihiro, Phys. Lett. B185, 304 (1987); Phys. Rep. 247, 221 (1994).

[6] S.P. Klevansky, Rev. Mod. Phys. 64, 649 (1992).

[7] H. Pagels and S. Stokar, Phys. Rev. D20, 2947 (1979).

[8] S.K. Gandhi, H.F. Jones and M.B. Pinto, Nucl. Phys. B359, 429 (1991).

[9] G. Krein, D.P. Menezes, M. Nielsen and M.B. Pinto, work in progress.

  • [1] A. Okopinska, Phys. Rev. D35, 1835 (1987);
  • [2] P. M. Stevenson, Phys. Rev. D23, 2916 (1981).
  • [3] G. Krein, D.P. Menezes and M.B. Pinto, Phys. Lett. B 370, 5 (1996);
  • [4] Y. Nambu and G. Jona-Lasinio, Phys. Rev. 122, 345 (1961).
  • [5] T. Hatsuda and T. Kunihiro, Phys. Lett. B185, 304 (1987);
  • [6] S.P. Klevansky, Rev. Mod. Phys. 64, 649 (1992).
  • [7] H. Pagels and S. Stokar, Phys. Rev. D20, 2947 (1979).
  • [8] S.K. Gandhi, H.F. Jones and M.B. Pinto, Nucl. Phys. B359, 429 (1991).
  • [9] G. Krein, D.P. Menezes, M. Nielsen and M.B. Pinto, work in progress.
  • *
    Alexander von Humboldt research fellow.
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      28 Apr 1999
    • Date of issue
      Mar 1998

    History

    • Received
      05 Dec 1997
    Sociedade Brasileira de Física Caixa Postal 66328, 05315-970 São Paulo SP - Brazil, Tel.: +55 11 3091-6922, Fax: (55 11) 3816-2063 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
    E-mail: sbfisica@sbfisica.org.br