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Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation revisited: is the phase transition really 1st order? (extended version)

The transition between the two phases of 4D Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation [1] was long believed to be of second order until in 1996 first order behavior was found for sufficiently large systems [5,9]. However, one may wonder if this finding was affected by the numerical methods used: to control...

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Autores principales: Rindlisbacher, Tobias, de Forcrand, Philippe
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/JHEP05(2015)138
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2001321
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author Rindlisbacher, Tobias
de Forcrand, Philippe
author_facet Rindlisbacher, Tobias
de Forcrand, Philippe
author_sort Rindlisbacher, Tobias
collection CERN
description The transition between the two phases of 4D Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation [1] was long believed to be of second order until in 1996 first order behavior was found for sufficiently large systems [5,9]. However, one may wonder if this finding was affected by the numerical methods used: to control volume fluctuations, in both studies [5,9] an artificial harmonic potential was added to the action; in [9] measurements were taken after a fixed number of accepted instead of attempted moves which introduces an additional error. Finally the simulations suffer from strong critical slowing down which may have been underestimated. In the present work, we address the above weaknesses: we allow the volume to fluctuate freely within a fixed interval; we take measurements after a fixed number of attempted moves; and we overcome critical slowing down by using an optimized parallel tempering algorithm [12]. With these improved methods, on systems of size up to 64k 4-simplices, we confirm that the phase transition is first order. In addition, we discuss a local criterion to decide whether parts of a triangulation are in the elongated or crumpled state and describe a new correspondence between EDT and the balls in boxes model. The latter gives rise to a modified partition function with an additional, third coupling. Finally, we propose and motivate a class of modified path-integral measures that might remove the metastability of the Markov chain and turn the phase transition into second order.
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spelling cern-20013212023-10-04T07:57:20Zdoi:10.1007/JHEP05(2015)138http://cds.cern.ch/record/2001321engRindlisbacher, Tobiasde Forcrand, PhilippeEuclidean Dynamical Triangulation revisited: is the phase transition really 1st order? (extended version)Particle Physics - LatticeThe transition between the two phases of 4D Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation [1] was long believed to be of second order until in 1996 first order behavior was found for sufficiently large systems [5,9]. However, one may wonder if this finding was affected by the numerical methods used: to control volume fluctuations, in both studies [5,9] an artificial harmonic potential was added to the action; in [9] measurements were taken after a fixed number of accepted instead of attempted moves which introduces an additional error. Finally the simulations suffer from strong critical slowing down which may have been underestimated. In the present work, we address the above weaknesses: we allow the volume to fluctuate freely within a fixed interval; we take measurements after a fixed number of attempted moves; and we overcome critical slowing down by using an optimized parallel tempering algorithm [12]. With these improved methods, on systems of size up to 64k 4-simplices, we confirm that the phase transition is first order. In addition, we discuss a local criterion to decide whether parts of a triangulation are in the elongated or crumpled state and describe a new correspondence between EDT and the balls in boxes model. The latter gives rise to a modified partition function with an additional, third coupling. Finally, we propose and motivate a class of modified path-integral measures that might remove the metastability of the Markov chain and turn the phase transition into second order.The transition between the two phases of 4D Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation [1] was long believed to be of second order until in 1996 first order behavior was found for sufficiently large systems [5, 9]. However, one may wonder if this finding was affected by the numerical methods used: to control volume fluctuations, in both studies [5, 9] an artificial harmonic potential was added to the action and in [9] measurements were taken after a fixed number of accepted instead of attempted moves which introduces an additional error. Finally the simulations suffer from strong critical slowing down which may have been underestimated.The transition between the two phases of 4D Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation [1] was long believed to be of second order until in 1996 first order behavior was found for sufficiently large systems [5,9]. However, one may wonder if this finding was affected by the numerical methods used: to control volume fluctuations, in both studies [5,9] an artificial harmonic potential was added to the action; in [9] measurements were taken after a fixed number of accepted instead of attempted moves which introduces an additional error. Finally the simulations suffer from strong critical slowing down which may have been underestimated. In the present work, we address the above weaknesses: we allow the volume to fluctuate freely within a fixed interval; we take measurements after a fixed number of attempted moves; and we overcome critical slowing down by using an optimized parallel tempering algorithm [12]. With these improved methods, on systems of size up to 64k 4-simplices, we confirm that the phase transition is first order. In addition, we discuss a local criterion to decide whether parts of a triangulation are in the elongated or crumpled state and describe a new correspondence between EDT and the balls in boxes model. The latter gives rise to a modified partition function with an additional, third coupling. Finally, we propose and motivate a class of modified path-integral measures that might remove the metastability of the Markov chain and turn the phase transition into second order.arXiv:1503.03706oai:cds.cern.ch:20013212015-03-12
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Lattice
Rindlisbacher, Tobias
de Forcrand, Philippe
Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation revisited: is the phase transition really 1st order? (extended version)
title Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation revisited: is the phase transition really 1st order? (extended version)
title_full Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation revisited: is the phase transition really 1st order? (extended version)
title_fullStr Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation revisited: is the phase transition really 1st order? (extended version)
title_full_unstemmed Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation revisited: is the phase transition really 1st order? (extended version)
title_short Euclidean Dynamical Triangulation revisited: is the phase transition really 1st order? (extended version)
title_sort euclidean dynamical triangulation revisited: is the phase transition really 1st order? (extended version)
topic Particle Physics - Lattice
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/JHEP05(2015)138
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2001321
work_keys_str_mv AT rindlisbachertobias euclideandynamicaltriangulationrevisitedisthephasetransitionreally1storderextendedversion
AT deforcrandphilippe euclideandynamicaltriangulationrevisitedisthephasetransitionreally1storderextendedversion