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 Werkstatt-Seminar: Simulational Methods in Physics 
The seminar takes place on 
 
Wednesdays, 15.15 hrs 
At some dates, the seminar will be shifted to a different day.
 
Venue: Seminar Room of the ITP, Philosophenweg 16. 
 
It covers topics in
elementary particle physics, biophysics, atomic, molecular, and quantum physics.
 
 SS 2010 
 
-  19 May 2010 -  Alexej Weber (Heidelberg)       
        Casimir Effect in the Worldline Formalism               In my talk I will discuss the interplay between geometry and temperature in the       Casimir effect for the inclined-plates, sphere-plate and cylinder-plate configurations.        The worldline approach used allows the precise computation of       Casimir energies in arbitrary geometries. I show the dependence of the Casimir force        on the separation parameter and temperature T, and present Casimir       phenomena which are dominated by long-range fluctuations. I demonstrate that for       open geometries, thermal energy densities are typically distributed on scales of thermal       wavelengths.  Whereas the high temperature       behavior is always found to be linear in T, richer power-law behaviors at       small temperatures emerge. In particular, thermal forces can develop a non-monotonic       behavior.     
   
 WS 2009/2010 
 
-  13 January 2010 - Julien Serreau (Paris)       
       Decoherence and thermalization of a pure quantum state in quantum field theory             We study the real-time evolution of a self-interacting O(N) scalar field initially prepared in a pure quantum state. We present a complete solution      of the nonequilibrium quantum dynamics from a 1/N-expansion of the two-particle-irreducible effective action at next-to-leading order,      which includes scattering and memory effects. Restricting one's attention (or ability to measure) to a subset of the infinite hierarchy of       correlation functions, the system is described by an effective (reduced) density matrix which, unlike the full density matrix, has a nontrivial       time evolution. In particular, starting from a pure quantum state, we observe the loss of putity/coherence and, on longer time scales,       thermalization of the reduced density matrix. We point out that the physics of decoherence is well described by classical statistical field theory.     
   
   
 
-  16 December 2009 -  Jürgen Schaffner-Bielich (Heidelberg)     
      An inflationary QCD phase transition in the early universe?           We explore a scenario that allows for a strong first order phase-transition of QCD at non-negligible baryon     number in the early universe and its possible cosmological observable consequences. The main assumption is a     quasi-stable QCD-vacuum state that leads to a short period of inflation, consequently diluting the net baryon     to photon ratio to it's today observed value. A strong mechanism for baryogenesis is needed to start out with     a baryon asymmetry of order unity, e.g. as provided by Affleck-Dine baryogenesis. The cosmological     implications are direct effects on primordial density fluctuations up to dark matter mass scales of 1 - 10     solar masses, change in the spectral slope up to mass scales of 10**6 - 10**7 solar masses, production of     primordial magnetic fields with initial strength up to 1012 Gauss and a gravitational wave spectrum with     present day peak strain amplitude of at most h_c = 4.7 * 10-15 around a frequency of 4*10-8 Hz. The little QCD     inflation scenario could be probed with the upcoming heavy ion research facility FAIR at GSI, Darmstadt.  
   
   
 SS 2009 
 
-  8 July 2009 -  Neda Sadooghi   (Tehran)     
      The Speed of Sound in a magnetized Quark-Gluon-Plasma  
   
   
 
-  1 July 2009 -  Svend Domdey (Heidelberg)     
      Testing the Scale Dependence of the Scale Factor in Double Dijet      Production at the LHC        The scale factor is the effective cross section used to    characterize the measured rate of inclusive double dijet production in    high energy hadron collisions. It is sensitive to the two-parton    distributions in the hadronic projectile. In principle, the scale factor    depends on the center of mass energy and on the minimal transverse    energy of the jets contributing to the double dijet cross section. Here,    we point out that proton-proton collisions at the LHC will provide for    the first time experimental access to these scale dependences in a    logarithmically wide, nominally perturbative kinematic range of minimal    transverse energy between 10 GeV and 100 GeV. This constrains the    dependence of two-parton distribution functions on parton momentum    fractions and parton localization in impact parameter space. Novel    information is to be expected about the transverse growth of hadronic    distribution functions in the range of semi-hard Bjorken x (0.001 < x <    0.1) and high resolution Q^2. We discuss to what extent one can    disentangle different pictures of the $x$-evolution of two-parton    distributions in the transverse plane by measuring double-hard    scattering events at the LHC.    
   
   
 
-  30 June 2009 -  Erhard Seiler (Munich)     
                The complex Langevin method: Successes and Difficulties      The complex Langevin method provides in principle a solution to   the problem of simulating quantum field theories with complex action.  It   has also been shown to work remarkably well in various examples.  On the   other hand it runs into unexpected difficulties in other cases.  I will   discuss the mathematical basis of the method, as far as it exists, and point   out open mathematical and as practical problems.    
   
   
 
-  24 June 2009 -  Tereza Mendes (Sao Paulo)     
               Infrared Propagators and Confinement: a Perspective from Lattice Simulations        Lattice studies of the infrared behavior of gluon and ghost propagators     may offer a crucial test of confinement scenarios in Yang-Mills theories.     However, finite-volume effects clearly become an important issue as the     infrared limit is approached. We study the Landau-gauge SU(2) case using     data from the largest lattice sizes (i.e. smallest momenta) to date. By     imposing rigorous constraints to gain control over the infinite-volume     limit, we gain a better understanding of the propagators in terms of more     general quantities.           
   
   
 
-  17 June 2009 -  Jorge Noronha (Columbia University)     
      Can AdS/CFT be used to describe soft and hard phenomena observed at      RHIC?        We show that five-fold constraints due to        (1) the observed nuclear modification of heavy quark jets measured        via non-photonic electrons, $R_{AA}^e(p_T \sim 6\,{\rm GeV})$,        (2) the elliptic transverse ``perfect fluid'' flow of low transverse        momenta pions, $v_2(p_T\sim       1\;{\rm GeV})$ in noncentral Au+Au collisions at 200 AGeV,        (3) the entropy density deficiency, $S/S_{SB}$, of strongly coupled       Quark-Gluon Plasmas (sQGP),        (4) the observed entropy inferred from       the pion multiplicity $dN_\pi/dy$, and        (5) causal response are       analytically related in a class of gauge/string dual models of sQGP       dynamics and remarkably compatible with the data with t'Hooft and       Gauss-Bonnet parameters       in the range of $\lambda\approx 10-25$ and $0< \lambda_{GB}< 0.09$.       In addition, the observed five-fold correlation       is shown to favor color glass condensate over Glauber initial sQGP       conditions within current systematic errors.            
  
   
 
-  13 May 2009 -  Christian Fischer (Darmstadt)     
       Deconfinement phase transition and the quark condensate              We study the dual quark condensate as a signal for the deconfinement phase         transition. This order parameter for center symmetry has been defined         recently by Bilgici et al. within lattice QCD. In this work we determine         the dual condensate with functional methods using a formulation of the         Dyson-Schwinger equations for the Landau gauge quark propagator on a         torus. We study the chiral and deconfinement phase transitions of quenched         QCD by related suszeptibilities. The gauge fixed functional formalism         yields similar results for the deconfinement transition as lattice QCD.      
       
   
  
 
-  29 April 2009 -  Bertrand Delamotte (Paris U., VI, LPTL)     
      Momentum dependence of correlation functions:           calculations and results obtained for systems at or out-of-equilibrium     
  
   
  
 WS 2008/09 
 
-  28 Jan 2009 - Tobias Paul (Heidelberg)     
      Nonlinear transport of Bose-Einstein condensates - from superfluidity to Anderson Localization     
  
   
 
-  21 Jan 2009 - Lev Ananikyan (Heidelberg)     
      Entanglement in the Heisenberg model     
  
   
 
-  8 Jan 2009 - Szabolcs Borsanyi (Wuppertal) 16:15 hrs @ SR Phil 16      
 (in the frame of the Teilchentee seminar)       From cosmic strings to oscillons     
  
   
 
-  10 Dec 2008 - Thomas Gasenzer (Heidelberg) 13:30 hrs @ SR Phil 16     
 (in the frame of the Werkstatt-Seminar Hochenergiereaktionen)       Non-equilibrium coherence dynamics in one-dimensional Bose gases     
  
   
 
-  3 Dec 2008 - Denes Sexty (Darmstadt)  
      Recent Results of Stochastic Quantisation     
  
   
 SS 2008 
 
-  18 Jul 2008 - Daniel Spielmann (Heidelberg) 
      Aspects of Infrared QCD from Stochastic Quantization on the Lattice           In order to understand the mechanism of confinement in QCD, the     infrared behavior of Green's functions in Landau gauge has been thoroughly     investigated in recent years. Confinement scenarios, such as     Gribov-Zwanziger and Kugo-Ojima, have implications for the ghost and     gluon propagator in the IR. However, results from continuum methods such as     the functional renormalization group and Dyson-Schwinger equations, while     corroborating these predictions, contradict the infrared asymptotics     found in lattice simulations. After reviewing this situation, I will     outline the approach of stochastic quantization including Zwanziger's concept of     stochastic gauge fixing as a possible remedy. This method has already     previously been adapted to lattice gauge theory in order to tackle     the Gribov problem. I will present first results obtained thus for the     Landau gauge ghost and gluon propagator, also in the lower-dimensional case,     and compare with standard gauge fixing. In addition, I will show     numerical evidence on how the stochastic method samples configurations, e.g.     from the spectrum of the Faddeev-Popov operator. This is of interest as     the Gribov-Zwanziger picture predicts a certain part of configuration     space to be responsible for confinement.     
   
  -  25 Jun 2008 - Matthias Ohliger (Berlin) 
      Diagrammatic Green's Function Approach to the Bose-Hubbard Model           Following an approach first used by W. Metzner in the context of electrons in conductors we use a diagrammatic hopping      expansion to calculate both grand potential and   finite temperature Green's functions      of the Bose-Hubbard Model used to describe Bosons in an optical lattice. This allows us to reconstruct in a qualitative      way the time-of-flight absorption pictures, which are taken after the optical          lattice is switched off. Furthermore, the technique makes summations of subsets of diagrams possible, leading to non-perturbative      results needed to locate the boundary between the superfluid and the Mott      phase for finite temperatures. Whereas the first-order calculation reproduces the seminal mean-field result, the second order      goes beyond and shifts the phase boundary in the immediate vicinity of the      critical parameters determined by Monte-Carlo simulations of the Bose-Hubbard model.      In the second part, we examine the superfluid-Mott insulator transition of spin-1 Bosons in an optical lattice where we extend      previous mean-field studies to finite    temperature. We find an interesting      asymmetry between Mott-states with even and odd filling factors which continuously disappears for higher temperature.     
  
   
 
-  6 Jun 2008 - Sascha Zöllner (Heidelberg) 14:00 hrs @ SR Phil 16  
      Fermionizing One-dimensional Bosons: Mechanism and Tunneling Dynamics     
  
   
 
-  29 May 2008 - L. Mühlbacher (Freiburg) 14:15 @ SR Phil 19 
      (In the frame of the Seminar on Theory of Complex Systems)      Real-time Quantum Monte Carlo simulations for non-equilibrium systems: A diagrammatic path-integral approach     
  
   
 WS 2007/08 
 
-  20 Feb 2008 - Svend Domdey (Heidelberg) 
      Gluon jet fragmentation in the Quark-Gluon Plasma     
  
   
 
-  6 Feb 2008 - Valya Khoze (Durham) 
      Aspects of Seiberg Duality and its Applications     
  
   
 
-  21 Jan 2008 - David Hutchinson (Otago/Paris) 11:00 hrs @ KIP, SR 2.402 
      (in the framework of the Journal-Club Seminar on Ultracold Gases)       Effects of Disorder in Ultra-cold, dilute gases           The possibility of using ultracold atoms to observe strong localization of     matter waves is now a subject of both theoretical and experimental     interest. These systems offer unprecedented control over inter-particle     interactions, imposed potentials and the level of disorder in the system     as compared to their condensed matter analogues. The two-dimensional (2D)     case is of particular interest. The prevailing view has been that in the     2D electron gas there is no metallic state, but recent experiments are     suggestive of a metal-insulator transition in very dilute systems. We     investigate theoretically the possibility of observing strongly localized     states, corresponding to the insulating phase, review the experimental     position in the field in the dilute 2D gas and discuss potential future     experiments.     
       
   
 
-  11 Jan 2008 - Lorenz von Smekal (Adelaide) 14:30 hrs @ SR Pw 16  
      Modified Lattice Landau Gauge           The infrared behaviour of QCD Green's functions in Landau gauge has been     focus of intense study. Different non-perturbative approaches     all lead to the same overall picture. These include Dyson-Schwinger     Equations, Functional Renormalisation Group Equations, Stochastic     Quantisation, and Lattice Landau Gauge Simulations. Finite volume effects     are being increasingly well understood. I will briefly review     the situation. But do covariant gauges have the potential to be truly     non-perturbative in the first place? BRST constructions have     long been blamed for only being perturbatively well defined. Lattice     definitions are plagued by the Neuberger problem. I will describe ways to     avoid this problem, and the modifications necessary to implement these,     including first results from Monte-Carlo simulations using a modified     lattice Landau gauge.      
   
 
-  17 Dec 2007 - Peter Schlagheck/Tobias Paul (Regensburg/Orsay) 11:00 hrs @ KIP, SR 2.402 
      (in the framework of the Journal-Club Seminar on Ultracold Gases)       P. Schlagheck: Nonlinear transport of Bose-Einstein condensates through disorder           T. Paul: Bose-Einstein condensates in presence of defects and disorder           Superfluidity and Anderson localization are genuine many-body      manifestations of quantum coherence which are nowadays revisited in      interacting dilute Bose gases.     In the first part of the talk we study the coherent flow of interacting      Bose-condensed atoms in presence of a single defect or an extended      disordered potential. We show that a variation of the condensate      velocity v with respect to the defect or disordered potential induces      different regimes of quantum transport. At velocities v small compared      to the sound velocity c of the condensate the flow shows superfluid      behavior, whereas a domain of time dependent flow is reached when v      becomes comparable to c. For velocities v considerably larger then the      sound velocity a regime of quasi-dissipationless transport is found      where the creation of elementary excitations is strongly oppressed. We      point out that in this domain, depending of the extent of the disordered      region, the system enters an Anderson localized phase.     In the second part we consider the experimentally relevant situation      where the condensate oscillates in a shallow harmonic trap to which a      small defect- or disorder- potential is superimposed. We obtain a global      picture characterizing the dynamical properties of the dipole      oscillations (e.g. damping of the oscillations), where we can recover      the different regimes of quantum transport presented in the first part      of the talk.     We discuss our findings in the context of recent experiments [1,2,3] and      address the question under which circumstances Anderson localization is      of relevance for these systems.     
       [1] C. Fort et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 170410 (2005)      [2] J. E. Lye et al., Phys. Rev. A 75, 061603 (2007)      [3] P. Engels and C. Atherton,  Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 160405 (2007)       
   
 
-  5 Dec 2007 - Michael M. Wolf (MPQ München)  
      Entanglement based tools for Quantum Many-Body Physics           The talk will address recent attempts of applying tools and     insights from Quantum Information Theory in Quantum Many-Body     Physics. Motivated by entropic area laws we will discuss powerful     entanglement based representations of quantum many-body states -     so called MPS/PEPS representations. These lead to both, novel     analytic results (on solvable models, quantum phase transitions,     RG flows, etc) and new numerical simulation methods beyond DMRG     and Monte Carlo techniques.     
  
   
 
-  27 Nov 2007 - Axel Maas (Bratislava) 16:15 hrs @ SR Pw 16  
      Gluons at finite temperature           Gluons are not part of the physical spectrum at zero temperature. It is     a natural question to ask, whether this is changed after a phase     transition which occurs when heating up a system of gluons. Results on     this question from lattice gauge theory and functional methods will be     presented. These indicate that gluons are never part of the physical     spectrum, not even at large or asymptotically high temperatures.     
  
   
 
-  21 Nov 2007 - Thomas Gasenzer (Heidelberg) 
      (together with Kalter-Quanten-Kaffee-Seminar)       Functional renormalisation group approach to far-from-equilibrium quantum field dynamics     
  
   
 
-  7 Nov 2007 - Prof. Y. Igarashi (Niigata University)  
      Quantum Master Equation for Yang-Mills theory in ERG           We discuss a general method to derive the     Ward-Takahashi identity for the Wilson action for gauge theories,     especially for Yang-Mills theory, in ERG.     The identity makes it possible to realize a gauge symmetry     even in the presence of a momentum cutoff.  In the cutoff     dependent realization, the nilpotency of the BRS transformation     is lost.  We apply the Batalin-Vilkovisky antifield formalism to     lift the Ward-Takahashi identity to a quantum master equation.     The extended BRS transformation regains nilpotency.     
  
   
 SS 2007 
 
-  21 Sep 2007 - Alexander Branschädel (Heidelberg) 14:15 hrs @ SR Pw 16 
      Transport equations for an ultracold Bose gas     
  
   
 
-  10 Jul 2007 - Falk Bruckmann (Regensburg) 14:15 hrs @ SR Pw 16 
      Instanton constituents in sigma models and Yang-Mills theory     
  
   
 
-  8 Jun 2007 - Daniel Spielmann (Tuebingen) 14:15 hrs @ SR Pw 16 
      On confinement in Sp(2) lattice gauge theory     
  
   
 
-  1 Jun 2007 - Cedric Bodet (Mons) 14:15 hrs @ SR Pw 16 
      Heavy tetraquark stability       Jim Kallarckal (Aachen)       Lepton flavor violating processes in quantum field theory     
  
   
 
-  10 May 2007 - Markus Oberthaler (Heidelberg) 16:15 hrs @ SR Pw 16 
      title tba       (Teilchentee)     
  
   
 
-  3 May 2007 - Dieter Heermann (Heidelberg) 14:15 hrs @ SR Pw 19 
      A new class of random matrices       (Seminar zur Theorie komplexer Systeme)     
  
   
 
-  26 Apr 2007 - Manfred Bohn (Heidelberg) 14:15 hrs @ SR Pw 19 
      A model for polymers with loops       (Seminar zur Theorie komplexer Systeme)     
  
   
 
-  20 Apr 2007 - Michael Fromm (Tübingen) 15:00 hrs @ SR Pw 19! 
          SU(2) projection of SU(3)       Assuming that certain classes of gauge field configurations, lying in     subalgebras of the Lie gauge group's Lie algebra, are the relevant     degrees of freedom (dof) for confinement, the corresponding subgroups of     the gauge group are directly accessed with lattice gauge theory: As     happened before within the Dual Superconductor model (U(1)^(N-1))     investigations or alternatively within the Center Vortex picture (Z_N)     access is achieved via gauge fixing and subsequent gauge projection.     Leaving a remnant symmetry, the degrees of freedom of the symmetry left     are then investigated as for their confining behaviour. Aim of this work     was the application to SU(3), the subgroup being a SU(2) in "spin s = 1"     representation.     
  
   
 Other seminars at the Institute for Theoretical Physics   
  
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