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arxiv: hep-th/0406084 · v1 · submitted 2004-06-09 · ✦ hep-th

A three-dimensional scalar field theory model of center vortices and its relation to k-string tensions

classification ✦ hep-th
keywords vorticescenterk-stringscalartensionstheoryfieldmodel
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In d=3 SU(N) gauge theory, we study a scalar field theory model of center vortices that furnishes an approach to the determination of so-called k-string tensions. This model is constructed from string-like quantum solitons introduced previously, and exploits the well-known relation between string partition functions and scalar field theories in d=3. Center vortices corresponding to magnetic flux J (in units of 2\pi /N) are composites of J elementary J=1 constituent vortices that come in N-1 types, with repulsion between like constituents and attraction between unlike constituents. The scalar field theory involves N scalar fields \phi_i (one of which is eliminated) that can merge, dissociate, and recombine while conserving flux mod N. The properties of these fields are deduced directly from the corresponding gauge-theory quantum solitons. Every vacuum Feynman graph of the theory corresponds to a real-space configuration of center vortices. We study qualitatively the problem of k-string tensions at large N, whose solution is far from obvious in center-vortex language. We construct a simplified dynamical picture of constituent-vortex merging, dissociation, and recombination, which allows in principle for the determination of vortex areal densities and k-string tensions. This picture involves point-like "molecules" (cross-sections of center vortices) made of constituent "atoms" that combine and disassociate dynamically in a d=2 test plane . The vortices evolve in a Euclidean "time" which is the location of the test plane along an axis perpendicular to the plane. A simple approximation to the molecular dynamics is compatible with k-string tensions that are linear in k for k<< N, as naively expected.

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