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Title: Progress report :


1
Progress report Holographic chiral symmetry
O.Bergman, S. Seki B. Burrington V. Mazo also O.
Aharony and S.Yankielowicz and K. Peeters and M.
Zamaklar
2
Introduction
  • QCD admits at low energies Confinement and
    chiral symmetry breaking.
  • Apriori there is no relation between the two
    phenomena.
  • Except of lattice simulations the arsenal of non
    perturbative field theory tools is quite limited.
  • Gauge/gravity duality is a powerful method to
    deal with strongly coupled gauge theories.
  • There are several stringy ( gravitational)
    models with a dual field theory in the same
    universality class as QCD
  • Confinement is easily realized, flavor chiral
    symmetry is not.

3
  • Fundamental quarks can be incorporated via probe
    branes. First were introduced in duals of
    coulomb phase. (Karch Katz).
  • Quarks in confining scenarios were introduced
    into the KS confining background using D7 braens
    ( Sakai Sonnenscehin)
  • Models based on Wittens near extremal D4 branes
    with D6 ( Kruczenski et al). Also Erdmenger et
    al
  • A model that admits full flavor chiral symmetry
    breaking by incorporating D8 and anti D8 branes
    to Wittens model. Sakai and Sugimoto
  • In this work we examine the issues of
  • (i) chiral symmetry breaking,
  • current algebra quark mass and the GOR
    relation via a tachyonic DBI action
  • (ii) Back-reaction on the background and the
    stability of the SS model.
  • (iii) Thermal phase structure using non
    critical string background.
  • In particular we discuss the
    transitions

  • confinement/deconfinement
  • chiral symmetry
    breaking/ restoring
  • We determine the thermal spectra of meson and
    their dissociation

4
Wittens model of near extremal D4 branes
  • The periodicity of x4
  • The high temperature background
  • The periodicity of t

5
  • The parameters of the gauge theory are given in
    the sugra
  • 5d coupling 4d coupling
    glueball mass
  • String tension
  • The gravity picture is valid only provided that
    l5 gtgt R
  • At energies Eltlt 1/R the theory is effectively
    4d.
  • However it is not really QCD since Mgb MKK

6
The Sakai Sugimoto model
  • The basic underlying brane configuration is
    --------
  • In the limit of Nf lt ltNc the Sugra background is
    that of the near horizon limit of the near
    extremal D4 branes with Nf probe D8 branes and
    Nf probe anti D8 branes.
  • The strings between the D4 branes and the D8 and
    anti D8 branes
  • D4- D8 strings y L left chiral
    fermions in ( Nf, 1 ,Nc) of U(Nf )x U(Nf )x
    U(Nc)
  • D4- anti-D8 strings yR right chiral
    fermions in (1, Nf ,Nc) of U(Nf )x U(Nf)xU(Nc)
  • Note that it is a chiral symmetry and not an
    U(Nf)xU(Nf) of Dirac fermions. This is due to
    the fact that the there is no transverse
    direction to the D8 branes.
  • The same applies to D4 branes in 6d non critical
    model ( Casero Paredes J.S)

D4
D8
anti D8
7
Outline
  • Quark mass, condensate from tachyonic DBI
  • Back reaction of the flavor branes
  • Phases of thermal QCD from Non critical strings

8
1. Quark mass, chrial symmetry breaking and
tachyonic DBI
  • In the Sakai Sugimoto model the quarks are
    massless and there is no apparent way to add a
    current algebra mass.
  • Even in the generalized model
  • the pion mass is zero and hence
  • so is the C.A quark mass
  • u0 -u L corresponds to constituent
  • quark mass
  • It is not clear what is the source
  • of the chiral symmetry breaking
  • and in particular it is not associated
  • with an expectation value of a bifundamental
  • One would like to have a holographic dual of the
    GOR relation
  • That states that

9
  • To understand the dynamics of the chiral symmetry
  • Breaking we incorporate a complex bi-fundamental
  • Tachyon. Discussed also by Casero Kiritsis
    Paredes
  • We start with an action proposed by Garousi
  • for a separated parrallel Dp and anti- D p
    branes
  • This action is obtained by generalizing Sens
    action
  • for non-BPS branes.
  • The action reads

10
Setting the gauge fields to zero in the non
compact case leaves us with the following
tachyonic DBI action
and
where
The brane locations
For small u the bi-fundamental T will become
tachyonic
The filed T has a localized tachyonic mode at
small u
11
The corresponding EOM for L and T are
For T0 the EOM are those of the Sakai Sugimoto
model From the point of view of the potential of
T this is a non stable solution. We are after a
solution with T(u) and L(u) such that when the
tachyon condenses the brane anti brane
separation vanishes
Profile of T(u)
T diverges
12
IR asymptotic solution
We expand the equations around uu0 and find
As expected The tachyon diverges at uu0 where
the brane anti brane merge
UV asymptotic solution
13
We put a cutoff and expand the solution around
it. We than compute physical quantities and
check that they are independent of this cutoff.
Strictly we cannot take it to infinity since at
this region the string coupling becomes large.
Requiring that the perturbation are small implies
We identify the non-normalizable solution with
the mass
14
The Hamiltonian density has the form
then the condensate is determined from
by differentiating with respect to mq
And since
the condensate is given by
15
To compute the spectrum of the vector mesons and
of the pions we analyze the spectrum
of fluctuations of the flavor gauge fields that
live on the probe branes
We go over to vector and axial gauge fields
and use the unitary gauge where the tachyon Is
real
16
The A sector
We dimensionally reduce the 9d action to a 5
one, and plug the background
We parameterize the guage fields
After solving the eigenvalues problem and
reducing to 4d we get
Thus we find a spectrum of massive vector mesons
17
The A- sector
In a similar manner the 5d action now is
We make the following decompositions
In our gauge the w0 are the pions
18
The 4d action of the A- now reads
Thus we see that the pions are massive
The mass of the pion is determined by eigenvalue
equation
19
The pion decay constant and the GOR relation
We evaluate the pion decay constant fp by
computing the correlator of axial Vector currents
Erlich, Katz,Son,Stefanov
The effective action is
By taking
we find
20
  • Finally we get

which in leading order in mq/ltqqgt translates
into the Gell-Mann Oakes Rener relation
21
2. From probe to fully back reaction
  • In the Sakai Sugimoto model flavor is introduced
    by incorporating Nf D8 anti-D8 branes. This is
    done in the probe approximation based on having
    NfltltNc .
  • The profile of the probe branes is determined by
    solving the DBI EOM. In the probe approximation
    the configuration is stable ( no tachyonic
    modes).
  • The motivation to go beyond the probe
    approximation is tow follded
  • (a) To check that the back-reaction on the
    background does not destroy the stability.
  • (b) To determine the flavor dependence on
    properties that are extracted from the background
    like string tension, beta function, the viscosity
    /entropy density etc.

22
The action of the back-reacted system is
Action of A9 form
Massive IIA action
DBI action
d (x4)d(x4-p)
Induced metric
23
The EOM of the metric, dilaton, and RR forms are
24
The solution for the parameter M and F10
The jumps are at the locations of the branes
Our basic assumption is that the back-reaction
is a small perturbation controled by the small
parameter
The bulk term in the massive IIA can be
neglected since it is of order
  • The delta functions are codimension one which
    leads to
  • an harmonic function ( absolute value x4) which
    is finite at the
  • location of the delta function

25
We take the following ansatz for the background
We plug it to the EOM and assume an expansion
perturbation
Original background
26
  • To simplify the computation we replace the
    cigar
  • Of the (u,x4) directions with a cylinder that
    asymptote to it

Which means that we omitted the factor f(u)
1-(uL/u)3 from the background Note that for
large u this factor is irrelevant
27
We separate the equations using the following
variables
F1 and F2 are invariant under x4 and u coordinate
transformations
We Fourier decompose in x4
28
Finally defining the
equations read
The general solution after enforcing the
convergence of the Fourier sum takes the form
29
The behavior at large u
The general behavior is of spikes around the
locations of the branes.
30
The spike structure ocours here only for much
larger u
31
The perturbed dilaton at small u
Note that the solution developes a duble notch
behavior between the cusp solution of very small
u (red) and the spikes of large u
32
The perturbed A at small u
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  • We were able to solve the equations also without
    the
  • Fourier decomposition. It can be shown that the
    general
  • structure of the of the solution is of the
    following form

where
In particular for F2 we get
  • The implications of the solution on the stability
  • Is still not clear to us.

36
3. Thermal phases of QCD from non critcal string
model
  • In 2006 with O. Aharony and S. Yankielowicz we
    have analyzed the hologrphic thermal phase
    structure of QCD based on thermalizing the Sakai
    Sugimoto model.
  • With K. Peeters and M. Zamaklar we analyzed the
    spectrum of thermal mesons and the ( no ) drag of
    mesons.
  • With V. Mazo we have done a similar analysis
    based on
  • A model of non critical D4 color branes with Nf
    D4 and anti D4 flavor branes.

37

The non critical near extremal D4 brane
  • The color and flavor barnes are

The flavor probe action is
38
Review of the bulk thermodynamics
  • We introduce temperature by compactifying the
    Euclidean time direction with periodicity b1/T
    and imposing anti-periodic boundary conditions on
    the fermions.
  • We use amodel of near extremal D4 branes (either
    ciritical or non critical).
  • There is already a compact direction x4 so in our
    thermal model ( t, x4) are compact.
  • There are only two such smooth SUGRA backgrounds

39
  • At any given T the background that dominates
    is the one that has a lower free energy, namely,
    lower classical SUGRA action ( times T).
  • The classical actions diverge. We regulate them
    by computing the difference between the two
    actions.
  • It is obvious that the two actions are equal for
    b 2p R , thus at Td 1/2p R there is a first
    order phase transition .
  • The transition is first order since the two
    solutions continue to exist both below and above
    the transition.
  • It is easy to see that for Tlt1/2 pR the
    background with a thermal factor on X4
    dominates, and above it the one with the thermal
    factor on t.

40
  • The interpretation of the phase transition is
    clear. The order parameters are
  • (i)low temperature the string tension Tst gtt
    gxx(umuL ) gt0 ? confinement
  • high temperature the string tension Tst gtt
    gxx(umuT ) 0 ? deconfinement
  • (ii) Discrete spectrum versus continuum and
    dissociation of glueballs.
  • (iii) Free energy Nc2 at high temperature Nc0
    at low temperature
  • (iv) Vanishing/non vanishing Polyakov loop (
    string wrapping the time direction)
  • The dominant phase for small l /R, due to the
    symmetry under
  • T ?gt 1/2p R, is a symmetric phase Aharony,
    Minwalla Weismann

Tlt? 1/2 pR
41
The phase diagram of the pure glue theory
Symmetric phase
----------------
42

Low temperature phase
  • At the UV the D8 and anti D8 are separated ?
    U(Nf)L x U(Nf)R
  • In the IR they merge together ? spontaneous
    breaking U(Nf)D
  • To verify this we analyze the DBI probe brane
    action
  • The solution of the corresponding equation of
    motion is

43
The low temperature phase with flavor
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The high temperature deconfining phase
  • Recall that the action has now the thermal
    factor on the t direction
  • The equation of motion admits a solution similar
    to the one
  • of the low temperature domain, namely with chiral
    symmetry breaking
  • However there is an additional stable solution of
    two disconnected
  • stacks of branes.
  • This obviously corresponds to chiral restoration.
  • This is possible since at uuT the t cycle
    shrinks to zero and the
  • D8 branes can smoothly end there.

46
Chiral symmetry breaking/restoring
47
  • The configuration with the lower free energy
    DBI action dominates
  • The action diverges but can be regulated by
    computing the difference
  • between the chiral symmetry breaking and
    restoring solutions

where yu/u0
  • We solve it numerically and find
  • For yT gt yTc 0.735 DS gt 0
  • For yT lt yTc 0.735 DS lt 0
    U

48
The action difference DS as a function of yT
(LT)
DS
c symmetry restored
yT
c symmetry broken
  • The c symmetry breaking/restoring phase
    transition, just like the conf/decon Is a first
    order phase transition

49
Phase diagram-
  • We express the critical point in terms of the
    physical quantities T,L

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Summary
  • We introduce a current algebra mass to the quark,
    associate the chiral symmetry breaking to an
    expectation value of a bi-fundamental tachyon and
    derived the GOR relation.
  • We analyzed the leading order backreaction on the
    Sakai Sugimoto model
  • We realized that the thermal phase structure
    derived from a non critical holomorphic model is
    very similar to the result from the ciritical
    thermalized Sakai Sugimoto model.

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Outline
  • Bulk thermodynamics of Wittens model- phases of
    YM theory dual
  • Adding quarks in the fundamental representation
  • The low temperature phase of the SS model
    confinement,
  • The high temperature phase deconfinement.
  • The phase diagram, intermediate phase of
    deconfinement and chiral symmetry breaking
  • The spectrum of the thermal mesons of the various
    phases
  • The dissociation of mesons at high temperature
  • Boosting mesons, ( no) drag, critical velocity

55
  • The parameters of the gauge theory are given in
    the sugra
  • The gravity picture is valid only provided that
    l5 gtgt R
  • In fact near the D8 branes the condition is l5
    gtgt L
  • At energies Eltlt 1/R the theory is effectively
    4d.
  • However it is not really QCD since Mgb MKK
  • In the opposite limit of l5 ltlt R we approach QCD

56
  • Thus there is a family of solutions parametrized
    by u0 gtuL.
  • A special case is the u0 uL , or Lp R
    (Sakai Sugimoto)
  • We can parameterize the solution instead in
    terms of L
  • For small values of L the action depends on L as
    follows

57
Thermal Mesons
  • In general mesons are strings that start and end
    on a D8 brane
  • For low spin these mesons correspond to the
    fluctuations of
  • the fields that reside on the probe branes.
  • Embedding scalars ?? pseudo scalar mesons
  • U(Nf) gauge fiedls ? ? vector mesons
  • Higher spin mesons are described by
    semi-classical stringy
  • Configurations Kruczenski, Pando Zayas, J.S,
    Vaman

58
High spin Stringy meson
59
Low spin Mesons in the confining phase
  • The structure of the mesonic spectrum is like in
    zero temperature.
  • We expand the 5d probe gauge fields
  • The four dimensional action of the vector
    fluctuations reads
  • The spectrum includes massless Goldstone pions
    associated with the c symmetry breaking
  • The mass eigenvalues are determined from
  • There are no deconfined quarks
  • The spectrum of massive mesons is discrete and
    indpendent of T

60
Scaling and the M1/L relation.
  • For short mesons one can
    determine the mass scale
  • of the meson with no computation from a scaling
    argument
  • In this limit and
  • We can rewrite the eigenvalue equation in terms
    of a dimensionless quantity y in the form

Which implies that the right hand side is also
dimensionless and thus
61
Meson mass as a function of the constituent
quark mass
  • If we identify the vertical parts of the
    spinning string as
  • massive quark end points, the energy of these
    segments corresponds to the quark constituent
    mass given by
  • The numerical results show that the meson mass is
    linaer with the constituent mass

62
M2 as a function of the excitation number n
M2
n
  • Thus, the meson mass behaves like Mn ( and not
    M2n)

63

Low spin mesons in the intemediate phase
  • To determine the thermal masses we consider
    spatially homogeneous modes
  • The probe brane action reduces to
  • The spectrum is determined by numerical
    shooting for

64
  • The masses in the intermediate phase are smaller
    than in the low one
  • They admit the non stringy behavior of m n

Low phase
Low phase
Intermediate
Intermediate
65
Masses of the low lying mesons as a function of
the temperature
  • The masses decrease as a function of the
    temeperature
  • The behavior is in qualitative agreement with
    lattice calculations.

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High spin stringy meson
  • A meson is a spinning string that start and ends
    on a probe brane

68
  • The relevant part of the metric of the
    deconfining background
  • The classical spinning string
  • The DBI action for such a configuration reads
  • The corresponding equation of motion

69
  • For the action to be real

or
  • In fact this is nothing but that the speed of
    light is f(u)
  • Thus the spinning string has to be above these
    curves
  • The numerical solutions of the profiles of the
    strings

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  • Dissociation temperature of high spin mesons

Zero temperature
High temperature
  • Zero temperature
  • High temperature
  • There is a maximal value of the spin as a
    function of the temperature

72
  • The mass dependence as a function of the
    temperature
  • for the high spin mesons is similar to that of
    the low spine ones

73
  • Mesons in the chiraly restored phase

Recall in this phase there are two separated
stacks of branes and hence chiral symmetry is
restored.
  • The meson masses are determined by

and the normalizability condition
  • The pion is no longer
    normalizable and hence disappear from the spectrum
  • There are light deconfined stringy quarks in
    this phase

74
  • If we expand the equation around uT we can
    solve analytially
  • the equation and can compare to the shooting
    results
  • The solution

75
(no) Drag effect on mesons moving in the plasma
  • It was shown recently that a single quark ( a
    string from the probe
  • brane to the horizon) suffers from a drag when
    moving
  • The string is bended and there is momentum flow
    into the horizon
  • and one has to apply force on the string at the
    flavor brane
  • This does not happen to the spinning string and
    even not to a moving spinning string. The string
    bends but there is no drag
  • A suitable ansatz of the string is of the form
  • The action becomes

76
  • The condition for a real action is
  • The solutions of the EOM are above this threshold
    and hence
  • the mesons do not suffer any drag

77
  • There is a critical velocity beyond which a state
    with a given
  • spin has to dissociate.
  • Similarly the 4d size of the meson decreases with
    the velocity

Found also (analytically) by Liu, Rajagopal and
U. Wiedermann
78
Summary
  • We constructed a holographic model of the thermal
    phases of QCD
  • It is based on thermalizing the Sakai Sugimoto
    mode
  • Both the conf/deconf and c breaking/restoring
  • are first order phase transition
  • For small L/R there is an intermediate phase of
  • deconfinement and chiral symmetry breaking
  • We computed the thermal spectrum of mesons

79
  • In the low temperature phase the masses are
    temperature independent
  • The low spin mesons admit M n behavior (unlike
    the stringy form M2 n )
  • In the intermediate phase the masses are
    temperature dependent similar
  • to lattice results.
  • The same qualitative behavior occurs also for
    spinning string mesons
  • There is a dissociation phenomenon of mesons, at
    any given temperature there is a maximal possible
    string.
  • There is no drag on meson.
  • There is a velocity dependence of the maximal
    spin and 4d size

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Thermal
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Mass square of first state as a function of u0
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Adding quarks in the fundamental representation-
The Sakai Sugimoto model model
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