Abstract

We propose a novel simulation strategy for Yang-Mills theories with a complex coupling, based on the Lefschetz thimble decomposition. We envisage, that the approach developed in the present work, can also be adapted to QCD at finite density, and real time simulations. Simulations with Lefschetz thimbles offer a potential solution to sign problems in Monte Carlo calculations within many different models with complex actions. We discuss the structure of Generalized Lefschetz thimbles for pure Yang-Mills theories with a complex gauge coupling $\beta$ and show how to incorporate the gauge orbits. We propose to simulate such theories on the union of the tangential manifolds to the relevant Lefschetz thimbles attached to the critical manifolds of the Yang-Mills action. We demonstrate our algorithm on a (1+1)-dimensional U(1) model and discuss how, starting from the main thimble result, successive subleading thimbles can be taken into account via a reweighting approach. While we face a residual sign problem, our novel approach performs exponentially better than the standard reweighting approach.

Highlights

  • The notorious sign problem hampers numerical simulations of many interesting physical systems, ranging from high energy to condensed matter systems

  • We propose a novel simulation strategy for Yang-Mills theories with a complex coupling, based on the Lefschetz thimble decomposition

  • We propose to simulate such theories on the union of the tangential manifolds to the relevant Lefschetz thimbles attached to the critical manifolds of the Yang-Mills action

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Summary

Introduction

The notorious sign problem hampers numerical simulations of many interesting physical systems, ranging from high energy to condensed matter systems. Examples of theories with a sign problem include realtime calculations in lattice-regularized quantum field theories, i.e., lattice QCD in Minkowski space-time, with a nonzero vacuum angle θ and with a nonzero baryon chemical potential μB. For the latter two cases, many methods have been developed that potentially circumvent or solve this problem in the continuum limit.

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