
TL;DR
This paper reviews the phase structure of gauge theories, highlighting recent discoveries of models with complex phase behavior, including confinement and deconfinement transitions, using semiclassical methods and monopole solutions.
Contribution
It introduces a new class of gauge theory models with rich phase structures, extending understanding of confinement-deconfinement transitions and non-perturbative effects.
Findings
Discovery of models with confined phases at small S^1 circumference
Role of Euclidean monopoles in non-perturbative string tension calculation
Application of techniques to finite-temperature and conformal phases
Abstract
One of the most fundamental questions we can ask about a given gauge theory is its phase diagram. In the standard model, we observe three fundamentally different types of behavior: QCD is in a confined phase at zero temperature, while the electroweak sector of the standard model combines Coulomb and Higgs phases. Our current understanding of the phase structure of gauge theories owes much to the modern theory of phase transitions and critical phenomena, but has developed into a subject of extensive study. After reviewing some fundamental concepts of phase transitions and finite-temperature gauge theories, we discuss some recent work that broadly extends our knowledge of the mechanisms that determine the phase structure of gauge theories. A new class of models with a rich phase structure has been discovered, generalizing our understanding of the confinement-deconfinement transition in…
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