6533b7d7fe1ef96bd12686f6
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Pinch technique self-energies and vertices to all orders in perturbation theory
Daniele BinosiJoannis Papavassiliousubject
PhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsParticle physicsBackground field methodHigh Energy Physics::LatticeHigh Energy Physics::PhenomenologyFOS: Physical sciencesFísicaFunction (mathematics)Vertex (geometry)RenormalizationHigh Energy Physics - PhenomenologyTheoretical physicsHigh Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)Kernel (statistics)Covariant transformationUniquenessPerturbation theory (quantum mechanics)description
The all-order construction of the pinch technique gluon self-energy and quark-gluon vertex is presented in detail within the class of linear covariant gauges. The main ingredients in our analysis are the identification of a special Green's function, which serves as a common kernel to all self-energy and vertex diagrams, and the judicious use of the Slavnov-Taylor identity it satisfies. In particular, it is shown that the ghost-Green's functions appearing in this identity capture precisely the result of the pinching action at arbitrary order. By virtue of this observation the construction of the quark-gluon vertex becomes particularly compact. It turns out that the aforementioned ghost-Green's functions play a crucial role, their net effect being the non-trivial modification of the ghost diagrams of the quark-gluon vertex in such a way as to reproduce dynamically the characteristic ghost sector of the background field method. The gluon self-energy is also constructed following two different procedures. First, an indirect derivation is given, by resorting to the strong induction method and the assumption of the uniqueness of the S-matrix. Second, an explicit construction based on the intrinsic pinch technique is provided, using the Slavnov-Taylor identity satisfied by the all-order three-gluon vertex nested inside the self-energy diagrams. The process-independence of the gluon self-energy is also demonstrated, by using gluons instead of quark as external test particles, and identifying the corresponding kernel function, together with its Slavnov-Taylor identity. Finally, the general methodology for carrying out the renormalization of the resulting Green's functions is outlined, and various open questions are briefly discussed.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2003-01-14 |