6533b7defe1ef96bd1276830

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Yang-Mills two-point functions in linear covariant gauges

Arlene Cristina AguilarJoannis PapavassiliouDaniele Binosi

subject

PhysicsHigh Energy Physics - TheoryNuclear and High Energy PhysicsHigh Energy Physics::LatticeHigh Energy Physics - Lattice (hep-lat)PropagatorFOS: Physical sciencesFísicaYang–Mills existence and mass gapRotation formalisms in three dimensionsGluonHigh Energy Physics - PhenomenologyHigh Energy Physics::TheoryHigh Energy Physics - LatticeHigh Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)High Energy Physics - Theory (hep-th)Quantum mechanicsCovariant transformationMathematical physicsGauge fixingAnsatz

description

In this work we use two different but complementary approaches in order to study the ghost propagator of a pure SU(3) Yang-Mills theory quantized in the linear covariant gauges, focusing on its dependence on the gauge-fixing parameter $\xi$ in the deep infrared. In particular, we first solve the Schwinger-Dyson equation that governs the dynamics of the ghost propagator, using a set of simplifying approximations, and under the crucial assumption that the gluon propagators for $\xi>0$ are infrared finite, as is the case in the Landau gauge $(\xi=0)$. Then we appeal to the Nielsen identities, and express the derivative of the ghost propagator with respect to $\xi$ in terms of certain auxiliary Green's functions, which are subsequently computed under the same assumptions as before. Within both formalisms we find that for $\xi>0$ the ghost dressing function approaches zero in the deep infrared, in sharp contrast to what happens in the Landau gauge, where it known to saturate at a finite (non-vanishing) value. The Nielsen identities are then extended to the case of the gluon propagator, and the $\xi$-dependence of the corresponding gluon masses is derived using as input the results obtained in the previous steps. The result turns out to be logarithmically divergent in the deep infrared; the compatibility of this behavior with the basic assumption of a finite gluon propagator is discussed, and a specific Ansatz is put forth, which readily reconciles both features.

10.1103/physrevd.91.085014http://hdl.handle.net/10550/49218