6533b82bfe1ef96bd128ce8e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Conformal Symmetry and Differential Regularization of the Three-Gluon Vertex

Gianluca GrignaniDaniel Z. FreedmanNuria RiusKenneth A. Johnson

subject

High Energy Physics - TheoryPhysicsQuantum chromodynamicsUltraviolet divergenceHigh Energy Physics::LatticeHigh Energy Physics::PhenomenologyGeneral Physics and AstronomyVertex functionFOS: Physical sciencesFísicaRenormalizationsymbols.namesakeHigh Energy Physics - Theory (hep-th)Conformal symmetryRegularization (physics)symbolsFeynman diagramGauge fixingMathematical physics

description

The conformal symmetry of the QCD Lagrangian for massless quarks is broken both by renormalization effects and the gauge fixing procedure. Renormalized primitive divergent amplitudes have the property that their form away from the overall coincident point singularity is fully determined by the bare Lagrangian, and scale dependence is restricted to $\delta$-functions at the singularity. If gauge fixing could be ignored, one would expect these amplitudes to be conformal invariant for non-coincident points. We find that the one-loop three-gluon vertex function $\Gamma_{\mu\nu\rho}(x,y,z)$ is conformal invariant in this sense, if calculated in the background field formalism using the Feynman gauge for internal gluons. It is not yet clear why the expected breaking due to gauge fixing is absent. The conformal property implies that the gluon, ghost and quark loop contributions to $\Gamma_{\mu\nu\rho}$ are each purely numerical combinations of two universal conformal tensors $D_{\mu\nu\rho}(x,y,z)$ and $C_{\mu\nu\rho}(x,y,z)$ whose explicit form is given in the text. Only $D_{\mu\nu\rho}$ has an ultraviolet divergence, although $C_{\mu\nu\rho}$ requires a careful definition to resolve the expected ambiguity of a formally linearly divergent quantity. Regularization is straightforward and leads to a renormalized vertex function which satisfies the required Ward identity, and from which the beta-function is easily obtained. Exact conformal invariance is broken in higher-loop orders, but we outline a speculative scenario in which the perturbative structure of the vertex function is determined from a conformal invariant primitive core by interplay of the renormalization group equation and Ward identities.

10.1016/0003-4916(92)90269-rhttp://hdl.handle.net/10550/42562