Search results for "Introduction to gauge theory"
showing 10 items of 16 documents
Relations for Einstein–Yang–Mills amplitudes from the CHY representation
2017
We show that a recently discovered relation, which expresses tree-level single trace Einstein-Yang-Mills amplitudes with one graviton and $(n-1)$ gauge bosons as a linear combination of pure Yang-Mills tree amplitudes with $n$ gauge bosons, can be derived from the CHY representation. In addition we show that there is a generalisation, which expresses tree-level single trace Einstein-Yang-Mills amplitudes with $r$ gravitons and $(n-r)$ gauge bosons as a linear combination of pure Yang-Mills tree amplitudes with $n$ gauge bosons. We present a general formula for this case.
Gauge-independent off-shell fermion self-energies at two loops: The cases of QED and QCD
2001
We use the pinch technique formalism to construct the gauge-independent off-shell two-loop fermion self-energy, both for Abelian (QED) and non-Abelian (QCD) gauge theories. The new key observation is that all contributions originating from the longitudinal parts of gauge boson propagators, by virtue of the elementary tree-level Ward identities they trigger, give rise to effective vertices, which do not exist in the original Lagrangian; all such vertices cancel diagrammatically inside physical quantities, such as current correlation functions or S-matrix elements. We present two different, but complementary derivations: First, we explicitly track down the aforementioned cancellations inside …
A partial elucidation of the gauge principle
2008
The elucidation of the gauge principle "is the most pressing problem in current philosophy of physics" said Michael Redhead in 2003. This paper argues for two points that contribute to this elucidation in the context of Yang–Mills theories. (1) Yang–Mills theories, including quantum electrodynamics, form a class. They should be interpreted together. To focus on electrodynamics is potentially misleading. (2) The essential role of gauge and BRST symmetries is to provide a local field theory that can be quantized and would be equivalent to the quantization of the non-local reduced theory. If this is correct, the gauge symmetry is significant, not so much because it implies ontological conseque…
Lorentz invariance and gauge equivariance
2014
Trying to place Lorentz and gauge transformations on the same foundation, it turns out that the first one generates invariance, the second one equivariance, at least for the abelian case. This similarity is not a hypothesis but is supported by and a consequence of the path integral formalism in quantum field theory.
Three-dimensional singletons
1990
The three-dimensional analog of singleton gauge theory turns out to be related to the topological gauge theory of Schwartz and Witten. It is a fully-fledged gauge theory, though it involves only a single scalar field. Real, physical degrees of freedom propagate in 3-space, but they are ‘confined’ in the sense that they cannot be detected locally. The physical Hamiltonian density is not zero, but it is concentrated on the boundary at spatial infinity. This boundary surface, a torus, supports a two-dimensional conformal field theory.
Asymptotic freedom in massive Yang-Mills theory
2007
An effective field theory model of the massive Yang-Mills theory is considered. Assuming that the renormalized coupling constants of 'non-renormalizable' interactions are suppressed by a large scale parameter it is shown that in analogy to the non-abelian gauge invariant theory the dimensionless coupling constant vanishes logarithmically for large values of the renormalization scale parameter.
The pinch technique at two loops
1999
It is shown that the fundamental properties of gauge-independence, gauge-invariance, unitarity, and analyticity of the $S$-matrix lead to the unambiguous generalization of the pinch technique algorithm to two loops.
Abelian charges in a nonabelian Yang-Mills theory from the stratification of the space of gauge potentials
1992
Abstract The Abelian charges in a non-Abelian Yang-Mills-Dirac theory arising from the reduction of the structure group are studied. They are defined by the concept of the stabilizer gauge transformations. Their properties are investigated. The relationship between the whole class of stabilizers and the stratification of the space of gauge potentials is given. The effect of the spontaneous symmetry breaking mechanism on these charges is discussed.
The Higgs Mechanism and Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking
2002
As is well known all gauge bosons of a pure Yang-Mills theory are necessarily massless. This is so because any ad-hoc mass term such as $$ m_i^2 A_\mu ^{(i)} A^{(i)\mu } or \sum\limits_{ik} {M_{ik} } A_\mu ^{(i)} A^{(k)\mu } $$ is incompatible with local gauge invariance. It is saidthat W. Pauli hadd evelopednonab elian gauge theory for himself (or knew about it from the work of H. Weyl and O. Klein) before the work of C.N. Yang and R. Mills (1954) but dismissedit because he hadrealizedthat the gauge particles wouldall be massless. As there was only one massless spin-1 particle known at the time (the photon) nonabelian gauge theory was to be rejectedon physical grounds. The few facts that w…
Gauge-invariant proper self-energies and vertices in gauge-theories with broken symmetry
1990
Using the pinch technique, we show how to recover, from the {ital S} matrix of a spontaneously broken non-Abelian gauge theory, proper self-energies and vertices which are fully gauge invariant when one or more momenta are off shell. Explicit calculations are carried out at the one-loop level for gauge-boson self-energies and fermion--gauge-boson vertices in a simple SU(2) gauge theory with a Higgs boson. The same technique allows us to calculate, at one-loop order, a neutrino electromagnetic form factor which is gauge invariant at all photon momenta, thus resolving a long-standing problem. We show how massless Goldstone bosons, not present in the {ital S} matrix, must be introduced into Gr…