Spin-1 and spin-2 fields

Author(s):  
Michael Kachelriess

Massive and massless spin-1 and spin-2 fields, their field equations and propagators are studied. The connection between local gauge symmetry and the coupling to a conserved current is derived in the massless case. The dynamical stress tensor is defined as source of gravity, and its local conservation is shown. The basic ideas of large extra dimensions is outlined in an appendix.

2003 ◽  
Vol 18 (22) ◽  
pp. 4015-4026 ◽  
Author(s):  
PAUL LANGACKER

Alternatives to the traditional grand unified theory seesaw for neutrino masses are briefly described. These include the possibility of large extra dimensions and various possibilities for models involving an extra U(1)′ gauge symmetry. The difficulty of observing Majorana phases in neutrinoless double beta decay is also briefly commented on.


2014 ◽  
Vol 29 (22) ◽  
pp. 1450120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jong-Ping Hsu

We discuss a confining model for quark–antiquark system with a new color SU3 gauge symmetry. New gauge transformations involve non-integrable phase factors and lead to the fourth-order gauge field equations and a linear potential. The massless gauge bosons have non-definite energies, which are not observable because they are permanently confined in quark systems by the linear potential. We use the empirical potentials of charmonium to determine the coupling strength of the color charge gs and find [Formula: see text]. The rules for Feynman diagrams involve propagators with poles of order 2 associated with new gauge fields. The confining quark model may be renormalizable by power counting and compatible with perturbation theory.


2007 ◽  
Vol 2007 (11) ◽  
pp. 089-089 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin C Allanach ◽  
Jordan P Skittrall ◽  
K Sridhar

Author(s):  
Jean Zinn-Justin

This chapter describes the formal properties, and discusses the renormalization, of quantum field theories (QFT) based on homogeneous spaces: coset spaces of the form G/H, where G is a compact Lie group and H a Lie subgroup. In physics, they appear naturally in the case of spontaneous symmetry breaking, and describe the interaction between Goldstone modes. Homogeneous spaces are associated with non-linear realizations of group representations. There exist natural ways to embed these manifolds in flat Euclidean spaces, spaces in which the symmetry group acts linearly. As in the example of the non-linear σ-model, this embedding is first used, because the renormalization properties are simpler, and the physical interpretation of the more direct correlation functions. Then, in a generic parametrization, the renormalization problem is solved by the introduction of a Becchi–Rouet–Stora–Tyutin (BRST)-like symmetry with anticommuting (Grassmann) parameters, which also plays an essential role in quantized gauge theories. The more specific properties of models corresponding to a special class of homogeneous spaces, symmetric spaces (like the non-linear σ-model), are studied. These models are characterized by the uniqueness of the metric and thus, of the classical action. In two dimensions, from the classical field equations an infinite number of non-local conservation laws can be derived. The field and the unique coupling renormalization group (RG) functions are calculated at one-loop order, in two dimensions, and shown to imply asymptotic freedom.


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