scholarly journals CHIRAL GAUGE THEORIES ON THE LATTICE WITHOUT GAUGE FIXING?

1994 ◽  
Vol 05 (02) ◽  
pp. 327-329
Author(s):  
WOLFGANG BOCK

We discuss two proposals for a non-perturbative formulation of chiral gauge theories on the lattice. In both cases gauge symmetry is broken by the regularization. We aim at a dynamical restoration of symmetry. If the gauge symmetry breaking is not too severe this procedure could lead in the continuum limit to the desired chiral gauge theory.

2002 ◽  
Vol 17 (02) ◽  
pp. 157-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. V. GUBAREV ◽  
V. I. ZAKHAROV

We consider the quantum mechanical notion of the geometrical (Berry) phase in SU(2) gauge theory, both in the continuum and on the lattice. It is shown that in the coherent state basis eigenvalues of the Wilson loop operator naturally decompose into the geometrical and dynamical phase factors. Moreover, for each Wilson loop there is a unique choice of U(1) gauge rotations which do not change the value of the Berry phase. Determining this U(1) locally in terms of infinitesimal Wilson loops we define monopole-like defects and study their properties in numerical simulations on the lattice. The construction is gauge dependent, as is common for all known definitions of monopoles. We argue that for physical applications the use of the Lorentz gauge is most appropriate. And, indeed, the constructed monopoles have the correct continuum limit in this gauge. Physical consequences are briefly discussed.


1993 ◽  
Vol 08 (27) ◽  
pp. 4755-4895 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALAN R. WHITE

The high-energy Regge behavior of gauge theories is studied via the formalism of analytic multi-Regge theory. Perturbative results for spontaneously broken theories are first organized into Reggeon diagrams. Unbroken gauge theories are studied via a Reggeon-diagram infrared analysis of symmetry restoration. Massless fermions play a crucial role and the case of QCD involves the supercritical Pomeron as an essential intermediate stage. An introductory review of the buildup of transverse-momentum diagrams and Reggeon diagrams from leading-log calculations in gauge theories is presented first. It is then shown that the results closely reproduce the general structure for multi-Regge amplitudes derived in Part I of the article, allowing the construction of general Reggeon diagrams for spontaneously broken theories. Next it is argued that, with a transverse-momentum cutoff, unbroken gauge theories can be reached through an infrared limiting process which successively decouples fundamental-representation Higgs fields. The first infrared limit studied is the restoration of SU(2) gauge symmetry. The analysis is dominated by the exponentiation of divergences imposed by Reggeon unitarity and the contribution of massless quarks to Reggeon interactions. Massless quarks also produce “triangle anomaly” transverse-momentum divergences which do not exponentiate but instead are absorbed into a Reggeon condensate — which can be viewed as a “generalized winding-number condensate.” The result is a Reggeon spectrum consistent with confinement and chiral-symmetry breaking, but there is no Pomeron. The analysis is valid when the gauge coupling does not grow in the infrared region, i.e. when a sufficient number of massless quarks is present. An analogy is drawn between the confinement produced by the Reggeon condensate and that produced by regularization of the fermion sea, in the presence of the anomaly, in the two-dimensional Schwinger model. When the analysis is extended to the case of QCD with the gauge symmetry restored to SU(2), the Reggeon condensate can be identified with the Pomeron condensate of supercritical Pomeron theory. In this case, the condensate converts an SU(2) singlet Reggeized gluon to a Pomeron Regge pole — which becomes an SU(3) singlet when the full gauge symmetry is restored, The condensate disappears as SU(3) symmetry is recovered, and in general this limit gives the critical Pomeron at a particular value of the transverse cutoff. If the maximal number of fermions consistent with asymptotic freedom is present, no transverse-momentum cutoff is required. For SU (N) gauge theory it is argued that, when the theory contains many fermions, there are N–2 Pomeron Regge poles of alternating signature. This spectrum of Pomeron trajectories is in direct correspondence with the topological properties of transverse flux tubes characterized by the center ZN of the gauge group. The corresponding Reggeon-field-theory solution of s-channel unitarity should include a representation of ZN in the cutting rules. Finally, the implications of the results for the phenomenological study of the Pomeron as well as for the construction of QCD with a small number of flavors are discussed. Also discussed is the attractive possibility that a flavor doublet of color-sextet quarks could both produce the critical Pomeron in QCD and be responsible for electroweak dynamical-symmetry breaking.


2017 ◽  
Vol 32 (14) ◽  
pp. 1750077 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. A. Escobar ◽  
L. F. Urrutia

Yang–Mills theories supplemented by an additional coordinate constraint, which is solved and substituted in the original Lagrangian, provide examples of the so-called Nambu models, in the case where such constraints arise from spontaneous Lorentz symmetry breaking. Some explicit calculations have shown that, after additional conditions are imposed, Nambu models are capable of reproducing the original gauge theories, thus making Lorentz violation unobservable and allowing the interpretation of the corresponding massless gauge bosons as the Goldstone bosons arising from the spontaneous symmetry breaking. A natural question posed by this approach in the realm of gauge theories is to determine under which conditions the recovery of an arbitrary gauge theory from the corresponding Nambu model, defined by a general constraint over the coordinates, becomes possible. We refer to these theories as extended Nambu models (ENM) and emphasize the fact that the defining coordinate constraint is not treated as a standard gauge fixing term. At this level, the mechanism for generating the constraint is irrelevant and the case of spontaneous Lorentz symmetry breaking is taken only as a motivation, which naturally bring this problem under consideration. Using a nonperturbative Hamiltonian analysis we prove that the ENM yields the original gauge theory after we demand current conservation for all time, together with the imposition of the Gauss laws constraints as initial conditions upon the dynamics of the ENM. The Nambu models yielding electrodynamics, Yang–Mills theories and linearized gravity are particular examples of our general approach.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrey Yu. Kotov ◽  
Daniel Nogradi ◽  
Kalman K. Szabo ◽  
Lorinc Szikszai

Abstract In previous work, [arXiv:1905.01909], we have calculated the mϱ/fπ ratio in the chiral and continuum limit for SU(3) gauge theory coupled to Nf = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 fermions in the fundamental representation. The main result was that this ratio displays no statistically significant Nf-dependence. In the present work we continue the study of the Nf-dependence by extending the simulations to Nf = 7, 8, 9, 10. Along the way we also study in detail the Nf-dependence of finite volume effects on low energy observables and a particular translational symmetry breaking unphysical, lattice artefact phase specific to staggered fermions.


1989 ◽  
Vol 04 (14) ◽  
pp. 1343-1353 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.E. CLARK ◽  
C.-H. LEE ◽  
S.T. LOVE

The supersymmetric extensions of anti-symmetric tensor gauge theories and their associated tensor gauge symmetry transformations are constructed. The classical equivalence between such supersymmetric tensor gauge theories and supersymmetric non-linear sigma models is established. The global symmetry of the supersymmetric tensor gauge theory is gauged and the locally invariant action is obtained. The supercurrent on the Kähler manifold is found in terms of the supersymmetric tensor gauge field.


2000 ◽  
Vol 15 (37) ◽  
pp. 2245-2256 ◽  
Author(s):  
YING CHEN ◽  
BING HE ◽  
HE LIN ◽  
JI-MIN WU

We calculated the SU(2) gluon propagator in Landau gauge on an anisotropic coarse lattice with the improved action. The standard and improved schemes are used to fix the gauge in this work. Even on the coarse lattice the lattice gluon propagator can be well described by a function of the continuous momentum. The effect of the improved gauge fixing scheme is found not to be apparent. Based on the Marenzoni's model, the mass scale and the anomalous dimension are extracted and can be reasonably extrapolated to the continuum limit with the values α~0.3 and M~600 MeV . We also extract the physical anisotropy ξ from the gluon propagator due to the explicit ξ dependence of the gluon propagator.


2004 ◽  
Vol 580 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 209-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Subhasish Basak ◽  
Asit K De ◽  
Tilak Sinha

2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (05) ◽  
pp. 1550020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristian Hauser Villegas ◽  
Jose Perico Esguerra

The lattice gauge theory (LGT) for curved spacetime is formulated. A discretized action is derived for both gluon and quark fields which reduces to the generally covariant form in the continuum limit. Using the Wilson action, it is shown analytically that for a general curved spacetime background, two propagating gluons are always color-confined. The fermion-doubling problem is discussed in the specific case of Friedman–Robertson–Walker (FRW) metric. Last, we discussed possible future numerical implementation of lattice QCD in curved spacetime.


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