A FORMULATION OF CHIRAL GAUGE THEORIES OFF AND ON THE LATTICE

1992 ◽  
Vol 07 (01) ◽  
pp. 177-191 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. D. KIEU

A formulation is proposed of Abelian chiral gauge theory which is invariant with respect to a gauge symmetry and admits both fermion and vector-boson mass terms, without invoking the Higgs mechanism. The issues of unitarity and renormalizability are discussed, and a lattice chiral regularization free from the problem of fermion-species doubling is constructed and compared with others.

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.


1990 ◽  
Vol 05 (06) ◽  
pp. 1123-1133 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. WOTZASEK

We proposed an algorithm to modify anomalous gauge theories by inserting new degrees of freedom in the system which transforms the constraints from second to first class. We illustrate this technique working out the cases of a massive vector boson field and the chiral Schwinger model.


Author(s):  
Govind S. Krishnaswami ◽  
Sachin S. Phatak

In the Higgs mechanism, mediators of the weak force acquire masses by interacting with the Higgs condensate, leading to a vector boson mass matrix. On the other hand, a rigid body accelerated through an inviscid, incompressible and irrotational fluid feels an opposing force linearly related to its acceleration, via an added-mass tensor. We uncover a striking physical analogy between the two effects and propose a dictionary relating them. The correspondence turns the gauge Lie algebra into the space of directions in which the body can move, encodes the pattern of gauge symmetry breaking in the shape of an associated body and relates symmetries of the body to those of the scalar vacuum manifold. The new viewpoint is illustrated with numerous examples, and raises interesting questions, notably on the fluid analogues of the broken symmetry and Higgs particle, and the field-theoretic analogue of the added mass of a composite body.


1989 ◽  
Vol 04 (27) ◽  
pp. 2675-2683 ◽  
Author(s):  
SHOGO MIYAKE ◽  
KEN-ICHI SHIZUYA

Using a gauge-symmetric formulation of anomalous gauge theories, we study the consistency and symmetry contents of a chiral gauge theory in four dimensions. The gauge symmetry, restored by the inclusion of the Wess-Zumino term, is spontaneously broken and the gauge field acquires a mass. Symmetry arguments are used to determine the particle spectrum and the current algebra of the model. Our analysis indicates that, apart from a question of renormalizability, the present theory is a consistent gauge theory.


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.


Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 2276
Author(s):  
Nouman Butt ◽  
Simon Catterall ◽  
Goksu Can Toga

We construct a four-dimensional lattice gauge theory in which fermions acquire mass without breaking symmetries as a result of gauge interactions. Our model consists of reduced staggered fermions transforming in the bifundamental representation of an SU(2)×SU(2) gauge symmetry. This fermion representation ensures that single-site bilinear mass terms vanish identically. A symmetric four-fermion operator is however allowed, and we give numerical results that show that a condensate of this operator develops in the vacuum.


2008 ◽  
Vol 05 (02) ◽  
pp. 233-252 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOSÉ M. ISIDRO

Any quantum-mechanical system possesses a U(1) gerbe naturally defined on configuration space. Acting on Feynman's kernel exp(iS/ħ), this U(1) symmetry allows one to arbitrarily pick the origin for the classical action S, on a point-by-point basis on configuration space. This is equivalent to the statement that quantum mechanics is a U(1) gauge theory. Unlike Yang–Mills theories, however, the geometry of this gauge symmetry is not given by a fibre bundle, but rather by a gerbe. Since this gauge symmetry is spontaneously broken, an analogue of the Higgs mechanism must be present. We prove that a Heisenberg-like noncommutativity for the space coordinates is responsible for the breaking. This allows to interpret the noncommutativity of space coordinates as a Higgs mechanism on the quantum-mechanical U(1) gerbe.


2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (10) ◽  
pp. 1950035
Author(s):  
Roberta A. Iseppi

We review the BV formalism in the context of [Formula: see text]-dimensional gauge theories. For a gauge theory [Formula: see text] with an affine configuration space [Formula: see text], we describe an algorithm to construct a corresponding extended theory [Formula: see text], obtained by introducing ghost and anti-ghost fields, with [Formula: see text] a solution of the classical master equation in [Formula: see text]. This construction is the first step to define the (gauge-fixed) BRST cohomology complex associated to [Formula: see text], which encodes many interesting information on the initial gauge theory [Formula: see text]. The second part of this article is devoted to the application of this method to a matrix model endowed with a [Formula: see text]-gauge symmetry, explicitly determining the corresponding [Formula: see text] and the general solution [Formula: see text] of the classical master equation for the model.


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.


1980 ◽  
Vol 58 (9) ◽  
pp. 1367-1374
Author(s):  
Christos Ragiadakos

From a direct generalization of the Lagrangians of gauge theories we derive the MIT bag model Lagrangian. An additional free quark sector is derived which may disappear after the proper quantization of the bag Lagrangian. When the gauge symmetry is spontaneously broken via a Higgs mechanism, we show that the fields can be liberated. The realistic [Formula: see text] gauge model (Weinberg–Salam model with chromodynamics) is explicitly studied.


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