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Gauge theory

In physics, a gauge theory is a type of field theory in which the Lagrangian (and hence the dynamics of the system itself) does not change (is invariant) under local transformations according to certain smooth families of operations (Lie groups).

The term gauge refers to any specific mathematical formalism to regulate redundant degrees of freedom in the Lagrangian of a physical system. The transformations between possible gauges, called gauge transformations, form a Lie group—referred to as the symmetry group or the gauge group of the theory. Associated with any Lie group is the Lie algebra of group generators. For each group generator there necessarily arises a corresponding field (usually a vector field) called the gauge field. Gauge fields are included in the Lagrangian to ensure its invariance under the local group transformations (called gauge invariance). When such a theory is quantized, the quanta of the gauge fields are called gauge bosons. If the symmetry group is non-commutative, then the gauge theory is referred to as non-abelian gauge theory, the usual example being the Yang–Mills theory.

Many powerful theories in physics are described by Lagrangians that are invariant under some symmetry transformation groups. When they are invariant under a transformation identically performed at every point in the spacetime in which the physical processes occur, they are said to have a global symmetry. Local symmetry, the cornerstone of gauge theories, is a stronger constraint. In fact, a global symmetry is just a local symmetry whose group's parameters are fixed in spacetime (the same way a constant value can be understood as a function of a certain parameter, the output of which is always the same).

Gauge theories are important as the successful field theories explaining the dynamics of elementary particles. Quantum electrodynamics is an abelian gauge theory with the symmetry group U(1) and has one gauge field, the electromagnetic four-potential, with the photon being the gauge boson. The Standard Model is a non-abelian gauge theory with the symmetry group U(1) × SU(2) × SU(3) and has a total of twelve gauge bosons: the photon, three weak bosons and eight gluons.

Gauge theories are also important in explaining gravitation in the theory of general relativity. Its case is somewhat unusual in that the gauge field is a tensor, the Lanczos tensor. Theories of quantum gravity, beginning with gauge gravitation theory, also postulate the existence of a gauge boson known as the graviton. Gauge symmetries can be viewed as analogues of the principle of general covariance of general relativity in which the coordinate system can be chosen freely under arbitrary diffeomorphisms of spacetime. Both gauge invariance and diffeomorphism invariance reflect a redundancy in the description of the system. An alternative theory of gravitation, gauge theory gravity, replaces the principle of general covariance with a true gauge principle with new gauge fields.

Historically, these ideas were first stated in the context of classical electromagnetism and later in general relativity. However, the modern importance of gauge symmetries appeared first in the relativistic quantum mechanics of electrons – quantum electrodynamics, elaborated on below. Today, gauge theories are useful in condensed matter, nuclear and high energy physics among other subfields.

History

The earliest field theory having a gauge symmetry was Maxwell's formulation, in 1864–65, of electrodynamics ("A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field") which stated that any vector field whose curl vanishes—and can therefore normally be written as a gradient of a function—could be added to the vector potential without affecting the magnetic field. The importance of this symmetry remained unnoticed in the earliest formulations. Similarly unnoticed, Hilbert had derived the Einstein field equations by postulating the invariance of the action under a general coordinate transformation. Later Hermann Weyl, in an attempt to unify general relativity and electromagnetism, conjectured that Eichinvarianz or invariance under the change of scale (or "gauge") might also be a local symmetry of general relativity. After the development of quantum mechanics, Weyl, Vladimir Fock and Fritz London modified gauge by replacing the scale factor with a complex quantity and turned the scale transformation into a change of phase, which is a U(1) gauge symmetry. This explained the electromagnetic field effect on the wave function of a charged quantum mechanical particle. This was the first widely recognised gauge theory, popularised by Pauli in 1941.[1]

In 1954, attempting to resolve some of the great confusion in elementary particle physics, Chen Ning Yang and Robert Mills introduced non-abelian gauge theories as models to understand the strong interaction holding together nucleons in atomic nuclei.[2] (Ronald Shaw, working under Abdus Salam, independently introduced the same notion in his doctoral thesis.) Generalizing the gauge invariance of electromagnetism, they attempted to construct a theory based on the action of the (non-abelian) SU(2) symmetry group on the isospin doublet of protons and neutrons. This is similar to the action of the U(1) group on the spinor fields of quantum electrodynamics. In particle physics the emphasis was on using quantized gauge theories.

This idea later found application in the quantum field theory of the weak force, and its unification with electromagnetism in the electroweak theory. Gauge theories became even more attractive when it was realized that non-abelian gauge theories reproduced a feature called asymptotic freedom. Asymptotic freedom was believed to be an important characteristic of strong interactions. This motivated searching for a strong force gauge theory. This theory, now known as quantum chromodynamics, is a gauge theory with the action of the SU(3) group on the color triplet of quarks. The Standard Model unifies the description of electromagnetism, weak interactions and strong interactions in the language of gauge theory.

In the 1970s, Michael Atiyah began studying the mathematics of solutions to the classical Yang–Mills equations. In 1983, Atiyah's student Simon Donaldson built on this work to show that the differentiable classification of smooth 4-manifolds is very different from their classification up to homeomorphism.[3] Michael Freedman used Donaldson's work to exhibit exotic R4s, that is, exotic differentiable structures on Euclidean 4-dimensional space. This led to an increasing interest in gauge theory for its own sake, independent of its successes in fundamental physics. In 1994, Edward Witten and Nathan Seiberg invented gauge-theoretic techniques based on supersymmetry that enabled the calculation of certain topological invariants[4][5] (the Seiberg–Witten invariants). These contributions to mathematics from gauge theory have led to a renewed interest in this area.

The importance of gauge theories in physics is exemplified in the tremendous success of the mathematical formalism in providing a unified framework to describe the quantum field theories of electromagnetism, the weak force and the strong force. This theory, known as the Standard Model, accurately describes experimental predictions regarding three of the four fundamental forces of nature, and is a gauge theory with the gauge group SU(3) × SU(2) × U(1). Modern theories like string theory, as well as general relativity, are, in one way or another, gauge theories.

See Pickering[6] for more about the history of gauge and quantum field theories.

Description

Global and local symmetries

Global symmetry

In physics, the mathematical description of any physical situation usually contains excess degrees of freedom; the same physical situation is equally well described by many equivalent mathematical configurations. For instance, in Newtonian dynamics, if two configurations are related by a Galilean transformation (an inertial change of reference frame) they represent the same physical situation. These transformations form a group of "symmetries" of the theory, and a physical situation corresponds not to an individual mathematical configuration but to a class of configurations related to one another by this symmetry group.

This idea can be generalized to include local as well as global symmetries, analogous to much more abstract "changes of coordinates" in a situation where there is no preferred "inertial" coordinate system that covers the entire physical system. A gauge theory is a mathematical model that has symmetries of this kind, together with a set of techniques for making physical predictions consistent with the symmetries of the model.

Example of global symmetry

When a quantity occurring in the mathematical configuration is not just a number but has some geometrical significance, such as a velocity or an axis of rotation, its representation as numbers arranged in a vector or matrix is also changed by a coordinate transformation. For instance, if one description of a pattern of fluid flow states that the fluid velocity in the neighborhood of (x=1, y=0) is 1 m/s in the positive x direction, then a description of the same situation in which the coordinate system has been rotated clockwise by 90 degrees states that the fluid velocity in the neighborhood of (x = 0, y= −1) is 1 m/s in the negative y direction. The coordinate transformation has affected both the coordinate system used to identify the location of the measurement and the basis in which its value is expressed. As long as this transformation is performed globally (affecting the coordinate basis in the same way at every point), the effect on values that represent the rate of change of some quantity along some path in space and time as it passes through point P is the same as the effect on values that are truly local to P.

Local symmetry

Use of fiber bundles to describe local symmetries

In order to adequately describe physical situations in more complex theories, it is often necessary to introduce a "coordinate basis" for some of the objects of the theory that do not have this simple relationship to the coordinates used to label points in space and time. (In mathematical terms, the theory involves a fiber bundle in which the fiber at each point of the base space consists of possible coordinate bases for use when describing the values of objects at that point.) In order to spell out a mathematical configuration, one must choose a particular coordinate basis at each point (a local section of the fiber bundle) and express the values of the objects of the theory (usually "fields" in the physicist's sense) using this basis. Two such mathematical configurations are equivalent (describe the same physical situation) if they are related by a transformation of this abstract coordinate basis (a change of local section, or gauge transformation).

In most gauge theories, the set of possible transformations of the abstract gauge basis at an individual point in space and time is a finite-dimensional Lie group. The simplest such group is U(1), which appears in the modern formulation of quantum electrodynamics (QED) via its use of complex numbers. QED is generally regarded as the first, and simplest, physical gauge theory. The set of possible gauge transformations of the entire configuration of a given gauge theory also forms a group, the gauge group of the theory. An element of the gauge group can be parameterized by a smoothly varying function from the points of spacetime to the (finite-dimensional) Lie group, such that the value of the function and its derivatives at each point represents the action of the gauge transformation on the fiber over that point.

A gauge transformation with constant parameter at every point in space and time is analogous to a rigid rotation of the geometric coordinate system; it represents a global symmetry of the gauge representation. As in the case of a rigid rotation, this gauge transformation affects expressions that represent the rate of change along a path of some gauge-dependent quantity in the same way as those that represent a truly local quantity. A gauge transformation whose parameter is not a constant function is referred to as a local symmetry; its effect on expressions that involve a derivative is qualitatively different from that on expressions that don't. (This is analogous to a non-inertial change of reference frame, which can produce a Coriolis effect.)

Gauge fields

The "gauge covariant" version of a gauge theory accounts for this effect by introducing a gauge field (in mathematical language, an Ehresmann connection) and formulating all rates of change in terms of the covariant derivative with respect to this connection. The gauge field becomes an essential part of the description of a mathematical configuration. A configuration in which the gauge field can be eliminated by a gauge transformation has the property that its field strength (in mathematical language, its curvature) is zero everywhere; a gauge theory is not limited to these configurations. In other words, the distinguishing characteristic of a gauge theory is that the gauge field does not merely compensate for a poor choice of coordinate system; there is generally no gauge transformation that makes the gauge field vanish.

When analyzing the dynamics of a gauge theory, the gauge field must be treated as a dynamical variable, similar to other objects in the description of a physical situation. In addition to its interaction with other objects via the covariant derivative, the gauge field typically contributes energy in the form of a "self-energy" term. One can obtain the equations for the gauge theory by:

  • starting from a naïve ansatz without the gauge field (in which the derivatives appear in a "bare" form);
  • listing those global symmetries of the theory that can be characterized by a continuous parameter (generally an abstract equivalent of a rotation angle);
  • computing the correction terms that result from allowing the symmetry parameter to vary from place to place; and
  • reinterpreting these correction terms as couplings to one or more gauge fields, and giving these fields appropriate self-energy terms and dynamical behavior.

This is the sense in which a gauge theory "extends" a global symmetry to a local symmetry, and closely resembles the historical development of the gauge theory of gravity known as general relativity.

Physical experiments

Gauge theories used to model the results of physical experiments engage in:

  • limiting the universe of possible configurations to those consistent with the information used to set up the experiment, and then
  • computing the probability distribution of the possible outcomes that the experiment is designed to measure.

We cannot express the mathematical descriptions of the "setup information" and the "possible measurement outcomes", or the "boundary conditions" of the experiment, without reference to a particular coordinate system, including a choice of gauge. One assumes an adequate experiment isolated from "external" influence that is itself a gauge-dependent statement. Mishandling gauge dependence calculations in boundary conditions is a frequent source of anomalies, and approaches to anomaly avoidance classifies gauge theories[clarification needed].

Continuum theories

The two gauge theories mentioned above, continuum electrodynamics and general relativity, are continuum field theories. The techniques of calculation in a continuum theory implicitly assume that:

  • given a completely fixed choice of gauge, the boundary conditions of an individual configuration are completely described
  • given a completely fixed gauge and a complete set of boundary conditions, the least action determines a unique mathematical configuration and therefore a unique physical situation consistent with these bounds
  • fixing the gauge introduces no anomalies in the calculation, due either to gauge dependence in describing partial information about boundary conditions or to incompleteness of the theory.

Determination of the likelihood of possible measurement outcomes proceed by:

  • establishing a probability distribution over all physical situations determined by boundary conditions consistent with the setup information
  • establishing a probability distribution of measurement outcomes for each possible physical situation
  • convolving these two probability distributions to get a distribution of possible measurement outcomes consistent with the setup information

These assumptions have enough validity across a wide range of energy scales and experimental conditions to allow these theories to make accurate predictions about almost all of the phenomena encountered in daily life: light, heat, and electricity, eclipses, spaceflight, etc. They fail only at the smallest and largest scales due to omissions in the theories themselves, and when the mathematical techniques themselves break down, most notably in the case of turbulence and other chaotic phenomena.

Quantum field theories

Other than these classical continuum field theories, the most widely known gauge theories are quantum field theories, including quantum electrodynamics and the Standard Model of elementary particle physics. The starting point of a quantum field theory is much like that of its continuum analog: a gauge-covariant action integral that characterizes "allowable" physical situations according to the principle of least action. However, continuum and quantum theories differ significantly in how they handle the excess degrees of freedom represented by gauge transformations. Continuum theories, and most pedagogical treatments of the simplest quantum field theories, use a gauge fixing prescription to reduce the orbit of mathematical configurations that represent a given physical situation to a smaller orbit related by a smaller gauge group (the global symmetry group, or perhaps even the trivial group).

More sophisticated quantum field theories, in particular those that involve a non-abelian gauge group, break the gauge symmetry within the techniques of perturbation theory by introducing additional fields (the Faddeev–Popov ghosts) and counterterms motivated by anomaly cancellation, in an approach known as BRST quantization. While these concerns are in one sense highly technical, they are also closely related to the nature of measurement, the limits on knowledge of a physical situation, and the interactions between incompletely specified experimental conditions and incompletely understood physical theory.[citation needed] The mathematical techniques that have been developed in order to make gauge theories tractable have found many other applications, from solid-state physics and crystallography to low-dimensional topology.

Classical gauge theory

Classical electromagnetism

Historically, the first example of gauge symmetry discovered was classical electromagnetism. In electrostatics, one can either discuss the electric field, E, or its corresponding electric potential, V. Knowledge of one makes it possible to find the other, except that potentials differing by a constant,  , correspond to the same electric field. This is because the electric field relates to changes in the potential from one point in space to another, and the constant C would cancel out when subtracting to find the change in potential. In terms of vector calculus, the electric field is the gradient of the potential,  . Generalizing from static electricity to electromagnetism, we have a second potential, the vector potential A, with

 

The general gauge transformations now become not just   but

 

where f is any twice continuously differentiable function that depends on position and time. The fields remain the same under the gauge transformation, and therefore Maxwell's equations are still satisfied. That is, Maxwell's equations have a gauge symmetry.

An example: Scalar O(n) gauge theory

The remainder of this section requires some familiarity with classical or quantum field theory, and the use of Lagrangians.
Definitions in this section: gauge group, gauge field, interaction Lagrangian, gauge boson.

The following illustrates how local gauge invariance can be "motivated" heuristically starting from global symmetry properties, and how it leads to an interaction between originally non-interacting fields.

Consider a set of n non-interacting real scalar fields, with equal masses m. This system is described by an action that is the sum of the (usual) action for each scalar field  

 

The Lagrangian (density) can be compactly written as

 

by introducing a vector of fields

 

The term   is the partial derivative of   along dimension  .

It is now transparent that the Lagrangian is invariant under the transformation

 

whenever G is a constant matrix belonging to the n-by-n orthogonal group O(n). This is seen to preserve the Lagrangian, since the derivative of   transforms identically to   and both quantities appear inside dot products in the Lagrangian (orthogonal transformations preserve the dot product).

 

This characterizes the global symmetry of this particular Lagrangian, and the symmetry group is often called the gauge group; the mathematical term is structure group, especially in the theory of G-structures. Incidentally, Noether's theorem implies that invariance under this group of transformations leads to the conservation of the currents

 

where the Ta matrices are generators of the SO(n) group. There is one conserved current for every generator.

Now, demanding that this Lagrangian should have local O(n)-invariance requires that the G matrices (which were earlier constant) should be allowed to become functions of the spacetime coordinates x.

In this case, the G matrices do not "pass through" the derivatives, when G = G(x),

 

The failure of the derivative to commute with "G" introduces an additional term (in keeping with the product rule), which spoils the invariance of the Lagrangian. In order to rectify this we define a new derivative operator such that the derivative of   again transforms identically with  

 

This new "derivative" is called a (gauge) covariant derivative and takes the form

 

Where g is called the coupling constant; a quantity defining the strength of an interaction. After a simple calculation we can see that the gauge field A(x) must transform as follows

 

The gauge field is an element of the Lie algebra, and can therefore be expanded as

 

There are therefore as many gauge fields as there are generators of the Lie algebra.

Finally, we now have a locally gauge invariant Lagrangian

 

Pauli uses the term gauge transformation of the first type to mean the transformation of  , while the compensating transformation in   is called a gauge transformation of the second type.

 
Feynman diagram of scalar bosons interacting via a gauge boson

The difference between this Lagrangian and the original globally gauge-invariant Lagrangian is seen to be the interaction Lagrangian

 

This term introduces interaction[disambiguation needed]s between the n scalar fields just as a consequence of the demand for local gauge invariance. However, to make this interaction physical and not completely arbitrary, the mediator A(x) needs to propagate in space. That is dealt with in the next section by adding yet another term,  , to the Lagrangian. In the quantized version of the obtained classical field theory, the quanta of the gauge field A(x) are called gauge bosons. The interpretation of the interaction Lagrangian in quantum field theory is of scalar bosons interacting by the exchange of these gauge bosons.

The Yang–Mills Lagrangian for the gauge field

The picture of a classical gauge theory developed in the previous section is almost complete, except for the fact that to define the covariant derivatives D, one needs to know the value of the gauge field   at all spacetime points. Instead of manually specifying the values of this field, it can be given as the solution to a field equation. Further requiring that the Lagrangian that generates this field equation is locally gauge invariant as well, one possible form for the gauge field Lagrangian is

 

where the   are obtained from potentials  , being the components of  , by

 

and the   are the structure constants of the Lie algebra of the generators of the gauge group. This formulation of the Lagrangian is called a Yang–Mills action. Other gauge invariant actions also exist (e.g., nonlinear electrodynamics, Born–Infeld action, Chern–Simons model, theta term, etc.).

In this Lagrangian term there is no field whose transformation counterweighs the one of  . Invariance of this term under gauge transformations is a particular case of a priori classical (geometrical) symmetry. This symmetry must be restricted in order to perform quantization, the procedure being denominated gauge fixing, but even after restriction, gauge transformations may be possible.[7]

The complete Lagrangian for the gauge theory is now

 

An example: Electrodynamics

As a simple application of the formalism developed in the previous sections, consider the case of electrodynamics, with only the electron field. The bare-bones action that generates the electron field's Dirac equation is

 

The global symmetry for this system is

 

The gauge group here is U(1), just rotations of the phase angle of the field, with the particular rotation determined by the constant θ.

"Localising" this symmetry implies the replacement of θ by θ(x). An appropriate covariant derivative is then

 

Identifying the "charge" e (not to be confused with the mathematical constant e in the symmetry description) with the usual electric charge (this is the origin of the usage of the term in gauge theories), and the gauge field A(x) with the four-vector potential of the electromagnetic field results in an interaction Lagrangian

 

where   is the electric current four vector in the Dirac field. The gauge principle is therefore seen to naturally introduce the so-called minimal coupling of the electromagnetic field to the electron field.

Adding a Lagrangian for the gauge field   in terms of the field strength tensor exactly as in electrodynamics, one obtains the Lagrangian used as the starting point in quantum electrodynamics.

 

Mathematical formalism

Gauge theories are usually discussed in the language of differential geometry. Mathematically, a gauge is just a choice of a (local) section of some principal bundle. A gauge transformation is just a transformation between two such sections.

Although gauge theory is dominated by the study of connections (primarily because it's mainly studied by high-energy physicists), the idea of a connection is not central to gauge theory in general. In fact, a result in general gauge theory shows that affine representations (i.e., affine modules) of the gauge transformations can be classified as sections of a jet bundle satisfying certain properties. There are representations that transform covariantly pointwise (called by physicists gauge transformations of the first kind), representations that transform as a connection form (called by physicists gauge transformations of the second kind, an affine representation)—and other more general representations, such as the B field in BF theory. There are more general nonlinear representations (realizations), but these are extremely complicated. Still, nonlinear sigma models transform nonlinearly, so there are applications.

If there is a principal bundle P whose base space is space or spacetime and structure group is a Lie group, then the sections of P form a principal homogeneous space of the group of gauge transformations.

Connections (gauge connection) define this principal bundle, yielding a covariant derivative ∇ in each associated vector bundle. If a local frame is chosen (a local basis of sections), then this covariant derivative is represented by the connection form A, a Lie algebra-valued 1-form, which is called the gauge potential in physics. This is evidently not an intrinsic but a frame-dependent quantity. The curvature form F, a Lie algebra-valued 2-form that is an intrinsic quantity, is constructed from a connection form by

 

where d stands for the exterior derivative and   stands for the wedge product. (  is an element of the vector space spanned by the generators  , and so the components of   do not commute with one another. Hence the wedge product   does not vanish.)

Infinitesimal gauge transformations form a Lie algebra, which is characterized by a smooth Lie-algebra-valued scalar, ε. Under such an infinitesimal gauge transformation,

 

where   is the Lie bracket.

One nice thing is that if  , then   where D is the covariant derivative

 

Also,  , which means   transforms covariantly.

Not all gauge transformations can be generated by infinitesimal gauge transformations in general. An example is when the base manifold is a compact manifold without boundary such that the homotopy class of mappings from that manifold to the Lie group is nontrivial. See instanton for an example.

The Yang–Mills action is now given by

 

where * stands for the Hodge dual and the integral is defined as in differential geometry.

A quantity which is gauge-invariant (i.e., invariant under gauge transformations) is the Wilson loop, which is defined over any closed path, γ, as follows:

 

where χ is the character of a complex representation ρ and   represents the path-ordered operator.

The formalism of gauge theory carries over to a general setting. For example, it is sufficient to ask that a vector bundle have a metric connection; when one does so, one finds that the metric connection satisfies the Yang–Mills equations of motion.

Quantization of gauge theories

Gauge theories may be quantized by specialization of methods which are applicable to any quantum field theory. However, because of the subtleties imposed by the gauge constraints (see section on Mathematical formalism, above) there are many technical problems to be solved which do not arise in other field theories. At the same time, the richer structure of gauge theories allows simplification of some computations: for example Ward identities connect different renormalization constants.

Methods and aims

The first gauge theory quantized was quantum electrodynamics (QED). The first methods developed for this involved gauge fixing and then applying canonical quantization. The Gupta–Bleuler method was also developed to handle this problem. Non-abelian gauge theories are now handled by a variety of means. Methods for quantization are covered in the article on quantization.

The main point to quantization is to be able to compute quantum amplitudes for various processes allowed by the theory. Technically, they reduce to the computations of certain correlation functions in the vacuum state. This involves a renormalization of the theory.

When the running coupling of the theory is small enough, then all required quantities may be computed in perturbation theory. Quantization schemes intended to simplify such computations (such as canonical quantization) may be called perturbative quantization schemes. At present some of these methods lead to the most precise experimental tests of gauge theories.

However, in most gauge theories, there are many interesting questions which are non-perturbative. Quantization schemes suited to these problems (such as lattice gauge theory) may be called non-perturbative quantization schemes. Precise computations in such schemes often require supercomputing, and are therefore less well-developed currently than other schemes.

Anomalies

Some of the symmetries of the classical theory are then seen not to hold in the quantum theory; a phenomenon called an anomaly. Among the most well known are:

Pure gauge

A pure gauge is the set of field configurations obtained by a gauge transformation on the null-field configuration, i.e., a gauge transform of zero. So it is a particular "gauge orbit" in the field configuration's space.

Thus, in the abelian case, where  , the pure gauge is just the set of field configurations   for all f(x).

See also

References

  1. ^ Pauli, Wolfgang (1941). "Relativistic Field Theories of Elementary Particles". Rev. Mod. Phys. 13 (3): 203–32. Bibcode:1941RvMP...13..203P. doi:10.1103/revmodphys.13.203.
  2. ^ Yang C. N., Mills R. L. (1954). "Conservation of Isotopic Spin and Isotopic Gauge Invariance". Phys. Rev. 96 (1): 191–195. Bibcode:1954PhRv...96..191Y. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.96.191.
  3. ^ Donaldson, Simon K. (1983). "Self-dual connections and the topology of smooth 4-manifolds". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 8 (1): 81–83. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1983-15090-5. MR 0682827.
  4. ^ Seiberg, N.; Witten, E. (1994a), "Electric-magnetic duality, monopole condensation, and confinement in N=2 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory", Nuclear Physics B, 426 (1): 19–52, arXiv:hep-th/9407087, Bibcode:1994NuPhB.426...19S, doi:10.1016/0550-3213(94)90124-4, MR 1293681, S2CID 14361074; "Erratum", Nuclear Physics B, 430 (2): 485–486, 1994, Bibcode:1994NuPhB.430..485., doi:10.1016/0550-3213(94)00449-8, MR 1303306
  5. ^ Seiberg, N.; Witten, E. (1994b), "Monopoles, duality and chiral symmetry breaking in N=2 supersymmetric QCD", Nuclear Physics B, 431 (3): 484–550, arXiv:hep-th/9408099, Bibcode:1994NuPhB.431..484S, doi:10.1016/0550-3213(94)90214-3, MR 1306869, S2CID 17584951
  6. ^ Pickering, A. (1984). Constructing Quarks. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-66799-5.
  7. ^ J. J. Sakurai, Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Addison-Wesley, 1967, sect. 1–4.

Bibliography

General readers
  • Schumm, Bruce (2004) Deep Down Things. Johns Hopkins University Press. Esp. chpt. 8. A serious attempt by a physicist to explain gauge theory and the Standard Model with little formal mathematics.
Texts
Articles
  • Becchi, C. (1997). "Introduction to Gauge Theories". arXiv:hep-ph/9705211.
  • Gross, D. (1992). "Gauge theory – Past, Present and Future". Retrieved 2009-04-23.
  • Jackson, J.D. (2002). "From Lorenz to Coulomb and other explicit gauge transformations". Am. J. Phys. 70 (9): 917–928. arXiv:physics/0204034. Bibcode:2002AmJPh..70..917J. doi:10.1119/1.1491265. S2CID 119652556.
  • Svetlichny, George (1999). "Preparation for Gauge Theory". arXiv:math-ph/9902027.

External links

gauge, theory, more, accessible, less, technical, introduction, this, topic, introduction, gauge, theory, this, article, discusses, physics, gauge, theories, mathematical, field, gauge, theory, mathematics, this, article, includes, list, general, references, l. For a more accessible and less technical introduction to this topic see Introduction to gauge theory This article discusses the physics of gauge theories For the mathematical field of gauge theory see Gauge theory mathematics This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message In physics a gauge theory is a type of field theory in which the Lagrangian and hence the dynamics of the system itself does not change is invariant under local transformations according to certain smooth families of operations Lie groups The term gauge refers to any specific mathematical formalism to regulate redundant degrees of freedom in the Lagrangian of a physical system The transformations between possible gauges called gauge transformations form a Lie group referred to as the symmetry group or the gauge group of the theory Associated with any Lie group is the Lie algebra of group generators For each group generator there necessarily arises a corresponding field usually a vector field called the gauge field Gauge fields are included in the Lagrangian to ensure its invariance under the local group transformations called gauge invariance When such a theory is quantized the quanta of the gauge fields are called gauge bosons If the symmetry group is non commutative then the gauge theory is referred to as non abelian gauge theory the usual example being the Yang Mills theory Many powerful theories in physics are described by Lagrangians that are invariant under some symmetry transformation groups When they are invariant under a transformation identically performed at every point in the spacetime in which the physical processes occur they are said to have a global symmetry Local symmetry the cornerstone of gauge theories is a stronger constraint In fact a global symmetry is just a local symmetry whose group s parameters are fixed in spacetime the same way a constant value can be understood as a function of a certain parameter the output of which is always the same Gauge theories are important as the successful field theories explaining the dynamics of elementary particles Quantum electrodynamics is an abelian gauge theory with the symmetry group U 1 and has one gauge field the electromagnetic four potential with the photon being the gauge boson The Standard Model is a non abelian gauge theory with the symmetry group U 1 SU 2 SU 3 and has a total of twelve gauge bosons the photon three weak bosons and eight gluons Gauge theories are also important in explaining gravitation in the theory of general relativity Its case is somewhat unusual in that the gauge field is a tensor the Lanczos tensor Theories of quantum gravity beginning with gauge gravitation theory also postulate the existence of a gauge boson known as the graviton Gauge symmetries can be viewed as analogues of the principle of general covariance of general relativity in which the coordinate system can be chosen freely under arbitrary diffeomorphisms of spacetime Both gauge invariance and diffeomorphism invariance reflect a redundancy in the description of the system An alternative theory of gravitation gauge theory gravity replaces the principle of general covariance with a true gauge principle with new gauge fields Historically these ideas were first stated in the context of classical electromagnetism and later in general relativity However the modern importance of gauge symmetries appeared first in the relativistic quantum mechanics of electrons quantum electrodynamics elaborated on below Today gauge theories are useful in condensed matter nuclear and high energy physics among other subfields Contents 1 History 2 Description 2 1 Global and local symmetries 2 1 1 Global symmetry 2 1 2 Example of global symmetry 2 1 3 Local symmetry 2 1 3 1 Use of fiber bundles to describe local symmetries 2 2 Gauge fields 2 3 Physical experiments 2 4 Continuum theories 2 5 Quantum field theories 3 Classical gauge theory 3 1 Classical electromagnetism 3 2 An example Scalar O n gauge theory 3 3 The Yang Mills Lagrangian for the gauge field 3 4 An example Electrodynamics 4 Mathematical formalism 5 Quantization of gauge theories 5 1 Methods and aims 5 2 Anomalies 6 Pure gauge 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory EditThe earliest field theory having a gauge symmetry was Maxwell s formulation in 1864 65 of electrodynamics A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field which stated that any vector field whose curl vanishes and can therefore normally be written as a gradient of a function could be added to the vector potential without affecting the magnetic field The importance of this symmetry remained unnoticed in the earliest formulations Similarly unnoticed Hilbert had derived the Einstein field equations by postulating the invariance of the action under a general coordinate transformation Later Hermann Weyl in an attempt to unify general relativity and electromagnetism conjectured that Eichinvarianz or invariance under the change of scale or gauge might also be a local symmetry of general relativity After the development of quantum mechanics Weyl Vladimir Fock and Fritz London modified gauge by replacing the scale factor with a complex quantity and turned the scale transformation into a change of phase which is a U 1 gauge symmetry This explained the electromagnetic field effect on the wave function of a charged quantum mechanical particle This was the first widely recognised gauge theory popularised by Pauli in 1941 1 In 1954 attempting to resolve some of the great confusion in elementary particle physics Chen Ning Yang and Robert Mills introduced non abelian gauge theories as models to understand the strong interaction holding together nucleons in atomic nuclei 2 Ronald Shaw working under Abdus Salam independently introduced the same notion in his doctoral thesis Generalizing the gauge invariance of electromagnetism they attempted to construct a theory based on the action of the non abelian SU 2 symmetry group on the isospin doublet of protons and neutrons This is similar to the action of the U 1 group on the spinor fields of quantum electrodynamics In particle physics the emphasis was on using quantized gauge theories This idea later found application in the quantum field theory of the weak force and its unification with electromagnetism in the electroweak theory Gauge theories became even more attractive when it was realized that non abelian gauge theories reproduced a feature called asymptotic freedom Asymptotic freedom was believed to be an important characteristic of strong interactions This motivated searching for a strong force gauge theory This theory now known as quantum chromodynamics is a gauge theory with the action of the SU 3 group on the color triplet of quarks The Standard Model unifies the description of electromagnetism weak interactions and strong interactions in the language of gauge theory In the 1970s Michael Atiyah began studying the mathematics of solutions to the classical Yang Mills equations In 1983 Atiyah s student Simon Donaldson built on this work to show that the differentiable classification of smooth 4 manifolds is very different from their classification up to homeomorphism 3 Michael Freedman used Donaldson s work to exhibit exotic R4s that is exotic differentiable structures on Euclidean 4 dimensional space This led to an increasing interest in gauge theory for its own sake independent of its successes in fundamental physics In 1994 Edward Witten and Nathan Seiberg invented gauge theoretic techniques based on supersymmetry that enabled the calculation of certain topological invariants 4 5 the Seiberg Witten invariants These contributions to mathematics from gauge theory have led to a renewed interest in this area The importance of gauge theories in physics is exemplified in the tremendous success of the mathematical formalism in providing a unified framework to describe the quantum field theories of electromagnetism the weak force and the strong force This theory known as the Standard Model accurately describes experimental predictions regarding three of the four fundamental forces of nature and is a gauge theory with the gauge group SU 3 SU 2 U 1 Modern theories like string theory as well as general relativity are in one way or another gauge theories See Pickering 6 for more about the history of gauge and quantum field theories Description EditGlobal and local symmetries Edit Global symmetry Edit In physics the mathematical description of any physical situation usually contains excess degrees of freedom the same physical situation is equally well described by many equivalent mathematical configurations For instance in Newtonian dynamics if two configurations are related by a Galilean transformation an inertial change of reference frame they represent the same physical situation These transformations form a group of symmetries of the theory and a physical situation corresponds not to an individual mathematical configuration but to a class of configurations related to one another by this symmetry group This idea can be generalized to include local as well as global symmetries analogous to much more abstract changes of coordinates in a situation where there is no preferred inertial coordinate system that covers the entire physical system A gauge theory is a mathematical model that has symmetries of this kind together with a set of techniques for making physical predictions consistent with the symmetries of the model Example of global symmetry Edit When a quantity occurring in the mathematical configuration is not just a number but has some geometrical significance such as a velocity or an axis of rotation its representation as numbers arranged in a vector or matrix is also changed by a coordinate transformation For instance if one description of a pattern of fluid flow states that the fluid velocity in the neighborhood of x 1 y 0 is 1 m s in the positive x direction then a description of the same situation in which the coordinate system has been rotated clockwise by 90 degrees states that the fluid velocity in the neighborhood of x 0 y 1 is 1 m s in the negative y direction The coordinate transformation has affected both the coordinate system used to identify the location of the measurement and the basis in which its value is expressed As long as this transformation is performed globally affecting the coordinate basis in the same way at every point the effect on values that represent the rate of change of some quantity along some path in space and time as it passes through point P is the same as the effect on values that are truly local to P Local symmetry Edit Use of fiber bundles to describe local symmetries Edit In order to adequately describe physical situations in more complex theories it is often necessary to introduce a coordinate basis for some of the objects of the theory that do not have this simple relationship to the coordinates used to label points in space and time In mathematical terms the theory involves a fiber bundle in which the fiber at each point of the base space consists of possible coordinate bases for use when describing the values of objects at that point In order to spell out a mathematical configuration one must choose a particular coordinate basis at each point a local section of the fiber bundle and express the values of the objects of the theory usually fields in the physicist s sense using this basis Two such mathematical configurations are equivalent describe the same physical situation if they are related by a transformation of this abstract coordinate basis a change of local section or gauge transformation In most gauge theories the set of possible transformations of the abstract gauge basis at an individual point in space and time is a finite dimensional Lie group The simplest such group is U 1 which appears in the modern formulation of quantum electrodynamics QED via its use of complex numbers QED is generally regarded as the first and simplest physical gauge theory The set of possible gauge transformations of the entire configuration of a given gauge theory also forms a group the gauge group of the theory An element of the gauge group can be parameterized by a smoothly varying function from the points of spacetime to the finite dimensional Lie group such that the value of the function and its derivatives at each point represents the action of the gauge transformation on the fiber over that point A gauge transformation with constant parameter at every point in space and time is analogous to a rigid rotation of the geometric coordinate system it represents a global symmetry of the gauge representation As in the case of a rigid rotation this gauge transformation affects expressions that represent the rate of change along a path of some gauge dependent quantity in the same way as those that represent a truly local quantity A gauge transformation whose parameter is not a constant function is referred to as a local symmetry its effect on expressions that involve a derivative is qualitatively different from that on expressions that don t This is analogous to a non inertial change of reference frame which can produce a Coriolis effect Gauge fields Edit The gauge covariant version of a gauge theory accounts for this effect by introducing a gauge field in mathematical language an Ehresmann connection and formulating all rates of change in terms of the covariant derivative with respect to this connection The gauge field becomes an essential part of the description of a mathematical configuration A configuration in which the gauge field can be eliminated by a gauge transformation has the property that its field strength in mathematical language its curvature is zero everywhere a gauge theory is not limited to these configurations In other words the distinguishing characteristic of a gauge theory is that the gauge field does not merely compensate for a poor choice of coordinate system there is generally no gauge transformation that makes the gauge field vanish When analyzing the dynamics of a gauge theory the gauge field must be treated as a dynamical variable similar to other objects in the description of a physical situation In addition to its interaction with other objects via the covariant derivative the gauge field typically contributes energy in the form of a self energy term One can obtain the equations for the gauge theory by starting from a naive ansatz without the gauge field in which the derivatives appear in a bare form listing those global symmetries of the theory that can be characterized by a continuous parameter generally an abstract equivalent of a rotation angle computing the correction terms that result from allowing the symmetry parameter to vary from place to place and reinterpreting these correction terms as couplings to one or more gauge fields and giving these fields appropriate self energy terms and dynamical behavior This is the sense in which a gauge theory extends a global symmetry to a local symmetry and closely resembles the historical development of the gauge theory of gravity known as general relativity Physical experiments Edit Gauge theories used to model the results of physical experiments engage in limiting the universe of possible configurations to those consistent with the information used to set up the experiment and then computing the probability distribution of the possible outcomes that the experiment is designed to measure We cannot express the mathematical descriptions of the setup information and the possible measurement outcomes or the boundary conditions of the experiment without reference to a particular coordinate system including a choice of gauge One assumes an adequate experiment isolated from external influence that is itself a gauge dependent statement Mishandling gauge dependence calculations in boundary conditions is a frequent source of anomalies and approaches to anomaly avoidance classifies gauge theories clarification needed Continuum theories Edit The two gauge theories mentioned above continuum electrodynamics and general relativity are continuum field theories The techniques of calculation in a continuum theory implicitly assume that given a completely fixed choice of gauge the boundary conditions of an individual configuration are completely described given a completely fixed gauge and a complete set of boundary conditions the least action determines a unique mathematical configuration and therefore a unique physical situation consistent with these bounds fixing the gauge introduces no anomalies in the calculation due either to gauge dependence in describing partial information about boundary conditions or to incompleteness of the theory Determination of the likelihood of possible measurement outcomes proceed by establishing a probability distribution over all physical situations determined by boundary conditions consistent with the setup information establishing a probability distribution of measurement outcomes for each possible physical situation convolving these two probability distributions to get a distribution of possible measurement outcomes consistent with the setup informationThese assumptions have enough validity across a wide range of energy scales and experimental conditions to allow these theories to make accurate predictions about almost all of the phenomena encountered in daily life light heat and electricity eclipses spaceflight etc They fail only at the smallest and largest scales due to omissions in the theories themselves and when the mathematical techniques themselves break down most notably in the case of turbulence and other chaotic phenomena Quantum field theories Edit Main article Quantum field theory Other than these classical continuum field theories the most widely known gauge theories are quantum field theories including quantum electrodynamics and the Standard Model of elementary particle physics The starting point of a quantum field theory is much like that of its continuum analog a gauge covariant action integral that characterizes allowable physical situations according to the principle of least action However continuum and quantum theories differ significantly in how they handle the excess degrees of freedom represented by gauge transformations Continuum theories and most pedagogical treatments of the simplest quantum field theories use a gauge fixing prescription to reduce the orbit of mathematical configurations that represent a given physical situation to a smaller orbit related by a smaller gauge group the global symmetry group or perhaps even the trivial group More sophisticated quantum field theories in particular those that involve a non abelian gauge group break the gauge symmetry within the techniques of perturbation theory by introducing additional fields the Faddeev Popov ghosts and counterterms motivated by anomaly cancellation in an approach known as BRST quantization While these concerns are in one sense highly technical they are also closely related to the nature of measurement the limits on knowledge of a physical situation and the interactions between incompletely specified experimental conditions and incompletely understood physical theory citation needed The mathematical techniques that have been developed in order to make gauge theories tractable have found many other applications from solid state physics and crystallography to low dimensional topology Classical gauge theory EditClassical electromagnetism Edit Historically the first example of gauge symmetry discovered was classical electromagnetism In electrostatics one can either discuss the electric field E or its corresponding electric potential V Knowledge of one makes it possible to find the other except that potentials differing by a constant V V C displaystyle V mapsto V C correspond to the same electric field This is because the electric field relates to changes in the potential from one point in space to another and the constant C would cancel out when subtracting to find the change in potential In terms of vector calculus the electric field is the gradient of the potential E V displaystyle mathbf E nabla V Generalizing from static electricity to electromagnetism we have a second potential the vector potential A with E V A t B A displaystyle begin aligned mathbf E amp nabla V frac partial mathbf A partial t mathbf B amp nabla times mathbf A end aligned The general gauge transformations now become not just V V C displaystyle V mapsto V C but A A f V V f t displaystyle begin aligned mathbf A amp mapsto mathbf A nabla f V amp mapsto V frac partial f partial t end aligned where f is any twice continuously differentiable function that depends on position and time The fields remain the same under the gauge transformation and therefore Maxwell s equations are still satisfied That is Maxwell s equations have a gauge symmetry An example Scalar O n gauge theory Edit The remainder of this section requires some familiarity with classical or quantum field theory and the use of Lagrangians Definitions in this section gauge group gauge field interaction Lagrangian gauge boson The following illustrates how local gauge invariance can be motivated heuristically starting from global symmetry properties and how it leads to an interaction between originally non interacting fields Consider a set of n non interacting real scalar fields with equal masses m This system is described by an action that is the sum of the usual action for each scalar field f i displaystyle varphi i S d 4 x i 1 n 1 2 m f i m f i 1 2 m 2 f i 2 displaystyle mathcal S int mathrm d 4 x sum i 1 n left frac 1 2 partial mu varphi i partial mu varphi i frac 1 2 m 2 varphi i 2 right The Lagrangian density can be compactly written as L 1 2 m F T m F 1 2 m 2 F T F displaystyle mathcal L frac 1 2 partial mu Phi mathsf T partial mu Phi frac 1 2 m 2 Phi mathsf T Phi by introducing a vector of fields F T f 1 f 2 f n displaystyle Phi mathsf T varphi 1 varphi 2 ldots varphi n The term m F displaystyle partial mu Phi is the partial derivative of F displaystyle Phi along dimension m displaystyle mu It is now transparent that the Lagrangian is invariant under the transformation F F G F displaystyle Phi mapsto Phi G Phi whenever G is a constant matrix belonging to the n by n orthogonal group O n This is seen to preserve the Lagrangian since the derivative of F displaystyle Phi transforms identically to F displaystyle Phi and both quantities appear inside dot products in the Lagrangian orthogonal transformations preserve the dot product m F m F G m F displaystyle partial mu Phi mapsto partial mu Phi G partial mu Phi This characterizes the global symmetry of this particular Lagrangian and the symmetry group is often called the gauge group the mathematical term is structure group especially in the theory of G structures Incidentally Noether s theorem implies that invariance under this group of transformations leads to the conservation of the currents J m a i m F T T a F displaystyle J mu a i partial mu Phi mathsf T T a Phi where the Ta matrices are generators of the SO n group There is one conserved current for every generator Now demanding that this Lagrangian should have local O n invariance requires that the G matrices which were earlier constant should be allowed to become functions of the spacetime coordinates x In this case the G matrices do not pass through the derivatives when G G x m G F G m F displaystyle partial mu G Phi neq G partial mu Phi The failure of the derivative to commute with G introduces an additional term in keeping with the product rule which spoils the invariance of the Lagrangian In order to rectify this we define a new derivative operator such that the derivative of F displaystyle Phi again transforms identically with F displaystyle Phi D m F G D m F displaystyle D mu Phi GD mu Phi This new derivative is called a gauge covariant derivative and takes the form D m m i g A m displaystyle D mu partial mu igA mu Where g is called the coupling constant a quantity defining the strength of an interaction After a simple calculation we can see that the gauge field A x must transform as follows A m G A m G 1 i g m G G 1 displaystyle A mu GA mu G 1 frac i g partial mu G G 1 The gauge field is an element of the Lie algebra and can therefore be expanded as A m a A m a T a displaystyle A mu sum a A mu a T a There are therefore as many gauge fields as there are generators of the Lie algebra Finally we now have a locally gauge invariant Lagrangian L l o c 1 2 D m F T D m F 1 2 m 2 F T F displaystyle mathcal L mathrm loc frac 1 2 D mu Phi mathsf T D mu Phi frac 1 2 m 2 Phi mathsf T Phi Pauli uses the term gauge transformation of the first type to mean the transformation of F displaystyle Phi while the compensating transformation in A displaystyle A is called a gauge transformation of the second type Feynman diagram of scalar bosons interacting via a gauge boson The difference between this Lagrangian and the original globally gauge invariant Lagrangian is seen to be the interaction Lagrangian L i n t i g 2 F T A m T m F i g 2 m F T A m F g 2 2 A m F T A m F displaystyle mathcal L mathrm int i frac g 2 Phi mathsf T A mu mathsf T partial mu Phi i frac g 2 partial mu Phi mathsf T A mu Phi frac g 2 2 A mu Phi mathsf T A mu Phi This term introduces interaction disambiguation needed s between the n scalar fields just as a consequence of the demand for local gauge invariance However to make this interaction physical and not completely arbitrary the mediator A x needs to propagate in space That is dealt with in the next section by adding yet another term L g f displaystyle mathcal L mathrm gf to the Lagrangian In the quantized version of the obtained classical field theory the quanta of the gauge field A x are called gauge bosons The interpretation of the interaction Lagrangian in quantum field theory is of scalar bosons interacting by the exchange of these gauge bosons The Yang Mills Lagrangian for the gauge field Edit Main article Yang Mills theory The picture of a classical gauge theory developed in the previous section is almost complete except for the fact that to define the covariant derivatives D one needs to know the value of the gauge field A x displaystyle A x at all spacetime points Instead of manually specifying the values of this field it can be given as the solution to a field equation Further requiring that the Lagrangian that generates this field equation is locally gauge invariant as well one possible form for the gauge field Lagrangian is L gf 1 2 tr F m n F m n 1 4 F a m n F m n a displaystyle mathcal L text gf frac 1 2 operatorname tr left F mu nu F mu nu right frac 1 4 F a mu nu F mu nu a where the F m n a displaystyle F mu nu a are obtained from potentials A m a displaystyle A mu a being the components of A x displaystyle A x by F m n a m A n a n A m a g b c f a b c A m b A n c displaystyle F mu nu a partial mu A nu a partial nu A mu a g sum b c f abc A mu b A nu c and the f a b c displaystyle f abc are the structure constants of the Lie algebra of the generators of the gauge group This formulation of the Lagrangian is called a Yang Mills action Other gauge invariant actions also exist e g nonlinear electrodynamics Born Infeld action Chern Simons model theta term etc In this Lagrangian term there is no field whose transformation counterweighs the one of A displaystyle A Invariance of this term under gauge transformations is a particular case of a priori classical geometrical symmetry This symmetry must be restricted in order to perform quantization the procedure being denominated gauge fixing but even after restriction gauge transformations may be possible 7 The complete Lagrangian for the gauge theory is now L L loc L gf L global L int L gf displaystyle mathcal L mathcal L text loc mathcal L text gf mathcal L text global mathcal L text int mathcal L text gf An example Electrodynamics Edit As a simple application of the formalism developed in the previous sections consider the case of electrodynamics with only the electron field The bare bones action that generates the electron field s Dirac equation is S ps i ℏ c g m m m c 2 ps d 4 x displaystyle mathcal S int bar psi left i hbar c gamma mu partial mu mc 2 right psi mathrm d 4 x The global symmetry for this system is ps e i 8 ps displaystyle psi mapsto e i theta psi The gauge group here is U 1 just rotations of the phase angle of the field with the particular rotation determined by the constant 8 Localising this symmetry implies the replacement of 8 by 8 x An appropriate covariant derivative is then D m m i e ℏ A m displaystyle D mu partial mu i frac e hbar A mu Identifying the charge e not to be confused with the mathematical constant e in the symmetry description with the usual electric charge this is the origin of the usage of the term in gauge theories and the gauge field A x with the four vector potential of the electromagnetic field results in an interaction Lagrangian L int e ℏ ps x g m ps x A m x J m x A m x displaystyle mathcal L text int frac e hbar bar psi x gamma mu psi x A mu x J mu x A mu x where J m x e ℏ ps x g m ps x displaystyle J mu x frac e hbar bar psi x gamma mu psi x is the electric current four vector in the Dirac field The gauge principle is therefore seen to naturally introduce the so called minimal coupling of the electromagnetic field to the electron field Adding a Lagrangian for the gauge field A m x displaystyle A mu x in terms of the field strength tensor exactly as in electrodynamics one obtains the Lagrangian used as the starting point in quantum electrodynamics L QED ps i ℏ c g m D m m c 2 ps 1 4 m 0 F m n F m n displaystyle mathcal L text QED bar psi left i hbar c gamma mu D mu mc 2 right psi frac 1 4 mu 0 F mu nu F mu nu See also Dirac equation Maxwell s equations and Quantum electrodynamicsMathematical formalism EditSee also Gauge theory mathematics Gauge theories are usually discussed in the language of differential geometry Mathematically a gauge is just a choice of a local section of some principal bundle A gauge transformation is just a transformation between two such sections Although gauge theory is dominated by the study of connections primarily because it s mainly studied by high energy physicists the idea of a connection is not central to gauge theory in general In fact a result in general gauge theory shows that affine representations i e affine modules of the gauge transformations can be classified as sections of a jet bundle satisfying certain properties There are representations that transform covariantly pointwise called by physicists gauge transformations of the first kind representations that transform as a connection form called by physicists gauge transformations of the second kind an affine representation and other more general representations such as the B field in BF theory There are more general nonlinear representations realizations but these are extremely complicated Still nonlinear sigma models transform nonlinearly so there are applications If there is a principal bundle P whose base space is space or spacetime and structure group is a Lie group then the sections of P form a principal homogeneous space of the group of gauge transformations Connections gauge connection define this principal bundle yielding a covariant derivative in each associated vector bundle If a local frame is chosen a local basis of sections then this covariant derivative is represented by the connection form A a Lie algebra valued 1 form which is called the gauge potential in physics This is evidently not an intrinsic but a frame dependent quantity The curvature form F a Lie algebra valued 2 form that is an intrinsic quantity is constructed from a connection form by F d A A A displaystyle mathbf F mathrm d mathbf A mathbf A wedge mathbf A where d stands for the exterior derivative and displaystyle wedge stands for the wedge product A displaystyle mathbf A is an element of the vector space spanned by the generators T a displaystyle T a and so the components of A displaystyle mathbf A do not commute with one another Hence the wedge product A A displaystyle mathbf A wedge mathbf A does not vanish Infinitesimal gauge transformations form a Lie algebra which is characterized by a smooth Lie algebra valued scalar e Under such an infinitesimal gauge transformation d e A e A d e displaystyle delta varepsilon mathbf A varepsilon mathbf A mathrm d varepsilon where displaystyle cdot cdot is the Lie bracket One nice thing is that if d e X e X displaystyle delta varepsilon X varepsilon X then d e D X e D X displaystyle delta varepsilon DX varepsilon DX where D is the covariant derivative D X d e f d X A X displaystyle DX stackrel mathrm def mathrm d X mathbf A X Also d e F e F displaystyle delta varepsilon mathbf F varepsilon mathbf F which means F displaystyle mathbf F transforms covariantly Not all gauge transformations can be generated by infinitesimal gauge transformations in general An example is when the base manifold is a compact manifold without boundary such that the homotopy class of mappings from that manifold to the Lie group is nontrivial See instanton for an example The Yang Mills action is now given by 1 4 g 2 Tr F F displaystyle frac 1 4g 2 int operatorname Tr F wedge F where stands for the Hodge dual and the integral is defined as in differential geometry A quantity which is gauge invariant i e invariant under gauge transformations is the Wilson loop which is defined over any closed path g as follows x r P e g A displaystyle chi rho left mathcal P left e int gamma A right right where x is the character of a complex representation r and P displaystyle mathcal P represents the path ordered operator The formalism of gauge theory carries over to a general setting For example it is sufficient to ask that a vector bundle have a metric connection when one does so one finds that the metric connection satisfies the Yang Mills equations of motion Quantization of gauge theories EditGauge theories may be quantized by specialization of methods which are applicable to any quantum field theory However because of the subtleties imposed by the gauge constraints see section on Mathematical formalism above there are many technical problems to be solved which do not arise in other field theories At the same time the richer structure of gauge theories allows simplification of some computations for example Ward identities connect different renormalization constants Methods and aims Edit The first gauge theory quantized was quantum electrodynamics QED The first methods developed for this involved gauge fixing and then applying canonical quantization The Gupta Bleuler method was also developed to handle this problem Non abelian gauge theories are now handled by a variety of means Methods for quantization are covered in the article on quantization The main point to quantization is to be able to compute quantum amplitudes for various processes allowed by the theory Technically they reduce to the computations of certain correlation functions in the vacuum state This involves a renormalization of the theory When the running coupling of the theory is small enough then all required quantities may be computed in perturbation theory Quantization schemes intended to simplify such computations such as canonical quantization may be called perturbative quantization schemes At present some of these methods lead to the most precise experimental tests of gauge theories However in most gauge theories there are many interesting questions which are non perturbative Quantization schemes suited to these problems such as lattice gauge theory may be called non perturbative quantization schemes Precise computations in such schemes often require supercomputing and are therefore less well developed currently than other schemes Anomalies Edit Some of the symmetries of the classical theory are then seen not to hold in the quantum theory a phenomenon called an anomaly Among the most well known are The scale anomaly which gives rise to a running coupling constant In QED this gives rise to the phenomenon of the Landau pole In quantum chromodynamics QCD this leads to asymptotic freedom The chiral anomaly in either chiral or vector field theories with fermions This has close connection with topology through the notion of instantons In QCD this anomaly causes the decay of a pion to two photons The gauge anomaly which must cancel in any consistent physical theory In the electroweak theory this cancellation requires an equal number of quarks and leptons Pure gauge EditA pure gauge is the set of field configurations obtained by a gauge transformation on the null field configuration i e a gauge transform of zero So it is a particular gauge orbit in the field configuration s space Thus in the abelian case where A m x A m x A m x m f x displaystyle A mu x rightarrow A mu x A mu x partial mu f x the pure gauge is just the set of field configurations A m x m f x displaystyle A mu x partial mu f x for all f x See also EditGauge principle Aharonov Bohm effect Coulomb gauge Electroweak theory Gauge covariant derivative Gauge fixing Gauge gravitation theory Gauge group mathematics Kaluza Klein theory Lorenz gauge Quantum chromodynamics Gluon field Gluon field strength tensor Quantum electrodynamics Electromagnetic four potential Electromagnetic tensor Quantum field theory Standard Model Standard Model mathematical formulation Symmetry breaking Symmetry in physics Charge physics Symmetry in quantum mechanics Fock symmetry Ward identities Yang Mills theory Yang Mills existence and mass gap 1964 PRL symmetry breaking papers Gauge theory mathematics References Edit Pauli Wolfgang 1941 Relativistic Field Theories of Elementary Particles Rev Mod Phys 13 3 203 32 Bibcode 1941RvMP 13 203P doi 10 1103 revmodphys 13 203 Yang C N Mills R L 1954 Conservation of Isotopic Spin and Isotopic Gauge Invariance Phys Rev 96 1 191 195 Bibcode 1954PhRv 96 191Y doi 10 1103 PhysRev 96 191 Donaldson Simon K 1983 Self dual connections and the topology of smooth 4 manifolds Bull Amer Math Soc 8 1 81 83 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 1983 15090 5 MR 0682827 Seiberg N Witten E 1994a Electric magnetic duality monopole condensation and confinement in N 2 supersymmetric Yang Mills theory Nuclear Physics B 426 1 19 52 arXiv hep th 9407087 Bibcode 1994NuPhB 426 19S doi 10 1016 0550 3213 94 90124 4 MR 1293681 S2CID 14361074 Erratum Nuclear Physics B 430 2 485 486 1994 Bibcode 1994NuPhB 430 485 doi 10 1016 0550 3213 94 00449 8 MR 1303306 Seiberg N Witten E 1994b Monopoles duality and chiral symmetry breaking in N 2 supersymmetric QCD Nuclear Physics B 431 3 484 550 arXiv hep th 9408099 Bibcode 1994NuPhB 431 484S doi 10 1016 0550 3213 94 90214 3 MR 1306869 S2CID 17584951 Pickering A 1984 Constructing Quarks University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 66799 5 J J Sakurai Advanced Quantum Mechanics Addison Wesley 1967 sect 1 4 Bibliography EditGeneral readersSchumm Bruce 2004 Deep Down Things Johns Hopkins University Press Esp chpt 8 A serious attempt by a physicist to explain gauge theory and the Standard Model with little formal mathematics TextsGreiner Walter Muller Berndt 2000 Gauge Theory of Weak Interactions Springer ISBN 3 540 67672 4 Cheng T P Li L F 1983 Gauge Theory of Elementary Particle Physics Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 851961 3 Frampton P 2008 Gauge Field Theories 3rd ed Wiley VCH Kane G L 1987 Modern Elementary Particle Physics Perseus Books ISBN 0 201 11749 5 ArticlesBecchi C 1997 Introduction to Gauge Theories arXiv hep ph 9705211 Gross D 1992 Gauge theory Past Present and Future Retrieved 2009 04 23 Jackson J D 2002 From Lorenz to Coulomb and other explicit gauge transformations Am J Phys 70 9 917 928 arXiv physics 0204034 Bibcode 2002AmJPh 70 917J doi 10 1119 1 1491265 S2CID 119652556 Svetlichny George 1999 Preparation for Gauge Theory arXiv math ph 9902027 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Gauge theory Gauge transformation Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Yang Mills equations on DispersiveWiki Gauge theories on Scholarpedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gauge theory amp oldid 1132186378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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