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Light-front quantization applications

The light-front quantization[1][2][3] of quantum field theories provides a useful alternative to ordinary equal-time quantization. In particular, it can lead to a relativistic description of bound systems in terms of quantum-mechanical wave functions. The quantization is based on the choice of light-front coordinates,[4] where plays the role of time and the corresponding spatial coordinate is . Here, is the ordinary time, is a Cartesian coordinate, and is the speed of light. The other two Cartesian coordinates, and , are untouched and often called transverse or perpendicular, denoted by symbols of the type . The choice of the frame of reference where the time and -axis are defined can be left unspecified in an exactly soluble relativistic theory, but in practical calculations some choices may be more suitable than others. The basic formalism is discussed elsewhere.

The light cone of special relativity. Light-front quantization uses light-front (or light-cone) coordinates to select an initial surface that is tangential to the light cone. Equal-time quantization uses an initial surface that is horizontal, labeled here as the "hypersurface of the present".

There are many applications of this technique, some of which are discussed below. Essentially, the analysis of any relativistic quantum system can benefit from the use of light-front coordinates and the associated quantization of the theory that governs the system.

Nuclear reactions edit

The light-front technique was brought into nuclear physics by the pioneering papers of Frankfurt and Strikman.[5][6] The emphasis was on using the correct kinematic variables (and the corresponding simplifications achieved) in making correct treatments of high-energy nuclear reactions. This sub-section focuses on only a few examples.

Calculations of deep inelastic scattering from nuclei require knowledge of nucleon distribution functions within the nucleus. These functions give the probability that a nucleon of momentum   carries a given fraction   of the plus component of the nuclear momentum,  ,  .

Nuclear wave functions have been best determined using the equal-time framework. It therefore seems reasonable to see if one could re-calculate nuclear wave functions using the light front formalism. There are several basic nuclear structure problems which must be handled to establish that any given method works. It is necessary to compute the deuteron wave function, solve mean-field theory (basic nuclear shell model) for infinite nuclear matter and for finite-sized nuclei, and improve the mean-field theory by including the effects of nucleon-nucleon correlations. Much of nuclear physics is based on rotational invariance, but manifest rotational invariance is lost in the light front treatment. Thus recovering rotational invariance is very important for nuclear applications.

The simplest version of each problem has been handled. A light-front treatment of the deuteron was accomplished by Cooke and Miller,[7][8] which stressed recovering rotational invariance.[9] Mean-field theory for finite nuclei was handled Blunden et al.[10][11][12] Infinite nuclear matter was handled within mean-field theory[13][14] and also including correlations.[15][16] Applications to deep inelastic scattering were made by Miller and Smith.[17][18][19] The principal physics conclusion is that the EMC effect (nuclear modification of quark distribution functions) cannot be explained within the framework of conventional nuclear physics. Quark effects are needed. Most of these developments are discussed in a review by Miller.[20]

There is a new appreciation that initial and final-state interaction physics, which is not intrinsic to the hadron or nuclear light-front wave functions, must be addressed in order to understand phenomena such as single-spin asymmetries, diffractive processes, and nuclear shadowing.[21] This motivates extending LFQCD to the theory of reactions and to investigate high-energy collisions of hadrons. Standard scattering theory in Hamiltonian frameworks can provide valuable guidance for developing a LFQCD-based analysis of high-energy reactions.

Exclusive processes edit

One of the most important areas of application of the light-front formalism are exclusive hadronic processes. "Exclusive processes" are scattering reactions in which the kinematics of the initial state and final state particles are measured and thus completely specified; this is in contrast to "inclusive" reactions where one or more particles in the final state are not directly observed. Prime examples are the elastic and inelastic form factors measured in the exclusive lepton-hadron scattering processes such as   In inelastic exclusive processes, the initial and final hadrons can be different, such as  . Other examples of exclusive reactions are Compton scattering  , pion photoproduction   and elastic hadron scattering such as  . "Hard exclusive processes" refer to reactions in which at least one hadron scatters to large angles with a significant change in its transverse momentum.

Exclusive processes provide a window into the bound-state structure of hadrons in QCD as well as the fundamental processes which control hadron dynamics at the amplitude level. The natural calculus for describing the bound-state structure of relativistic composite systems, needed for describing exclusive amplitudes, is the light-front Fock expansion which encodes the multi-quark, gluonic, and color correlations of a hadron in terms of frame-independent wave functions. In hard exclusive processes, in which hadrons receive a large momentum transfer, perturbative QCD leads to factorization theorems[22] which separate the physics of hadronic bound-state structure from that of the relevant quark and gluonic hard-scattering reactions which underlie these reactions. At leading twist, the bound-state physics is encoded in terms of universal "distribution amplitudes",[23] the fundamental theoretical quantities which describe the valence quark substructure of hadrons as well as nuclei. Nonperturbative methods, such as AdS/QCD, Bethe–Salpeter methods, discretized light-cone quantization, and transverse lattice methods, are now providing nonperturbative predictions for the pion distribution amplitude. A basic feature of the gauge theory formalism is color transparency",[24] the absence of initial and final-state interactions of rapidly moving compact color-singlet states. Other applications of the exclusive factorization analysis include semileptonic   meson decays and deeply virtual Compton scattering, as well as dynamical higher-twist effects in inclusive reactions. Exclusive processes place important constraints on the light-front wave functions of hadrons in terms of their quark and gluon degrees of freedom as well as the composition of nuclei in terms of their nucleon and mesonic degrees of freedom.

The form factors measured in the exclusive reaction   encode the deviations from unity of the scattering amplitude due to the hadron's compositeness. Hadronic form factors fall monotonically with spacelike momentum transfer, since the amplitude for the hadron to remain intact continually decreases. One can also distinguish experimentally whether the spin orientation (helicity) of a hadron such as the spin-1/2 proton changes during the scattering or remains the same, as in the Pauli (spin-flip) and Dirac (spin-conserving) form factors.

The electromagnetic form factors of hadrons are given by matrix elements of the electromagnetic current such as   where   is the momentum four-vector of the exchanged virtual photon and   is the eigenstate for hadron   with four momentum  . It is convenient to choose the light-front frame where   with   The elastic and inelastic form factors can then be expressed[25] as integrated overlaps of the light-front Fock eigenstate wave functions   and   of the initial and final-state hadrons, respectively. The   of the struck quark is unchanged, and  . The unstruck (spectator) quarks have  . The result of the convolution gives the form factor exactly for all momentum transfer when one sums over all Fock states of the hadron. The frame choice   is chosen since it eliminates off-diagonal contributions where the number of initial and final state particles differ; it was originally discovered by Drell and Yan[26] and by West.[27] The rigorous formulation in terms of light-front wave functions is given by Brodsky and Drell.[25]

Light-front wave functions are frame-independent, in contrast to ordinary instant form wave functions which need to be boosted from   to  , a difficult dynamical problem, as emphasized by Dirac. Worse, one must include contributions to the current matrix element where the external photon interacts with connected currents arising from vacuum fluctuations in order to obtain the correct frame-independent result. Such vacuum contributions do not arise in the light-front formalism, because all physical lines have positive  ; the vacuum has only  , and   momentum is conserved.

At large momentum transfers, the elastic helicity-conserving form factors fall-off as the nominal power   where   is the minimum number of constituents.[28][29][30] For example,   for the three-quark Fock state of the proton. This "quark counting rule" or "dimensional counting rule" holds for theories such as QCD in which the interactions in the Lagrangian are scale invariant (conformal). This result is a consequence of the fact that form factors at large momentum transfer are controlled by the short distance behavior of the hadron's wave function which in turn is controlled by the "twist" (dimension - spin) of the leading interpolating operator which can create the hadron at zero separation of the constituents. The rule can be generalized to give the power-law fall-off of inelastic form factors and form factors in which the hadron spin changes between the initial and final states. It can be derived nonperturbatively using gauge/string theory duality[31] and with logarithmic corrections from perturbative QCD.[22]

In the case of elastic scattering amplitudes, such as  , the dominant physical mechanism at large momentum transfer is the exchange of the   quark between the   kaon and the proton  .[32] This amplitude can be written as a convolution of the four initial and final state light-front valence Fock-state wave functions. It is convenient to express the amplitude in terms of Mandelstam variables,[33] where, for a reaction   with momenta  , the variables are  . The resulting "quark interchange" amplitude has the leading form   which agrees well with the angular dependence and power law fall-off of the amplitude with momentum transfer   at fixed CM angle  . The   behavior of the amplitude, at fixed but large momentum transfer squared  , shows that the intercept of Regge amplitudes   at large negative  .[34] The nominal power-law   fall-off of the resulting hard exclusive scattering cross section for   at fixed CM angle is consistent with the dimensional counting rule for hard elastic scattering  , where   is the minimum number of constituents.

More generally, the amplitude for a hard exclusive reaction in QCD can be factorized[22] at leading power as a product of the hard-scattering subprocess quark scattering amplitude  , where the hadrons are each replaced with their constituent valence quarks or gluons, with their respective light-front momenta  ,   convoluted with the "distribution amplitude"   for each initial and final hadron.[23] The hard-scattering amplitude can then be computed systematically in perturbative QCD from the fundamental quark and gluon interactions of QCD. This factorization procedure can be carried out systematically since the effective QCD running coupling   becomes small at high momentum transfer, because of the asymptotic freedom property of QCD.

The physics of each hadron enters through its distribution amplitudes  , which specifies the partitioning of the light-front momenta of the valence constituents  . It is given in light-cone gauge   as  , the integral of the valence light-front wave function over the internal transverse momentum squared  ; the upper limit   is the characteristic transverse momentum in the exclusive reaction. The logarithmic evolution of the distribution amplitude in   is given rigorously in perturbative QCD by the ERBL evolution equation.[23][35] The results are also consistent with general principles such as the renormalization group. The asymptotic behavior of the distribution such as   where   is the decay constant measured in pion decay   can also be determined from first principles. The nonperturbative form of the hadron light-front wave function and distribution amplitude can be determined from AdS/QCD using light-front holography.[36][37][38][39][40] The deuteron distribution amplitude has five components corresponding to the five different color-singlet combinations of six color triplet quarks, only one of which is the standard nuclear physics product   of two color singlets. It obeys a   evolution equation[41] leading to equal weighting of the five components of the deuteron's light-front wave function components at   The new degrees of freedom are called "hidden color".[41][42][43] Each hadron emitted from a hard exclusive reaction emerges with high momentum and small transverse size. A fundamental feature of gauge theory is that soft gluons decouple from the small color-dipole moment of the compact fast-moving color-singlet wave function configurations of the incident and final-state hadrons. The transversely compact color-singlet configurations can persist over a distance of order  , the Ioffe coherence length. Thus, if we study hard quasi elastic processes in a nuclear target, the outgoing and ingoing hadrons will have minimal absorption - a novel phenomenon called "color transparency".[24][44] This implies that quasi-elastic hadron-nucleon scattering at large momentum transfer can occur additively on all of the nucleons in a nucleus with minimal attenuation due to elastic or inelastic final state interactions in the nucleus, i.e. the nucleus becomes transparent. In contrast, in conventional Glauber scattering, one predicts nearly energy-independent initial and final-state attenuation. Color transparency has been verified in many hard-scattering exclusive experiments, particularly in the diffractive dijet experiment[45]   at Fermilab. This experiment also provides a measurement of the pion's light-front valence wave function from the observed   and transverse momentum dependence of the produced dijets.[46]

Light-front holography edit

One of the most interesting recent advances in hadron physics has been the application to QCD of a branch of string theory, Anti-de Sitter/Conformal Field Theory (AdS/CFT).[47] Although QCD is not a conformally invariant field theory, one can use the mathematical representation of the conformal group in five-dimensional anti-de Sitter space to construct an analytic first approximation to the theory. The resulting model,[36][37][38][39][40][48] called AdS/QCD, gives accurate predictions for hadron spectroscopy and a description of the quark structure of mesons and baryons which has scale invariance and dimensional counting at short distances, together with color confinement at large distances.

"Light-Front Holography" refers to the remarkable fact that dynamics in AdS space in five dimensions is dual to a semiclassical approximation to Hamiltonian theory in physical   space-time quantized at fixed light-front time. Remarkably, there is an exact correspondence between the fifth-dimension coordinate of AdS space and a specific impact variable   which measures the physical separation of the quark constituents within the hadron at fixed light-cone time   and is conjugate to the invariant mass squared  . This connection allows one to compute the analytic form of the frame-independent simplified light-front wave functions for mesons and baryons that encode hadron properties and allow for the computation of exclusive scattering amplitudes.

In the case of mesons, the valence Fock-state wave functions of   for zero quark mass satisfy a single-variable relativistic equation of motion in the invariant variable  , which is conjugate to the invariant mass squared  . The effective confining potential   in this frame-independent "light-front Schrödinger equation" systematically incorporates the effects of higher quark and gluon Fock states. Remarkably, the potential has a unique form of a harmonic oscillator potential if one requires that the chiral QCD action remains conformally invariant. The result is a nonperturbative relativistic light-front quantum mechanical wave equation which incorporates color confinement and other essential spectroscopic and dynamical features of hadron physics.

These recent developments concerning AdS/CFT duality provide new insights about light-front wave functions which may form first approximations to the full solutions that one seeks in LFQCD, and be considered as a step in building a physically motivated Fock-space basis set to diagonalize the LFQCD Hamiltonian, as in the basis light-front quantization (BLFQ) method.

Prediction of the cosmological constant edit

A major outstanding problem in theoretical physics is that most quantum field theories predict a huge value for the quantum vacuum. Such arguments are usually based on dimensional analysis and effective field theory. If the universe is described by an effective local quantum field theory down to the Planck scale, then we would expect a cosmological constant of the order of  . As noted above, the measured cosmological constant is smaller than this by a factor of 10−120. This discrepancy has been called "the worst theoretical prediction in the history of physics!".[49]

A possible solution is offered by light front quantization, a rigorous alternative to the usual second quantization method. Vacuum fluctuations do not appear in the Light-Front vacuum state,.[50][51] This absence means that there is no contribution from QED, Weak interactions and QCD to the cosmological constant which is thus predicted to be zero in a flat space-time.[52] The measured small non-zero value of the cosmological constant could originate for example from a slight curvature of the shape of the universe (which is not excluded within 0.4% (as of 2017)[53][54][55]) since a curved-space could modify the Higgs field zero-mode, thereby possibly producing a non-zero contribution to the cosmological constant.

Intense lasers edit

High-intensity laser facilities offer prospects for directly measuring previously unobserved processes in QED, such as vacuum birefringence, photon-photon scattering and, still some way in the future, Schwinger pair production. Furthermore, `light-shining-through-walls' experiments can probe the low energy frontier of particle physics and search for beyond-standard-model particles. These possibilities have led to great interest in the properties of quantum field theories, in particular QED, in background fields describing intense light sources,[56][57] and some of the fundamental predictions of the theory have been experimentally verified.[58]

Despite the basic theory behind `strong-field QED' having been developed over 40 years ago, there have remained until recent years several theoretical ambiguities that can in part be attributed to the use of the instant-form in a theory which, because of the laser background, naturally singles out light-like directions. Thus, light-front quantization is a natural approach to physics in intense laser fields. The use of the front-form in strong-field QED[59] has provided answers to several long standing questions, such as the nature of the effective mass in a laser pulse, the pole structure of the background-dressed propagator, and the origins of classical radiation reaction within QED.

Combined with nonperturbative approaches such as `time dependent basis light-front quantization',[60][61] which is specifically targeted at time-dependent problems in field theory, the front-form promises to provide a better understanding of QED in external fields. Such investigations will also provide groundwork for understanding QCD physics in strong magnetic fields at, for example, RHIC.

Nonperturbative quantum field theory edit

Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), the theory of strong interactions, is a part of the Standard Model of elementary particles that also includes, besides QCD, the theory of electro-weak (EW) interactions. In view of the difference in strength of these interactions, one may treat the EW interactions as a perturbation in systems consisting of hadrons, the composite particles that respond to the strong interactions. Perturbation theory has its place in QCD also, but only at large values of the transferred energy or momentum where it exhibits the property of asymptotic freedom. The field of perturbative QCD is well developed and many phenomena have been described using it, such as factorization, parton distributions, single-spin asymmetries, and jets. However, at low values of the energy and momentum transfer, the strong interaction must be treated in a nonperturbative manner, since the interaction strength becomes large and the confinement of quarks and gluons, as the partonic components of the hadrons, cannot be ignored. There is a wealth of data in this strong interaction regime that is waiting for explanation in terms of calculations proceeding directly from the underlying theory. As one prominent application of an ab initio approach to QCD, many extensive experimental programs either measure directly, or depend upon the knowledge of, the probability distributions of the quark and gluon components of the hadrons.

Three approaches have produced considerable success in the strong-coupling area up to the present. First, hadronic models have been formulated and applied successfully.[62][63][64][65][66][67][68][69][70] This success comes sometimes at the price of introducing parameters that need to be identified quantitatively. For example, the Relativistic String Hamiltonian[71] depends on the current quark masses, the string tension, and a parameter corresponding to  . The second method, lattice QCD,[72][73][74] is an ab initio approach directly linked to the Lagrangian of QCD. Based on a Euclidean formulation, lattice QCD provides an estimate of the QCD path integral and opens access to low-energy hadronic properties such as masses. Although lattice QCD can estimate some observables directly, it does not provide the wave functions that are needed for the description of the structure and dynamics of hadrons. Third is the Dyson—Schwinger approach.[75][76][77][78] It is also formulated in Euclidean space-time and employs models for vertex functions.

The light-front Hamiltonian approach is a fourth approach, which, in contrast to the lattice and Dyson–Schwinger approaches, is developed in Minkowski space and deals directly with wave functions - the main objects of quantum theory. Unlike the modeling approach, it is rooted in the fundamental Lagrangian of QCD.

Any field-theoretical Hamiltonian   does not conserve the number of particles. Therefore, in the basis, corresponding to fixed number of particles, it is a non-diagonal matrix. Its eigenvector—the state vector of a physical system—is an infinite superposition (Fock decomposition) of the states with different numbers of particles:  

  is the  -body wave function (Fock component) and   is an integration measure. In light-front quantization, the Hamiltonian   and the state vector   here are defined on the light-front plane.

In many cases, though not always, one can expect that a finite number of degrees of freedom dominates, that is, the decomposition in the Fock components converges enough quickly. In these cases the decomposition can be truncated, so that the infinite sum can be approximately replaced by a finite one. Then, substituting the truncated state vector in the eigenvector equation

 

one obtains a finite system of integral equations for the Fock wave functions   which can be solved numerically. Smallness of the coupling constant is not required. Therefore, the truncated solution is nonperturbative. This is the basis of a nonperturbative approach to the field theory which was developed and, for the present, applied to QED[79][80][81][82][83] and to the Yukawa model.[84][85]

The main difficulty in this way is to ensure cancellation of infinities after renormalization. In the perturbative approach, for a renormalizable field theory, in any fixed order of coupling constant, this cancellation is obtained as a by-product of the renormalization procedure. However, to ensure the cancellation, it is important to take into account the full set of graphs at a given order. Omitting some of these graphs destroys the cancellation and the infinities survive after renormalization. This is what happens after truncation of the Fock space; though the truncated solution can be decomposed into an infinite series in terms of the coupling constant, at any given order the series does not contain the full set of perturbative graphs. Therefore, the standardrenormalization scheme does not eliminate infinities.

In the approach of Brodsky et al.[79] the infinities remain uncanceled, though it is expected that as soon as the number of sectors kept after truncation increases, the domain of stability of the results relative to the cutoff also increases. The value on this plateau of stability is just an approximation to the exact solution which is taken as the physical value.

The sector-dependent approach[85][86] is constructed so as to restore cancellation of infinities for any given truncation. The values of the counterterms are constructed from sector to sector according to unambiguously formulated rules. The numerical results for the anomalous magnetic moment of fermion in the truncation keeping three Fock sectors are stable relative to increase of the cutoff.[87] However, the interpretation of the wave functions, due to negative norm of the Pauli-Villars states introduced for regularization, becomes problematic.[88] When the number of sectors increases, the results in both schemes should tend to each other and approach to the exact nonperturbative solution.

The light-front coupled-cluster approach[89] (see Light-front computational methods#Light-front coupled-cluster method), avoids making a Fock-space truncation. Applications of this approach are just beginning.

Structure of hadrons edit

Experiments that need a conceptually and mathematically precise theoretical description of hadrons at the amplitude level include investigations of: the structure of nucleons and mesons, heavy quark systems and exotics, hard processes involving quark and gluon distributions in hadrons, heavy ion collisions, and many more. For example, LFQCD will offer the opportunity for an ab initio understanding of the microscopic origins of the spin content of the proton and how the intrinsic and spatial angular momenta are distributed among the partonic components in terms of the wave functions. This is an outstanding unsolved problem as experiments to date have not yet found the largest components of the proton spin. The components previously thought to be the leading carriers, the quarks, have been found to carry a small amount of the total spin. Generalized parton distributions (GPDs) were introduced to quantify each component of the spin content and have been used to analyze the experimental measurements of deeply virtual Compton scattering (DVCS). As another example, LFQCD will predict the masses, quantum numbers and widths of yet-to-be observed exotics such as glueballs and hybrids.

QCD at high temperature and density edit

There are major programs at accelerator facilities such as GSI-SIS, CERN-LHC, and BNL-RHIC to investigate the properties of a new state of matter, the quark–gluon plasma, and other features of the QCD phase diagram. In the early universe, temperatures were high, while net baryon densities were low. In contrast, in compact stellar objects, temperatures are low, and the baryon density is high. QCD describes both extremes. However, reliable perturbative calculations can only be performed at asymptotically large temperatures and densities, where the running coupling constant of QCD is small due to asymptotic freedom, and lattice QCD provides information only at very low chemical potential (baryon density). Thus, many frontier questions remain to be answered. What is the nature of the phase transitions? How does the matter behave in the vicinity of the phase boundaries? What are the observable signatures of the transition in transient heavy-ion collisions? LFQCD opens a new avenue for addressing these issues.

In recent years a general formalism to directly compute the partition function in light-front quantization has been developed and numerical methods are under development for evaluating this partition function in LFQCD.[90][91][92][93][94][95][96] Light-front quantization leads to new definitions of the partition function and temperature which can provide a frame-independent description of thermal and statistical systems.[91][92] The goal is to establish a tool comparable in power to lattice QCD but extending the partition function to finite chemical potentials where experimental data are available.

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • ILCAC, Inc., the International Light-Cone Advisory Committee.
  • Publications on light-front dynamics, maintained by A. Harindranath.

light, front, quantization, applications, light, front, quantization, quantum, field, theories, provides, useful, alternative, ordinary, equal, time, quantization, particular, lead, relativistic, description, bound, systems, terms, quantum, mechanical, wave, f. The light front quantization 1 2 3 of quantum field theories provides a useful alternative to ordinary equal time quantization In particular it can lead to a relativistic description of bound systems in terms of quantum mechanical wave functions The quantization is based on the choice of light front coordinates 4 where x ct z displaystyle x equiv ct z plays the role of time and the corresponding spatial coordinate is x ct z displaystyle x equiv ct z Here t displaystyle t is the ordinary time z displaystyle z is a Cartesian coordinate and c displaystyle c is the speed of light The other two Cartesian coordinates x displaystyle x and y displaystyle y are untouched and often called transverse or perpendicular denoted by symbols of the type x x y displaystyle vec x perp x y The choice of the frame of reference where the time t displaystyle t and z displaystyle z axis are defined can be left unspecified in an exactly soluble relativistic theory but in practical calculations some choices may be more suitable than others The basic formalism is discussed elsewhere The light cone of special relativity Light front quantization uses light front or light cone coordinates to select an initial surface that is tangential to the light cone Equal time quantization uses an initial surface that is horizontal labeled here as the hypersurface of the present There are many applications of this technique some of which are discussed below Essentially the analysis of any relativistic quantum system can benefit from the use of light front coordinates and the associated quantization of the theory that governs the system Contents 1 Nuclear reactions 2 Exclusive processes 3 Light front holography 4 Prediction of the cosmological constant 5 Intense lasers 6 Nonperturbative quantum field theory 6 1 Structure of hadrons 6 2 QCD at high temperature and density 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksNuclear reactions editThe light front technique was brought into nuclear physics by the pioneering papers of Frankfurt and Strikman 5 6 The emphasis was on using the correct kinematic variables and the corresponding simplifications achieved in making correct treatments of high energy nuclear reactions This sub section focuses on only a few examples Calculations of deep inelastic scattering from nuclei require knowledge of nucleon distribution functions within the nucleus These functions give the probability that a nucleon of momentum p displaystyle p nbsp carries a given fraction y displaystyle y nbsp of the plus component of the nuclear momentum P displaystyle P nbsp y p P displaystyle y p P nbsp Nuclear wave functions have been best determined using the equal time framework It therefore seems reasonable to see if one could re calculate nuclear wave functions using the light front formalism There are several basic nuclear structure problems which must be handled to establish that any given method works It is necessary to compute the deuteron wave function solve mean field theory basic nuclear shell model for infinite nuclear matter and for finite sized nuclei and improve the mean field theory by including the effects of nucleon nucleon correlations Much of nuclear physics is based on rotational invariance but manifest rotational invariance is lost in the light front treatment Thus recovering rotational invariance is very important for nuclear applications The simplest version of each problem has been handled A light front treatment of the deuteron was accomplished by Cooke and Miller 7 8 which stressed recovering rotational invariance 9 Mean field theory for finite nuclei was handled Blunden et al 10 11 12 Infinite nuclear matter was handled within mean field theory 13 14 and also including correlations 15 16 Applications to deep inelastic scattering were made by Miller and Smith 17 18 19 The principal physics conclusion is that the EMC effect nuclear modification of quark distribution functions cannot be explained within the framework of conventional nuclear physics Quark effects are needed Most of these developments are discussed in a review by Miller 20 There is a new appreciation that initial and final state interaction physics which is not intrinsic to the hadron or nuclear light front wave functions must be addressed in order to understand phenomena such as single spin asymmetries diffractive processes and nuclear shadowing 21 This motivates extending LFQCD to the theory of reactions and to investigate high energy collisions of hadrons Standard scattering theory in Hamiltonian frameworks can provide valuable guidance for developing a LFQCD based analysis of high energy reactions Exclusive processes editOne of the most important areas of application of the light front formalism are exclusive hadronic processes Exclusive processes are scattering reactions in which the kinematics of the initial state and final state particles are measured and thus completely specified this is in contrast to inclusive reactions where one or more particles in the final state are not directly observed Prime examples are the elastic and inelastic form factors measured in the exclusive lepton hadron scattering processes such as ep e p displaystyle ep to e prime p prime nbsp In inelastic exclusive processes the initial and final hadrons can be different such as ep e D displaystyle ep to e prime Delta nbsp Other examples of exclusive reactions are Compton scattering gp g p displaystyle gamma p to gamma prime p prime nbsp pion photoproduction gp p n displaystyle gamma p to pi n nbsp and elastic hadron scattering such as p p p p displaystyle pi p to pi prime p prime nbsp Hard exclusive processes refer to reactions in which at least one hadron scatters to large angles with a significant change in its transverse momentum Exclusive processes provide a window into the bound state structure of hadrons in QCD as well as the fundamental processes which control hadron dynamics at the amplitude level The natural calculus for describing the bound state structure of relativistic composite systems needed for describing exclusive amplitudes is the light front Fock expansion which encodes the multi quark gluonic and color correlations of a hadron in terms of frame independent wave functions In hard exclusive processes in which hadrons receive a large momentum transfer perturbative QCD leads to factorization theorems 22 which separate the physics of hadronic bound state structure from that of the relevant quark and gluonic hard scattering reactions which underlie these reactions At leading twist the bound state physics is encoded in terms of universal distribution amplitudes 23 the fundamental theoretical quantities which describe the valence quark substructure of hadrons as well as nuclei Nonperturbative methods such as AdS QCD Bethe Salpeter methods discretized light cone quantization and transverse lattice methods are now providing nonperturbative predictions for the pion distribution amplitude A basic feature of the gauge theory formalism is color transparency 24 the absence of initial and final state interactions of rapidly moving compact color singlet states Other applications of the exclusive factorization analysis include semileptonic B displaystyle B nbsp meson decays and deeply virtual Compton scattering as well as dynamical higher twist effects in inclusive reactions Exclusive processes place important constraints on the light front wave functions of hadrons in terms of their quark and gluon degrees of freedom as well as the composition of nuclei in terms of their nucleon and mesonic degrees of freedom The form factors measured in the exclusive reaction eH eH displaystyle eH to eH prime nbsp encode the deviations from unity of the scattering amplitude due to the hadron s compositeness Hadronic form factors fall monotonically with spacelike momentum transfer since the amplitude for the hadron to remain intact continually decreases One can also distinguish experimentally whether the spin orientation helicity of a hadron such as the spin 1 2 proton changes during the scattering or remains the same as in the Pauli spin flip and Dirac spin conserving form factors The electromagnetic form factors of hadrons are given by matrix elements of the electromagnetic current such as FH q2 lt H p q j H p gt displaystyle F H q 2 lt H prime p q j H p gt nbsp where qm displaystyle q mu nbsp is the momentum four vector of the exchanged virtual photon and H p gt displaystyle H p gt nbsp is the eigenstate for hadron H displaystyle H nbsp with four momentum pm displaystyle p mu nbsp It is convenient to choose the light front frame where q 0 q Q q 2q pP displaystyle q 0 q perp Q q frac 2q cdot p P nbsp with q 2 Q2 q2 displaystyle q perp 2 Q 2 q 2 nbsp The elastic and inelastic form factors can then be expressed 25 as integrated overlaps of the light front Fock eigenstate wave functions PSH xi k li displaystyle Psi H x i vec k perp lambda i nbsp and PSH xi k li displaystyle Psi H x i vec k perp prime lambda i nbsp of the initial and final state hadrons respectively The x displaystyle x nbsp of the struck quark is unchanged and k k 1 xi q displaystyle k perp prime vec k perp 1 x i vec q perp nbsp The unstruck spectator quarks have k k x1q displaystyle vec k perp prime vec k perp x 1 vec q perp nbsp The result of the convolution gives the form factor exactly for all momentum transfer when one sums over all Fock states of the hadron The frame choice q 0 displaystyle q 0 nbsp is chosen since it eliminates off diagonal contributions where the number of initial and final state particles differ it was originally discovered by Drell and Yan 26 and by West 27 The rigorous formulation in terms of light front wave functions is given by Brodsky and Drell 25 Light front wave functions are frame independent in contrast to ordinary instant form wave functions which need to be boosted from p displaystyle p nbsp to p q displaystyle p q nbsp a difficult dynamical problem as emphasized by Dirac Worse one must include contributions to the current matrix element where the external photon interacts with connected currents arising from vacuum fluctuations in order to obtain the correct frame independent result Such vacuum contributions do not arise in the light front formalism because all physical lines have positive k displaystyle k nbsp the vacuum has only k 0 displaystyle k 0 nbsp and displaystyle nbsp momentum is conserved At large momentum transfers the elastic helicity conserving form factors fall off as the nominal power FH Q2 1Q2 n 1 displaystyle F H Q 2 propto left frac 1 Q 2 right n 1 nbsp where n displaystyle n nbsp is the minimum number of constituents 28 29 30 For example n 3 displaystyle n 3 nbsp for the three quark Fock state of the proton This quark counting rule or dimensional counting rule holds for theories such as QCD in which the interactions in the Lagrangian are scale invariant conformal This result is a consequence of the fact that form factors at large momentum transfer are controlled by the short distance behavior of the hadron s wave function which in turn is controlled by the twist dimension spin of the leading interpolating operator which can create the hadron at zero separation of the constituents The rule can be generalized to give the power law fall off of inelastic form factors and form factors in which the hadron spin changes between the initial and final states It can be derived nonperturbatively using gauge string theory duality 31 and with logarithmic corrections from perturbative QCD 22 In the case of elastic scattering amplitudes such as K p K p displaystyle K p to K p nbsp the dominant physical mechanism at large momentum transfer is the exchange of the u displaystyle u nbsp quark between the K us displaystyle K u bar s nbsp kaon and the proton uud displaystyle uud nbsp 32 This amplitude can be written as a convolution of the four initial and final state light front valence Fock state wave functions It is convenient to express the amplitude in terms of Mandelstam variables 33 where for a reaction A B C D displaystyle A B to C D nbsp with momenta PX displaystyle P X nbsp the variables are s PA PB 2 ECM2 t PD PB 2 u PA PD 2 displaystyle s P A P B 2 E CM 2 t P D P B 2 u P A P D 2 nbsp The resulting quark interchange amplitude has the leading form M 1ut2 displaystyle M propto frac 1 ut 2 nbsp which agrees well with the angular dependence and power law fall off of the amplitude with momentum transfer pT2 tus displaystyle p T 2 frac tu s nbsp at fixed CM angle cos 8CM t u2s displaystyle cos theta CM frac t u 2s nbsp The 1u displaystyle frac 1 u nbsp behavior of the amplitude at fixed but large momentum transfer squared t displaystyle t nbsp shows that the intercept of Regge amplitudes ua t 1 displaystyle u alpha t to 1 nbsp at large negative t displaystyle t nbsp 34 The nominal power law s 8 displaystyle s 8 nbsp fall off of the resulting hard exclusive scattering cross section for K p K p displaystyle K p to K p nbsp at fixed CM angle is consistent with the dimensional counting rule for hard elastic scattering dsdt A B C D F 8CMsnA nB nC nD 2 displaystyle frac d sigma dt A B to C D propto frac F theta CM s n A n B n C n D 2 nbsp where nA displaystyle n A nbsp is the minimum number of constituents More generally the amplitude for a hard exclusive reaction in QCD can be factorized 22 at leading power as a product of the hard scattering subprocess quark scattering amplitude T displaystyle T nbsp where the hadrons are each replaced with their constituent valence quarks or gluons with their respective light front momenta k xiP displaystyle k x i P nbsp k xiP displaystyle vec k perp x i vec P perp nbsp convoluted with the distribution amplitude ϕH xi Q displaystyle phi H x i Q nbsp for each initial and final hadron 23 The hard scattering amplitude can then be computed systematically in perturbative QCD from the fundamental quark and gluon interactions of QCD This factorization procedure can be carried out systematically since the effective QCD running coupling as q2 displaystyle alpha s q 2 nbsp becomes small at high momentum transfer because of the asymptotic freedom property of QCD The physics of each hadron enters through its distribution amplitudes ϕH xi Q displaystyle phi H x i Q nbsp which specifies the partitioning of the light front momenta of the valence constituents xi ki P displaystyle x i frac k i P nbsp It is given in light cone gauge A 0 displaystyle A 0 nbsp as Pi Qd2k ipsH xi k i displaystyle Pi i int Q d 2 vec k perp i psi H x i vec k perp i nbsp the integral of the valence light front wave function over the internal transverse momentum squared k 2 lt Q2 displaystyle k perp 2 lt Q 2 nbsp the upper limit Q2 displaystyle Q 2 nbsp is the characteristic transverse momentum in the exclusive reaction The logarithmic evolution of the distribution amplitude in log Q2 displaystyle log Q 2 nbsp is given rigorously in perturbative QCD by the ERBL evolution equation 23 35 The results are also consistent with general principles such as the renormalization group The asymptotic behavior of the distribution such as ϕp 3fpx 1 x displaystyle phi pi to sqrt 3 f pi x 1 x nbsp where fp displaystyle f pi nbsp is the decay constant measured in pion decay p W m nm displaystyle pi to W to mu nu mu nbsp can also be determined from first principles The nonperturbative form of the hadron light front wave function and distribution amplitude can be determined from AdS QCD using light front holography 36 37 38 39 40 The deuteron distribution amplitude has five components corresponding to the five different color singlet combinations of six color triplet quarks only one of which is the standard nuclear physics product d np displaystyle d to np nbsp of two color singlets It obeys a 5 5 displaystyle 5 times 5 nbsp evolution equation 41 leading to equal weighting of the five components of the deuteron s light front wave function components at Q2 displaystyle Q 2 to infty nbsp The new degrees of freedom are called hidden color 41 42 43 Each hadron emitted from a hard exclusive reaction emerges with high momentum and small transverse size A fundamental feature of gauge theory is that soft gluons decouple from the small color dipole moment of the compact fast moving color singlet wave function configurations of the incident and final state hadrons The transversely compact color singlet configurations can persist over a distance of order Elab Q2 displaystyle E rm lab Q 2 nbsp the Ioffe coherence length Thus if we study hard quasi elastic processes in a nuclear target the outgoing and ingoing hadrons will have minimal absorption a novel phenomenon called color transparency 24 44 This implies that quasi elastic hadron nucleon scattering at large momentum transfer can occur additively on all of the nucleons in a nucleus with minimal attenuation due to elastic or inelastic final state interactions in the nucleus i e the nucleus becomes transparent In contrast in conventional Glauber scattering one predicts nearly energy independent initial and final state attenuation Color transparency has been verified in many hard scattering exclusive experiments particularly in the diffractive dijet experiment 45 pA JetJetA displaystyle pi A to JetJetA prime nbsp at Fermilab This experiment also provides a measurement of the pion s light front valence wave function from the observed x displaystyle x nbsp and transverse momentum dependence of the produced dijets 46 Light front holography editOne of the most interesting recent advances in hadron physics has been the application to QCD of a branch of string theory Anti de Sitter Conformal Field Theory AdS CFT 47 Although QCD is not a conformally invariant field theory one can use the mathematical representation of the conformal group in five dimensional anti de Sitter space to construct an analytic first approximation to the theory The resulting model 36 37 38 39 40 48 called AdS QCD gives accurate predictions for hadron spectroscopy and a description of the quark structure of mesons and baryons which has scale invariance and dimensional counting at short distances together with color confinement at large distances Light Front Holography refers to the remarkable fact that dynamics in AdS space in five dimensions is dual to a semiclassical approximation to Hamiltonian theory in physical 3 1 displaystyle 3 1 nbsp space time quantized at fixed light front time Remarkably there is an exact correspondence between the fifth dimension coordinate of AdS space and a specific impact variable z 2 b 2x 1 x displaystyle zeta perp 2 b perp 2 x 1 x nbsp which measures the physical separation of the quark constituents within the hadron at fixed light cone time t displaystyle tau nbsp and is conjugate to the invariant mass squared Mqq 2 displaystyle M q bar q 2 nbsp This connection allows one to compute the analytic form of the frame independent simplified light front wave functions for mesons and baryons that encode hadron properties and allow for the computation of exclusive scattering amplitudes In the case of mesons the valence Fock state wave functions of HLF displaystyle H LF nbsp for zero quark mass satisfy a single variable relativistic equation of motion in the invariant variable z2 b 2x 1 x displaystyle zeta 2 b perp 2 x 1 x nbsp which is conjugate to the invariant mass squared Mqq 2 displaystyle M q bar q 2 nbsp The effective confining potential U z2 displaystyle U zeta 2 nbsp in this frame independent light front Schrodinger equation systematically incorporates the effects of higher quark and gluon Fock states Remarkably the potential has a unique form of a harmonic oscillator potential if one requires that the chiral QCD action remains conformally invariant The result is a nonperturbative relativistic light front quantum mechanical wave equation which incorporates color confinement and other essential spectroscopic and dynamical features of hadron physics These recent developments concerning AdS CFT duality provide new insights about light front wave functions which may form first approximations to the full solutions that one seeks in LFQCD and be considered as a step in building a physically motivated Fock space basis set to diagonalize the LFQCD Hamiltonian as in the basis light front quantization BLFQ method Prediction of the cosmological constant editSee also Cosmological constant problem A major outstanding problem in theoretical physics is that most quantum field theories predict a huge value for the quantum vacuum Such arguments are usually based on dimensional analysis and effective field theory If the universe is described by an effective local quantum field theory down to the Planck scale then we would expect a cosmological constant of the order of Mpl4 displaystyle M rm pl 4 nbsp As noted above the measured cosmological constant is smaller than this by a factor of 10 120 This discrepancy has been called the worst theoretical prediction in the history of physics 49 A possible solution is offered by light front quantization a rigorous alternative to the usual second quantization method Vacuum fluctuations do not appear in the Light Front vacuum state 50 51 This absence means that there is no contribution from QED Weak interactions and QCD to the cosmological constant which is thus predicted to be zero in a flat space time 52 The measured small non zero value of the cosmological constant could originate for example from a slight curvature of the shape of the universe which is not excluded within 0 4 as of 2017 53 54 55 since a curved space could modify the Higgs field zero mode thereby possibly producing a non zero contribution to the cosmological constant Intense lasers editHigh intensity laser facilities offer prospects for directly measuring previously unobserved processes in QED such as vacuum birefringence photon photon scattering and still some way in the future Schwinger pair production Furthermore light shining through walls experiments can probe the low energy frontier of particle physics and search for beyond standard model particles These possibilities have led to great interest in the properties of quantum field theories in particular QED in background fields describing intense light sources 56 57 and some of the fundamental predictions of the theory have been experimentally verified 58 Despite the basic theory behind strong field QED having been developed over 40 years ago there have remained until recent years several theoretical ambiguities that can in part be attributed to the use of the instant form in a theory which because of the laser background naturally singles out light like directions Thus light front quantization is a natural approach to physics in intense laser fields The use of the front form in strong field QED 59 has provided answers to several long standing questions such as the nature of the effective mass in a laser pulse the pole structure of the background dressed propagator and the origins of classical radiation reaction within QED Combined with nonperturbative approaches such as time dependent basis light front quantization 60 61 which is specifically targeted at time dependent problems in field theory the front form promises to provide a better understanding of QED in external fields Such investigations will also provide groundwork for understanding QCD physics in strong magnetic fields at for example RHIC Nonperturbative quantum field theory editQuantum Chromodynamics QCD the theory of strong interactions is a part of the Standard Model of elementary particles that also includes besides QCD the theory of electro weak EW interactions In view of the difference in strength of these interactions one may treat the EW interactions as a perturbation in systems consisting of hadrons the composite particles that respond to the strong interactions Perturbation theory has its place in QCD also but only at large values of the transferred energy or momentum where it exhibits the property of asymptotic freedom The field of perturbative QCD is well developed and many phenomena have been described using it such as factorization parton distributions single spin asymmetries and jets However at low values of the energy and momentum transfer the strong interaction must be treated in a nonperturbative manner since the interaction strength becomes large and the confinement of quarks and gluons as the partonic components of the hadrons cannot be ignored There is a wealth of data in this strong interaction regime that is waiting for explanation in terms of calculations proceeding directly from the underlying theory As one prominent application of an ab initio approach to QCD many extensive experimental programs either measure directly or depend upon the knowledge of the probability distributions of the quark and gluon components of the hadrons Three approaches have produced considerable success in the strong coupling area up to the present First hadronic models have been formulated and applied successfully 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 This success comes sometimes at the price of introducing parameters that need to be identified quantitatively For example the Relativistic String Hamiltonian 71 depends on the current quark masses the string tension and a parameter corresponding to LQCD displaystyle Lambda rm QCD nbsp The second method lattice QCD 72 73 74 is an ab initio approach directly linked to the Lagrangian of QCD Based on a Euclidean formulation lattice QCD provides an estimate of the QCD path integral and opens access to low energy hadronic properties such as masses Although lattice QCD can estimate some observables directly it does not provide the wave functions that are needed for the description of the structure and dynamics of hadrons Third is the Dyson Schwinger approach 75 76 77 78 It is also formulated in Euclidean space time and employs models for vertex functions The light front Hamiltonian approach is a fourth approach which in contrast to the lattice and Dyson Schwinger approaches is developed in Minkowski space and deals directly with wave functions the main objects of quantum theory Unlike the modeling approach it is rooted in the fundamental Lagrangian of QCD Any field theoretical Hamiltonian H displaystyle H nbsp does not conserve the number of particles Therefore in the basis corresponding to fixed number of particles it is a non diagonal matrix Its eigenvector the state vector of a physical system is an infinite superposition Fock decomposition of the states with different numbers of particles p n 1 psn k1 kn p n Dk displaystyle p rangle sum n 1 infty int psi n k 1 ldots k n p n rangle D k nbsp psn displaystyle psi n nbsp is the n displaystyle n nbsp body wave function Fock component and Dk displaystyle D k nbsp is an integration measure In light front quantization the Hamiltonian H displaystyle H nbsp and the state vector p displaystyle p rangle nbsp here are defined on the light front plane In many cases though not always one can expect that a finite number of degrees of freedom dominates that is the decomposition in the Fock components converges enough quickly In these cases the decomposition can be truncated so that the infinite sum can be approximately replaced by a finite one Then substituting the truncated state vector in the eigenvector equationH p M p displaystyle H p rangle M p rangle nbsp one obtains a finite system of integral equations for the Fock wave functions psn displaystyle psi n nbsp which can be solved numerically Smallness of the coupling constant is not required Therefore the truncated solution is nonperturbative This is the basis of a nonperturbative approach to the field theory which was developed and for the present applied to QED 79 80 81 82 83 and to the Yukawa model 84 85 The main difficulty in this way is to ensure cancellation of infinities after renormalization In the perturbative approach for a renormalizable field theory in any fixed order of coupling constant this cancellation is obtained as a by product of the renormalization procedure However to ensure the cancellation it is important to take into account the full set of graphs at a given order Omitting some of these graphs destroys the cancellation and the infinities survive after renormalization This is what happens after truncation of the Fock space though the truncated solution can be decomposed into an infinite series in terms of the coupling constant at any given order the series does not contain the full set of perturbative graphs Therefore the standardrenormalization scheme does not eliminate infinities In the approach of Brodsky et al 79 the infinities remain uncanceled though it is expected that as soon as the number of sectors kept after truncation increases the domain of stability of the results relative to the cutoff also increases The value on this plateau of stability is just an approximation to the exact solution which is taken as the physical value The sector dependent approach 85 86 is constructed so as to restore cancellation of infinities for any given truncation The values of the counterterms are constructed from sector to sector according to unambiguously formulated rules The numerical results for the anomalous magnetic moment of fermion in the truncation keeping three Fock sectors are stable relative to increase of the cutoff 87 However the interpretation of the wave functions due to negative norm of the Pauli Villars states introduced for regularization becomes problematic 88 When the number of sectors increases the results in both schemes should tend to each other and approach to the exact nonperturbative solution The light front coupled cluster approach 89 see Light front computational methods Light front coupled cluster method avoids making a Fock space truncation Applications of this approach are just beginning Structure of hadrons edit Experiments that need a conceptually and mathematically precise theoretical description of hadrons at the amplitude level include investigations of the structure of nucleons and mesons heavy quark systems and exotics hard processes involving quark and gluon distributions in hadrons heavy ion collisions and many more For example LFQCD will offer the opportunity for an ab initio understanding of the microscopic origins of the spin content of the proton and how the intrinsic and spatial angular momenta are distributed among the partonic components in terms of the wave functions This is an outstanding unsolved problem as experiments to date have not yet found the largest components of the proton spin The components previously thought to be the leading carriers the quarks have been found to carry a small amount of the total spin Generalized parton distributions GPDs were introduced to quantify each component of the spin content and have been used to analyze the experimental measurements of deeply virtual Compton scattering DVCS As another example LFQCD will predict the masses quantum numbers and widths of yet to be observed exotics such as glueballs and hybrids QCD at high temperature and density edit There are major programs at accelerator facilities such as GSI SIS CERN LHC and BNL RHIC to investigate the properties of a new state of matter the quark gluon plasma and other features of the QCD phase diagram In the early universe temperatures were high while net baryon densities were low In contrast in compact stellar objects temperatures are low and the baryon density is high QCD describes both extremes However reliable perturbative calculations can only be performed at asymptotically large temperatures and densities where the running coupling constant of QCD is small due to asymptotic freedom and lattice QCD provides information only at very low chemical potential baryon density Thus many frontier questions remain to be answered What is the nature of the phase transitions How does the matter behave in the vicinity of the phase boundaries What are the observable signatures of the transition in transient heavy ion collisions LFQCD opens a new avenue for addressing these issues In recent years a general formalism to directly compute the partition function in light front quantization has been developed and numerical methods are under development for evaluating this partition function in LFQCD 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 Light front quantization leads to new definitions of the partition function and temperature which can provide a frame independent description of thermal and statistical systems 91 92 The goal is to establish a tool comparable in power to lattice QCD but extending the partition function to finite chemical potentials where experimental data are available See also editLight front quantization Light front computational methods Quantum field theories Quantum chromodynamics Quantum electrodynamics Light front holographyReferences edit Bakker B L G Bassetto A Brodsky S J Broniowski W Dalley S Frederico T Glazek S D Hiller J R Ji C R Karmanov V Kulshreshtha D Mathiot J F Melnitchouk W Miller G A Papavassiliou J Polyzou W N Stefanis N G Vary J P Ilderton A Heinzl T 2014 Light front quantum chromodynamics Nuclear Physics B Proceedings Supplements 251 252 165 174 arXiv 1309 6333 Bibcode 2014NuPhS 251 165B doi 10 1016 j nuclphysbps 2014 05 004 ISSN 0920 5632 S2CID 117029089 Burkardt Matthias 2002 Light front quantization Advances in Nuclear Physics Vol 23 pp 1 74 arXiv hep ph 9505259 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 346 1655 doi 10 1007 0 306 47067 5 1 ISBN 978 0 306 45220 8 S2CID 19024989 S J Brodsky H C Pauli S S Pinsky 1998 Quantum chromodynamics and other field theories on the light cone Physics Reports 301 4 6 299 486 arXiv hep ph 9705477 Bibcode 1998PhR 301 299B CiteSeerX 10 1 1 343 1943 doi 10 1016 S0370 1573 97 00089 6 S2CID 118978680 P A M Dirac 1949 Forms of Relativistic Dynamics Reviews of Modern Physics Submitted manuscript 21 3 392 399 Bibcode 1949RvMP 21 392D doi 10 1103 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with fundamental matter and a Chern Simons term Physical Review D 76 4 045008 arXiv hep th 0702071 Bibcode 2007PhRvD 76d5008H doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 76 045008 hdl 1811 48046 S2CID 14119315 U Kulshreshtha D S Kulshreshtha J P Vary 2015 Hamiltonian Path Integral and BRST Formulations of Large N Scalar QCD 2 on the Light Front and Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking Eur Phys J C 75 4 174 arXiv 1503 06177 Bibcode 2015EPJC 75 174K doi 10 1140 epjc s10052 015 3377 x S2CID 119102254 D S Kulshreshtha U Kulshreshtha J P Vary 2016 Light Front Quantization of the Restricted Gauge Theory of QCD 2 Few Body Systems 57 8 669 Bibcode 2016FBS 57 669K doi 10 1007 s00601 016 1076 2 S2CID 124799003 External links editILCAC Inc the International Light Cone Advisory Committee Publications on light front dynamics maintained by A Harindranath Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Light front quantization applications amp oldid 1203794623, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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