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Yang–Mills theory

Unsolved problem in physics:

Yang–Mills theory and the mass gap. Quantum particles described by the theory have mass but the classical waves of the field travel at the speed of light.[1]

The phrase Yang–Mills theory means both a quantum field theory for nuclear binding devised by Chen Ning Yang and Robert Mills in 1953 and the class of similar theories. In mathematical physics, Yang–Mills theory is a gauge theory based on a special unitary group SU(n), or more generally any compact Lie group. A Yang–Mills theory seeks to describe the behavior of elementary particles using these non-abelian Lie groups and is at the core of the unification of the electromagnetic force and weak forces (i.e. U(1) × SU(2)) as well as quantum chromodynamics, the theory of the strong force (based on SU(3)). Thus it forms the basis of our understanding of the Standard Model of particle physics.

History and qualitative description edit

Gauge theory in electrodynamics edit

All known fundamental interactions can be described in terms of gauge theories, but working this out took decades.[2] Hermann Weyl's pioneering work on this project started in 1915 when his colleague Emmy Noether proved that every conserved physical quantity has a matching symmetry, and culminated in 1928 when he published his book applying the geometrical theory of symmetry (group theory) to quantum mechanics.[3]: 194  Weyl named the relevant symmetry in Noether's theorem the "gauge symmetry", by analogy to distance standardization in railroad gauges.

Erwin Schrodinger in 1922, three years before working on his famous equation, connected Weyl's group concept to electron charge. Schrodinger showed that the group   produced a phase shift   in electromagnetic fields that matched the conservation of electric charge.[3]: 198  As the theory of quantum electrodynamics developed in the 1930's and 1940's the   group transformations played a central role. Many physicists thought there must be an analog for the dynamics of nucleons. Chen Ning Yang in particular was obsessed with this possibility.

Yang and Mills find the nuclear force gauge theory edit

Yang's core idea was to look for a conserved quantity in nuclear physics comparable to electric charge and use it to develop a corresponding gauge theory comparable to electrodynamics. He settled on conservation of isospin, a quantum number that distinguishes a neutron from a proton, but he made no progress on a theory.[3]: 200  Taking a break from Princeton in the summer of 1953, Yang met a collaborator who could help: Robert Mills. As Mills himself describes:

"During the academic year 1953–1954, Yang was a visitor to Brookhaven National Laboratory ... I was at Brookhaven also...and was assigned to the same office as Yang. Yang, who has demonstrated on a number of occasions his generosity to physicists beginning their careers, told me about his idea of generalizing gauge invariance and we discussed it at some length...I was able to contribute something to the discussions, especially with regard to the quantization procedures, and to a small degree in working out the formalism; however, the key ideas were Yang's."[4]

In the summer 1953, Yang and Mills extended the concept of gauge theory for abelian groups, e.g. quantum electrodynamics, to non-abelian groups, selecting the group   to provide an explanation for isospin conservation in collisions involving the strong interactions. Yang's presentation of the work at Princeton in February 1954 was challenged by Pauli, asking about the mass in the field developed with the gauge invariance idea.[3]: 202  Pauli knew that this might be an issue as he had worked on applying gauge invariance but chose not to publish it, viewing the massless excitations of the theory to be "unphysical 'shadow particles'".[2]: 13  Yang and Mills published in October 1954; near the end of the paper, they admit:

We next come to the question of the mass of the   quantum, to which we do not have a satisfactory answer.[5]

This problem of unphysical massless excitation blocked further progress.[3]

The idea was set aside until 1960, when the concept of particles acquiring mass through symmetry breaking in massless theories was put forward, initially by Jeffrey Goldstone, Yoichiro Nambu, and Giovanni Jona-Lasinio. This prompted a significant restart of Yang–Mills theory studies that proved successful in the formulation of both electroweak unification and quantum chromodynamics (QCD). The electroweak interaction is described by the gauge group SU(2) × U(1), while QCD is an SU(3) Yang–Mills theory. The massless gauge bosons of the electroweak SU(2) × U(1) mix after spontaneous symmetry breaking to produce the 3 massive weak bosons (
W+
,
W
, and
Z0
) as well as the still-massless photon field. The dynamics of the photon field and its interactions with matter are, in turn, governed by the U(1) gauge theory of quantum electrodynamics. The Standard Model combines the strong interaction with the unified electroweak interaction (unifying the weak and electromagnetic interaction) through the symmetry group SU(3) × SU(2) × U(1). In the current epoch the strong interaction is not unified with the electroweak interaction, but from the observed running of the coupling constants it is believed[citation needed] they all converge to a single value at very high energies.

Phenomenology at lower energies in quantum chromodynamics is not completely understood due to the difficulties of managing such a theory with a strong coupling. This may be the reason why confinement has not been theoretically proven, though it is a consistent experimental observation. This shows why QCD confinement at low energy is a mathematical problem of great relevance, and why the Yang–Mills existence and mass gap problem is a Millennium Prize Problem.

Parallel work on non-Abelian gauge theories edit

In 1953, in a private correspondence, Wolfgang Pauli formulated a six-dimensional theory of Einstein's field equations of general relativity, extending the five-dimensional theory of Kaluza, Klein, Fock, and others to a higher-dimensional internal space.[6] However, there is no evidence that Pauli developed the Lagrangian of a gauge field or the quantization of it. Because Pauli found that his theory "leads to some rather unphysical shadow particles", he refrained from publishing his results formally.[6] Although Pauli did not publish his six-dimensional theory, he gave two seminar lectures about it in Zürich in November 1953.[6]

In January 1954 Ronald Shaw, a graduate student at the University of Cambridge also developed a non-Abelian gauge theory for nuclear forces.[7] However, the theory needed massless particles in order to maintain gauge invariance. Since no such massless particles were known at the time, Shaw and his supervisor Abdus Salam chose not to publish their work.[7] Shortly after Yang and Mills published their paper in October 1954, Salam encouraged Shaw to publish his work to mark his contribution. Shaw declined, and instead it only forms a chapter of his PhD thesis published in 1956.[8][9]

Mathematical overview edit

 
 
 
 
The dx1σ3 coefficient of a BPST instanton on the (x1,x2)-slice of 4 where σ3 is the third Pauli matrix (top left). The dx2σ3 coefficient (top right). These coefficients determine the restriction of the BPST instanton A with g=2, ρ=1, z=0 to this slice. The corresponding field strength centered around z=0 (bottom left). A visual representation of the field strength of a BPST instanton with center z on the compactification S4 of 4 (bottom right). The BPST instanton is a classical instanton solution to the Yang–Mills equations on 4.

Yang–Mills theories are special examples of gauge theories with a non-abelian symmetry group given by the Lagrangian

 

with the generators   of the Lie algebra, indexed by a, corresponding to the F-quantities (the curvature or field-strength form) satisfying

 

Here, the f abc are structure constants of the Lie algebra (totally antisymmetric if the generators of the Lie algebra are normalised such that   is proportional to  ), the covariant derivative is defined as

 

I is the identity matrix (matching the size of the generators),   is the vector potential, and g is the coupling constant. In four dimensions, the coupling constant g is a pure number and for a SU(n) group one has  

The relation

 

can be derived by the commutator

 

The field has the property of being self-interacting and the equations of motion that one obtains are said to be semilinear, as nonlinearities are both with and without derivatives. This means that one can manage this theory only by perturbation theory with small nonlinearities.[citation needed]

Note that the transition between "upper" ("contravariant") and "lower" ("covariant") vector or tensor components is trivial for a indices (e.g.  ), whereas for μ and ν it is nontrivial, corresponding e.g. to the usual Lorentz signature,  

From the given Lagrangian one can derive the equations of motion given by

 

Putting   these can be rewritten as

 

A Bianchi identity holds

 

which is equivalent to the Jacobi identity

 

since   Define the dual strength tensor   then the Bianchi identity can be rewritten as

 

A source   enters into the equations of motion as

 

Note that the currents must properly change under gauge group transformations.

We give here some comments about the physical dimensions of the coupling. In D dimensions, the field scales as   and so the coupling must scale as   This implies that Yang–Mills theory is not renormalizable for dimensions greater than four. Furthermore, for D = 4 , the coupling is dimensionless and both the field and the square of the coupling have the same dimensions of the field and the coupling of a massless quartic scalar field theory. So, these theories share the scale invariance at the classical level.

Quantization edit

A method of quantizing the Yang–Mills theory is by functional methods, i.e. path integrals. One introduces a generating functional for n-point functions as

 

but this integral has no meaning as it is because the potential vector can be arbitrarily chosen due to the gauge freedom. This problem was already known for quantum electrodynamics but here becomes more severe due to non-abelian properties of the gauge group. A way out has been given by Ludvig Faddeev and Victor Popov with the introduction of a ghost field (see Faddeev–Popov ghost) that has the property of being unphysical since, although it agrees with Fermi–Dirac statistics, it is a complex scalar field, which violates the spin–statistics theorem. So, we can write the generating functional as

 

being

 

for the field,

 

for the gauge fixing and

 

for the ghost. This is the expression commonly used to derive Feynman's rules (see Feynman diagram). Here we have ca for the ghost field while ξ fixes the gauge's choice for the quantization. Feynman's rules obtained from this functional are the following

 

These rules for Feynman's diagrams can be obtained when the generating functional given above is rewritten as

 

with

 

being the generating functional of the free theory. Expanding in g and computing the functional derivatives, we are able to obtain all the n-point functions with perturbation theory. Using LSZ reduction formula we get from the n-point functions the corresponding process amplitudes, cross sections and decay rates. The theory is renormalizable and corrections are finite at any order of perturbation theory.

For quantum electrodynamics the ghost field decouples because the gauge group is abelian. This can be seen from the coupling between the gauge field and the ghost field that is   For the abelian case, all the structure constants   are zero and so there is no coupling. In the non-abelian case, the ghost field appears as a useful way to rewrite the quantum field theory without physical consequences on the observables of the theory such as cross sections or decay rates.

One of the most important results obtained for Yang–Mills theory is asymptotic freedom. This result can be obtained by assuming that the coupling constant g is small (so small nonlinearities), as for high energies, and applying perturbation theory. The relevance of this result is due to the fact that a Yang–Mills theory that describes strong interaction and asymptotic freedom permits proper treatment of experimental results coming from deep inelastic scattering.

To obtain the behavior of the Yang–Mills theory at high energies, and so to prove asymptotic freedom, one applies perturbation theory assuming a small coupling. This is verified a posteriori in the ultraviolet limit. In the opposite limit, the infrared limit, the situation is the opposite, as the coupling is too large for perturbation theory to be reliable. Most of the difficulties that research meets is just managing the theory at low energies. That is the interesting case, being inherent to the description of hadronic matter and, more generally, to all the observed bound states of gluons and quarks and their confinement (see hadrons). The most used method to study the theory in this limit is to try to solve it on computers (see lattice gauge theory). In this case, large computational resources are needed to be sure the correct limit of infinite volume (smaller lattice spacing) is obtained. This is the limit the results must be compared with. Smaller spacing and larger coupling are not independent of each other, and larger computational resources are needed for each. As of today, the situation appears somewhat satisfactory for the hadronic spectrum and the computation of the gluon and ghost propagators, but the glueball and hybrids spectra are yet a questioned matter in view of the experimental observation of such exotic states. Indeed, the σ resonance[10][11] is not seen in any of such lattice computations and contrasting interpretations have been put forward. This is a hotly debated issue.

Open problems edit

Yang–Mills theories met with general acceptance in the physics community after Gerard 't Hooft, in 1972, worked out their renormalization, relying on a formulation of the problem worked out by his advisor Martinus Veltman.[12] Renormalizability is obtained even if the gauge bosons described by this theory are massive, as in the electroweak theory, provided the mass is only an "acquired" one, generated by the Higgs mechanism.

The mathematics of the Yang–Mills theory is a very active field of research, yielding e.g. invariants of differentiable structures on four-dimensional manifolds via work of Simon Donaldson. Furthermore, the field of Yang–Mills theories was included in the Clay Mathematics Institute's list of "Millennium Prize Problems". Here the prize-problem consists, especially, in a proof of the conjecture that the lowest excitations of a pure Yang–Mills theory (i.e. without matter fields) have a finite mass-gap with regard to the vacuum state. Another open problem, connected with this conjecture, is a proof of the confinement property in the presence of additional fermions.

In physics the survey of Yang–Mills theories does not usually start from perturbation analysis or analytical methods, but more recently from systematic application of numerical methods to lattice gauge theories.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Yang-Mills & The Mass Gap". Clay Mathematics Institute. Retrieved 2024-04-09.
  2. ^ a b O’Raifeartaigh, Lochlainn; Straumann, Norbert (2000-01-01). "Gauge theory: Historical origins and some modern developments". Reviews of Modern Physics. 72 (1): 1–23. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.72.1. ISSN 0034-6861.
  3. ^ a b c d e Baggott, J. E. (2013). The quantum story: a history in 40 moments (Impression: 3 ed.). Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0-19-956684-6.
  4. ^ Gray, Jeremy; Wilson, Robin (2012-12-06). Mathematical Conversations: Selections from the Mathematical Intelligencer. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 63. ISBN 9781461301950 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ Yang, C.N.; Mills, R. (1954). "Conservation of isotopic spin and isotopic gauge invariance". Physical Review. 96 (1): 191–195. Bibcode:1954PhRv...96..191Y. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.96.191.
  6. ^ a b c Straumann, N. (2000). "On Pauli's invention of non-abelian Kaluza-Klein Theory in 1953". arXiv:gr-qc/0012054.
  7. ^ a b Atiyah, M. (2017). "Ronald Shaw 1929–2016 by Michael Atiyah (1954)". Trinity College Annual Record (memorial). 2017: 137–146.
  8. ^ Shaw, Ronald (September 1956). The problem of particle types and other contributions to the theory of elementary particles (Ph.D. thesis). University of Cambridge. ch. 3, pp. 34–46.
  9. ^ Fraser, Gordon (2008). Cosmic Anger: Abdus Salam – the first Muslim Nobel scientist. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. p. 117. ISBN 978-0199208463.
  10. ^ Caprini, I.; Colangelo, G.; Leutwyler, H. (2006). "Mass and width of the lowest resonance in QCD". Physical Review Letters. 96 (13): 132001. arXiv:hep-ph/0512364. Bibcode:2006PhRvL..96m2001C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.96.132001. PMID 16711979. S2CID 42504317.
  11. ^ Yndurain, F.J.; Garcia-Martin, R.; Pelaez, J.R. (2007). "Experimental status of the ππ isoscalar S wave at low energy: f0(600) pole and scattering length". Physical Review D. 76 (7): 074034. arXiv:hep-ph/0701025. Bibcode:2007PhRvD..76g4034G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.76.074034. S2CID 119434312.
  12. ^ 't Hooft, G.; Veltman, M. (1972). "Regularization and renormalization of gauge fields". Nuclear Physics B. 44 (1): 189–213. Bibcode:1972NuPhB..44..189T. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(72)90279-9. hdl:1874/4845.

Further reading edit

Books
Articles
  • Svetlichny, George (1999). "Preparation for Gauge Theory". arXiv:math-ph/9902027.
  • Gross, D. (1992). "Gauge theory – Past, Present and Future". Retrieved 2015-05-05.

External links edit

yang, mills, theory, unsolved, problem, physics, mass, quantum, particles, described, theory, have, mass, classical, waves, field, travel, speed, light, more, unsolved, problems, physics, phrase, means, both, quantum, field, theory, nuclear, binding, devised, . Unsolved problem in physics Yang Mills theory and the mass gap Quantum particles described by the theory have mass but the classical waves of the field travel at the speed of light 1 more unsolved problems in physics The phrase Yang Mills theory means both a quantum field theory for nuclear binding devised by Chen Ning Yang and Robert Mills in 1953 and the class of similar theories In mathematical physics Yang Mills theory is a gauge theory based on a special unitary group SU n or more generally any compact Lie group A Yang Mills theory seeks to describe the behavior of elementary particles using these non abelian Lie groups and is at the core of the unification of the electromagnetic force and weak forces i e U 1 SU 2 as well as quantum chromodynamics the theory of the strong force based on SU 3 Thus it forms the basis of our understanding of the Standard Model of particle physics Contents 1 History and qualitative description 1 1 Gauge theory in electrodynamics 1 2 Yang and Mills find the nuclear force gauge theory 1 3 Parallel work on non Abelian gauge theories 2 Mathematical overview 3 Quantization 4 Open problems 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory and qualitative description editGauge theory in electrodynamics edit All known fundamental interactions can be described in terms of gauge theories but working this out took decades 2 Hermann Weyl s pioneering work on this project started in 1915 when his colleague Emmy Noether proved that every conserved physical quantity has a matching symmetry and culminated in 1928 when he published his book applying the geometrical theory of symmetry group theory to quantum mechanics 3 194 Weyl named the relevant symmetry in Noether s theorem the gauge symmetry by analogy to distance standardization in railroad gauges Erwin Schrodinger in 1922 three years before working on his famous equation connected Weyl s group concept to electron charge Schrodinger showed that the group U 1 displaystyle U 1 nbsp produced a phase shift e i 8 displaystyle e i theta nbsp in electromagnetic fields that matched the conservation of electric charge 3 198 As the theory of quantum electrodynamics developed in the 1930 s and 1940 s the U 1 displaystyle U 1 nbsp group transformations played a central role Many physicists thought there must be an analog for the dynamics of nucleons Chen Ning Yang in particular was obsessed with this possibility Yang and Mills find the nuclear force gauge theory editYang s core idea was to look for a conserved quantity in nuclear physics comparable to electric charge and use it to develop a corresponding gauge theory comparable to electrodynamics He settled on conservation of isospin a quantum number that distinguishes a neutron from a proton but he made no progress on a theory 3 200 Taking a break from Princeton in the summer of 1953 Yang met a collaborator who could help Robert Mills As Mills himself describes During the academic year 1953 1954 Yang was a visitor to Brookhaven National Laboratory I was at Brookhaven also and was assigned to the same office as Yang Yang who has demonstrated on a number of occasions his generosity to physicists beginning their careers told me about his idea of generalizing gauge invariance and we discussed it at some length I was able to contribute something to the discussions especially with regard to the quantization procedures and to a small degree in working out the formalism however the key ideas were Yang s 4 In the summer 1953 Yang and Mills extended the concept of gauge theory for abelian groups e g quantum electrodynamics to non abelian groups selecting the group S U 2 displaystyle SU 2 nbsp to provide an explanation for isospin conservation in collisions involving the strong interactions Yang s presentation of the work at Princeton in February 1954 was challenged by Pauli asking about the mass in the field developed with the gauge invariance idea 3 202 Pauli knew that this might be an issue as he had worked on applying gauge invariance but chose not to publish it viewing the massless excitations of the theory to be unphysical shadow particles 2 13 Yang and Mills published in October 1954 near the end of the paper they admit We next come to the question of the mass of the b displaystyle b nbsp quantum to which we do not have a satisfactory answer 5 This problem of unphysical massless excitation blocked further progress 3 The idea was set aside until 1960 when the concept of particles acquiring mass through symmetry breaking in massless theories was put forward initially by Jeffrey Goldstone Yoichiro Nambu and Giovanni Jona Lasinio This prompted a significant restart of Yang Mills theory studies that proved successful in the formulation of both electroweak unification and quantum chromodynamics QCD The electroweak interaction is described by the gauge group SU 2 U 1 while QCD is an SU 3 Yang Mills theory The massless gauge bosons of the electroweak SU 2 U 1 mix after spontaneous symmetry breaking to produce the 3 massive weak bosons W W and Z0 as well as the still massless photon field The dynamics of the photon field and its interactions with matter are in turn governed by the U 1 gauge theory of quantum electrodynamics The Standard Model combines the strong interaction with the unified electroweak interaction unifying the weak and electromagnetic interaction through the symmetry group SU 3 SU 2 U 1 In the current epoch the strong interaction is not unified with the electroweak interaction but from the observed running of the coupling constants it is believed citation needed they all converge to a single value at very high energies Phenomenology at lower energies in quantum chromodynamics is not completely understood due to the difficulties of managing such a theory with a strong coupling This may be the reason why confinement has not been theoretically proven though it is a consistent experimental observation This shows why QCD confinement at low energy is a mathematical problem of great relevance and why the Yang Mills existence and mass gap problem is a Millennium Prize Problem Parallel work on non Abelian gauge theories edit In 1953 in a private correspondence Wolfgang Pauli formulated a six dimensional theory of Einstein s field equations of general relativity extending the five dimensional theory of Kaluza Klein Fock and others to a higher dimensional internal space 6 However there is no evidence that Pauli developed the Lagrangian of a gauge field or the quantization of it Because Pauli found that his theory leads to some rather unphysical shadow particles he refrained from publishing his results formally 6 Although Pauli did not publish his six dimensional theory he gave two seminar lectures about it in Zurich in November 1953 6 In January 1954 Ronald Shaw a graduate student at the University of Cambridge also developed a non Abelian gauge theory for nuclear forces 7 However the theory needed massless particles in order to maintain gauge invariance Since no such massless particles were known at the time Shaw and his supervisor Abdus Salam chose not to publish their work 7 Shortly after Yang and Mills published their paper in October 1954 Salam encouraged Shaw to publish his work to mark his contribution Shaw declined and instead it only forms a chapter of his PhD thesis published in 1956 8 9 Mathematical overview editSee also Yang Mills equations nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp The dx1 s3 coefficient of a BPST instanton on the x1 x2 slice of ℝ4 where s3 is the third Pauli matrix top left The dx2 s3 coefficient top right These coefficients determine the restriction of the BPST instanton A with g 2 r 1 z 0 to this slice The corresponding field strength centered around z 0 bottom left A visual representation of the field strength of a BPST instanton with center z on the compactification S4 of ℝ4 bottom right The BPST instanton is a classical instanton solution to the Yang Mills equations on ℝ4 Yang Mills theories are special examples of gauge theories with a non abelian symmetry group given by the Lagrangian L g f 1 2 tr F 2 1 4 F a m n F m n a displaystyle mathcal L mathrm gf tfrac 1 2 operatorname tr F 2 tfrac 1 4 F a mu nu F mu nu a nbsp with the generators T a displaystyle T a nbsp of the Lie algebra indexed by a corresponding to the F quantities the curvature or field strength form satisfying tr T a T b 1 2 d a b T a T b i f a b c T c displaystyle operatorname tr left T a T b right tfrac 1 2 delta ab qquad left T a T b right i f abc T c nbsp Here the f abc are structure constants of the Lie algebra totally antisymmetric if the generators of the Lie algebra are normalised such that tr T a T b displaystyle operatorname tr T a T b nbsp is proportional to d a b displaystyle delta ab nbsp the covariant derivative is defined as D m I m i g T a A m a displaystyle D mu I partial mu i g T a A mu a nbsp I is the identity matrix matching the size of the generators A m a displaystyle A mu a nbsp is the vector potential and g is the coupling constant In four dimensions the coupling constant g is a pure number and for a SU n group one has a b c 1 n 2 1 displaystyle a b c 1 ldots n 2 1 nbsp The relation F m n a m A n a n A m a g 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 f abc A mu b A nu c nbsp can be derived by the commutator D m D n i g T a F m n a displaystyle left D mu D nu right i g T a F mu nu a nbsp The field has the property of being self interacting and the equations of motion that one obtains are said to be semilinear as nonlinearities are both with and without derivatives This means that one can manage this theory only by perturbation theory with small nonlinearities citation needed Note that the transition between upper contravariant and lower covariant vector or tensor components is trivial for a indices e g f a b c f a b c displaystyle f abc f abc nbsp whereas for m and n it is nontrivial corresponding e g to the usual Lorentz signature h m n d i a g displaystyle eta mu nu rm diag nbsp From the given Lagrangian one can derive the equations of motion given by m F m n a g f a b c A m b F m n c 0 displaystyle partial mu F mu nu a g f abc A mu b F mu nu c 0 nbsp Putting F m n T a F m n a displaystyle F mu nu T a F mu nu a nbsp these can be rewritten as D m F m n a 0 displaystyle left D mu F mu nu right a 0 nbsp A Bianchi identity holds D m F n k a D k F m n a D n F k m a 0 displaystyle left D mu F nu kappa right a left D kappa F mu nu right a left D nu F kappa mu right a 0 nbsp which is equivalent to the Jacobi identity D m D n D k D k D m D n D n D k D m 0 displaystyle left D mu left D nu D kappa right right left D kappa left D mu D nu right right left D nu left D kappa D mu right right 0 nbsp since D m F n k a D m F n k a displaystyle left D mu F nu kappa a right D mu F nu kappa a nbsp Define the dual strength tensor F m n 1 2 e m n r s F r s displaystyle tilde F mu nu tfrac 1 2 varepsilon mu nu rho sigma F rho sigma nbsp then the Bianchi identity can be rewritten as D m F m n 0 displaystyle D mu tilde F mu nu 0 nbsp A source J m a displaystyle J mu a nbsp enters into the equations of motion as m F m n a g f a b c A b m F m n c J n a displaystyle partial mu F mu nu a g f abc A b mu F mu nu c J nu a nbsp Note that the currents must properly change under gauge group transformations We give here some comments about the physical dimensions of the coupling In D dimensions the field scales as A L 2 D 2 displaystyle left A right left L left tfrac 2 D 2 right right nbsp and so the coupling must scale as g 2 L D 4 displaystyle left g 2 right left L left D 4 right right nbsp This implies that Yang Mills theory is not renormalizable for dimensions greater than four Furthermore for D 4 the coupling is dimensionless and both the field and the square of the coupling have the same dimensions of the field and the coupling of a massless quartic scalar field theory So these theories share the scale invariance at the classical level Quantization editA method of quantizing the Yang Mills theory is by functional methods i e path integrals One introduces a generating functional for n point functions as Z j d A exp i 2 d 4 x tr F m n F m n i d 4 x j m a x A a m x displaystyle Z j int mathrm d A exp left tfrac i 2 int mathrm d 4 x operatorname tr left F mu nu F mu nu right i int mathrm d 4 x j mu a x A a mu x right nbsp but this integral has no meaning as it is because the potential vector can be arbitrarily chosen due to the gauge freedom This problem was already known for quantum electrodynamics but here becomes more severe due to non abelian properties of the gauge group A way out has been given by Ludvig Faddeev and Victor Popov with the introduction of a ghost field see Faddeev Popov ghost that has the property of being unphysical since although it agrees with Fermi Dirac statistics it is a complex scalar field which violates the spin statistics theorem So we can write the generating functional as Z j e e d A d c d c exp i S F A A i S g f A i S g c c c c A exp i d 4 x j m a x A a m x i d 4 x c a x e a x e a x c a x displaystyle begin aligned Z j bar varepsilon varepsilon amp int mathrm d A mathrm d bar c mathrm d c exp Bigl i S F left partial A A right i S gf left partial A right i S g left partial c partial bar c c bar c A right Bigr amp exp left i int mathrm d 4 x j mu a x A a mu x i int mathrm d 4 x left bar c a x varepsilon a x bar varepsilon a x c a x right right end aligned nbsp being S F 1 2 d 4 x tr F m n F m n displaystyle S F tfrac 1 2 int mathrm d 4 x operatorname tr left F mu nu F mu nu right nbsp for the field S g f 1 2 3 d 4 x A 2 displaystyle S gf frac 1 2 xi int mathrm d 4 x partial cdot A 2 nbsp for the gauge fixing and S g d 4 x c a m m c a g c a f a b c m A b m c c displaystyle S g int mathrm d 4 x left bar c a partial mu partial mu c a g bar c a f abc partial mu A b mu c c right nbsp for the ghost This is the expression commonly used to derive Feynman s rules see Feynman diagram Here we have ca for the ghost field while 3 fixes the gauge s choice for the quantization Feynman s rules obtained from this functional are the following nbsp These rules for Feynman s diagrams can be obtained when the generating functional given above is rewritten as Z j e e exp i g d 4 x d i d e a x f a b c m i d d j m b x i d d e c x exp i g d 4 x f a b c m i d d j n a x i d d j m b x i d d j c n x exp i g 2 4 d 4 x f a b c f a r s i d d j m b x i d d j n c x i d d j r m x i d d j s n x Z 0 j e e displaystyle begin aligned Z j bar varepsilon varepsilon amp exp left i g int mathrm d 4 x frac delta i delta bar varepsilon a x f abc partial mu frac i delta delta j mu b x frac i delta delta varepsilon c x right amp qquad times exp left i g int mathrm d 4 x f abc partial mu frac i delta delta j nu a x frac i delta delta j mu b x frac i delta delta j c nu x right amp qquad qquad times exp left i frac g 2 4 int mathrm d 4 x f abc f ars frac i delta delta j mu b x frac i delta delta j nu c x frac i delta delta j r mu x frac i delta delta j s nu x right amp qquad qquad qquad times Z 0 j bar varepsilon varepsilon end aligned nbsp with Z 0 j e e exp d 4 x d 4 y e a x C a b x y e b y exp 1 2 d 4 x d 4 y j m a x D a b m n x y j n b y displaystyle Z 0 j bar varepsilon varepsilon exp left int mathrm d 4 x mathrm d 4 y bar varepsilon a x C ab x y varepsilon b y right exp left tfrac 1 2 int mathrm d 4 x mathrm d 4 y j mu a x D ab mu nu x y j nu b y right nbsp being the generating functional of the free theory Expanding in g and computing the functional derivatives we are able to obtain all the n point functions with perturbation theory Using LSZ reduction formula we get from the n point functions the corresponding process amplitudes cross sections and decay rates The theory is renormalizable and corrections are finite at any order of perturbation theory For quantum electrodynamics the ghost field decouples because the gauge group is abelian This can be seen from the coupling between the gauge field and the ghost field that is c a f a b c m A b m c c displaystyle bar c a f abc partial mu A b mu c c nbsp For the abelian case all the structure constants f a b c displaystyle f abc nbsp are zero and so there is no coupling In the non abelian case the ghost field appears as a useful way to rewrite the quantum field theory without physical consequences on the observables of the theory such as cross sections or decay rates One of the most important results obtained for Yang Mills theory is asymptotic freedom This result can be obtained by assuming that the coupling constant g is small so small nonlinearities as for high energies and applying perturbation theory The relevance of this result is due to the fact that a Yang Mills theory that describes strong interaction and asymptotic freedom permits proper treatment of experimental results coming from deep inelastic scattering To obtain the behavior of the Yang Mills theory at high energies and so to prove asymptotic freedom one applies perturbation theory assuming a small coupling This is verified a posteriori in the ultraviolet limit In the opposite limit the infrared limit the situation is the opposite as the coupling is too large for perturbation theory to be reliable Most of the difficulties that research meets is just managing the theory at low energies That is the interesting case being inherent to the description of hadronic matter and more generally to all the observed bound states of gluons and quarks and their confinement see hadrons The most used method to study the theory in this limit is to try to solve it on computers see lattice gauge theory In this case large computational resources are needed to be sure the correct limit of infinite volume smaller lattice spacing is obtained This is the limit the results must be compared with Smaller spacing and larger coupling are not independent of each other and larger computational resources are needed for each As of today the situation appears somewhat satisfactory for the hadronic spectrum and the computation of the gluon and ghost propagators but the glueball and hybrids spectra are yet a questioned matter in view of the experimental observation of such exotic states Indeed the s resonance 10 11 is not seen in any of such lattice computations and contrasting interpretations have been put forward This is a hotly debated issue Open problems editYang Mills theories met with general acceptance in the physics community after Gerard t Hooft in 1972 worked out their renormalization relying on a formulation of the problem worked out by his advisor Martinus Veltman 12 Renormalizability is obtained even if the gauge bosons described by this theory are massive as in the electroweak theory provided the mass is only an acquired one generated by the Higgs mechanism The mathematics of the Yang Mills theory is a very active field of research yielding e g invariants of differentiable structures on four dimensional manifolds via work of Simon Donaldson Furthermore the field of Yang Mills theories was included in the Clay Mathematics Institute s list of Millennium Prize Problems Here the prize problem consists especially in a proof of the conjecture that the lowest excitations of a pure Yang Mills theory i e without matter fields have a finite mass gap with regard to the vacuum state Another open problem connected with this conjecture is a proof of the confinement property in the presence of additional fermions In physics the survey of Yang Mills theories does not usually start from perturbation analysis or analytical methods but more recently from systematic application of numerical methods to lattice gauge theories See also editAharonov Bohm effect Coulomb gauge Deformed Hermitian Yang Mills equations Gauge covariant derivative Gauge theory mathematics Hermitian Yang Mills equations Kaluza Klein theory Lattice gauge theory Lorenz gauge n 4 supersymmetric Yang Mills theory Propagator Quantum gauge theory Field theoretical formulation of the standard model Symmetry in physics Two dimensional Yang Mills theory Weyl gauge Yang Mills equations Yang Mills existence and mass gap Yang Mills Higgs equationsReferences edit Yang Mills amp The Mass Gap Clay Mathematics Institute Retrieved 2024 04 09 a b O Raifeartaigh Lochlainn Straumann Norbert 2000 01 01 Gauge theory Historical origins and some modern developments Reviews of Modern Physics 72 1 1 23 doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 72 1 ISSN 0034 6861 a b c d e Baggott J E 2013 The quantum story a history in 40 moments Impression 3 ed Oxford Oxford Univ Press ISBN 978 0 19 956684 6 Gray Jeremy Wilson Robin 2012 12 06 Mathematical Conversations Selections from theMathematical Intelligencer Springer Science amp Business Media p 63 ISBN 9781461301950 via Google Books Yang C N Mills R 1954 Conservation of isotopic spin and isotopic gauge invariance Physical Review 96 1 191 195 Bibcode 1954PhRv 96 191Y doi 10 1103 PhysRev 96 191 a b c Straumann N 2000 On Pauli s invention of non abelian Kaluza Klein Theory in 1953 arXiv gr qc 0012054 a b Atiyah M 2017 Ronald Shaw 1929 2016 by Michael Atiyah 1954 Trinity College Annual Record memorial 2017 137 146 Shaw Ronald September 1956 The problem of particle types and other contributions to the theory of elementary particles Ph D thesis University of Cambridge ch 3 pp 34 46 Fraser Gordon 2008 Cosmic Anger Abdus Salam the first Muslim Nobel scientist Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 117 ISBN 978 0199208463 Caprini I Colangelo G Leutwyler H 2006 Mass and width of the lowest resonance in QCD Physical Review Letters 96 13 132001 arXiv hep ph 0512364 Bibcode 2006PhRvL 96m2001C doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 96 132001 PMID 16711979 S2CID 42504317 Yndurain F J Garcia Martin R Pelaez J R 2007 Experimental status of the pp isoscalar S wave at low energy f 0 600 pole and scattering length Physical Review D 76 7 074034 arXiv hep ph 0701025 Bibcode 2007PhRvD 76g4034G doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 76 074034 S2CID 119434312 t Hooft G Veltman M 1972 Regularization and renormalization of gauge fields Nuclear Physics B 44 1 189 213 Bibcode 1972NuPhB 44 189T doi 10 1016 0550 3213 72 90279 9 hdl 1874 4845 Further reading editBooks Frampton P 2008 Gauge Field Theories 3rd ed Wiley VCH ISBN 978 3 527 40835 1 Cheng T P Li L F 1983 Gauge Theory of Elementary Particle Physics Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 851961 3 t Hooft G ed 2005 50 Years of Yang Mills theory Singapore World Scientific ISBN 981 238 934 2 Articles Svetlichny George 1999 Preparation for Gauge Theory arXiv math ph 9902027 Gross D 1992 Gauge theory Past Present and Future Retrieved 2015 05 05 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Yang Mills theory Yang Mills field Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Yang Mills theory DispersiveWiki Archived from the original on 2021 06 03 Retrieved 2018 08 30 The Millennium Prize Problems The Clay Mathematics Institute Archived from the original on 2009 01 16 Retrieved 2008 11 24 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yang Mills theory amp oldid 1222118374, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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