107 research outputs found
Gauge Invariance and Symmetry Breaking by Topology and Energy Gap
For the description of observables and states of a quantum system, it may be
convenient to use a canonical Weyl algebra of which only a subalgebra , with a non-trivial center , describes observables, the other
Weyl operators playing the role of intertwiners between inequivalent
representations of . In particular, this gives rise to a gauge
symmetry described by the action of . A distinguished case is when
the center of the observables arises from the fundamental group of the manifold
of the positions of the quantum system. Symmetries which do not commute with
the topological invariants represented by elements of are then
spontaneously broken in each irreducible representation of the observable
algebra, compatibly with an energy gap; such a breaking exhibits a mechanism
radically different from Goldstone and Higgs mechanisms. This is clearly
displayed by the quantum particle on a circle, the Bloch electron and the two
body problem.Comment: 23 page
Local Gauss law and local gauge symmetries in QFT
Local gauge symmetries reduce to the identity on the observables, as well as
on the physical states (apart from reflexes of the local gauge group topology)
and therefore their use in Quantum Field Theory (QFT) asks for a justification
of their strategic role. They play an intermediate role in deriving the
validity of Local Gauss Laws on the physical states (for the currents which
generate the related global gauge group); conversely, we show that local gauge
symmetries arise whenever a vacuum representation of a local field algebra
is used for the description/construction of physical states
satisfying Local Gauss Laws, just as global compact gauge groups arise for the
description of localizable states labeled by superselected quantum numbers. The
above relation suggests that the Gauss operator, which by locality cannot
vanish in , provides an intrinsic characterization of the
realizations of a gauge QFT in terms of a local field algebra and of the
related local gauge symmetries.Comment: 14 pages Corrected typo
Asymptotic Abelianness and Braided Tensor C*-Categories
By introducing the concepts of asymptopia and bi-asymptopia, we show how
braided tensor C*-categories arise in a natural way. This generalizes
constructions in algebraic quantum field theory by replacing local
commutativity by suitable forms of asymptotic Abelianness.Comment: 20 pages, no figures. Final version, as to appear in "Rigorous
Quantum Field Theory", Progress in Mathematics, Volume 25
A non-perturbative argument for the non-abelian Higgs mechanism
The evasion of massless Goldstone bosons by the non-abelian Higgs mechanism
is proved by a non-perturbative argument in the local BRST gauge.Comment: The new version differs from version 1 by the correction of a few
misprint
Quantum mechanics on manifolds and topological effects
A unique classification of the topological effects associated to quantum
mechanics on manifolds is obtained on the basis of the invariance under
diffeomorphisms and the realization of the Lie-Rinehart relations between the
generators of the diffeomorphism group and the algebra of infinitely
differentiable functions on the manifold. This leads to a unique
("Lie-Rinehart") C* algebra as observable algebra; its regular representations
are shown to be locally Schroedinger and in one to one correspondence with the
unitary representations of the fundamental group of the manifold. Therefore, in
the absence of spin degrees of freedom and external fields, the first homotopy
group of the manifold appears as the only source of topological effects.Comment: A few comments have been added to the Introduction, together with
related references; a few words have been changed in the Abstract and a Note
added to the Titl
- …