6,255 research outputs found
Equivalence of Faddeev-Jackiw and Dirac approaches for gauge theories
The equivalence between the Dirac method and Faddeev-Jackiw analysis for
gauge theories is proved. In particular we trace out, in a stage by stage
procedure, the standard classification of first and second class constraints of
Dirac's method in the F-J approach. We also find that the Darboux
transformation implied in the F-J reduction process can be viewed as a
canonical transformation in Dirac approach. Unlike Dirac's method the F-J
analysis is a classical reduction procedure, then the quantization can be
achieved only in the framework of reduce and then quantize approach with all
the know problems that this type of procedures presents. Finally we illustrate
the equivalence by means of a particular example.Comment: Latex v2.09, 15 pages, to appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Legendre expansion of the neutrino-antineutrino annihilation kernel: Influence of high order terms
We calculate the Legendre expansion of the rate of the process up to 3rd order extending previous results
of other authors which only consider the 0th and 1st order terms. Using
different closure relations for the moment equations of the radiative transfer
equation we discuss the physical implications of taking into account quadratic
and cubic terms on the energy deposition outside the neutrinosphere in a
simplified model. The main conclusion is that 2nd order is necessary in the
semi-transparent region and gives good results if an appropriate closure
relation is used.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures. To be published in A&A Supplement Serie
Generally covariant theories: the Noether obstruction for realizing certain space-time diffeomorphisms in phase space
Relying on known results of the Noether theory of symmetries extended to
constrained systems, it is shown that there exists an obstruction that prevents
certain tangent-space diffeomorphisms to be projectable to phase-space, for
generally covariant theories. This main result throws new light on the old fact
that the algebra of gauge generators in the phase space of General Relativity,
or other generally covariant theories, only closes as a soft algebra and not a
a Lie algebra.
The deep relationship between these two issues is clarified. In particular,
we see that the second one may be understood as a side effect of the procedure
to solve the first. It is explicitly shown how the adoption of specific
metric-dependent diffeomorphisms, as a way to achieve projectability, causes
the algebra of gauge generators (constraints) in phase space not to be a Lie
algebra --with structure constants-- but a soft algebra --with structure {\it
functions}.Comment: 22 pages, version to be published in Classical & Quantum Gravit
BV analysis for covariant and non-covariant actions
The equivalence between the covariant and the non-covariant version of a
constrained system is shown to hold after quantization in the framework of the
field-antifield formalism. Our study covers the cases of Electromagnetism and
Yang-Mills fields and sheds light on some aspects of the Faddeev-Popov method,
for both the coratiant and non-covariant approaches, which had not been fully
clarified in the literature.Comment: 21 pages, preprint # UTTG-02-93, UB-ECM-PF 93/5. To appear in Phys.
Rev.
Faddeev-Jackiw approach to gauge theories and ineffective constraints
The general conditions for the applicability of the Faddeev-Jackiw approach
to gauge theories are studied. When the constraints are effective a new proof
in the Lagrangian framework of the equivalence between this method and the
Dirac approach is given. We find, however, that the two methods may give
different descriptions for the reduced phase space when ineffective constraints
are present. In some cases the Faddeev-Jackiw approach may lose some
constraints or some equations of motion. We believe that this inequivalence can
be related to the failure of the Dirac conjecture (that says that the Dirac
Hamiltonian can be enlarged to an Extended Hamiltonian including all first
class constraints, without changes in the dynamics) and we suggest that when
the Dirac conjecture fails the Faddeev-Jackiw approach fails to give the
correct dynamics. Finally we present some examples that illustrate this
inequivalence.Comment: 21 pages, Latex. To be published in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
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