2,888,261 research outputs found
Gauge Transformations, BRST Cohomology and Wigner's Little Group
We discuss the (dual-)gauge transformations and BRST cohomology for the two
(1 + 1)-dimensional (2D) free Abelian one-form and four (3 + 1)-dimensional
(4D) free Abelian 2-form gauge theories by exploiting the (co-)BRST symmetries
(and their corresponding generators) for the Lagrangian densities of these
theories. For the 4D free 2-form gauge theory, we show that the changes on the
antisymmetric polarization tensor e^{\mu\nu} (k) due to (i) the (dual-)gauge
transformations corresponding to the internal symmetry group, and (ii) the
translation subgroup T(2) of the Wigner's little group, are connected with
each-other for the specific relationships among the parameters of these
transformation groups. In the language of BRST cohomology defined w.r.t. the
conserved and nilpotent (co-)BRST charges, the (dual-)gauge transformed states
turn out to be the sum of the original state and the (co-)BRST exact states. We
comment on (i) the quasi-topological nature of the 4D free 2-form gauge theory
from the degrees of freedom count on e^{\mu\nu} (k), and (ii) the Wigner's
little group and the BRST cohomology for the 2D one-form gauge theory {\it
vis-{\`a}-vis} our analysis for the 4D 2-form gauge theory.Comment: LaTeX file, 29 pages, misprints in (3.7), (3.8), (3.9), (3.13) and
(4.14)corrected and communicated to IJMPA as ``Erratum'
Wigner's little group and BRST cohomology for one-form Abelian gauge theory
We discuss the (dual-)gauge transformations for the gauge-fixed Lagrangian
density and establish their intimate connection with the translation subgroup
T(2) of the Wigner's little group for the free one-form Abelian gauge theory in
four -dimensions (4D) of spacetime. Though the relationship between
the usual gauge transformation for the Abelian massless gauge field and T(2)
subgroup of the little group is quite well-known, such a connection between the
dual-gauge transformation and the little group is a new observation. The above
connections are further elaborated and demonstrated in the framework of
Becchi-Rouet-Stora-Tyutin (BRST) cohomology defined in the quantum Hilbert
space of states where the Hodge decomposition theorem (HDT) plays a very
decisive role.Comment: LaTeX file, 17 pages, Journal-ref. give
Linearized Weyl-Weyl Correlator in a de Sitter Breaking Gauge
We use a de Sitter breaking graviton propagator to compute the tree order
correlator between noncoincident Weyl tensors on a locally de Sitter
background. An explicit, and very simple result is obtained, for any spacetime
dimension D, in terms of a de Sitter invariant length function and the tensor
basis constructed from the metric and derivatives of this length function. Our
answer does not agree with the one derived previously by Kouris, but that
result must be incorrect because it not transverse and lacks some of the
algebraic symmetries of the Weyl tensor. Taking the coincidence limit of our
result (with dimensional regularization) and contracting the indices gives the
expectation value of the square of the Weyl tensor at lowest order. We propose
the next order computation of this as a true test of de Sitter invariance in
quantum gravity.Comment: 31 pages, 2 tables, no figures, uses LaTex2
An Alternative to Spinning Dust for the Microwave Emission of LPH 201.663+1.643: an Ultracompact HII Region
The microwave spectral energy distribution of the dusty, diffuse H II region
LPH 201.663+1.643 has been interpreted by others as tentative evidence for
microwave emission from spinning dust grains. We present an alternative
interpretation for that particular object; specifically, that an ultracompact H
II region embedded within the dust cloud would explain the available
observations as well or better than spinning dust. Parameters for the size,
surface brightness, and flux density of the putative ultracompact HII region,
derived from the microwave observations, are within known ranges. A possible
candidate for such an ultracompact H II region is IRAS 06337+1051, based upon
its infrared colors. However, IRAS 06337+1051's infrared flux appears to be too
small to be consistent with the microwave flux required for this alternative
model to explain the observations.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted to ApJ Letter
Supersymmetric Oscillator: Novel Symmetries
We discuss various continuous and discrete symmetries of the supersymmetric
simple harmonic oscillator (SHO) in one (0 + 1)-dimension of spacetime and show
their relevance in the context of mathematics of differential geometry. We show
the existence of a novel set of discrete symmetries in the theory which has,
hitherto, not been discussed in the literature on theoretical aspects of SHO.
We also point out the physical relevance of our present investigation.Comment: REVTeX file, 5 pages, minor changes in title, text and abstract,
references expanded, version to appear in EP
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