840 research outputs found
Treatment of a System with Explicitly Broken Gauge Symmetries
A system in which the free part of the action possesses a gauge symmetry that
is not respected by the interacting part presents problems when quantized. We
illustrate how the Dirac constraint formalism can be used to address this
difficulty by considering an antisymmetric tensor field interacting with a
spinor field.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX2e, typos correcte
The Effective Potential in Non-Conformal Gauge Theories
By using the renormalization group (RG) equation it has proved possible to
sum logarithmic corrections to quantities that arise due to quantum effects in
field theories. In particular, the effective potential V in the Standard Model
in the limit that there are no massive parameters in the classical action (the
"conformal limit") has been subject to this analysis, as has the effective
potential in a scalar theory with a quartic self coupling and in massless
scalar electrodynamics. Having multiple coupling constants and/or mass
parameters in the initial action complicates this analysis, as then several
mass scales arise. We show how to address this problem by considering the
effective potential in scalar electrodynamics when the scalar field has a tree
level mass term. In addition to summing logarithmic corrections by using the RG
equation, we also consider the consequences of the condition V'(v)=0 where v is
the vacuum expectation value of the scalar. If V is expanded in powers of the
logarithms that arise, then it proves possible to show that either v is zero or
that V is independent of the scalar. (That is, either there is no spontaneous
symmetry breaking or the vacuum expectation value is not determined by
minimizing V as V is "flat".
Renormalization Mass Scale and Scheme Dependence in the Perturbative Contribution to Inclusive Semileptonic Decays
We examine the perturbative calculation of the inclusive semi-leptonic decay
rate for the -quark, using mass-independent renormalization. To
finite order of perturbation theory the series for will depend on the
unphysical renormalization scale parameter and on the particular choice
of mass-independent renormalization scheme; these dependencies will only be
removed after summing the series to all orders. In this paper we show that all
explicit -dependence of , through powers of ln, can be
summed by using the renormalization group equation. We then find that this
explicit -dependence can be combined together with the implicit
-dependence of (through powers of both the running coupling
and the running -quark mass ) to yield a -independent
perturbative expansion for in terms of and both
evaluated at a renormalization scheme independent mass scale which is
fixed in terms of either the " mass" of the
quark or its pole mass . At finite order the resulting perturbative
expansion retains a degree of arbitrariness associated with the particular
choice of mass-independent renormalization scheme. We use the coefficients
and of the perturbative expansions of the renormalization group
functions and , associated with and
respectively, to characterize the remaining renormalization scheme
arbitrariness of . We further show that all terms in the expansion of
can be written in terms of the and coefficients and a set
of renormalization scheme independent parameters .Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures, typo correcte
Gauge Dependence in Chern-Simons Theory
We compute the contribution to the modulus of the one-loop effective action
in pure non-Abelian Chern-Simons theory in an arbitrary covariant gauge. We
find that the results are dependent on both the gauge parameter () and
the metric required in the gauge fixing. A contribution arises that has not
been previously encountered; it is of the form . This is possible as in three dimensions
is dimensionful. A variant of proper time regularization is used to render
these integrals well behaved (although no divergences occur when the
regularization is turned off at the end of the calculation). Since the original
Lagrangian is unaltered in this approach, no symmetries of the classical theory
are explicitly broken and is handled unambiguously
since the system is three dimensional at all stages of the calculation. The
results are shown to be consistent with the so-called Nielsen identities which
predict the explicit gauge parameter dependence using an extension of BRS
symmetry. We demonstrate that this dependence may potentially
contribute to the vacuum expectation values of products of Wilson loops.Comment: 17 pp (including 3 figures). Uses REVTeX 3.0 and epsfig.sty
(available from LANL). Latex thric
Off-Diagonal Elements of the DeWitt Expansion from the Quantum Mechanical Path Integral
The DeWitt expansion of the matrix element M_{xy} = \left\langle x \right|
\exp -[\case{1}{2} (p-A)^2 + V]t \left| y \right\rangle, in
powers of can be made in a number of ways. For (the case of interest
when doing one-loop calculations) numerous approaches have been employed to
determine this expansion to very high order; when (relevant for
doing calculations beyond one-loop) there appear to be but two examples of
performing the DeWitt expansion. In this paper we compute the off-diagonal
elements of the DeWitt expansion coefficients using the Fock-Schwinger gauge.
Our technique is based on representing by a quantum mechanical path
integral. We also generalize our method to the case of curved space, allowing
us to determine the DeWitt expansion of \tilde M_{xy} = \langle x| \exp
\case{1}{2} [\case{1}{\sqrt {g}} (\partial_\mu - i
A_\mu)g^{\mu\nu}{\sqrt{g}}(\partial_\nu - i A_\nu) ] t| y \rangle by use of
normal coordinates. By comparison with results for the DeWitt expansion of this
matrix element obtained by the iterative solution of the diffusion equation,
the relative merit of different approaches to the representation of as a quantum mechanical path integral can be assessed. Furthermore, the
exact dependence of on some geometric scalars can be
determined. In two appendices, we discuss boundary effects in the
one-dimensional quantum mechanical path integral, and the curved space
generalization of the Fock-Schwinger gauge.Comment: 16pp, REVTeX. One additional appendix concerning end-point effects
for finite proper-time intervals; inclusion of these effects seem to make our
results consistent with those from explicit heat-kernel method
On the Standard Approach to Renormalization Group Improvement
Two approaches to renormalization-group improvement are examined: the
substitution of the solutions of running couplings, masses and fields into
perturbatively computed quantities is compared with the systematic sum of all
the leading log (LL), next-to-leading log (NLL) etc. contributions to
radiatively corrected processes, with n-loop expressions for the running
quantities being responsible for summing N^{n}LL contributions. A detailed
comparison of these procedures is made in the context of the effective
potential V in the 4-dimensional O(4) massless model,
showing the distinction between these procedures at two-loop order when
considering the NLL contributions to the effective potential V.Comment: 6 page
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