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= 2 / 0 2 mg.
(2.9.179)
Here, the left-hand side refers to xlop ' n a pure gauge theory. 1 ' A sensible determination of m^ requires a theory including fermions. Thus, the WittenVeneziano relation compares quantities of different theories. Equation (2.9.179) has important consequences for the pseudo-scalar meson spectrum (cf. Sect. 3.5.1.2). The main point is that the mass of the i] meson in the theory with two flavours (the mass of the 7/ meson for 3 flavours) is large compared to the pion mass (m- and m/c). This U ( l ) problem is solved by the instantons [1.H7G], i.e. by the Witten Vencziano relation. If we take a value for Xtop = (ISOMcV)'1, coming from lattice calculation [DE97], we get a reasonable agreement with experiment. ,7
Iti a gauge theory with iVf massless fermions, we have
' = 0.
2.10
Lattice approximation of gauge theories."li>I
2.10
s
In order to treat reliably the non-perturbative aspects of gauge theories, it is necessary to find an approach for the evaluation of the basic gaugeinvariant path-integral formula that is different from perturbation theory (Sect. 2.4.1.3) [YVi74]. Lattice approximation of gauge theory is such an attempt. [Se82]. In this scheme, the (D - l)-dirnensional configuration space or the ^-dimensional euclidean space-time is approximated by discrete points of a lattice I\ The approximation of a finite euclidean space-time by a finite lat tice appears most promising. There are quite a few limiting processes necessary in order to get from such a field theory on T to the Green functions in the four-dimensional continuum. These limiting processes define the gauge-invariant, path-integral formula. In this section, we sketch the main features of the lattice approximation of gauge theories [LAT]. Based on the geometry of local gauge symmetry, we describe the gauge-invariant field theory on F in Sect. 2.10.1. The transition to the continuum is treated in Sect. 2.10.4. The infinite-volume limit is considered in Sect. 2.10.5. Because fermions pose problems which have not yet been solved completely, we postpone a short overview of these questions to Sect. 2.10.6. The computational procedures are strong-coupling approximation (Sect. 2.10.2), and above all, numerical methods (Sect. 2.10.3). Results for QCD are given in Sect. 3.G.
2.10.1 2.10.1.1
B a s i c s of lattice a p p r o x i m a t i o n G e o m e t r i c a l e l e m e n t s of pure g a u g e t h e o r i e s
The geometry of local gauge symmetry described in Sect. 2.3.2 can be transferred point by point to the lattice [Ma81]. First, we describe pure Ddimensional gauge theory. The description of Dirac particles has some particular difficulties about which we report on at the end of this section. For the sake of simplicity, a cubic lattice with lattice constant a and lattice; points, where is finite or infinite, is used. The various lattice elements are p o i n t s x with coordinates x = (ii , 2,...,
nD),
nl = 1 , 2 , . . . ,
,
links I) = [a;;/i] connect neighbouring points with coordinates ( x \ , x ) (x + clt,x), WK;re c t — a/7 and //. is oriented from x to x\,
=
.'i(¡'I 2
Q u a n t u m theory of Yang Mills
fields
Fig. 2.24 Objects on the lattice
p l a q u e t t e s V = [.-c; p, v] are the smallest closed loops with coordinates (xz,x2,xi,x) = (x + e^^ + e/t + e^^x + eftjx), {ft ^ v), oriented by this sense of rotation, c u b e s K, with corresponding orientation, and s u p e r - c u b e s with corresponding orientation. A path C\J on the lattice is a sum of connected links C\J = h> a surface is a sum of plaquettes 13 = ^2'Pi- The boundary of a path is denoted by dC\„ and that of a surface by OB. Figure 2.24 illustrates these concepts. The basic geometrical concepts of lattice gauge theory can be summarized as follows: •
Gauge fields describe the infinitesimal parallel displacement of charged fields [cf. (2.3.17) and (2.3.18)]. Hence, parallel displacements U(b) (2.3.36) along links b 6 F correspond to gauge fields on Ike lattice,
Pexp (i Jdt^A^t))
U(b) = U([x-,{i]) =
(2.10.1)
2.10
Lattice approximation of gauge theories."li>I
Lattice gauge fields U(b) = (/([:;:; /i]) are therefore functions that are defined on the links of the lattice and their values arc group elements of G. They possess the property U\-b)
= U~x{b)
Parallel displacement proximation
with - ( x i , x 2 ) = (*2,*i).
(2.10.2)
along a curve C [cf. (2.3.36)] reads in lattice ap-
U{C) = Pexp (\ [ df'A^t)] V Jc
U{CL) = TT U{b,), ¿cL
)
(2.10.3)
where C\, = Yl, bj C F is a path that approximates the continuous curve C'. In agreement with (2.3.25), the field strength describes the parallel displacement around a plaquette. Parallel displacement around the boundary dVx of a plaquette with the links b.\,b3,b2,bi corresponds to U(&PX) = P [ ] U(bi) = U(bA)U(bz)U(b2)U(M
=
U([x-,,1,»)).
bieav
(2.10.4)
As a result of path ordering, the initial point x is distinguished on tinboundary dV. The notions used in Fig. 2.24b are also used here. The Baker I lausdorff formula for the multiplication of exponential functions of non-commuting factors, e M c \B
_ eiA+iB-±[A,B}+...^
(2.10.5)
implies U(dVx)
=
=
(2.10.6)
The lattice analogue of the field strength is Flw(x)
•-> T(PX)
= ^-([ar;p,,/]).
(2.10.7)
Local gauge transformations g(x) G G as in (2.3.35) are defined at lattice points x e T. The geometric quantities then transform in a way similar to the continuum U(b) -> g(x2)U(b)g~l(x,) U(CL)->g(x')U(CL)g-l(x),
with
b = (x2y X] ), (2.10.8)
2
2
u a n t u m theory o f
ang
ills fields
where C is a curve from x to x', and g(x)U(d x)g-l(x),
U(D X) ^ x)
2.1 .1.2
The
g{x)T{ x)g~l(v).
^
2.1 .
ilson action
The dynamics of a lattice gauge theory is determined by t he definition of an action. ccording to . ilson i 4 , the following expression is considered for a pure euclidean gauge theory with gauge group V w
-
Y, P
U-\d )
- 2.
2.1 .1
1 1
The sum extends over all non-oriented pla ucttes of the euclidean space time lattice, i.e. each pla uette appears in the sum only with one orientation,
E
x
E
p u
x
pu
The trace 'l\ U{D' x)] permits a eyelie permutation of the factors in 2.1 .1 and is therefore independent of x. The gauge invariance of w follows from 2.1 . and the trace property. In order to investigate the correspondence with the continuum case we use 2.1 .1 - 2.1 . , especially ( x,v )
f a n
)
i
y ,
2.1 .11
where g{) is the bare gauge coupling. Together with 2.1 .G , 1.2. 2 , and ~ f d x a i one can show that w is an approximation of the action S = f d 1 ; ;a g 2. .42 for small lattice constants, w
~
p
r 4
^
) + U- (drp) - 2
^ T
x
= -
^
^
h
d xF^(x)F ' (x),
fo
^
2 for
,
2.1 .12
2.1
attice approximation of gauge theories. li I
i.e. the eontimuun action. For abcliau gauge groups
2.1 .1.
1 we have f
.
a t h integral o n t h e l a t t i c e
The uantum dynamics on a lattice can be derived from the path integral. II can he formulated with help of the action defined above. If 2 is an observable which is given as a gauge-invariant functional of the lattice gauge lields, then its vacuum expectation value can be calculated from the general ruclidean palli-integral formula cf. ect. 2.2.4.4 ,
The measure V[U given as
must be defined in the space of gauge fields. It can lie
2.1 .14
in which d / i ( g ) is the Haar measure 1.2. 4 - 1.2. for the symmetry group = ( ) . The invariance of the Haar measure implies that a gaugeinvariant uantum theory is described by the basic e uation 2.1 .1 . The gauge invariance of the expectation values follows from the gauge invariance of i i . Gauge-fixing terms fis in 2.4.1 are not necessary for the integration with the finite Haar measure.
2.1 .1.4
a t t i c e a n a l o g u e of physical
uantities
In ects. 2.1 and 2.2 we have discussed in general how to derive in the continuum case dynamically relevant uantities li e masses and cross sections from the vacuum expectation values of the corresponding operators. This can be translated in an appropriate way to the lattice. s examples, we indicate this for the determination of the ilson loop and the lattice masses. The relation to the continuum uantities is discussed in ect. 2.1 .4. e report about the applications in C in ect. . .
.'i(¡'I 2
Q u a n t u m theory of Yang Mills fields
In Sect. 3.7.1 we show that a gauge-invariant definition of astatic potential can be derived from the Wilson loop [Wi74, We7l] W(C) = (Tr [U(C)}) = | | U(C)=
Pexp
P[A]'IY[i/(C)]exp(-Sw{A})
d.s'M»(.s)y^ .
(2.10.15)
This expression can be treated in lattice approximation. To this end, we choose a rectangular path on the lattice which can be approximated by a Sequence of lattice links U[C]^U[CL\=
J ] U(bi).
(2.10.16)
Then, the lattice approximation for the Wilson loop W(C) reads W{C) -> W{CL) = ||V[U]
r
I\(i/[C,J)e-' 9 w l , ; ],
Z = Jv[U]e-s™M.
(2.10.17)
Poles of Green functions in an invariant mass variable P2 at P2 = m2 point to the existence of free particles with mass m (Sect. 2.1.5). In coordinate space, these poles correspond to an exponential fall-off in space-like directions, and also in the euclidean time-like direction [cf. (2.1.16)]. This sets the frame for the calculations of masses in lattice approximations. Let us take the simplest case of a two-point function (F(x)F(y)) of a gaugeinvariant, field F(x) exciting the vacuum to a one particle state. We assume (F(x)) = 0 and (0\F(x)\M,p, j, jz) 0. We consider the lattice approximation F(x) i-> ii(x,*). For a large lattice extent in the euclidean time direction, we expect the behaviour
~ Ae-'"al'l+..., t-y oo
(2.10.18)
where the euclidean time t is measured in lattice units. Because of the finitesize effects, t should be large but much smaller than N, the length of the periodic lattice. The quantity £ = ma is called the correlation length. Measuring the correlation length of the two-point function determines the mass
2.10
Lattice approximation of g a u g e theories."li I
In lattice uuits. lt is the inaili problem of the transition to the continuum lo deterrnine the lattice Constant and the limit. a 0. l Iiis is only a first exainple of the translation of the structure of general liciti t.heory (Sect. 2.1) into the lattice approximation and the extraction of pliysical quantities.
2.10.2
Strong-coupling a p p r o x i m a t i o n
ext we discuss the strong-coupling approximation g\\ > oo, i.e. the limit /) I of the ilson action (2.10.10) and the vacuum expectation value (2.10.13). According to the notion of Sect. 2.2.4.4 this may be called a high temperature expansion. This method played an important role for getting insight into the essential features of lattice field theory. owever, as the continuum limit requires ft oo (cf. Sect. 2.10.4.3), high temperature expansion is of limited value for physical problems.
2.10.2.1
A simple model
In lattice approximation it is possible to have gauge theories with finite gauge groups. e consider the Z2 gauge theory on a two-dimensional lattice with 2 points. The gauge group is the finite group with two elements {c r = 1 } , o2 = 1. Lattice gauge fields U(b) = o{b) are functions on Z2 links b r 2 , which have values 1 . In view of the commutativity of group is multiplication, the field strength (2.10.4), o(d' ) = o(b^)a(b3)a(l)2)( (bi), a pure plaquette function. The following definitions correspond to (2.10.10), (2.10.13), (2.10.17), and (2.10.14):
Action:
6 v = ft
Partition sum: ilson loop:
v(l Z =
~ \a) exp( . A
(C) = \ f
)
a) a(C) e x p ( - 5 w a )
aar measure: j d i i ( a ) f ( a ) = with 'd i(cr) = 1, f d/x(
f{ )
.'i(¡'I 2
Q u a n t u m theory of Yang Mills fields
The integrals for the partition function Z and the Wilson loop W(C) for small ft, i.e. the high-temperature expansion, are best evaluated by the following steps. First, the Boltzmann factor for an individual plaquette is calculated, g -Q{\-O)
_
cosh ft + oe~P sinh ft = C(1 + av)
(2.10.19)
with C -- e x p ( — f t ) cosh ft and v = tanh ft. This result is an example of a Fourier representation of the Boltzmann factor. The first term C is the contribution of the identity representation of the Z2 group, the second aCv that of the defining representation. Since v ~ ft for ft 1, a power series in v can be considered instead of one in ft. The expansion of the Boltzmann factor reads e x p f - / 3 Y ^ [J \ 7>er2
= '
II c[l+t/a(0P)] -per2 /
=c»
2
n Te i'2
[
i
+
»
*
( n
« =o
>
(2.10.20) \
)
] n peG(">
After evaluation of the product Opec*")' coefficient of v" emerges as a sum of the contributions of all possible lattice graphs A lattice graph is a set of n non-oriented plaquettes. Its contribution to the Boltzmann factor is the product of all o(dV) of these plaquettes. The high-temperature (strong-coupling) expansion for the partition sum is obtained by inserting (2.10.20) in its expression above,
Z = CN~ E »
z
E
(G'(n))
\G(">
>
(2.10.21)
/
in which Z(6'^"') is the contribution of a lattice graph to the partition sum, Z(GW)=
i v [ a ]
¡"J a{0V), •pec(")
V[a) =
f j dp(6). Per 2
(2.10.22)
The properties of the Haar measure imply that Z ( G ^ ) is only different from zero if a(l>) in flpeGi") appears in even powers. In view of cr(d'P) =
2.1
attice approximation of gauge theories. li I
I i, -trpa b , this means that each lin must be the boundary of at least two pla uettes of , i.e. Z( ^) only when the boundary d of G vanishes. In a two-dimensional finite lattice this only applies for i.e. the empty lattice graph, and hence 2.1 .21 implies Z = C '. Ta ing a periodic lattice in which opposite lin s of r 2 are identified, then is also e ual to , and one gets the result C
v
i
C
for
TV2
1,
v
.
2.1 .2
This shows that in this limit there is no difference between a lattice with no boundary condition and one with periodic boundary condition. The in llucnce of the boundary disappears for large . The corresponding strong-coupling approximation for the ilson integral is obtained by substituting the olt. mann factor 2.1 .2 into the expression of the ilson loop,
W(C) = J2V'1
( X G
W(C-,
{n)
)
) ,
1,
2.1 .24
with W[C-,
{n)
)=
V[o o{C)
a(d V).
2.1 .2
pect The conclusion is similar to the one from the discussion of the contributions to the partition sum, i.e. only those contribute in which ^ C applies. In two dimensions and with no periodic boundary conditions, this is a single graph consisting of r C pla uettes, where r C is the number of pla uettes which are enclosed by C, i.e. the area enclosed by C. The result obtained is W C) =
r C e
r C logv
2.1 .2
Thus, the area law of the ilson confinement condition cf. ect. . .1.1 is satisfied with a string constant logr; in lattice-constant units for a two-dimensional , lattice gauge theory.
.'i(¡'I 2
Q u a n t u m theory of Yang Mills
2.10.2.2
fields
G e n e r a l i t i e s of t h e s t r o n g - c o u p l i n g a p p r o x i m a t i o n of S U (TV)
This example of a Z 2 gauge theory shows the important steps for the general strong-coupling approximation: •
group-theoretical expansion of the Boltzmann factor for the individual plaquette, i.e. its character expansion (2.10.20);
•
expansion of the total Boltzmann factor into lattice-graph contributions (2.10.21);
•
determination and calculation of graphs which give a non-vanishing contribution;
•
graph summation.
The expansion of the Boltzmann factor (2.10.19) is a special case of an expansion in group characters x ^ ( t f ) = Tr D ^ { g ) of the irreducible, unitary representations (k) of dimension dim(Ar) of the gauge group G. For this expansion the orthogonality and completeness relations of the group characters are important. We write the action as a sum over the contributions of the plaquettes S[f7] = (i^-p S
= e^-^^pl/iliOJIpx}, mid the completeness of the states \X,px), + f
(3.2.3)
this can be written as-5
V V G h i ) = J $ e i w ( p l [ ¿ ¡ M M o)] |p).
(3.2.4)
'I'he mirent.- current commutator instead of the product is obtained by subtracting from (3.2.1) a similar expression where the ¿-function (3.2.2) is replaced by (/; — px —
Wfil/(p,q)
= -g^Fx
+ PJ^F2 pq
- i
F
pq
Ppq° „ _ ( <)Ju pJ,Pu\ „ 9jw „ --z 1 Pi + i r - t h - i£,u>p
(3.2.5)
with T
9,w
_
— .9/
_
W»
1
T _
Pp
~
Pf-
_
P'l 2'
(3.2.6)
and
.
2pq
- f . 2pq
'The average over the hadron spin 1/2
(3.2.7, is not written explicitly in the following.
'138
3
Q u a n t u m
C h r o m o d y n a m i c s
In D dimensions, the inversion of this decomposition reads
=
( - £ + ID - 1)2/-|f ) T
FL(x,Q2)
= —2xF\ (x, r/2) +
= 4.r2^iy""(p,
F3(X,Q2) =
3.2.1.2
T
q), (3.2.8)
Light-cone behaviour of the free current commutator
We arc interested in the behaviour of Wlt„, (3.2.4), in the Bjorken limit, i.e. for Q2 -» oo, // = pq/M —> oo, x — Q2/2Mv fixed. According to the method of stationary phase this comes from that part of the integration region where qy remains finite. In the laboratory frame, where q'1 = (f, 0,0, \Ji>'1 + Q 2 ), we obtain
Iwl =
7A)
2/3 \J 1 + 2Mxjv ~ i/\yo -1/3 v—>oo
(3.2.!))
In order to keep |i/?/| finite for // —> oo this requires |j/o — ?/:í| = 0. Hence the essential contribution to the current commutator in the Bjorken limit originates from the vicinity of the light cone. Next we rederive the results of the quark-parton model for the hadronic tensor W^}' A of deep-inelastic lcplon nucleón scattering (cf. Sect. 1.5.2) in a field-theoretical manner using the commutation relations for free, massless quark fields. Here we consider general vector and axial-vector quark currents
<11 ,'/2,C
>ii,Ay)=
E
:
$
(3.2.10)
3.2
(.¿CI)
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
s c a t t e r i n g
'If»!)
whore X''nq2 denotes the Cell-Mann matrix (ef. Sect. 1.2.2.2) in the llavour »pace of the quarks.'1 The electromagnetic, charged, and neutral weak currents (cf. Sect. 1.4.2.1) are linear combinations of these general flavour currents h'iAv) = YL^nivh^QMv) <1 ll
?Ay) = Y <1
=
i'iyhi'Q^iv)'
- 75aq)ii>q{y),
hi(y) = J^Myh^-^-Vij^iy). ij
(3.2.11)
For illustration we give the relation between the Gell-Mann-matrix notation in (3.2.10) and the one in (3.2.11),
Qq = diag I
I=
,
(3.2.12)
for the electromagnetic current in the case of three quark flavours. The Bjorken limit of the structure functions is obtained from the commutator of the quark currents5 (:c), ht(y)] = ]T fan WlvKmW« Qi
<*)>
Mfr^«^«(»)
X
- (vH'^vi, (?/)> i>qi (x)hli*qiq2M )) •
(3.2
Inserting the anticommutator of free massless quark fields, (1.2.12), U>
= <W(i7A^)iA(rc - y),
(3.2.14)
and using the relation XaXb = (i fabc + dabc) Ac + -6"b 1 3
(3.2.15)
'In the following we suppress the symbols : . . . : for normal ordering and the colour index c. We here restrict the treatment to vector currents.
'I'll)
3
Q u a n t
u m
C h r o m o d y n a m i c s
for the product of Cell-Mann matrices yields K](x),hi(y)]
=
(3.2.16)
- r6c(^bM7A7.AcV>(y)
i^A(x
- y) + (x
+ ¡c/atfi(V;(*b,i7A7i>Acy>(?/) \dxA(x +
(yWwxlA
y,,i <-> „))
- y) - (z
jy))
i>{y) id*A(® - y) ~(x
Decomposing the product of Dirac matrices with help of the Chisholm identity 7/i7a7i/ = {g,L\(j„f, + g\>,g,,p - y,wy\p) Y - ie/,A/>757p - ie^vplsY,
=
(3.2.17)
finally gives for the current commutator [/»?(*),/£(*)]
=^A(x-y)
x { - i / a 6 c [ ^ A , p {i>(x)Yxc->P(y) + - ie^Aup {M*hpvAci>(y) c
- dabc[o,lXup
i>(y) -
i'(yhpmx)) - i%)7"75A c V(*))]
$(y)-f\e1>{x)) Ac v(y))]
- \&ab[
- V>(y)7pV>(z))
(^(x)7p75^(?y) + ^(2/)7"75V>(tf))] }•
(3.2.18)
This provides an example, which already shows the typical features, of an operator-product expansion (OPE). The expansion consists of singular functions, in this case the derivative of the free scalar commutator function (1.2.9) A(.r - y ) = - ( ¿ y j / A = ~sgn(x°
-iq(x-y) sgn(q0)6(q2)exp~>
- y°)S {(x - y) 2 ),
(3.2.19)
3.2
(.¿CI)
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
s c a t t e r i n g 'If»!)
llavour tensors f"bc, dabc, 6ab, Lorentz tensors cr,,\„p, e,,\„/(, and regular 1 >ilond operators. I'lie bilocal operators are of the vector- and axial-vector type, symmetrized and antisymmetrized, Of^{x,y)
= ipq(x)lpipq.(y)
± il>q(yhP4>q-(x),
?/) = i><,'{v) ± i'q[vYiplr^'q1 (x), HIICII
(3.2.20)
that the total expression (3.2.18) is antisymmetric.
The electroweak currents transform according to the adjoint representation of the flavour group [cf. (3.2.10)]. Their commutators, i.e. the bilocal operators, lie in the adjoint representation (Ac terms) with symmetric (d ) or antisymmetric {fabc) couplings, or in the singlet representation (1 terms) with coupling Sab and are organized in expressions with definite chargeconjugation parity. The corresponding contributions are denoted flavour non-singlet (NS) CjNS.c.d: = J 2 X '
q
.Of*
© J f *
=
and flavour singlet (S), 0 S, q > ± =
£
0Jft±f
0s;<,,± =
£
(3.2.22)
respectively, with charge-conjugation parity ±. Inserting these expressions into (3.2.18) gives
- \*ah [cr^O*«'-
(x, y) - i
(
x
,
j/)] }.
(3.2.23)
This decomposition into irreducible representations of the flavour group with definite charge-conjugation parity is important when higher-order QCD corrections are calculated (cf. Sect. 3.2.3).
432
3
Q u a n t u m
G h r o m o d y t i a i n i c s
Similar results are obtained when commutators with axial-vector currents or chirai currents are calculated. This arid a more detailed discussion of (3.2.18) is postponed to Sect. 3.2.1.3 where also the generalization to the interacting case in QCD is considered. We are interested in the contribution of the free current commutator to the nucléon structure functions. In order to work out the essential points we evaluate the contribution of the electromagnetic current x) = x i )liLQqtf'q(•'')• To extract the Bjorken limit of the unpolarized structure functions, the expression (3.2.18) has to be substituted into (3.2.4). For the case of the electromagnetic current, the terms with the structure constants /"'"" and with 75 are absent in the unpolarized case, and using translational invariance (x = 0) the hadronic tensor reads
Id
= J
<1
x{p\O^~(y,0)\p),
(3-2.24)
where A(y) = - A ( - y ) . Written in the group-theoretic notation of (3.2.18), (3.2.21), and (3.2.22), this reads
= ~ J dV
W
< W (¿tfA(y))
x ^(p|C?f' 3 '-(y,0)|p) + ^
(3.2.25)
This representation of shows that in the electromagnetic case both non-singlet and singlet operators contribute. The same occurs in neutraland charged-current reactions. The spin-averaged nucléon matrix element can be decomposed into Lorentz covariants //', yp and invariant functions of py, p2, and y2, (p\0«;h (y,0)|p) = 2 p P g q M p y , y 2 , P 2 )
+Vl>M%tM(py,V\p2). (3.2.261
3.2
(.¿CI)
Mocause of the J(y2)-function in d*A(y) this elfectively reduces to (p\O^'-(y,0)\p)
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
s c a t t e r i n g
[cf. (3.2.19)] and p 2 = M 2 «
= 2PpOgMipy),
'If»!)
Q'\
(3.2.27)
since the term hqjj gives a contribution which is suppressed by a factor M /pq in momentum space and therefore can be neglected in the Bjorken limit. The form (3.2.27) of the matrix element of the bilocal operator has I lie consequence that the longitudinal structure function [cf. (3.2.8)] Fu =
(3.2.28)
4X2LJ—WIW
pq
is proportional to p 2 = M 2
^gqMO^{py\
-oo
(3.2.29)
yields WtfjV(p,q)=
= 7-n E
(3.2.30) [
J
(
t
f
A(y)) ,
where the sum over q runs over all quarks. Equation (3.2.8) then yields for the structure function
(3.2.31) and by using after partial integration again the integral (3.2.19), ^,77AVy,
= pq £ tf
[
J
^
+
s [ l+
{'
tofyiMt)(3.2.32)
4 4 4
3
Q u a n U m i
C h r o i n o d y n a m i c s
Neglecting the nucleoli mass, we have in the Bjorken limit, since °,p° > 0, sgn(<7° + &>°)J((<7 + i v f ) ~ ¿(if 2 + 2 ^ 9 ) =
- a-)
(3.2.33)
with the scaling variable x. Kinematics implies 0 < x < 1 [cf. (1.5.3)]. Thus, performing the £ integration with help of the ¿-function, the Bjorken limit of the structure functions F ? 1 ^ is obtained as F r
«
[ x )
=
1£
= 2 3 ; F i 77^ ( x )
(3.2.34)
<7 The functions gqjtf(x) are the nucleoli expectation values of the bilocal operators 0'ph~ [cf. (3.2.27)]. Writing these operators in terms of quark creation and annihilation operators the physical meaning of g,hM{X) becomes obvious: gqjj(x) is the density of quarks and antiquarks with momentum fraction x in the nucleoli and thus identical with the quark distribution functions, 9 = Sqjs{ x ) + J()M{X)- Therefore the final result is FTV(*)
= \ E QKfnMx)
+ /wrW),
n
F ^ ( x ) = x J 2 Q q U i M * ) + f'lM*))•
(3-2.35)
<1
Altogether we found: the light-cone singularity of a free quark field gives Bjorken scaling (and vice versa, see [Bj69]). The Call an Gross relation (1.5.29) is found to be valid. In addition we obtained a field-theoretical definition of the quark and antiquark distribution functions f,!r\f(x) and /,/,.y (•'<") • These are the Fourier transforms of the reduced hadron expectation values of the bilocal operators 011 the light cone. In a similar way the parton model results for neutral and charged weak current processes (1.5.28) can be obtained field theoretically. 3.2.1.3
Wilson expansion
Expanding the bilocal operators of (3.2.20), e.g. O%'~(yt0)
= TpqilMqiO)
~
TpqiOhMy)
(3.2.36)
3.2
(.¿CI)
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
s c a t t e r i n g
'If»!)
into a power series in y, oo n=0
(0) =
• • • OMv)7pV-,(0)
y=o,
(3.2.37)
substituting tliis into (3.2.18), one obtains the Wilson expansion for tin* free current commutator, i.e. its representation by singular functions, Lorentz tensors, and local operators, the Wilson operators [Wi69].
JIIUI
The mass dimension of the operators O wll ,.. (lll (0) can be calculated as ditn[C7] = 71 + 3 according to the above equation. On the other hand, the Opin...)in are tensors of rank (71 + 1) and thus possess the maximum angular momentum lmax = n + 1. The difference between dimension and angular momentum of an operator is called twist, T = dim [O] - I.
(3.2.38)
Hence the operators O have minimal twist 2. The spin-averaged nucleón matrix element of the Wilson operators can be decomposed into covariants and reduced matrix elements,
=
( » 1 • --PvMWfl
-1- M2ppgfiut2p,l3.
••P,i„Bj/
n+l
(3-2.39)
+ terms with more fl^'sY
The terms containing g,w have higher twist, T > 4. In the Bjorken limit their contribution to the structure functions is suppressed by the factor ( M 2 / Q ¿ ) . Therefore, their effect is small compared with the leading twist-2 terms. Again we discuss the electromagnetic case in more detail. Comparing (3.2.27) with (3.2.37) and (3.2.39) shows that the coefficients A\ r < n + i are obtained from the invariant functions gqw\r[py) by power-series expansion, (
d
\
n
py=o
1
s
sing the Fourier transform of
gqj^(py)
yields
71-1 .V
(3.2.40)
The x integral extends from to I only, since gqrrf(x) vanishes for x < and x > 1 for inematical reasons cf. 1. . . The reduced matrix elements ilson operators ft ..tln are r n of the r the sums of the Mellin moments fqjj)U and f,],A ,n of the quark and antiquark distribution functions. They determine the moments of the structure Junctions in the or en limit,
F
f
The inversion of formation.
o
dxx- F
ix
2
,f
,n
.2.41 is obtained by performing an inverse
.2.41
ellin trans-
utting everything together, we can write
(3.2,12)
for the electromagnetic structure function in the case of free masslcss uar s as partons. imilar expressions result for the case of neutral and charged wea -current deep-inelastic processes.
3.2
.'{.2.2
(.¿CI)
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
s c a t t e r i n g 'If»!)
Q C D corrections t o the parton model
In Sect. 3.2.1, the parton-model results for the structure functions in deepinelastic scattering were derived for free quarks using the Wilson expansion of the current commutators. In this section we generalize this procedure to 111«' case of interacting quarks in the one-loop approximation. We consider the quark currents (3.2.10), which contain as special cases the elect romagnetic as well as the charged and neutral weak currents (3.2.11). Then, all three structure functions F^ v > j V , F%V>J^, and occur. Moreover, hesides the quarks also the gluons have to be taken into account as partons. As a consequence, the Callan-Gross relation is violated. Therefore, we consider — 2xF\ instead of F,v V"A' and the longitudinal structure function F\T = introduce the index a = {2, L, 3} corresponding to the projectors (3.2.8) on the structure functions FL,, and the parity-violating part F3. 3.2.2.1
Operator-product expansion in higher orders
The operator-product expansion for the general case has been introduced in Ilef. [Wi69, Ka69]. Using this and the facts discussed above, the moments of the hadronic tensor can be in general expressed as =
k , T NVV'k
Ak
•
1)P(la R'W'k Ak
(3.2.43)
a s , M) describe the hard-scattering proThe Wilson coefficients C^'k{Q2, cess between the virtual elcctroweak gauge bosons and the partons, and can be calculated in perturbation theory [Gr73a]. They depend 011 the flavour and parity of the currents and 011 the parton species but not 011 the properties of the external hadrons. In the electromagnetic case they are given by the quark charges, e.g. CQ™ (Q2, as = 0, M) = Q2, in lowest order. The coefficients A ^ n ( a s , M ) are the reduced hadronic matrix elements of the Wilson operators. They are given by the moments of the parton distribution functions and cannot, be calculated in perturbation theory. In one-loop order of QCD it is necessary to use the decomposition into non-singlet (NS) and singlet (S) contributions (3.2.25) with definite symmetry under charge conjugation. The singlet quark contribution can mix
4 4 8
3
Q u a n t u m
C l u o i n o d y n a u i i c s
with gluonic contributions with the same quantum numbers. The index /.• = {NS,r:; S,q; S,g} discriminates between all these contributions: quark contributions are denoted in the group-theoretic notation by NS,c and S,q in the non-singlet and singlet case, respectively. The gluonic contributions, which occur in one-loop order, are labelled by S,g. The following Wilson operators of QCD with twist two generalize the expressions (3.2.20), (3.2.21), (3.2.22), and (3.2.37) of the free quark case: O™;c.,ln(0)
= ï>q{0)S{'ypDfil
... D,ln}A^VY
(0),
(°) = ^ q ( 0 ) S { l p D , i l . . . D l l n } r P q ( 0),
^,..^(0) =
•••DMM-
(3-2-44)
Here S denotes symmetrization of the Lorentz indices and taking out traces in order to obtain, with respect to the Lorentz group, irreducible tensor operators. Tlu; covariant derivative with respect to the colour SU(3) group D,t occurs because of gauge invariance. In QCD also the gluon fields contribute to the singlet Wilson operators with twist two, ...^(0)=«S{1VV(0)^I
F tt/irl (0)},
(3.2.45)
where the trace refers to the colour indices. The operators 0 S,
= i n PpP>n - P , 1 „ 2 ^ 1 ( a
8 l
M).
(3.2.46)
A comparison of (3.2.43) with the general decomposition of the hadronic tensor (3.2.5) provides relations between the moments of the structure
3.2
(.¿CI)
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
s c a t t e r i n g
'If»!)
functions and the coefficient functions,
F i r m
= [
l
dxx»-*Fr'"(Q2,x)
Jo
FCn"(Q2)
k = f Jo
= E
dxx»-*Fr'"(Q?,x) C?Xk{Q\as,
M)AiiMin(as,
M),
k F$r«[)
= /*' Jo
dxxn~lF^v^(Q2,x)
= ^ EC3Tfc(QVs>^MW(«s,M). k
(3.2.47)
Thus, the moments of the structure functions are determined by the Fouriertransformed Wilson coefficients and the nucleoli matrix elements of the Wilson operators. In lowest order of the strong coupling constant a s , the covariant derivative Dtl is replaced by the partial one 0in and there is 110 contribution of the Ilavour-ncutral gluon fields. Consequently, we have only aspin-1/2 contribution, and F\, vanishes. The matrix elements of the Wilson operators A'.^ n and A^^f n arc the sums and differences of the moments f q j^, n ± Jqjf,n °f the quark and antiquark distribution functions [cf. (3.2.42)]. The Wilson coefficients reduce to the products of the quark couplings (1.5.11). I11 this way the results of the parton model are reproduced.
3.2.2.2
Renormalization-group equation
The quark currents h,L(x) and the Wilson operators (0) = Op,„.../Jn(0) are local composite operators built up from quark and gluon fields to which the multiplicative renormalization procedure of QCD (cf. Sect. 2.5.1.7) can be generalized [Zi73, Di74, Jo76, Co84]. However, mixing of operators of the same quantum numbers and the same or lower dimensions may occur. In our case the flavour-singlet Wilson operators C^''1 and Of,'K mix. Ilence in
432
3
Q u a n t u m
G h r o m o d y t i a i n i c s
general, a renormalizat ion-constant matrix (Zo n ) kl relates the renormalized Wilson operators ;1 (« s , .M) to the unrenormalized ones, h%L{x,aa,M)
=
Z£\aa,M)h»(x),
0& i f l (O,a„M) = '¿[Z£{at1M))k,Oln(
0).
(3.2.48)
From the corresponding Green functions, = (0| Ti}>{xx) [ f c £ ( s ) , M 0 ) ] i ( i 2 ) |0), (3.2.49)
= (0| Ti>{Xl) 0*(0) i>{x2) |0),
the renormalized vertex functions and arc derived by truncation of the quark and antiquark legs. These vertex functions satisfy the renonnalizat,ion-group (RG) equations0 M
E
M
-
(1M
027"' + 2 7 " rfhUl(as,M)
d M -fry*)
kl
S"' + In
rf°'«{aa,M)
= 0, = 0.
(3.2.50)
The coefficients 7' 1 and 7* are the anomalous dimensions of the current operator and the Wilson operator, respectively, [cf. (2.G.9)]
(3.2.51) The charges of the quark currents h'1 are the generators of the flavour symmetry group. Because h'1 is a conserved current, it does not need renormalization, i.e. Z/t = 1, and its anomalous dimension vanishes, i.e. 7'' = 0. The current current and Wilson-operator vertex functions are linked together by the Wilson expansion, written in a condensed form as (3.2.52) k,n c
The different signs in front of truncated.
and 7*' result from the fact that the if/ legs are
.'{.'2
(.¿CI)
in
d e c p - i n c l a s t i c
s c a t t e r i n g
'151
Ni is allows to derive a RG equation for the Wilson coefficients C b y substituting (3.2.52) into (3.2.50), 0 = M
AM
- £k,n = E
E Cn ( Q21 «s, M) r
-2^
(aa,M)
k,n
M^ci, + ci ( « dJL M rR°'n(<*s,M)
-
7?
k,l,n
) rr!
) C*(Q\as,M).
(3.2.53)
for irreducible Lorentz tensors this equation must be fulfilled for each n and I separately,
0
= E
( ' ^ d ^
-
(3.2.54)
Ckn(Q2,<*s,M).
As the Wilson coelficients are diinensionlcss, the associated scale-transformation equation reads (in the massless case)
E 6'k(XA~P{9s)^)+'Y"{9s)
C
n{Mf,<*s)=0.
(3.2.55)
This general RG equation is a coupled system of linear, partial differential equations. It allows for the application of perturbation theory to the calculation of the momentum dependence of the Wilson coefficients, because QCD is asymptotically free. No mixing of operators occurs in the flavour non-singlet case, where ONS.C and O f ' c contribute. The corresponding one-loop anomalous dimensions are flavour- and parity-independent in massless QCD. Therefore, we denote them by 7^S(ffs)- The RG equation is a scalar equation and (suppressing flavour indices) solved by
C™((\Q)\as)
= C„ ns (Q 2 , a s ((AQ) 2 )) exp
| V
, (3.2.50)
4 5 2
3
Q u a n t u m
C l i r o m o d y n a m i c s
where ots is the running coupling constant. With (3.2.47) this implies F„ns ((AQ)2, ots) = F„NS (Q2, â s ( ( A Q f ) ) exp ( - j T dg'
. (3.2.57)
for the Q 2 dependence of the non-singlet moments. The breaking of scaling in the moments of the structure functions is determined by the anomalous dimensions 7^'s of the Wilson operators and the function of QCD. Now we treat the flavour singlet case, e.g. contributions to neutral current scattering, at one loop. Because of mixing among the operators and S sa 0 'S in the singlet case, 7®(<7S) > constant 2 x 2 matrix, 7« - I 7r,q
7r,g
J »
(¿.2.o8)
which can be diagonalized
with 7,f = I (xT 1 + 7 , f ± y / h i f ' - 7n 8 ) 2 + s w r r M " j ,
Here Nf denotes the number of flavours. This procedure decouples the two differential equations for C«''1 and C^'8. The linear combinations Cn'+ and c C'„ then behave ¡11 the usual way, C;^((A
Q)\as)
= Csn±(Q\as((\Qf))
exp ( - j \ g '
.
(3.2.61) This treatment of the singlet case can be generalized to higher orders if a decomposition into irreducible representations of the flavour and chargeconjugation symmetry is performed. This will be treated in Sect. 3.2.3.
3.2
3,2.2.3
(.¿CI)
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
s c a t t e r i n g
'If»!)
Structure of QCD corrections
Evaluation of (3.2.55) and (3.2.61) by means of perturbation theory starts from a power-series expansion of the relevant quantities, explicitly
/%.) = -AMfejfl* - Aft (if^y+ • • • . »(FT) = 7 „ , «
I
|
5
+ 7 N
J
( J |
F
)
:
'
+ ....
P-2-62) (3.2.63)
The expansion of the Wilson coefficients C ^ ' f c ( a s ) starts with the partoninodel values =
+
+ ...
(3.2.64)
with _
r
°2,n,0
— u
O
= GI!'1"".
t>
i
vvg _
n
°2,n,0 ~ u> C ?
= 0.
O = 0. < » = 0 (3.2.65) in the product base and similar expressions in the decomposition into the adjoint and singlet representation of the flavour group. The coupling strengths Gv and Ga of the quarks are given in (1.5.11). Since Fi, = 0 in the parton model, and since the gluons do not couple directly to the flavour currents, the expansion of the corresponding quantities starts with the a s terms. From (3.2.64) (3.2.65), the calculation of the behaviour of the moments of the structure function proceeds. Using only the first terms of the expansions above to work out (3.2.57), one gets the leading-order results. There is a difference between the non-singlet case, where only one Wilson operator of order n exists, and the singlet case, where mixing of operators occurs. From the corresponding RG equations one obtains
<
W S
( Q
2
) =
(3.2.66)
4
4
,
s
for the Q2 dependence of the non-singlet moments and the parityviolating non-singlet moments F^, where Qo is the reference scale and
C
=
(3.2.67,
The Q2 dependence of the singlet moments F 2 jf is given by
C'
S , ±
W
2
) = (Ull)"3"'"
F
lnKS^Q2o)
(3-2.68)
with
f = " g -
(3.2.69)
The anomalous dimensions i/„,o are calculated in the following section.
3.2.2.4
Anomalous dimensions of Wilson operators in Q C D
In order to calculate the anomalous dimensions of the Wilson operators O in order o s , the QCD Feynman rules must be extended to the case of local composite operators. The following field points are assigned to the Wilson operators (3.2.44) and (3.2.45) (cf. [Gr73a] for further details): i > q A x ) S { > 1 >>{<,'dm • • • V,>n } V y , c ( * )
^ { T / m ^ ^
i!>q>c(x)S
}<W
j 7 / 1 , \ f q q , d n • • • fkAl
X a, r s-f-^S
(x) ^
q\d n,f J I ^ ®
i ,c
. . . d,in }
fyjix)
(3.2.71)
n,f,a
q,c
. , , { (ii ,,, ... £fl, ... ,ln ->
> (3-2.70)
,
'
3 . 2
^liZ/i/z^/ij • • • klht +
_>
( . ¿ C I )
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
9fit191'HI
s c a t t e r i n g 'If»!)
•••
~~ kti9viii • • • k,ln — ku9wn k/12 • • • kti„ k -> g,« n g, b 'x/N/XgW/x,
.
(3.2.72)
Similar rules apply for axial operators. The diagrams representing the oneloop corrections to the operator (3.2.70) are shown in Fig. 3.3. The calculation is similar to that for the one-loop diagrams in Sect. 2.5.2. It was worked out initially by Gross and Wilczek [Gr73a] and Politzer [Po74]. Symmetrization and taking out traces can be most easily achieved by contracting the operator with the tensor A/M • • • A/Ifl formed by light-like vector A;1. In Feynman gauge, using dimensional regularization, the Feynman rules give
M
1 9sCpX 1
~ ' J (2n)0 k*(p-k)W - -19SCF\'(2 - D)p. J {27r)„kHp_k)2k2 i„V
xf(9
[
d k
°
Oi.
+ X 2(1^ Z) v0n "
M**)""1*
r1
n x
+Ik*ztf)(Ak + zAp) ~ + Z(l - z)p>}*
for diagram (a). In the last step we used the Feynman parametrization of the integrand (2.5.(i7). For the anomalous dimension of the Wilson operator
432
3
Q u a n t u m
G h r o m o d y t i a i n i c s
only the residue of the pole at D — 4 is needed. This is determined by the: k,tkt, terms in the numerator.7 These act in the integral like glwk2/I). Since A 2 = 0, there is only one contribution, M[a)
= -ig2CFA^(Ap)"-l(/J>
2)
dz (1 — z)zn~
2 [
V
Jo
I x „_D r d»k 2 M /j J J (2TT) 2[k + z(l - z ) p 2 ] 2 as (D - 2) = — Gf.vvlo D 4?r /•l x 2 / dz(l -«)2n"142)(2(l -2)p2),
(3.2.74)
Jo
where we have inserted the lowest-order expression M(0a)
(3.2.75)
= A'£(Ap)n~l.
The tadpole integral /l[|'!) was calculated in Sect. 2.5.2.1. Writing as usual D = 4- 26, it reads [cf. (2.5.58)] 42)(z( 1 -
z)p2)
= ( ^ p )
r(i)(z(l -
z))-s.
(3.2.76)
The z integration gives Euler's /^-function, i.e. a ratio of T functions. The result of diagram (a) finally is A„(•)
a
V
4?r
, j(a) o (2 ~ 26)2 r ( n - ¿ ) r ( 2 - S) f4ir,i2 0
2
4-2*
r(n + 2 - 2 J )
( ^ J
^ *w
0
P(<5)
(3.2.77)
For the anomalous dimension we need only the singular part of this expression [cf. (2.6.30)], { a) M^ , 2 S1,,l = ^C T .M 0 e 4?r 7i(?i+l)i 7
(3.2.78)
The contributions of the terms with more k's in the numerator vanish owing to A 2 = 0.
.2
(
.s .
s
1
7
The second and the third graph of Fig. 3.3 yield
Adding these contributions and the renorinalization constants for the ex ternal fields (2.6.31) yields the renorinalization constant of the non-singlet operators in the MS scheme, =
I n(n + l)
4TT
sj
*
/
(3.2.80) and with (3.2.51) and (2.6.30) the one-loop coefficient of the anomalous dimension,
Hence for the colour group SU(3) the exponent in (3.2.66) is given by
The elements of the 2 x 2 matrix for the singlet case have also been worked out in [Gr73a],
n2 + n + 2
qg _ n, o -
_ 7 »-°"
e i F n
(
n
+
) (
+2)'
a
iC
n + n+ 2 n(n 2 — 1) '
2 2 ^ee = _ 4 C , I I 7 A "-° I »(« - 1) r (n + l)(n + 2)
- ^T f N { ,
6
j (3.2.83)
4 2
s
where Cv = 4/3, C A = 3 and T = 1/2 for SU(3). The exponents of the logarithms that determine the scaling violations in asymptotically free gauge theories are given by (3.2.82) and (3.2.69) together with (3.2.60) and (3.2.83). For light quarks they are flavour-independent. Since the Q 2 dependence of the moments is only logarithmic, it is weak compared with that of non-gauge theories. The anomalous dimensions of the Wilson operators at two loops have been calculated in Refs. [F177, F179, Go79, Ha92a]. For the three-loop case some specific moments are known [La97]. 3.2.3
Evolution equations
Using the Wilson expansion and the renormalization group we have derived QCD predictions for the moments of structure functions. In particular, logarithmic corrections to the scaling behaviour of the parton model have been found. In the naive parton model the structure functions are independent of the momentum transfer 2, i.e. the probability of finding a parton with momentum fraction x in the nucleoli does not depend on the resolution the nucleoli is probed with.8 The scaling violations in QCD emerge from t he fact that the interaction at short distances may convert a quark into a qUark and a gluon (cf. Fig. 3.2 on page 436), and a gluon into two gluons or into a quark-antiquark pair. The observation of these fluctuations depends on the resolution. Increasing the momentum transfer reveals the structure at shorter distances. More virtual quar s and gluons are found, each of them carrying a smaller fraction of the original valence-quar momentum. This is the parton picture of scaling violations. The 2 dependence of the structure functions can be controlled by evolution equations derived by Dokshitzer, Gribov and Lipatov, and Altarelli and Parisi [Gr72, Li75, A177, Do77]. We start from the solution (3.2.66) of the RG equation for the flavour non-singlet, moments '^i 2)They satisfy the differential equation ^2 8
N
n
S
(0=<
S
o^
with
t = log
2
A 2.
(3.2.84)
Thc three-momentum of the virtual photon in the nucleoli rest frame is (Q 2 + i/"')"'• According to I lie uncertainty principle it. probes the nucleoli structure at the corresponding length scale.
3.2
Inserting
(.¿CI)
= - 7 l ^ / ( 2 / i ( ) ) and «,(/.) =
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
4ir/f)0t
s c a t t e r i n g
'If»!)
yields
= - ^ - f F ^ ( t ) .
(3.2.85)
In the quark parton model the structure functions F, v '^(x, t) arc products of tlio coupling strengths GqVV and the quark distribution functions U M ' ^ t ) and J a M ^ t ) [cf. (3.2.35)], F ^
N S
( x , t) = £ x (G«vv' <7
0 +^
0) . (3.2.85)
This implies for the moments of the quark distribution
functions
This set of equations is equivalent to an integro-differential equation, the evolution equation for the quark distribution functions fqjf(x,t), also called Dokshitzer-Gribov-Lipatov Altarelli -Parisi (DGLAP) equation, dfq^rjx, t.) _ dt
as(t) dy / ' dzS(x - yz)pW(z)fq,Kr(y, 2tt Jo Jo _ <*B [t) q<1 J f g j A ( M ) , 27r
t) (3.2.88)
provided
7«,o = - 4
f d Jo
zzn-'P$»{z).
(3.2.89)
The structure of (3.2.88) is identical to the one of QED for t he emission of hard, collinear photons (2.8.11G). This is no surprise since both equations describe the same physical situation, collinear emission of masslcss gauge bosons.
4 2
s
The evolution ernel also called splitting function, is calculated in one-loop approximation in Sect. '2.8.3.1 for QED and in Sect. 3.3 for QCD. The result for QCD is [cf. (3.3.1)]
+ (3.2.90) with the {+)-distribution defined in (2.8.80) or (2.8.81). Multiplicative convolutions [cf. (2.8.115)] h{x) =
] (s) = f
d
Jo
can be factorized by taking
f
dz6(x -
z)f{ )g(z)
Jo
ellin
moments
hji = [ d « " - ' / » ( i ) , Jo
(3.2.92)
as the following calculation shows: hn =
dxxn~*h{x)= Jo
=
drc Jo
d
n
d
dz 6{x -
Jo
J0
f{ )g(z)
Jo
f dzz ~lg(z)
~ f( )
z)xn~
= fn n.
(3.2.93)
Jo
The relation (3.2.89) between the anomalous dimension (3.2.81) and the splitting function (3.2.90) can be verified as follows:
(3.2.94) The first integral is elementary, ri Jo
„2z»-'
.+ + 2 „ + 1I -_ 2 2 _ i - *
U+l
r,I Jo
n
(z -
+ *»"' + 2 £ £ 0 V )
dz
jr; J i
1 -z
n(n+l)
.'{.12
Q C I )
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
.scattering
4 6 1
Adding the contribution of the ¿-function term finally gives
(3.2.%) in agreement with (3.2.81). In general, the evolution equation couples the gluon distribution fy„\r(x,t) with the quark and antiquark distribution functions9 d/ff.yV _ as{t) At 2ir <*s (t) 2ir
di
®
®
+ A.g ®
j P'li'lj
Miff
j
II
<*s(t)
® /
2?r
dt
+ pwi
function
+ /gg ® /g,A/' (3.2.96)
This coupled system of 2N[ 4- 1 equations is reduced by using chargeconjugation and flavour symmetry. The splitting functions are written in terms of flavour-singlet. (S) and flavour-non-singlet (V) contributions, V s +1 1 P S 1Pqq P
"g;
=
"gq-
Furthermore, we introduce distribution functions with definite charge-conjugation parity,
/ t v = UirM ± 9
This corresponds to operator mixing in tlie operator-product expansion.
(3-2.98)
1( 2
.{
s
and flavour-synnnetry properties, namely non-singlet quark distributions
k
h,qi = E t=i
~
»
A; = 1 , . . . ,ATf — 1,
(3.2.99)
and singlet quark distributions t
(3.2.100) i=i Then, the evolution equations decompose into
sCr - ^ [ « ,+
• O " + M. - >4) • E ,
5 #
= ^
< +
1
<
O
,+
+ * (/* + ^ ) } e y j f
+ 2JVfPqg
i M
=
+ PgB
^r
(3.2.101)
®V
There are two separate equations for the non-singlet quark-distribution functions f ^ y and /^'y-- The quark-singlet distribution function f^Jj- is coupled to the gluon-distribution function /R>Jv. The splitting functions Pij(x) are related to the probabilities of finding parton i with a momentum fraction x in parton j. They are (-f)-distributions and fulfill the sum rules for quark-number conservation (3.2.102) Jo
;
and momentum conservation I '
dx
(
j f dxx
( ) + PQ*i
+ PW ( * ) ) = 0.
[/>„(*) + P l J x ) ] +
= 0.
(3.2.103)
3.2
Q C I )
ill d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
s c a t t e r i n g
163
The integrals have to vanish since the lowest-order contribution, i.e. the iiiinple parton-model contribution, saturates the sum rules. In the one-loop approximation the corresponding kernels are flavour- and ncherne-indepeudent and have the form P X ( , (*) = .
<^(x) i&
= T,
= o,
p^ \x)
= 0,
x2 + ( - x)2
o(0
gq (x) gg
= 2 ,
Li
1
r i i
—
11
+
2
+
+ { j CrA - ^N(Tv) ~ 3
1-
x x
/, \ +x(l - x )
(1 - x).
(3.2.104)
Consequently, the non-singlet evolution equations are diagonal and have the same kernel /^(.-E). This kernel also enters the singlet equation. The QCD splitting functions differ from the QED case (2.8.117) only by the group-theoretical factors and the contribution of the gluon self-couplings. At two-loop order the singlet contributions Pq(f1' and P^f 1 ^ are non-zero but obey the relation Pqq 1 ^ = equations still are diagonal.
''. Therefore, the non-singlet evolution
As the strong fine-structure constant a s is not small in the complete region, higher-order approximations give a significant contribution. The t oloop splitting functions are known [Cu80, Fu80a, Fu82j. A complete secondorder calculation for deep-inelastic scattering was performed in Refs. [Ma90, vN91, Zi91, Zi92] both in the MS and the DIS (deep-inelastic scattering) scheme including non-leading terms.10 In this calculation also the one-loop corrections to the Wilson coefficients [Ba78, FI79] enter. The evolution equations (3.2.88), (3.2.96) [or (3.2.101)] and (3.2.104) describe the QCD corrections to deep-inelastic lcpton nucleon scattering in a l0
T h c DIS scheme is defined such that the simple parton model is exact at the renormali'/ation point. The conversion formulas between the diiTerent schemes are given in Sect. 3.3.2.
4 6 4
3
Q u a n t u m
C h r o t n o d y n a m i c s
concentrated form. The solution of the evolution equations can be approximated by suitable expressions with free parameters for fqrtf[x,t), Jq,A/{x,t), and / g ( jv(i, i). These have the typical form J(x, t) = C(t)xa^{i
- x ) W [ l -1- c(/.)v/i + d(t)x], (3.2.105)
where C, a, b, c, and d are expanded in power series in t. Fitting these parameters to experiment, while respecting the QCD sum rules, one obtains phenomenologically useful, (¿"'-dependent parton distribution Junctions (cf. [G198, LaOO, MaOO] and references therein). 3.2.4
E x p e r i m e n t a l t e s t s of Q C D
A huge amount of experimental results for deep-inelastic lepton-nucleon scattering is available from SLAC, CERN, Fermilab, and HERA. They cover a wide range of x and Q2 values, namely 0.00002 < re < 0.85,
1 GeV2 < Q2 < 30000 GeV2,
and have attained a very high degree of accuracy. A detailed discussion of these results and the corresponding theoretical QCD calculations is not possible in this book. Instead, we restrict ourselves to the discussion of some important results in order to give an impression of the quality of the applications of QCD in this field. A comparison between the experimental data of the nucleón structure Junction F 2 ( X , Q 2 ) and the solution of the evolution equation in next-toleading order with parton distribution functions fitted at the initial scale Q2 = 4GeV 2 , and using a fixed value of the strong fine-structure constant as(M2) = 0.118 is shown in Fig. 3.4 [F199]. The data agree impressively with the QCD prediction. This is also the case for high energies in the small x region where no deviation of the next-to-leading order QCD prediction is seen. Note, however, that the figure does not show the scaling violations and the comparably large experimental errors at large x. For a review see Ref. [St95], for a compilation of recent data Ref. [PDG00]. Combining the results of these experiments in a suitable way, it is possible to determine the parlón distribution Junctions Jijj{x,Q2). Results are available for the valence-quark densities Ju,v{x, Q2) and Jd,v(x,Q2), but also for
3.2
( . ¿ C I )
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
s c a t t e r i n g
'If»!)
(f/cW
Fig. 3.4 The proton structure function F 2 ( x , Q 2 ) for 1 GeV 2 < Q 2 < 30000 GeV 2 and 0.00002 < x < 0.65. The line is a next-to-leading order QCD fit (from Ref. [F199]). For display purposes c(x) = O.G(«(x) — O.-l), i(x) — 1 , . . . , 24 is added to Fj each time the value of i is increased.
antiquark densities and the distribution of strange and charmed quarks in the proton. The gluon distribution Junction fgj>(x, Q2) dominates at small x although it enters the experimental results only in next-to-leading order. As an example, the results on the parton distribution functions from the MRST collaboration [Ma98] are shown in Fig. 3.5. The valence quarks u and d are most important at x > 0.1. The sea quarks contribute at smaller values of x, and the gluon dominates for x < 0.1. The probability of carrying
432
3
Q u a n t u m
G h r o m o d y t i a i n i c s
X
Fig. 3.5 The parton distribution functions f,,p(x, 2), denoted by the parton symbols (u,d, g), for Q a = 20 GeV 2 (from Ref. (Ma98])
a large momentum fraction x decreases for the single parton. Therefore, the parton distribution functions must decrease at large x with increasing 2. Because of momentum conservation they increase for small x. 2xF\ vanishes in the quark The longitudinal structure unction F\, = parton model (cf. Sect. 1.5.3.1). Owing to higher-order corrections it is no longer equal to zero in QCD but is given by
+ 4 E ^ 0 ~ ; ) zhMz>Q2)
the at the one-loop level [A178, G178].
(3.2.106)
3.2
(.¿CI)
in
d e e p - i n e l a s t i c
s c a t t e r i n g
'If»!)
Tim C>(a;*) corrections have been calculated in R.ef. [vN!)l, Zi91, Zi92, MoOO]. Tin- measurements of the ratio R = F\j2xF\ are in agreement with the QCD |.i«diction [Ar97, YaOO].
3,2.4.1
The Q C D scale parameter A
I'hu evolution of the structure functions with QA depends on the scale pauimeter AQCD- R s value in the MS scheme, taking into account four quark llavours and three-loop corrections, is [Sa99] A ^ = 282.7 ± 25.1(stat.) ± 24.5(syst.) MeV,
(3.2.107)
corresponding to a s ( M | ) = 0.1172 ± 0.0017(stat.) ± 0.0017(syst.).
3.2.4.2
(3.2.108)
Sum rules
We have presented the different parton-model sum rules and their tests already in Sect. 1.5. The two-loop QCD corrections have been calculated to most of them and are necessary to find agreement between the predictions and experiment.
3.2.4.3
Polarized deep-inelastic scattering
Results for polarized deep-inelastic electron nucleoli scattering have become available recently. The measured quantity is the nucleoli spin asymmetry"
which depends on the spin-dependent, structure functions g\;i{x,Q2). These are defined by decomposing the hadronic tensor for polarized deep-inelastic 'The first arrow denotes the lepton spin, the second the nucléon spin.
4 5 8
.'5
Q u a n t u m
C h r o m o d y u a m i c s
lepton- liucleon scattering as (we restrict ourselves here to the photon contribution) wv(P>) = - a ' l M ^ Q 2 ) + pq
Vj
i uupoQ
~f2[x,Q2) \
(3.2.110) (
J
where s denotes the spin vector of the nucleoli with the properties sp = 0 and s 2 = — 1. The nucleoli spin is composed of the spins of the valence quarks, the sea quarks, the gluons, and the orbital angular momenta. In the naive parton model only the contribution of the valence quark spin is taken into account. Then, the structure functions g\ depend on the difference of the distribu|
tion functions for quarks with spin up and spin down A = For electromagnetic deep-inelastic scattering this gives 9V"{*) = \
+
|
— fqr\r-
=
(3.2.111)
q
The QCD corrections to this parton-model result can be obtained from 2 evolution equations for A q j s f ( x , 2 ) and jf(x, ) of the form (3.2.88) with the lo est-order polarized splitting functions [A177] if(x)
=
qq(x)
=C
^(x)=TF(2x-l), APff(x) = C F ( 2 - x ) ,
(3.2.112) Taking input data and an ansatz as in (3.2.105), predictions for the 2 dependence of gi(x, 2) can be made (again CF = 4/3, TF 1/2, and C,\ - 3 for QCD). The t o-loop polarized splitting functions are also known [Me96, Vo96]. From the experimental data it turns out. that approximately only one third of the nucleoli spin is carried by the valence quarks [Kr99] (spin crisis [Le88]).
3.3
crl u r l m l i v c
Q u a n t u m
C h r o m o d y n a m i c s
4 6 9
However, because of the axial anomaly (cf. Sect. 2.7), the spin densities of the corresponding constituent and parton quarks do not have to he equal. Hie possible contribution of the gluons to the quark spin function may cure this defect [A197]. The spin structure of the nucleons is also tested by the lor the spin asymmetry [I3j66], 5bj = f
dx [9f{x,)-g?{x,&)]
=
jor en sum rule
1 — —^ { 7T / <7v | ^
—
l
-
where g\j and
~ ,xx+4> (/>+
ZZrpi
W+W-J]7)
ZZxx
W+W~xx
AA(/>+(f)~ ZA
w+w~4>+c
.2.11
1 2F
1 2c'sl
W±A
C
SSS vertex
F4
2
W±Z4FT] 1 2c
C2-
c2-
2
W±Z
2
2c
.
.2.1
F
VSS vertex 2
S\,k\
Si ieC
s
.2.12
\
.2.1
= ieC{ki - k2),l
a S2,k2 with the actual values of Si, S2, S3, and C
with the actual values of V, S\, S2, and C S\S2Si c
wv vxx, . . I 2s w 2s v
A(j>+(jr
2
.2.1 C
i 2ca
-1
z
r i 2s
.2.1
7G2
A Appendix
SVV
vertex:
(A.2.18)
= 1e g ^ C V2,„
with tlie actual values of S, Vj, V2, and C VZZ
V2
(¡¿W^A
C
-Mw
^W^Z
(A.2.19)
-§Mw
VFF vertex:
with the actual values of V, F\, F>, Cn, and C\,
A/i/j cr,
W ,
W+xiidj
i K -t. v/2s J'
-Q/^tj
CR
W'ljWi
ly-JjUi
(JfSij
0
0
0
0 (A.2.21)
where
c
3]
sc
(A.2.22)
A.2
Feynirian rule for Lho
The vector and axial-vector
Vf = a
f
SFF
=
2 ( ,+ p (»/
leetroweak Standard Model
couplings of the
7M
-boson are given by
2sc
=
(A.2.2. )
— j ) = 2 sc
vertex:
=
(A.2.24)
with the actual values of S, F\, /' >, C'a, and C\,
S FyF2 CL
6
Vfifj
I "/..x 2.5 A/w
fifj 3 L o / '^LLS 2s w,/ M v i 2/3 'JLLiS0 2* w,f My, '
>+ ilj
0
1 "" ) A/w
JLHILL
2s Aiw -
A/w
.
0
1/
A/w "«
(f> djUi J L ^ I /
/2.s + / 21s
1
Aiw "iiii u t/d Aiw 1
(A.2.25)
il
ppendix
V GG vertex G\,k\
x
ie i tC
\
.2.2
G 2, k-2 with the actual values of V, G\, G2, and C VG,G2
Au u
u Tfi «
c
1
1
TfiTu 2
.2.2
s
SGG vertex
G\ S
eCix
.2.2
v.
G* with 1 G , G 2 , and C . G1 2
for
1
. ux, respectively, and the actual values of S,
Huzuz
C (fy^U^V? 2
G,G2
C
i
w
.2.2 ab w
s [EP]
Elementary particle physics: D. Griffiths, Introduction to lementary Particle Physics, (John Wiley & Sons, New York, etc., 1987); E. Lohnnann, llochenergiephysik, (Teubner, Stuttgart, 1992); D.H. Perkins, Introduction to High- nergy Physics, (Addison-Wesley, Menlo Park, 1987); YV.B. Rolnick, The Fundamental Particles and their Interactions, (Addison-Wesley, Reading, Massachusetts, 1994).
[E\V]
Electroweak interaction: E.D. Commins and P.H. Bucksbauin, Weak Interactions of Leptons and Quarks, (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1983); K. Grotz and U.V. Klapdor, The Weak Interaction in Nuclear, Particle and Astrophysics, (Hilger, Bristol, etc., 1990); P. Renton, lectroweak Interactions: an Introduction to the Physics of Quarksand Leptons, (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1990).
[FT]
Field theory: J.D. Bjorken and S. Drell, elativistic Quantum Mech anics/ ela t i vis tic Quantum Fields, (McGraw-Ilill, New York, 1964); C. Itzykson and J.B. Zuber, Quantum Field Theory, (McGraw- Hill, New York, 1980); C. Kaku, Quantum Field Theory, (Oxford University Press, New York, Oxford, 1993); T. Kugo, ichtheorie, (Springer, Berlin, etc., 1997); M.E. Peskin and D.V. Schroedcr, An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory, (Addison-Wesley, Reading, Massachusetts, 1995); S. Pokorski, Gauge Field Theories, (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000); S. Weinberg, The Quantum Theory of Fields, Vol. 1 and 2, (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1995).
[GSW]
Glashow-Salam- Weinberg theory: E.S. Abers and B.W. Lec, Phys. ept. 9 (1973) 1; J.C. Taylor, Gauge Theories of Weak interactions, (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1976); D. Bardin and G. Passarino, The Standard Model in the Making, (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1999).
766
eneral references
T
roup theory: . eorgi, i i i i : i ii i (Benjamin/Cumnnngs, eading, Massachusetts, 1 2); M. amcrmesh, i i i i (Addison esley, eading, Massachusetts, 1 62); .B. Lichtenberg, i i (Academic Press, ew ork, 1 7 ); B. . ybourne, i i i ( ohn iley Sons, ew ork, 1 74). T
rand nified Theories: P. Langacker, i 72 (1 . . oss, ii Massachusetts, 1 4).
1) 1 5; i (Benjamin-Cummings,
eading,
uantum lectrodynamics: . . Bjorken and S. rcll, i i i i i i i uantum Fields, (Mc raw- ill, ew ork, 1 64); .M. auch and F. ohrlich, (Springer, Berlin, 1 76); T. inoshita, i ( orld Scientific, Singapore, 1 0). StM
Statistical Mechanics: .P. Feyiunan, i i i : ( .A. Benjamin Inc., eading, Massachusetts, 1 72); . . Popov, i i i i i i i ( . eidel Publishing Company, ordrecht, etc., 1 3); . inn-. ustin, i ii ( xford niversity Press, xford, 1 ).
S S
Supcrsymmetry: P. Fayet and S. Ferrara, 32 (1 77) 24 ; . . II aber and .L. ane, (1 5) 75; II.P. illes, 110 (1 4) 1; . ess and . Bagger, i niversity Press, Princeton, ew ersey, 1 2).
LAT
(Princeton
Lattice gauge theory: M. Creutz, i (Cambridge niversity Press, Cambridge, 1 3); I. Montvay and . Münster, i i (Cambridge niversity Press, Cambridge, 1 4); II..I. othe, i i : an i ( orld Scientific, Singapore, etc., 1 7).
abclian dominance, 543, 549 Abrikosov-Nielsen Olesen string, 536-540 Adler sum rule, 70 a s , sec fine-structure constant, strong Altarelli-Parisi equation, 459 anomalous dimension, 253 background gauge field, 264 ferinion field, 261 gauge parameter, 435 gauge-boson field, 261 gluon field, 263 quark field, 263 quark mass, 434 quark propagator, 429 Wilson operator, 454 458 anomalous magnetic moment, 77 anomaly, 28, 268-285
approximation leading-logarithmic, 315, 429, 480 quenched, 413, 519 semi-classical, 12G, 328, 347 349 soft-photon, 295 strong-coupling, 385-390, 534-535 tree-graph, 77, 126 asymmetry, forward-backward, 690, 703 asymptotic freedom, 259 of non-abelian gauge theory, 201 of QGD, 427-435 asymptotic scale parameter, sec also A parameter of QCD, 428, 431, 467, 520, 555 asymptotic scaling, 403, 519 autocorrelation, 393 axial gauge, 311 axial-vector coupling, 59, 763 effective, 685, 695
and gauge field, 280 281 and index theorem, 375-377 cancellation, 281-283 freedom of SO(10) GUT, 732 freedom of SU(5) GUT, 727 freedom of EWSM, 283 in gauge theory, 279 285 in massless QGD, 510 non-rcnormalization theorem of, 283 safe group, 282 safe representation, 282 structure in gauge theory, 284-285 triangle graph, 269-277 Wess-Zumino condition, 285 antiinstanton, 3116
767
background-field method, 178-188 and instantons, 349-351 and renormalization, 206 and S matrix, 184 185 /?-function, 264-265 EWSM, 638-642, 666 668 Feynman rules, 186 -188 gauge fixing, 179 EWSM, 638 Green function, 180-184 't Hooft gauge, 639, 640 vertex functional, 181 Ward identity, 182, 639 642 bare parameter, 188
768
Index
baryon, 3 number, 3 violation, 722, 723, 728 spectrum in quark model, 34 wave function, 31 35 Becclii llouet, Stora transformation, see BRS transformation ¿¡-function, 253 background-field method, 264-265 GUT, 719 massless gauge theory, 261 QGD, 263 QED, 262 Bethe-Salpeter amplitude, 101-103 Bhabha scattering, 703 Bianchi identity, 140 Bjorken limit, 63, 438 Bjorken scaling, 63 Bjorken sum rule, 469 Bloch Nordsieck theorem, 294, 305 bremsstrahlung, 692 gluon, 435, 473, 487, 489, 689 photon, 689 collinear, 305-310 soft, 294-297 BRS charge, 165, 239, 251 BRS current, 165 BRS operator, 162 BRS symmetry, 162 165 EWSM, 625-627 BRS transformation, 162, 164 EWSM, 625 Cabibbo angle, 50 Gallan Gross relation, 66, 69, 413 Callan Symanzik equation, 255 canonical ensemble, 391 canonical quantization, 118, 365, 397 Casimir operator, 19 causality, 8, 87 charge BRS, 165, 239, 251 conjugation, 725
matrix, 725, 745 symmetry, 441, 461 conserved, 27, 88 operator, 18, 27, 725 quantization in GUTs, 719, 727 renormalization, 203, 659, 665 SU(2)W x U(l)y, 43 universality EWSM, 642-646, 660 QED, 204, 642 weak,43 charge-conjugate field. 725 chargino, 736 Chern class, 328, 337-339, 369 chiral condensate, 373 chiral limit, 507 chiral multiplet, 733 chiral perturbation theory, 507-518 applications, 516-518 decay constants, 517-518 meson masses, 516-517 chiral symmetry, 507 breaking, 509, 513-515 effective Lagrangian, 512, 514 on the lattice, 411 chromo-electric Meissner effect, 540-543, 549-551 cluster decomposition, 98, 365 cocycle condition, 337 Coleman-Mandula theorem, 732 collinear emission electron, 315-318, 325-328 gluon, 473 massless gauge boson, 459 photon, 305-315, 699 collinear singularity, see singularity, collinear colour, 3, 35, 81, 426 group, 24 quark, 73 screening, 547
Index
commutation relation creation and annihilation operators, 7 equal time, 27 fermion field operators, 9 field operators, 8 Lie algebra, 18 space-like, 87 commutator, current, 437, 495 composite operator, 133, 449 composite particle scattering, 101-104 condensate, 373 chiral, 373 gluon, 373 magnetic monopole, 549, 551 quark, 509, 514 confinement, 39, 81, 529-554 dynamical quarks, 547-548 potential, 38, 39, 530 531 string picture, 536-548 strong-coupling approximation, 534-535 Wilson criterion, 531, 535 connected graph, 97 connected Green function, .sec Green function, connected continuum limit, 397-404 correlation length, 384 Coulomb phase, 299 Coulomb potential, 534 gluon exchange, 38 Wilson definition, 532-534 counterterm, 191, 652 Lagrangian, 191 recursive construction, 232-235 structure, 199 coupling axial-vector, 59 electromagnetic, 10 fermion gauge boson, 41-42 gauge, 145, 146, 592 scalar, 145, 595, 615, 760
76?)
strong, 147, 427 vector, 59 Yukawa, 145, 594, 763 covariant derivative, 135, 138, 140 CP violation, 51 strong, 377 creation and annihilation operators, 7 on the lattice, 398 critical point, 400 critical slowing down, 404 cross section differential, 11-12, 751 c+e- -> / / , 54, 691 radiative correction, 697 + e e~ -> hadrons, 72, 494 197 e + c~ jets, 488-494 + e e~ -> /¿+/z~, 18, 55 e + e~ i/cj>cII, 619 e+eW+W", 607 + e e~ ZH, 618 619 inclusive, 58 lepton-parton, 65-66 symmetry factor, 12 total, 18 current algebra, 28, 508 axial-vector, 269, 508 BRS, 165 charged, 42, 48, 439 commutator, 437, 495 conserved, 25, 26 covariantly, 270 in gauge theory, 269 eikonal, 302 electromagnetic, 16, 42, 439 hadronic, 47-49 left-handed, 270 neutral, 42, 48, 439 Noether, 26, 132 quark, 47-49 right-handed, 270 vector, 269, 508
770
Index
weak, '12, 439 cut-off parameter, 190 decay width, 12 /¿, 4G, 675 Iliggs boson, 620-622 7T° -> 27, 36, 275-277 W boson, 53, 688-689 Z boson, 52, 684 688 deep-inelastic scattering, 57 in parton model, 57-76 in QCD, 435-469 polarized, 467-469 detailed balance, 392 DGLAP equation, 459 dilogaritluu, 215 dimension of fields, 195 dimensional regularization, 192, 208 collinear singularity, 487 Dirac algebra, 215 III singularity, 225, 472 metric tensor, 215 dimensional transmutation, 403, 428 Dirac algebra, 9, 744 in dimensional regularization, 215 Dirac equation, 9, 134 gaugc-covariant, 138 in instanton background, 342 in momentum space, 747 on the lattice, 406 on the torus, 340 Dirac matrix, 9, 744 euclidean, 750 in D dimensions, 747 Dirac operator euclidean, 344, 375, 750 Dirac propagator, 91 Dirac spin matrix, 745 Dirac spinor, 747 normalization, 748 polarization sum, 749 YVeyl representation, 308 Dirac trace, 747
Dirac zero mode, 328, 340 344, 363-365 Dirac-Kahler equation, 410 dispersion relation, 678 distribution function evolution equation, 324 325, 459 field-theoretical definition, 444 gluon, 461, 465 parton, 64, 72, 464 QCD, 459, 476 QED, 321, 323, 700 quark, 67, 444, 446, 459, 464 scheme dependence, 477 spin-dependent, 468 with definite charge-conjugation parity, 461 divergence, see also singularity and renormalization, 188 207 primitive, 194 superficial degree of, 192 195 ultraviolet, 192 Drell Yan process QCD corrections, 485-488 dual field-strength, 332 dual gauge theory, 542, 549 Durham algorithm, 491 Dynkin index, 20 Dyson re-summation, 641, 694, 697 effective action, 113 gauge-invariant, 182 effective Lagrangian chiral symmetry, 512, 514 gauge theory, 154 GUT, 728 effective weak mixing angle, 685, 689 eikonal current, 302 electric charge, see charge electromagnetic coupling, 10 running, 677 electromagnetic current, 1U, 16, 42, 439 electromagnetic field-strength tensor, 10, 135
Iudex
electromagnetic interaction collinear singularity, 292, 305-328 infrared singularity, 291, 294-305 Lagrangian, 10 electron, 2 field renormalization, 202, 225, 312, 313 magnetic moment, 77 mass renormalization, 202, 224 self-energy, 77, 221, 311 electron-positron annihilation into fermion pairs, 18, 53, 690-704 into hadrons, 72, 494-497 into jets, 488-494 into muon pairs, 16-18 into jets, 490 into W pairs, 604-613 into Z boson, 690-704 into Zll, 616-619 electroweak interaction, 39 57 Lagrangian, 56 of hadrons, 47-51 of leptons, 41-46 universality, 41 Electroweak Standard Model, see EWSM elementary charge, 10, 600 equation of motion, 9, 127 for Green function, 129 equivalent-photon approximation, 318 ergodicity, 392 local, 396 euclidean coordinates, 750 euclidean Dirac matrix, 750 euclidean Dirac operator, 344, 375, 750 euclidean field theory, 120 121 euclidean Green function, 120, 533 euclidean path integral, 120 121,383
771
evolution equation QCD, 458 -464 QED, 324-325 EWSM, 566, 591-604 anomaly cancellation, 283 applications, 601 622 axial-vector coupling, 763 effective, 685, 695 background-field method, 638-642 charge universality, 642 646 counterterm, 651, 652 experimental test, 683 fermion mass, 599 Feynman rules, 758 764 gauge fixing, 622 background-field method, 63 K gauge transformation, 595 Lagrangian, 592-601 fermion part, 593 gauge part, 592 Iliggs part, 594 in physical basis, 596 604 Lee identity, 630 637 physical field, 597- 600, 627, 631 physical Lagrangian, 600 604 physical parameter, 597-600 precision test, 704-708 quantization, 622 651 radiative corrections, 671 704 higher-order, 681 683, 688, 704 renormalization, 651 671 renormalization condition, 655-661 renormalization constant, 652-654,661 666 Slavnov-Taylor ident ity, 628 630 spontaneous symmetry brooking, 59(> vector coupling, 763 elle. live, 686, 695
772
Index
Yukawa interaction, 594 factorization, 476 -484 scheme, 477 PIS, 478, 488 MS, 477, 487 Faddeev Popov determinant, 152 Faddeev-Popov field, 154, 622 Faddeev Popov method, 150-156 for zero mode, 358-359 Faddeev Popov-ghost propagator, 160
Fermi constant, see also inuon decay constant, 45 definition, 675 Fermi model, 39, 45, 198, 675 fermion mass, 599 propagator, 15, 160, 195, 754, 755 fermion integration, 109-110 in path integral, 119, 363 Feynman dagger, 9, 744 Feynman gauge, 92, 160, 198, 261 Feynman graph, 13 Feynman parametrization, 213 Feynman patii integral, see also path integral, 116 Feynman propagator, 14, 90, 106, 117 Feynman rules, 13-16, 755-757 background-field method, 186-188
EWSM, 758-764 for Green function, 93 from path integral, 122 125 gauge theory, 157-161 in configuration space, 122-124 in momentum space, 124-125 QGD, 160-161 QED, 13-16 symmetry factor, 15, 124, 756 fibre bundle, 143, 334 principle, 338
field, 8 dimension, 195 Faddeev -Popov ghost, 154 fermion, 9, 119 on the lattice, 406-414 gauge, 135, 137 on the lattice, 380-382 gluon, 147 Nakanishi -Lautrup, 164 operator, 8, 87 point, 93 quark, 147 scalar, 8 vector boson, 91 field-strength tensor, 139 dual, 332 electromagnetic, 10, 135 non-abelian, 139 of QCD, 147 on the lattice, 381 Fierz identity, 746 fine-structure constant, 10, 220 strong, 39, 227, 428, 432, 527-529,554 556, 706 finite-size effects, 404-405 fixed point, 258 flavour, 3 group, 24, 441 non-singlet, 441, 451, 461 singlet, 441, 452, 461 flavour-spin symmetry, 498, 503 flux function, 701 flux quantization, 539 on the torus, 329-331 Foldy-Wouthuysen transformation, 501 forward- backward asymmetry, 690, 703 four-fermion interaction, 39, 198, 722 four-fermion processes, 44-45 fragmentation function, 72, 74-76 QCD, 470, 485 Fubini formula, 110
Iudex
functional, 105 calculus, 104-111 differentiation, 105, 110 generating, see generating functional integral, sec also path integral, 107 Jacobi determinant, 108 r (Euler's Gamma function), 210 7 (Euler constant), 211 7 matrix, sec Dirac matrix 7s, 744 in dimensional regularization, 278-279 gauge, sec also gauge fixing axial, 311 background-field, 179 Feynman, 92, 160, 198, 261 Landau, 160, 261, 645 Lorentz, 152, 154, 245 maximal abelian, 549 't Hooft, 584, 586, 622, 639, 640 't Hooft-Feynman, 624 temporal, 142, 366, 369, 537 unitary, 582, 597 gauge boson, 5, 144 propagator, 159, 160, 585, 603, 623, 624, 755 gauge coupling, 145, 146, 592 gauge field, 135 as connection, 137 on the lattice, 380 382 gauge fixing, 150 153 EWSM, 622 background-field method, 638 functional, 150, 152, 630 gauge invariancc, 133 148 QED, 134 136 gauge potential, see gauge field gauge theory, 143 148 Feynman rules, 157 161 for scalar», 144 Lagrangian, I I I
773
effective, 154 non-perturbative aspects, 328 378 of electroweak interaction, 148, 566-708 of strong interaction, 146 on the lattice, 379-414 one-loop renormalization, 219-231 physical field, 241, 245 physical source, 242 physical state, 238-246 quantization, 149 156, 584 587 renormalization, 231 -238 renormalized action, 235 238 with spontaneous symmetry breaking, 580-591 quantization, 584-587 gauge transformation abelian, 136 global, 134 in EWSM, 595 large, 366 local, 134 of gauge field, 138-140 of matter field, 136 small, 366 gauge-invariant effective action, 182 gaugino, 736 Gell-Mann matrix, 20 Gcll-Mann-Nishijima relation, 43, 592, 725 generating functional, 105 for connected Green function, 111-112, 181, 183, 752 for Green function, 104, 111-116, 751-754 background-field, 180-184 for vertex function, 113 114, 181, 183, 233, 753 free Dirac field, 111 free scalar field, 106 non-abelian gauge theory, 155
774
Index
QED, 156 Slavnov-Taylor identity, 167 ghost field, 154, 622 ghost number, 162 GIM mechanism, 49 Gin-/,burg-Landau Lagrangian, 536 Glashow-Salam-Weinberg theory, see EWSM glue ball, 524-526 mass, 525 quantum number, 524 gluino, 736 gluon, 5, 81, 426 bremsstrahlung, 473, 487, 489, 689 condensate, 373 distribution function, 461, 465 field, 147 jet, 489 propagator, 160 structure function, 475 virtual, 458 Goldstone boson, 509, 570 Goldstone field, 570, 572 Goldstone model, 568-570 gauged, 580-583 Goldstone theorem, 571-573 quantized theory, 574-576 Goldstone-boson equivalence theorem, 642, 646 651 Gordon identity, 749 Gottfried sum rule, 70 graded algebra, 733 grand unification, see GUT graph connected, 97 structural, 100 vertex, 99 Grassmann algebra, 108 Grassmann variable, differentiation, 109 Green function, 88 104, 751-754 and S matrix, 95 96
background-field, 180 184 connected, 97 99, 111-112, 752 background-field, 181, 183, 640 convention for, 751 definition, 89 equation of motion, 129 euclidean, 120, 533 Feynman rules for, 93 for free fields, 89 generating functional, 111-116, 751-754 momentum space, 752 one-particle (ir)reducible, see also vertex function, 99-101 path-integral representation, 118 pole, 102 renormalization, 191 Slavnov-Taylor identity, 168-170 truncated, 95, 752 vacuum structure. 98 Ward identity, 131, 133 Gross Llewellyn Smith sum rule, 70 GUT, 717-732 SO(IO), 731 SU(5), 723 732 SUSY, 738 hadron, 3 electroweak interaction, 47 51 inclusive production, 74 spectrum from lattice QCD, 519-524 in quark model, 29-39 hadronic tensor, 60, 436, 495 hadronization, 494 heat kernel, 344, 354 equation, 344 regularization, 377 heat-bath algorithm, 395-397 heavy-quark effective theory, 497-507 applications, 504-506
Iudex
expansion, 500 -502 Feynman rules, 502 Lagrangian, 498-502 matrix elements, 504- 506 symmetry, 498, 502-504 hierarchy problem, 723, 735, 737 Higgs boson, 583, 597 decay, 620 622 mass, 597, 614-615, 706 MSSM, 737 production, 616-620 SU(5), 730 Higgs field, 567, 581, 583, 597 Higgs mechanism, 567, 580 -583, 591 Higgsino, 736 hypercharge strong, 24 weak, 43, 591, 592, 719 improved Born approximation, 697 inclusive cross section, 58 index density, 375 index theorem, 328, 339-347 and anomaly, 375-377 proof, 344-347 infrared (IR) singularity, see singularity, infrared infrared safety, 476 instanton, 329-337 contribution to vacuum-to-vacuum transition, 349-362 lattice results, 552-553 on the torus, 331 potential, 334 SU(2), on the sphere, 331-337 invariant matrix element, 11, 751 Isgur-Wise function, 505 isospin strong, 24 weak, 43, 591, 592 .Jacobi identity, 19 JADE algorithm, 490 493
775
jets, 73, 81, 489 494 Kadanoff-Wilson renormal ization-grou]» theory, 400 Kinoshita Lee Nauenberg (KLN) theorem, 294, 327, 495 Klein-Gordon equation, 8 gauge-covariant, 138, 145 Kobayashi Maskawa matrix, see quark-mixing matrix ladder diagram, 480 Lagrangian, 9 background field, 179 effective for gauge theory, 154 effective for pious, 511 EWSM, 592-604 Faddeev-Popov ghost, 154, 161 background-field, 180 formalism, 9 gauge-fixing, 153-154, 164 gauge theory, 144 quantized, 154 heavy-quark, 498-502 QCD, 147 quantized, 157 QED, 10, 135 quantized, 156 Yang-Mills, 144 quantized, 154 A matrix, 20 A parameter of QCD, see also asymptotic scale parameter, 431, 432, 528 Landau equations, 288, 290 Landau gauge, 160, 261, 645 Landau singularity, 285, 288 lattice, 379-382 and string picture, 543-546 approximation, 379-414 fermions, 406-414 free field, 397-399 continuum limit, 397-404
776
Index
determination of a 3 , 526-529 Dirac equation, 406 error estimates, 393 field strength, 381 finite-size effects, 404-405 Fourier transformation, 398 gauge field, 380-382 gauge theory, 379-414 graph, 386 instanton on the, 552-553 link, 379 numerical methods, 390 397 perturbation theory, 399 physical quantities on the, 383 plaquette, 380 point, 379 QCD, 518-529 quenched approximation, 413, 519 strange-quark mass, 523 thermodynamic limit, 389 transition to the continuum, 402 leading-logarithmic (LL) approximation, 305, 315, 429, 180 Lee identity, 171-172, 232-235 EWSM, 630-637 left derivative, 109 left-handed current, 270, 508 left-handed Dirac field, 43, 270, 345, 593 lepton, 2 electroweak interaction, 41-46 number, 2 violation, 728 quantum numbers, 2 lepton-pair production QCD corrections, 485 488 leptonic tensor, 17, 60 leptoquark, 725 Levi-Civita tensor, 19, 743, 744, 750 Lie algebra, 18-21 Casimir operator, 19
generator, 18 Jacobi identity, 19 rank, 19 representation, 19 adjoint, 21 complex and real, 572 dimension of, 19 Dynkin index, 20 fundamental, 19 irreducible, 19 structure constant, 19 Lie group, see also Lie algebra, 21-24 centre, 22 colour SU(3)c, 24 flavour SU(JVF), 24 llaar measure, 22-23 rank, 19 SU(2)W x U(l)y, 24, 43, 81, 591, 592 SU(3)c x SU(2)W x U(1) K , 717 SU(5), 724 SU(/Vf) x SU(jVf), 508 light cone, 90, 438, 444 London limit, 539 longitudinal structure function, 437, 466 looj) diagram, 77 loop expansion, 125-127 loop integral, 15, 207, 211, 756 Lorentz gauge, 152, 154, 245 Lorentz transformation, 6, 87 Lorentz vector, 742 LSZ factor, 95 LSZ formula, see also reduction formula, 95, 103 Luke's theorem, 506 Majorana spinor, 733 Mandelstam variable, 16, 58, 489, 605 Markov process, 392 mass fermion, 599 glue ball, 525
I in lex
Higgs boson, 597, 614 -615, 706 quark, 3, 432-434, 517, 521 top quark, 684, 706 YV boson, 5, 45, 598, 706 Z boson, 5, 45, 598, 696 mass renormalization EWSM, 655, 662 QCD, 432 QED, 224 unstable particle, 668 671 mass singularity, see singularity, mass matrix Dirac, 9, 744 Gell-Mann, 20 Pauli, 20, 744 quark-mixing, 48-51 maximal abelian gauge, 549 Maxwell equation, 10 generalized, 145 Meissner effect, 540-543 Mellin moments, 446, 460 Mellin transformation, 355, 479 inverse, 355 meson, 3 heavy masses, 504 masses from chiral perturbation theory, 516-517 spectrum in quark model, 31 wave function, 30-31 metric tensor, 742 euclidean, 750 in D dimensions, 215 Metropolis algorithm, 394 minimal gauge-invariant coupling, 136, 718 minimal subtraction scheme, sec renormalization scheme, MS Minimal Snpersymmetric Standard Model, 736- 738 MOM scheme, see renormalization scheme, MOM
777
moments Mellin, 446, 460 nucleón structure function, 446, 449, 452, 479-480, 484 quark distribution function, 446, 459 structure function, 446, 449 Monte Carlo integration, 390 MS (MS) scheme, see renormalization scheme, MS (MS) ¡i (parameter of dimensional regularization), 208 multiplicative convolution, 324, 476 muon, 2 decay, 46, 675 radiative corrections, 675 683 decay constant, 45, 46, 602 definition, 675 lifetime, 675 magnetic moment, 78 it-vacuum, 366 Nakanishi-Lautrup field, 164, 626 neutralino, 736 Nielsen-Olesen string, 536-540 Nielson Ninomiya theorem, 411 Noether current, 26, 132 Noether's theorem, 25-27 non-abelian gauge theory, 143-148 generating functional, 155 renormalizability, 198 renormalization, 204-206 non-linear a model, 512 massive, 514 non-renormalization theorem, 735 normal ordering, 115 nucleón structure function, 67, 464 factorization, 476 moments, 446, 479-480 leading logarithms, 484 off(on)-shell particle, 96
778
Index
one-loop diagram, 77 evaluation, 207-219 one-particle (ir)reducible, 99 one-particle state, 6, 751 operator-product expansion, 440 higher order, 447-449 optical theorem, 695 order parameter, 509, 541, 568, 569 parallel displacement, 137 finite, 141 on the lattice, 381 parton, 57, 63, 81 cross section, 72 distribution function, 64, 67, 72, 464, 466, 476, 477 fragmentation function, 72, 74-76, 470, 485 momentum, 71 shower, 494 spin, 69 structure function, 67, 176, 477, 480 parton model. 57 76 applications, 68-72 field-theoretical, 436 446 formulation, 63 68 QCD corrections, 447-458, 470 484 sum rules, 69 71 universality, 72 path integral, 116 133 and topology, 347-349 euclidean, 120 121, 383 fermion integration in, 119 Fcynman rules from, 122 127 for free fields, 116-118 for gauge theory, 148-177 for Green function, 118 for interacting fields, 118 for S matrix, 115 on the lattice, 383 quantization, 116-119 of gauge theory, 149-156
Ward identity, 127-133 path ordering, 141 Pauli identity, 746 Pauli matrix, 20, 744 Pauli-Villars regularization, 272, 353 PCAC hypothesis, 276, 509, 522 perturbative QCD, 469- 497 (f)3 interaction, 757 <j>x interaction, 756 photon, 5 bremsstrahlung, 689 field, 10 renormalization, 201, 223 propagator, 15, 173, 201 self-energy, 77, 219, 672 splitting, 318 photon-fermion coupling, 599 physical field EWSM, 597-600, 627, 631 in gauge theory, 241, 245 physical source, 242 physical state, 92 in gauge theory, 238-246 pion decay, 275 277 pion-pole dominance, 510 Planck scale, 721 plaquette, 380 (+)-distribution, 314, 460 polarization sum Dirac spinor, 749 polarization vector, 749 polarization vector, 245-246, 749 pole of Green function, 102 Pontryagin density, 280, 334 Pontryagin number, 334 potential confinement, 38, 39, 530-531 Coulomb, 38, 534 Higgs, 594, 604 model, 37-39 quark-(anti)quark, 38 power counting, 193 primitive divergence, 194
Index
propagator EWSM, 758 Faddeev-Popov ghost, 100, 624 fermion, 15, 1G0, 195, 754, 755 Feynman, 14, 90, 10G, 117 gauge boson, 159, 160 massive, 585, 623, 755 't Hooft-Feynman gauge, G24 unitary gauge, 603 gluon, 160 photon, 15, 173, 201 quark, 160, 429 scalar, 14, 195, 755 vector boson, 92, 195 massive, 44 weak neutral gauge boson, 694 would-be Goldstone boson, 585, 623 proton decay, 721-723 proton lifetime, 722, 728 QCD, 426 556 asymptotic freedom, 427-435 chiral symmetry, 507 CP problem, 377 deep-inelastic scattering, 435-469 experimental test, 464-469, 554-556 Feynman rules, 160-161 fragmentation function, 470, 485 jets, 489-494 Lagrangian, 146, 157 lattice approximation, 518-529 perturbative, 469-497 renorrnalizability, 198 renormalization, 205-206, 226-231 running coupling, 427-432, 554-556 running mass, 432 434 vacuum, long-range correlations, 548-554
77!)
QED, 10 experimental test, 78 Feynman rules, 13 16 gauge invariance, 134 136 higher-order corrections, 76 78 Lagrangian, 10, 135 renorrnalizability, 197 renormalization, 200 204, 223-225 Ward identity, 172 -177 quantization canonical, 118, 365, 397 of charge, 719, 727 of EWSM, 622-651 of gauge theory, 149-156 path-integral, 118 Quantum Chromodynamics, see QCD Quantum Electrodynamics, see QED quantum number colour, 3 flavour, 3 of glue balls, 524 of hadrons, 29 36 of leptons, 2 of quarks, 3 topological, 328, 331, 338, 539 quark, 3, 81 colour, 35, 73 condensate, 509, 514 confinement, sec confinement distribution function, 67, 444, 459, 464 moments, 446, 459 field, 147 flavour, 3 jets, 73, 488 mass, 3, 432-434 from chiral perturbation theory, 517 from lattice QCD, 521 model, 29 39 parton model, 57 76
780
Index
propagator, 1G0, 429 quantum numbers, 3 running mass, 432-434 sea, 69 structure function, 474 top, 3, 81, 684, 706 valence, 69 virtual, 458 quark-gluon plasma, 553 quark-mixing matrix, 48-51, 600 renormalization, 657, 663 quarkonia, 37 potential model, 37-39 quartet mechanism, 245, 627 quenched approximation, 413, 519 parity, 736 radiative corrections, 77, 81 electromagnetic, 698-704 electroweak, 671 706 higher-order, 681 683, 688, 704 in gauge theory, 226 231 in QCD, 226-231, 469-475 in QED, 76 78, 219-223 to e + e~ f f , 692-704 to muon decay, 675-683 W-boson decay, 688-689 Z-boson decay, 684-688 reduction formula, sec also LSZ formula. 95, 116, 649, 753 regularization, 188 dimensional, 192, 208 heat-kernel, 377 lattice, 379, 397 Pauli-Villars, 272, 353 scheme, 190 ^-function, 353-357 renorrnalizability, 189, 193-199 of gauge theory, 198, 231- 252 of massive gauge theory, 591 of QCD, 198 of QED, 197
renormalization, 188-252 a model, 576-580 background-field method, 206, 666-668
charge, 203, 659 EWSM, 665 condition, 191 EWSM, 655-661 QCD, 205 QED, 201-203 electron field, 202, 225, 312, 313 EWSM, 651-671 unphysical sector, 660 gauge theory, 204- 206 non-abelian, 226-231 one-loop, 219-231 Green function, 191 mass EWSM, 655, 662 QCD, 432 QED, 202, 224 unstable particle, 668-671 multiplicative, 200, 237 photon field, 201, 223 physical meaning, 189 -190 point, 252 QCD, 205-206 one-loop, 226-231 QED, 200-204, 223-225 quark-mixing matrix, 657, 663 spontaneously broken gauge symmetry, 588- 589 symmetry, 576-580 tadpole, 589, 655 transformation, 190, 200, 204, 237 EWSM, 652-654 vertex function, 191 weak mixing angle, 666 renormalization constant, 190 EWSM, 652-654, 661-666 gauge theory, 205, 228-230 massless, 260
Iudex
QCD, 205, 228 230 QED, 200, 223-225 wave-function, 95 renormalization group, 252-2G7 equation, 252-259 derivation, 253-255 for Higgs coupling, G15 for Wilson operators, 449 452 solution, 25G 257 fixed point, 258 function, sec /^-function Kadanoff Wilson theory, 400 non-perturbative, 52G-529 on the lattice, 400-404 QCD, 263 renormalization scheme, 192, 265-267 dependence, 189 for EWSM, 651 MOM, 205, 229, 267 MS, 205, 211, 229, 266 MS, 205, 211, 229, 267, 361 on-shell, 201, 651 renormalized action gauge theory, 235-238 renormalized parameter, 190, 200, 204, 237, 652 representation, see Lie algebra re-summation collinear logarithms, 322-325, 480 484 corrections to Ar, 683 corrections to Aa, (581 Dyson, 641, 694,697 RG logarithms, 257, 429 soft-photons, 298, 302 p parameter, G80, 681 right-handed current, 270, 508 right-handed Dirac Held, 43, 270, 345, 593 running coupling, 257 electromagnetic, 262, G77 in QCD, 427 132, 555
781
at two loops, 431 unrenorinalized, 267 running gauge parameter, 435 running mass, 257 quark, 432 -434 S matrix, 11, 95, 239, 751 and Green functions, 95 96 Feynman rules, 13-16 gauge independence, 246 251 in background-field method, 184-185 path-integral representation, 115 renormalization invariance, 253 unitarity in gauge theory, 251 scalar n-point integral, 211 215 scalar propagator, 14, 195, 755 scalar self-coupling, 145, 595, 615, 760 scaling Bjorken, 63 variable, 58, 62 violation, 256 scattering matrix, see S matrix scattering of composite particle, 101-104 Schwinger function, 533 Schwinger model, 547 sea quark, 69 self-dual field, 332, 337 self-energy, 77 electron, 77, 221, 311 fermion, 229 fermionic contributions, 672-674 gauge-boson, 226-228 integral, 211 photon, 77, 219, 672 semi-classical approximation, 126, 328, 347-349 a model linear, 573 non-linear, 512 renormalization, 576 -580
782
Index
singularity, sec also divergence collinear, 285, 292 cancellation, 327 final state, 325-328 QCD, 473, 475 QED, 305 328 infrared, 285, 291 cancellation, 304-305 QCD, 473 QED, 294 305 Landau, 288 mass, 285 328, 473 definition, 289-294 of complex integrals, 286-287 ultraviolet, 192 Slavnov identity, 169 Slavnov-Taylor identity, 166-170 EWSM, 628-630 for generating functional, 167 for Green function, 168-170 slepton, 736 soft singularity, see singularity, infrared soft-photon amplitude, 294 305 soft-photon approximation, 295 soft-photon integral, 298-301, 303-304 soft-photon re-summation, 298, 302, 701 source, 118 spectrum-doubling problem, 408 Spence function, 215 spin sum, see polarization sum spin symmetry, 498, 503 splitting function electron-electron, 314 electron-photon, 317 photon electron, 319 photon-photon, 320 QCD, 460, 475 one-loop, 463 polarized, 468 two-loop, 463
QED, 324, 700 sum rule, 462 spontaneous symmetry breaking, 567-591 chiral symmetry, 509 EWSM, 596 gauge symmetry, 580-591 general theory, 589-591 global symmetry, 568 580 quantization, 574 576, 584 587 renormalization, 576 580, 588-589 SU(5) GUT, 729 vertex functional, 578 squark, 736 staggered fermions, 409 Standard Model of the Electroweak Interaction, see EWSM Sterinan Weinberg approach, 493 string breaking, 547 string constant, 525, 531, 535, 540 string picture and lattice, 543-546 strong coupling, 147, 427 strong-coupling approximation, 385-390 and confinement, 534-535 structural graph, 100 structure function, 60, 437 gluon, 475 longitudinal, 437, 466 nucleon, 67, 464 factorization, 476 leading logarithms, 484 moments, 446, 449, 452 parton, 67 quark, 474 spin-dependent, 467 sum rule for splitting function, 462 sum-rule technique, 373 summation convention, 742 superficial degree of divergence, 192-194 supersymmetry, see SUSY
Iudex SUSY, 732 738 algebra, 733 chiral multiple!,, 733 GUT, 738 improved UV properties, 731 non-ronormalizntion theorem, 735 transformation, 733 symmetry, see ul.to Lie |p<>ui>. ''if' transformation global, 25 and Ward identity, 131 local, 134 and Ward identity, 130 spontaneously broken, 509, 567 591 symmetry factor in cross section, 12 in Feynman rules, 15, 124, 756
i wlui, 4 11 U ( l ) piulilnin, Itfu
Ultraviolet lIlSeiMHlH .., |i|,l unification of coupling«, ; lm t )\ , ii. of fermion uuu • , 11, f m unitarity of S matrix in gnii|>ti theory, 251 tarity violation, 608 unitary gauge, 582, 597
UMlvtniiallty of i Inline In I VY MM, l| l',» (¡40,660 in <jl i i ' i n , tit,', 0 4 3 III IIHlllHI llltllll'l, 711, IH I ill Willi ltd' • III I Inn. 11
VIUIIMtlll tllllllll'il 'Mi. vai'iiiiin • I|I>" I ill' ii
't Hooft gauge, 584, 586, 622 background-field method, 639, 640 't Hooft-Feynmart gauge, 624 tadpole, 207, 579, 604 integral, 207-211 renormalization, 589, 655 temporal gauge, 142, 366, 369, 537 tensor integral, 216-218 thermodynamic limit, 389 0-vacuum, 365- 369 Thirring's theorem, 203, 263 Thomson cross section, 203, 263, 652 Thomson limit, 651, 659 time-ordered product, 11 top quark, 3, 81 mass, 684, 706 topological charge density, 334 topological quantum number, 328, 331, 338, 539 topological susceptibility, 378 tree graph, 15, 77, 126 tree-graph approximation, 77, 126 truncation, 95, 753
783
1(1 \l | ilie
>iw
liWHM »'Hi sti(r.), 7'J», / in vacuum pulim
vacuum mute, /, vacuum stun l me ii) * i• * *.*» tuie Mmi 98 vacuum tunnelling. 31111 L I and fermions, 37'.! 373 valence quark, 69 vector boson, see gauge ho im vector bundle, 336 vector coupling, 59, 763 effective, 685, 695 vertex, 14, 755 correction, 77, 222 function, 99-101, 753 generating functional, 113-116,181,233,578,753 renormalization, 191 spontaneous symmetry breaking, 578 graph, proper, 99 violation baryon number, 722, 723, 728
784
Index
CP, 51, 377 lepton number, 728 virtual correction, 77 EWSM, 687, G92 QCD, 435, 487 QED, 298 virtual particle, 13 Vol terra series, 106 Ward identity, 127-133 anomalous, 274 for current Green functions, 271 for Green functions, 131, 133 from global symmetry, 131 from local symmetry, 130 in background-Geld method, 182, 639 642 QED, 172-177, 201, 222 Ward-Takahashi identity, 174, 177 wave function baryon, 31-35 meson, 30 31 renormalization, 95 weak hypercharge, 24, 43, 81, 592, 719 weak isospin, 24, 43, 81, 592 weak mixing angle, 41, 45, 46, 49, 598, 666 effective, 685, 689 GUT prediction, 719, 721, 738 measurement, 692 renormalization, 666, 680 weak vector boson, see W boson, Z boson Weinberg angle, see weak mixing angle Weinberg's theorem, 193 Weizsäcker-Williams approximation, 318 Wess-Zumino condition, 285 Wess-Zumino model, 734 Weyl representation, 308, 746 Wick rotation, 209 Wightman axioms, 87
Wightman function, 88 Wilson action, 382 Wilson coefficient, 447 Wilson criterion for confinement, 531, 535 Wilson expansion, 444 446, 450 Wilson fermions, 408 Wilson loop, 384, 530 Wilson operator, 445 of QCD, 448 anomalous dimension, 454-458 winding number, 336, 366 Witten- Veneziano relation, 378 would-be Goldstone field, 585, 597, 623 W boson, 5 couplings, 42 decay width, 53, 688-689 mass, 5, 45, 598, 706 measurement, 612 prediction, 683 pair production, 604 613 Yang-Mills Lagrangian, 144 Yang Mills theory, .see also gauge theory, Ì43-148 Yukawa coupling, 145, 594 zero mode, 352 fermionic, 328, 340-344, 363-365 functional integration of, 357-361 in instanton background field, 342-344 on the torus, 340-342 ([-function regularization, 353 357 Z boson, 5 couplings, 42 decay width, 52, 684 688 mass, 5, 45, 598, 696 production, 53, 690-704
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