A Theory of SpontaneousViolation
- 15 August 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 8 (4) , 1226-1239
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.8.1226
Abstract
A theory of spontaneous violation is presented. The total Lagrangian is assumed to be invariant under the time reversal and a gauge transformation (e.g., the hypercharge gauge), but the physical solutions are not. In addition to the spin-1 gauge field and the known matter fields, in its simplest form the theory consists of two complex spin-0 fields. Through the spontaneous symmetry-breaking mechanism of Goldstone and Higgs, the vacuum expectation values of these two spin-0 fields can be characterized by the shape of a triangle and their quantum fluctuations by its vibrational modes, just like a triangular molecule. violations can be produced among the known particles through virtual excitations of the vibrational modes of the triangle which has a built-in -violating phase angle. Examples of both Abelian and non-Abelian gauge groups are discussed. For renormalizable theories, all spontaneously -violating effects are finite. It is found that at low energy, below the threshold of producing these vibrational quanta, violation is always quite small.
Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of a Neutral Intermediate Boson in Semileptonic ProcessesPhysical Review D, 1972
- Physical Processes in a Convergent Theory of the Weak and Electromagnetic InteractionsPhysical Review Letters, 1971
- A Model of LeptonsPhysical Review Letters, 1967
- Symmetry Breaking in Non-Abelian Gauge TheoriesPhysical Review B, 1967
- Spontaneous Symmetry Breakdown without Massless BosonsPhysical Review B, 1966
- Global Conservation Laws and Massless ParticlesPhysical Review Letters, 1964
- Broken Symmetries and the Masses of Gauge BosonsPhysical Review Letters, 1964
- Broken Symmetry and the Mass of Gauge Vector MesonsPhysical Review Letters, 1964
- Broken SymmetriesPhysical Review B, 1962
- Field theories with « Superconductor » solutionsIl Nuovo Cimento (1869-1876), 1961