Concept and properties of lattice gauge theory
- 15 September 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 24 (6) , 1595-1609
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.24.1595
Abstract
A finite lattice in four dimensions and correlation functions defined by integrals are used to formulate quantum gauge theory. Former results on Schwinger-Dyson equations and Ward-Takahashi identities are extended and the much richer structure of quantities and relations, which arises necessarily on the lattice, is discussed. The mechanism of gauge fixing is analyzed and various consequences of this analysis are pointed out. The implications of the generalized fermion degeneracy regularization for the position-space propagator and in the relations for the various currents are shown. An explicit solution for open boundaries is presented and compared with that of the case of the otherwise-used periodic conditions. The analog of continuum methods for dynamical masses and particular decompositions of the fermion determinants are considered. The connection between degeneracy regularization and axial-vector anomaly and the situation for weak interactions are discussed. Further, a number of important details are clarified.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Axial-vector anomaly in lattice gauge theoryPhysical Review D, 1981
- Chiral symmetry breaking in the action formulation of lattice gauge theoryNuclear Physics B, 1981
- Pions as spin waves: Chiral symmetry breaking in lattice gauge theoryNuclear Physics B, 1981
- Chiral symmetry breaking in QCD; Mesons as spin wavesNuclear Physics B, 1980
- Asymptotic-Freedom ScalesPhysical Review Letters, 1980
- Dynamical breaking of chiral symmetry in lattice gauge theoriesPhysical Review D, 1980
- Monte Carlo study of quantized SU(2) gauge theoryPhysical Review D, 1980
- Dynamics of spontaneous symmetry breaking in the Weinberg-Salam theoryPhysical Review D, 1979
- Implications of dynamical symmetry breaking: An addendumPhysical Review D, 1979
- Confinement of quarksPhysical Review D, 1974