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Link to original content: http://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/renormalization group flow
renormalization group flow in nLab

nLab renormalization group flow

Contents

Context

Algebraic Quantum Field Theory

algebraic quantum field theory (perturbative, on curved spacetimes, homotopical)

Introduction

Concepts

field theory:

Lagrangian field theory

quantization

quantum mechanical system, quantum probability

free field quantization

gauge theories

interacting field quantization

renormalization

Theorems

States and observables

Operator algebra

Local QFT

Perturbative QFT

Contents

Idea

In perturbative quantum field theory the construction of the scattering matrix š’®\mathcal{S}, hence of the interacting field algebra of observables for a given interaction gS intg S_{int} perturbing around a given free field vacuum, involves choices of normalization of time-ordered products/Feynman diagrams (traditionally called "re"-normalizations) encoding new interactions that appear where several of the original interaction vertices defined by gS intg S_{int} coincide.

Whenever a group RGRG acts on the space of observables of the theory such that conjugation by this action takes ("re"-)normalization schemes into each other, then these choices of ("re"-)normalization are parameterized by ā€“ or ā€œflow withā€ ā€“ the elements of RGRG. This is called renormalization group flow (prop. below); often called RG flow, for short.

The archetypical example here is the group RGRG of scaling transformations on Minkowski spacetime (def. below), which induces a renormalization group flow (prop. below) due to the particular nature of the Wightman propagator resp. Feynman propagator on Minkowski spacetime (example below). In this case the choice of ("re"-)normalization hence ā€œflows with scaleā€.

Now the main theorem of perturbative renormalization states that (if only the basic renormalization condition called ā€œfield independenceā€ is satisfied) any two choices of ("re"-)normalization schemes š’®\mathcal{S} and š’®ā€²\mathcal{S}' are related by a unique interaction vertex redefinition š’µ\mathcal{Z}, as

š’®ā€²=š’®āˆ˜š’µ. \mathcal{S}' = \mathcal{S} \circ \mathcal{Z} \,.

Applied to a parameterization/flow of renormalization choices by a group RGRG this hence induces an interaction vertex redefinition as a function of RGRG. One may think of the shape of the interaction vertices as fixed and only their (adiabatically switched) coupling constants as changing under such an interaction vertex redefinition, and hence then one has coupling constants g jg_j that are parameterized by elements Ļ\rho of RGRG:

š’µ Ļ vac Ļ:{g j}ā†¦{g j(Ļ)} \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_{vac}}^\rho \;\colon\; \{g_j\} \mapsto \{g_j(\rho)\}

This dependendence is called running of the coupling constants under the renormalization group flow (def. below).

One example of renormalization group flow is that induced by scaling transformations (prop. below). This is the original and main example of the concept (Gell-Mann & Low 54)

In this case the running of the coupling constants may be understood as expressing how ā€œmoreā€ interactions (at higher energy/shorter wavelength) become visible (say to experiment) as the scale resolution is increased. In this case the dependence of the coupling g j(Ļ)g_j(\rho) on the parameter Ļ\rho happens to be differentiable; its logarithmic derivative (denoted ā€œĻˆ\psiā€ in Gell-Mann & Low 54) is known as the beta function (Callan 70, Symanzik 70):

Ī²(g)ā‰”Ļāˆ‚g jāˆ‚Ļ. \beta(g) \coloneqq \rho \frac{\partial g_j}{\partial \rho} \,.

Notice that this is related to, but conceptually different from, Polchinski's flow equation in the context of Wilsonian RG.

The running of the coupling constants is not quite a representation of the renormalization group flow, but it is a ā€œtwistedā€ representation, namely a group 1-cocycle (prop. below). For the case of scaling transformations this may be called the Gell-Mann-Low renormalization cocycle (Brunetti-DĆ¼tsch-Fredenhagen 09).

For more see at

Definition

Proposition

(renormalization group flow)

Let

vacā‰”(E BV-BRST,Lā€²,Ī” H) vac \;\coloneqq\; (E_{\text{BV-BRST}}, \mathbf{L}', \Delta_H )

be a relativistic free vacuum (according to this def.) around which we consider interacting perturbative QFT.

Consider a group RGRG equipped with an action on the Wick algebra of off-shell microcausal polynomial observables with formal parameters adjoined (as in this def.)

rg (āˆ’):RGƗPolyObs(E BV-BRST) mc((ā„))[[g,j]]āŸ¶PolyObs(E BV-BRST) mc((ā„))[[ā„,g,j]], rg_{(-)} \;\colon\; RG \times PolyObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})_{mc}((\hbar))[ [ g, j ] ] \longrightarrow PolyObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})_{mc}((\hbar))[ [ \hbar, g, j ] ] \,,

hence for each ĻāˆˆRG\rho \in RG a continuous linear map rg Ļrg_\rho which has an inverse rg Ļ āˆ’1āˆˆRGrg_\rho^{-1} \in RG and is a homomorphism of the Wick algebra-product (the star product ā‹† H\star_H induced by the Wightman propagator of the given vauum vacvac)

rg Ļ(A 1ā‹† HA 2)=rg Ļ(A 1)ā‹† Hrg Ļ(A 2) rg_\rho( A_1 \star_H A_2 ) \;=\; rg_\rho(A_1) \star_H rg_\rho(A_2)

such that the following conditions hold:

  1. the action preserves the subspace of off-shell polynomial local observables, hence it restricts as

    rg (āˆ’):RGƗLocObs(E BV-BRST)[[ā„,g,j]]āŸØg,jāŸ©āŸ¶LocObs(E BV-BRST)[[ā„,g,j]]āŸØg,jāŸ© rg_{(-)} \;\colon\; RG \times LocObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})[ [ \hbar, g, j ] ]\langle g,j\rangle \longrightarrow LocObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})[ [ \hbar, g, j ] ]\langle g,j\rangle
  2. the action respects the causal order of the spacetime support (this def.) of local observables, in that for O 1,O 2āˆˆLocObs(E BV-BRST)[[ā„,g,j]]O_1, O_2 \in LocObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})[ [ \hbar, g, j] ] we have

    (supp(O 1)āˆØāˆ§supp(O 2))Aā‡’A(supp(rg Ļ(O 1))āˆØāˆ§supp(rg Ļ(O 2))) \left( supp(O_1) \,{\vee\!\!\!\wedge}\, supp(O_2) \right) \phantom{A} \Rightarrow \phantom{A} \left( supp(rg_\rho(O_1)) \,{\vee\!\!\!\wedge}\, supp(rg_\rho(O_2)) \right)

    for all ĻāˆˆRG\rho \in RG.

Then:

The operation of conjugation by this action on observables induces an action on the set of S-matrix renormalization schemes (this def., this remark), in that for

š’®:LocObs(E BV-BRST)[[ā„,g,j]]āŸ¶PolyObs(E BV-BRST)((ā„))[[g,j]] \mathcal{S} \;\colon\; LocObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})[ [ \hbar , g, j] ] \longrightarrow PolyObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})( (\hbar) )[ [ g, j] ]

a perturbative S-matrix scheme around the given free field vacuum vacvac, also the composite

š’® Ļā‰”rg Ļāˆ˜š’®āˆ˜rg Ļ āˆ’1:LocObs(E BV-BRST)[[ā„,g,j]]āŸ¶PolyObs(E BV-BRST)((ā„))[[g,j]] \mathcal{S}^\rho \;\coloneqq\; rg_\rho \circ \mathcal{S} \circ rg_{\rho}^{-1} \;\colon\; LocObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})[ [ \hbar , g, j] ] \longrightarrow PolyObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})( (\hbar) )[ [ g, j] ]

is an S-matrix scheme, for all ĻāˆˆRG\rho \in RG.

More generally, let

vac Ļā‰”(E BV-BRST,Lā€² Ļ,Ī” H,Ļ) vac_\rho \;\coloneqq\; (E_{\text{BV-BRST}}, \mathbf{L}'_\rho, \Delta_{H,\rho} )

be a collection of gauge fixed free field vacua parameterized by elements ĻāˆˆRG\rho \in RG, all with the same underlying field bundle; and consider rg Ļrg_\rho as above, except that it is not an automorphism of any Wick algebra, but an isomorphism between the Wick algebra-structures on various vacua, in that

(1)rg Ļ(A 1ā‹† H,Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vacA 2)=rg Ļ(A 1)ā‹† H,Ļ vacrg Ļ(A 2) rg_{\rho}( A_1 \star_{H, \rho^{-1} \rho_{vac}} A_2 ) \;=\; rg_{\rho}(A_1) \star_{H, \rho_{vac}} rg_{\rho}(A_2)

for all Ļ,Ļ vacāˆˆRG\rho, \rho_{vac} \in RG

Then if

{š’® Ļ} ĻāˆˆRG \{ \mathcal{S}_{\rho} \}_{\rho \in RG}

is a collection of S-matrix schemes, one around each of the gauge fixed free field vacua vac Ļvac_\rho, it follows that for all pairs of group elements Ļ vac,ĻāˆˆRG\rho_{vac}, \rho \in RG the composite

(2)š’® Ļ vac Ļā‰”rg Ļāˆ˜š’® Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vacāˆ˜rg Ļ āˆ’1 \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}}^\rho \;\coloneqq\; rg_\rho \circ \mathcal{S}_{\rho^{-1}\rho_{vac}} \circ rg_\rho^{-1}

is an S-matrix scheme around the vacuum labeled by Ļ vac\rho_{vac}.

Since therefore each element ĻāˆˆRG\rho \in RG in the group RGRG picks a different choice of normalization of the S-matrix scheme around a given vacuum at Ļ vac\rho_{vac}, we call the assignment Ļā†¦š’® Ļ vac Ļ\rho \mapsto \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho} a re-normalization group flow.

(Brunetti-DĆ¼tsch-Fredenhagen 09, sections 4.2, 5.1, DĆ¼tsch 18, section 3.5.3)

Proof

It is clear from the definition that each š’® Ļ vac Ļ\mathcal{S}^{\rho}_{\rho_{vac}} satisfies the axiom ā€œperturbationā€ (in this def.).

In order to verify the axiom ā€œcausal additivityā€, observe, for convenience, that by this prop. it is sufficient to check causal factorization.

So consider O 1,O 2āˆˆLocObs(E BV-BRST)[[ā„,g,j]]āŸØg,jāŸ©O_1, O_2 \in LocObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})[ [ \hbar, g, j] ]\langle g,j\rangle two local observables whose spacetime support is in causal order.

supp(O 1)āˆØāˆ§supp(O 2). supp(O_1) \;{\vee\!\!\!\wedge}\; supp(O_2) \,.

We need to show that the

š’® Ļ vac Ļ(O 1+O 2)=š’® Ļ vac Ļ(O 1)ā‹† H,Ļ vacš’® vac e Ļ(O 2) \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho}(O_1 + O_2) = \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}}^\rho(O_1) \star_{H,\rho_{vac}} \mathcal{S}_{vac_e}^\rho(O_2)

for all Ļ,Ļ vacāˆˆRG\rho, \rho_{vac} \in RG.

Using the defining properties of rg (āˆ’)rg_{(-)} and the causal factorization of š’® Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vac\mathcal{S}_{\rho^{-1}\rho_{vac}} we directly compute as follows:

š’® Ļ vac Ļ(O 1+O 2) =rg Ļāˆ˜š’® Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vacāˆ˜rg Ļ āˆ’1(O 1+O 2) =rg Ļ(š’® Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vac(rg Ļ āˆ’1(O 1)+rg Ļ āˆ’1(O 2))) =rg Ļ((š’® Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vac(rg Ļ āˆ’1(O 1)))ā‹† H,Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vac(š’® Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vac(rg Ļ āˆ’1(O 2)))) =rg Ļ(š’® Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vac(rg Ļ āˆ’1(O 1)))ā‹† H,Ļ vacrg Ļ(š’® Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vac(rg Ļ āˆ’1(O 2))) =š’® Ļ vac Ļ(O 1)ā‹† H,Ļ vacš’® Ļ vac Ļ(O 2). \begin{aligned} \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}}^\rho(O_1 + O_2) & = rg_\rho \circ \mathcal{S}_{\rho^{-1} \rho_{vac}} \circ rg_\rho^{-1}( O_1 + O_2 ) \\ & = rg_\rho \left( {\, \atop \,} \mathcal{S}_{\rho^{-1}\rho_{vac}} \left( rg_\rho^{-1}(O_1) + rg_\rho^{-1}(O_2) \right) {\, \atop \,} \right) \\ & = rg_\rho \left( {\, \atop \,} \left( \mathcal{S}_{\rho^{-1}\rho_{vac}}\left(rg_\rho^{-1}(O_1)\right) \right) \star_{H, \rho^{-1} \rho_{vac}} \left( \mathcal{S}_{ \rho^{-1} \rho_{vac} }\left(rg_\rho^{-1}(O_2)\right) \right) {\, \atop \,} \right) \\ & = rg_\rho \left( {\, \atop \,} \mathcal{S}_{\rho^{-1} \rho_{vac}}\left(rg_{\rho^{-1}}(O_1)\right) {\, \atop \,} \right) \star_{H, \rho_{vac}} rg_\rho \left( {\, \atop \,} \mathcal{S}_{\rho^{-1} \rho_{vac}}\left( rg_\rho^{-1}(O_2)\right) {\, \atop \,} \right) \\ & = \mathcal{S}^\rho_{\rho_{vac}}( O_1 ) \, \star_{H, \rho_{vac}} \, \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}}^\rho(O_2) \,. \end{aligned}
Definition

(running coupling constants)

Let

vacā‰”vac eā‰”(E BV-BRST,Lā€²,Ī” H) vac \coloneqq vac_e \;\coloneqq\; (E_{\text{BV-BRST}}, \mathbf{L}', \Delta_H )

be a relativistic free vacuum (according to this def.) around which we consider interacting perturbative QFT, let š’®\mathcal{S} be an S-matrix scheme around this vacuum and let rg (āˆ’)rg_{(-)} be a renormalization group flow according to prop. , such that each re-normalized S-matrix scheme š’® vac Ļ\mathcal{S}_{vac}^\rho satisfies the renormalization condition ā€œfield independenceā€.

Then by the main theorem of perturbative renormalization (this prop.) there is for every pair Ļ 1,Ļ 2āˆˆRG\rho_1, \rho_2 \in RG a unique interaction vertex redefinition

š’µ Ļ vac Ļ:LocObs(E BV-BRST)[[ā„,g,j]]āŸ¶LocObs(E BV-BRST)[[ā„,g,j]] \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho} \;\colon\; LocObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})[ [ \hbar, g, j] ] \longrightarrow LocObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})[ [ \hbar, g, j] ]

which relates the corresponding two S-matrix schemes via

(3)š’® Ļ vac Ļ=š’® Ļ vacāˆ˜š’µ Ļ vac Ļ. \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho} \;=\; \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}} \circ \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_{vac}}^\rho \,.

If one thinks of an interaction vertex, hence a local observable gS int+jAg S_{int}+ j A, as specified by the (adiabatically switched) coupling constants g jāˆˆC cp āˆž(Ī£)āŸØgāŸ©g_j \in C^\infty_{cp}(\Sigma)\langle g \rangle multiplying the corresponding interaction Lagrangian densities L int,jāˆˆĪ© Ī£ p+1,0(E BV-BRST)\mathbf{L}_{int,j} \in \Omega^{p+1,0}_\Sigma(E_{\text{BV-BRST}}) as

gS int=āˆ‘jĻ„ Ī£(g jL int,j) g S_{int} \;=\; \underset{j}{\sum} \tau_\Sigma \left( g_j \mathbf{L}_{int,j} \right)

(where Ļ„ Ī£\tau_\Sigma denotes transgression of variational differential forms) then š’µ Ļ 1 Ļ 2\mathcal{Z}_{\rho_1}^{\rho_2} exhibits a dependency of the (adiabatically switched) coupling constants g jg_j of the renormalization group flow parameterized by Ļ\rho. The corresponding functions

š’µ Ļ vac Ļ(gS int):(g j)ā†¦(g j(Ļ)) \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho}(g S_{int}) \;\colon\; (g_j) \mapsto (g_j(\rho))

are then called running coupling constants.

(Brunetti-DĆ¼tsch-Fredenhagen 09, sections 4.2, 5.1, DĆ¼tsch 18, section 3.5.3)

Properties

Proposition

(running coupling constants are group cocycle over renormalization group flow)

Consider running coupling constants

š’µ Ļ vac Ļ:(g j)ā†¦(g j(Ļ)) \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho} \;\colon\; (g_j) \mapsto (g_j(\rho))

as in def. . Then for all Ļ vac,Ļ 1,Ļ 2āˆˆRG\rho_{vac}, \rho_1, \rho_2 \in RG the following equality is satisfied by the ā€œrunning functionsā€ (3):

š’µ Ļ vac Ļ 1Ļ 2=š’µ Ļ vac Ļ 1āˆ˜(Ļƒ Ļ 1āˆ˜š’µ Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vac Ļ 2āˆ˜Ļƒ Ļ 1 āˆ’1). \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho_1 \rho_2} \;=\; \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho_1} \circ \left( \sigma_{\rho_1} \circ \mathcal{Z}_{\rho^{-1} \rho_{vac}}^{\rho_2} \circ \sigma_{\rho_1}^{-1} \right) \,.

(Brunetti-DĆ¼tsch-Fredenhagen 09 (69), DĆ¼tsch 18, (3.325))

Proof

Directly using the definitions, we compute as follows:

š’® Ļ vacāˆ˜š’µ Ļ vac Ļ 1Ļ 2 =š’® Ļ vac Ļ 1Ļ 2 =Ļƒ Ļ 1āˆ˜Ļƒ Ļ 2āˆ˜š’® Ļ 2 āˆ’1Ļ 1 āˆ’1Ļ vacāˆ˜Ļƒ Ļ 2 āˆ’1āŸ=š’® Ļ 1 āˆ’1Ļ vac Ļ 2=š’® Ļ 1 āˆ’1Ļ vacāˆ˜š’µ Ļ 1 āˆ’1Ļ vac Ļ 2āˆ˜Ļƒ Ļ 1 āˆ’1 =Ļƒ Ļ 1āˆ˜š’® Ļ 1 āˆ’1Ļ vacāˆ˜Ļƒ Ļ 1 āˆ’1āˆ˜Ļƒ Ļ 1āž=idāŸ=š’® Ļ vacāˆ˜š’µ Ļ vac Ļ 1āˆ˜Ļƒ Ļ 1āˆ˜š’µ Ļ 1 āˆ’1Ļ vac Ļ 2āˆ˜Ļƒ Ļ 1 āˆ’1 =š’® Ļ vacāˆ˜š’µ Ļ vac Ļ 1āˆ˜Ļƒ Ļ 1āˆ˜š’µ Ļ 1 āˆ’1Ļ vac Ļ 2āˆ˜Ļƒ Ļ 1 āˆ’1āŸ \begin{aligned} \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}} \circ \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho_1 \rho_2} & = \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho_1 \rho_2 } \\ & = \sigma_{\rho_1} \circ \underset{ = \mathcal{S}_{\rho_1^{-1} \rho_{vac}}^{\rho_2} = \mathcal{S}_{\rho_1^{-1} \rho_{vac}} \circ \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_1^{-1} \rho_vac}^{\rho_2} }{ \underbrace{ \sigma_{\rho_2} \circ \mathcal{S}_{\rho_2^{-1}\rho_1^{-1}\rho_{vac}} \circ \sigma_{\rho_2}^{-1} }} \circ \sigma_{\rho_1}^{-1} \\ & = \underset{ = \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}} \circ \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho_1} \circ \sigma_{\rho_1} }{ \underbrace{ \sigma_{\rho_1} \circ \mathcal{S}_{\rho_1^{-1} \rho_{vac}} \circ \overset{ = id }{ \overbrace{ \sigma_{\rho_1}^{-1} \circ \sigma_{\rho_1} } } }} \circ \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_1^{-1} \rho_{vac}}^{\rho_2} \circ \sigma_{\rho_1}^{-1} \\ & = \mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}} \circ \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_{vac}}^{\rho_1} \circ \underbrace{ \sigma_{\rho_1} \circ \mathcal{Z}_{\rho_1^{-1} \rho_{vac}}^{\rho_2} \circ \sigma_{\rho_1}^{-1} } \end{aligned}

This demonstrates the equation between vertex redefinitions to be shown after composition with an S-matrix scheme. But by the uniqueness-clause in the main theorem of perturbative renormalization the composition operation š’® Ļ vacāˆ˜(āˆ’)\mathcal{S}_{\rho_{vac}} \circ (-) as a function from vertex redefinitions to S-matrix schemes is injective. This implies the equation itself.

Examples

Scaling transformations

We discuss (prop. below) that, if the field species involved have well-defined mass dimension (example below) then scaling transformations on Minkowski spacetime (example below) induce a renormalization group flow (def. ). This is the original and main example of renormalization group flows (Gell-Mann& Low 54).

Example

(scaling transformations and mass dimension)

Let

EāŸ¶fbĪ£ E \overset{fb}{\longrightarrow} \Sigma

be a field bundle which is a trivial vector bundle over Minkowski spacetime Ī£=ā„ p,1ā‰ƒ ā„ā„ p+1\Sigma = \mathbb{R}^{p,1} \simeq_{\mathbb{R}} \mathbb{R}^{p+1}.

For Ļāˆˆ(0,āˆž)āŠ‚ā„\rho \in (0,\infty) \subset \mathbb{R} a positive real number, write

Ī£ āŸ¶Ļ Ī£ x ā†¦ Ļx \array{ \Sigma &\overset{\rho}{\longrightarrow}& \Sigma \\ x &\mapsto& \rho x }

for the operation of multiplication by Ļ\rho using the real vector space-structure of the Cartesian space ā„ p+1\mathbb{R}^{p+1} underlying Minkowski spacetime.

By pullback this acts on field histories (sections of the field bundle) via

Ī“ Ī£(E) āŸ¶Ļ * Ī“ Ī£(E) Ī¦ ā†¦ Ī¦(Ļ(āˆ’)). \array{ \Gamma_\Sigma(E) &\overset{\rho^\ast}{\longrightarrow}& \Gamma_\Sigma(E) \\ \Phi &\mapsto& \Phi(\rho(-)) } \,.

Let then

Ļā†¦vac Ļā‰”(E BV-BRST,Lā€² Ļ,Ī” H,Ļ) \rho \mapsto vac_\rho \;\coloneqq\; (E_{\text{BV-BRST}}, \mathbf{L}'_{\rho}, \Delta_{H,\rho} )

be a 1-parameter collection of relativistic free vacua on that field bundle, according to this def., and consider a decomposition into a set SpecSpec of field species (this def.) such that for each spāˆˆSpecsp \in Spec the collection of Feynman propagators Ī” F,Ļ,sp\Delta_{F,\rho,sp} for that species scales homogeneously in that there exists

dim(sp)āˆˆā„ dim(sp) \in \mathbb{R}

such that for all Ļ\rho we have (using generalized functions-notation)

(4)Ļ 2dim(sp)Ī” F,1/Ļ,sp(Ļx)=Ī” F,sp,Ļ=1(x). \rho^{ 2 dim(sp) } \Delta_{F, 1/\rho, sp}( \rho x ) \;=\; \Delta_{F,sp, \rho = 1}(x) \,.

Typically Ļ\rho rescales a mass parameter, in which case dim(sp)dim(sp) is also called the mass dimension of the field species spsp.

Let finally

PolyObs(E) āŸ¶Ļƒ Ļ PolyObs(E) Ī¦ sp a(x) ā†¦ Ļ āˆ’dim(sp)Ī¦ a(Ļ āˆ’1x) \array{ PolyObs(E) & \overset{ \sigma_\rho }{\longrightarrow} & PolyObs(E) \\ \mathbf{\Phi}_{sp}^a(x) &\mapsto& \rho^{- dim(sp)} \mathbf{\Phi}^a( \rho^{-1} x ) }

be the function on off-shell polynomial observables given on field observables Phi a(x)\mathbf{Phi}^a(x) by pullback along Ļ āˆ’1\rho^{-1} followed by multiplication by Ļ\rho taken to the negative power of the mass dimension, and extended from there to all polynomial observables as an algebra homomorphism.

This constitutes an action of the group

RGā‰”(ā„ +,ā‹…) RG \coloneqq \left( \mathbb{R}_+, \cdot \right)

of positive real numbers (under multiplication) on polynomial observables, called the group of scaling transformations for the given choice of field species and mass parameters.

(DĆ¼tsch 18, def. 3.19)

Example

(mass dimension of scalar field)

Consider the Feynman propagator Ī” F,m\Delta_{F,m} of the free real scalar field on Minkowski spacetime Ī£=ā„ p,1\Sigma = \mathbb{R}^{p,1} for mass parameter māˆˆ(0,āˆž)m \in (0,\infty); a Green function for the Klein-Gordon equation.

Let the group RGā‰”(ā„ +,ā‹Æ)RG \coloneqq (\mathbb{R}_+, \cdots) of scaling transformations Ļāˆˆā„ +\rho \in \mathbb{R}_+ on Minkowski spacetime (def. ) act on the mass parameter by inverse multiplication

(Ļ,Ī” F,m)ā†¦Ī” F,Ļ āˆ’1m(Ļ(āˆ’)). (\rho , \Delta_{F,m}) \mapsto \Delta_{F,\rho^{-1}m}(\rho (-)) \,.

Then we have

Ī” F,Ļ āˆ’1m(Ļ(āˆ’))=Ļ āˆ’(p+1)+2Ī” F,1(x) \Delta_{F,\rho^{-1}m}(\rho (-)) \;=\; \rho^{-(p+1) + 2} \Delta_{F,1}(x)

and hence the corresponding mass dimension (def. ) of the real scalar field on ā„ p,1\mathbb{R}^{p,1} is

dim(scalar field)=(p+1)/2āˆ’1. dim(\text{scalar field}) = (p+1)/2 - 1 \,.
Proof

By (this prop.) the Feynman propagator in question is given by the Cauchy principal value-formula (in generalized function-notation)

Ī” F,m(x) =limĻµāˆˆ(0,āˆž)Ļµā†’0+i(2Ļ€) p+1āˆ«āˆ« āˆ’āˆž āˆže ik Ī¼x Ī¼āˆ’k Ī¼k Ī¼āˆ’(mcā„) 2Ā±iĻµdk 0d pkā†’. \begin{aligned} \Delta_{F,m}(x) & = \underset{ {\epsilon \in (0,\infty)} \atop {\epsilon \to 0} }{\lim} \frac{+i}{(2\pi)^{p+1}} \int \int_{-\infty}^\infty \frac{ e^{i k_\mu x^\mu} }{ - k_\mu k^\mu - \left( \tfrac{m c}{\hbar} \right)^2 \pm i \epsilon } \, d k_0 \, d^p \vec k \,. \end{aligned}

By applying change of integration variables kā†¦Ļ āˆ’1kk \mapsto \rho^{-1} k in the Fourier transform this becomes

Ī” F,Ļ āˆ’1m(Ļx) =limĻµāˆˆ(0,āˆž)Ļµā†’0+i(2Ļ€) p+1āˆ«āˆ« āˆ’āˆž āˆže ik Ī¼Ļx Ī¼āˆ’k Ī¼k Ī¼āˆ’(Ļ āˆ’1mcā„) 2Ā±iĻµdk 0d pkā†’ =Ļ āˆ’(p+1)limĻµāˆˆ(0,āˆž)Ļµā†’0+i(2Ļ€) p+1āˆ«āˆ« āˆ’āˆž āˆže ik Ī¼x Ī¼āˆ’Ļ āˆ’2k Ī¼k Ī¼āˆ’Ļ āˆ’2(mcā„) 2Ā±iĻµdk 0d pkā†’ =Ļ āˆ’(p+1)+2limĻµāˆˆ(0,āˆž)Ļµā†’0+i(2Ļ€) p+1āˆ«āˆ« āˆ’āˆž āˆže ik Ī¼x Ī¼āˆ’k Ī¼k Ī¼āˆ’(mcā„) 2Ā±iĻµdk 0d pkā†’ =Ļ āˆ’(p+1)+2Ī” F,m(x) \begin{aligned} \Delta_{F,\rho^{-1}m}(\rho x) & = \underset{ {\epsilon \in (0,\infty)} \atop {\epsilon \to 0} }{\lim} \frac{+i}{(2\pi)^{p+1}} \int \int_{-\infty}^\infty \frac{ e^{i k_\mu \rho x^\mu} }{ - k_\mu k^\mu - \left( \rho^{-1} \tfrac{m c}{\hbar} \right)^2 \pm i \epsilon } \, d k_0 \, d^p \vec k \\ & = \rho^{-(p+1)} \underset{ {\epsilon \in (0,\infty)} \atop {\epsilon \to 0} }{\lim} \frac{+i}{(2\pi)^{p+1}} \int \int_{-\infty}^\infty \frac{ e^{i k_\mu x^\mu} }{ - \rho^{-2} k_\mu k^\mu - \rho^{-2} \left( \tfrac{m c}{\hbar} \right)^2 \pm i \epsilon } \, d k_0 \, d^p \vec k \\ & = \rho^{-(p+1)+2} \underset{ {\epsilon \in (0,\infty)} \atop {\epsilon \to 0} }{\lim} \frac{+i}{(2\pi)^{p+1}} \int \int_{-\infty}^\infty \frac{ e^{i k_\mu x^\mu} }{ - k_\mu k^\mu - \left( \tfrac{m c}{\hbar} \right)^2 \pm i \epsilon } \, d k_0 \, d^p \vec k \\ & = \rho^{-(p+1) + 2} \Delta_{F,m}(x) \end{aligned}
Proposition

(scaling transformations are renormalization group flow)

Let

vacā‰”vac mā‰”(E BV-BRST,Lā€²,Ī” H,m) vac \coloneqq vac_m \coloneqq (E_{\text{BV-BRST}}, \mathbf{L}', \Delta_{H,m})

be a relativistic free vacua on that field bundle, according to this def. equipped with a decomposition into a set SpecSpec of field species (this def.) such that for each spāˆˆSpecsp \in Spec the collection of Feynman propagators the corresponding field species has a well-defined mass dimension dim(sp)dim(sp) (def. )

Then the action of the group RGā‰”(ā„ +,ā‹…)RG \coloneqq (\mathbb{R}_+, \cdot) of scaling transformations (def. ) is a renormalization group flow in the sense of this prop..

(DĆ¼tsch 18, exercise 3.20)

Proof

It is clear that rescaling preserves causal order and the renormalization condition of ā€œfield indepencenā€.

The condition we need to check is that for A 1,A 2āˆˆPolyObs(E BV-BRST) mc[[ā„,g,j]]A_1, A_2 \in PolyObs(E_{\text{BV-BRST}})_{mc}[ [ \hbar, g, j] ] two microcausal polynomial observables we have for any Ļ,Ļ vacāˆˆā„ +\rho, \rho_{vac} \in \mathbb{R}_+ that

Ļƒ Ļ(A 1ā‹† H,Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vaccA 2)=Ļƒ Ļ(A 1)ā‹† H,Ļ vacĻƒ Ļ(A 2). \sigma_\rho \left( A_1 \star_{H, \rho^{-1} \rho_{vac} c} A_2 \right) \;=\; \sigma_\rho(A_1) \star_{H,\rho_{vac}} \sigma_\rho(A_2) \,.

By the assumption of decomposition into free field species spāˆˆSpecsp \in Spec, it is sufficient to check this for each species Ī” H,sp\Delta_{H,sp}. Moreover, by the nature of the star product on polynomial observables, which is given by iterated contractions with the Wightman propagator, it is sufficient to check this for one such contraction.

Observe that the scaling behaviour of the Wightman propagator Ī” H,m\Delta_{H,m} is the same as the behaviour (4) of the correspponding Feynman propagator. With this we directly compute as follows:

Ļƒ Ļ(Ī¦(x))ā‹† F,Ļ vacmĻƒ Ļ(Ī¦(y) =Ļ āˆ’2dimĪ¦(Ļ āˆ’1x)ā‹† F,Ļ vacmĪ¦(Ļ āˆ’1y) =Ļ āˆ’2dimĪ” F,Ļ vacm(Ļ āˆ’1(xāˆ’y)) =Ī” F,Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vacm(x,y)1 =rg Ļ(Ī” F,Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vacm(x,y)1) =rg Ļ(Ī¦(x)ā‹† F,Ļ āˆ’1Ļ vacmĪ¦(y)). \begin{aligned} \sigma_\rho (\mathbf{\Phi}(x)) \star_{F, \rho_{vac} m} \sigma_\rho (\mathbf{\Phi}(y) & = \rho^{-2 dim } \mathbf{\Phi}(\rho^{-1} x) \star_{F, \rho_{vac} m} \mathbf{\Phi}(\rho^{-1} y) \\ & = \rho^{-2 dim } \Delta_{F, \rho_{vac} m}(\rho^{-1}(x-y)) \\ & = \Delta_{F, \rho^{-1}\rho_{vac}m }(x,y) \mathbf{1} \\ & = rg_{\rho}\left( \Delta_{F, \rho^{-1}\rho_{vac}m }(x,y) \mathbf{1} \right) \\ & = rg_{\rho} \left( \mathbf{\Phi}(x) \star_{F, \rho^{-1} \rho_{vac} m} \mathbf{\Phi}(y) \right) \end{aligned} \,.

References

The original informal discussion for RG-flow along scaling transformations is due to

Formulation in the rigorous context of causal perturbation theory/pAQFT, via the main theorem of perturbative renormalization, is due to

reviewed in

In the context of factorization algebras, this is given by the book Renormalization and Effective Field Theory

Last revised on August 5, 2019 at 18:08:23. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.