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Gluon field strength tensor
In theoretical particle physics, the gluon field strength tensor is a second order tensor field characterizing the gluon interaction between quarks.
The strong interaction is one of the fundamental interactions of nature, and the quantum field theory (QFT) to describe it is called quantum chromodynamics (QCD). Quarks interact with each other by the strong force due to their color charge, mediated by gluons. Gluons themselves possess color charge and can mutually interact.
The gluon field strength tensor is a rank 2 tensor field on the spacetime with values in the adjoint bundle of the chromodynamical SU(3) gauge group (see vector bundle for necessary definitions). Throughout, Latin indices (typically a, b, c, n) take values 1, 2, ..., 8 for the eight gluon color charges, while Greek indices (typically α, β, μ, ν) take values 0 for timelike components and 1, 2, 3 for spacelike components of four-vectors and four-dimensional spacetime tensors. Throughout all equations, the summation convention is used on all color and tensor indices, unless explicitly stated there is no sum to be taken.
Definition
Below the definitions (and most of the notation) follow K. Yagi, T. Hatsuda, Y. Miake[1] and Greiner, Schäfer.[2]
Tensor components
The tensor is denoted G, (or F, F, or some variant), and has components defined proportional to the commutator of the quark covariant derivative \( D_\mu \) :[2][3]
\( G_{\alpha\beta} = \pm \frac{1}{g_s} [D_\alpha, D_\beta]\,, \)
where:
\( D_\mu =\partial_\mu \pm ig_s t_a \mathcal{A}^a_\mu\,, \)
in which
i is the imaginary unit;
gs is the coupling constant of the strong force;
ta = λa/2 are the Gell-Mann matrices λa divided by 2;
a is a color index in the adjoint representation of SU(3) which take values 1, 2, ..., 8 for the eight generators of the group, namely the Gell-Mann matrices;
μ is a spacetime index, 0 for timelike components and 1, 2, 3 for spacelike components;
\( \mathcal{A}_\mu = t_a \mathcal{A}^a_\mu \) expresses the gluon field, a spin-1 gauge field or, in differentially-geometric parlance, a connection in the SU(3) principal bundle;
\( \mathcal{A}_\mu \) are its four (coordinate-system dependent) components, that in a fixed gauge are 3×3 traceless Hermitian matrix-valued functions, while \( \mathcal{A}^a_\mu \) are 32 real-valued functions, the four components for each of the eight four-vector fields.
Different authors choose different signs.
Expanding the commutator gives;
\( G_{\alpha\beta} =\partial_{\alpha}\mathcal{A}_\beta-\partial_\beta\mathcal{A}_\alpha \pm ig_s[\mathcal{A}_{\alpha}, \mathcal{A}_{\beta}] \)
Substituting \( t_a \mathcal{A}^a_\alpha = \mathcal{A}_{\alpha} \) and using the commutation relation \( [t_a, t_b ] = i f^{abc} t_c \) for the Gell-Mann matrices (with a relabeling of indices), in which f abc are the structure constants of SU(3), each of the gluon field strength components can be expressed as a linear combination of the Gell-Mann matrices as follows:
\(\begin{align} G_{\alpha \beta} & = \partial_\alpha t_a \mathcal{A}^a_{\beta} - \partial_\beta t_a \mathcal{A}^a_\alpha \pm i g_s \left[t_b ,t_c \right ] \mathcal{A}^b_\alpha \mathcal{A}^c_\beta \\ & = t_a \left( \partial_\alpha \mathcal{A}^a_{\beta} - \partial_\beta \mathcal{A}^a_\alpha \pm i^2 g_s \mathcal{A}^b_\alpha \mathcal{A}^c_\beta \right) \\ & = t_a G^a_{\alpha \beta} \\ \end{align}\,, \)
so that:[4][5]
\( G^a_{\alpha \beta} = \partial_\alpha \mathcal{A}^a_{\beta} - \partial_\beta \mathcal{A}^a_\alpha \mp g_s f^{abc} \mathcal{A}^b_\alpha \mathcal{A}^c_\beta \,, \)
where again a, b, c = 1, 2, ..., 8 are color indices. As with the gluon field, in a specific coordinate system and fixed gauge Gαβ are 3×3 traceless Hermitian matrix-valued functions, while Gaαβ are real-valued functions, the components of eight four-dimensional second order tensor fields.
Differential forms
The gluon color field can be described using the language of differential forms, specifically as an adjoint bundle-valued curvature 2-form (note that fibers of the adjoint bundle are the su(3) Lie algebra);
\( \mathbf{G} =\mathrm{d}\boldsymbol{\mathcal{A}} \mp g_s\,\boldsymbol{\mathcal{A}}\wedge \boldsymbol{\mathcal{A}}\,, \)
where \( \boldsymbol{\mathcal{A}} \) is the gluon field, a vector potential 1-form corresponding to G and ∧ is the (antisymmetric) wedge product of this algebra, producing the structure constants f abc. The Cartan-derivative of the field form (i.e. essentially the divergence of the field) would be zero in the absence of the "gluon terms", i.e. those \boldsymbol{\mathcal{A}} which represent the non-abelian character of the SU(3).
Comparison with the electromagnetic tensor
This almost parallels the electromagnetic field tensor (also denoted F ) in quantum electrodynamics, given by the electromagnetic four-potential A describing a spin-1 photon;
\( F_{\alpha\beta}=\partial_{\alpha}A_{\beta}-\partial_{\beta}A_{\alpha}\,, \)
or in the language of differential forms:
\( \mathbf{F} = \mathrm{d}\mathbf{A}\,. \)
The key difference between quantum electrodynamics and quantum chromodynamics is that the gluon field strength has extra terms which lead to self-interactions between the gluons and asymptotic freedom. This is a complication of the strong force making it inherently non-linear, contrary to the linear theory of the electromagnetic force. QCD is a non-abelian gauge theory. The word non-abelian in group-theoretical language means that the group operation in not commutative, that makes the corresponding Lie algebra non-trivial.
QCD Lagrangian density
See also: classical field theory
Characteristic of field theories, the dynamics of the field strength are summarized by a suitable Lagrangian density and substitution into the Euler–Lagrange equation (for fields) obtains the equation of motion for the field. The Lagrangian density for massless quarks, bound by gluons, is:[2]
\( \mathcal{L}=-\frac{1}{2}\mathrm{tr}\left(G_{\alpha\beta}G^{\alpha\beta}\right)+ \bar{\psi}\left(iD_\mu \right)\gamma^\mu\psi \)
where "tr" denotes trace of the 3×3 matrix GαβGαβ, and γμ are the 4×4 gamma matrices.
Gauge transformations
Main article: Gauge theory
In contrast to QED, the gluon field strength tensor is not gauge invariant by itself. Only the product of two contracted over all indices is gauge invariant.
Equations of motion
The equations[1] governing the evolution of the quark fields are:
\( ( i\hbar \gamma^\mu D_\mu - mc ) \psi = 0 \)
which is like the Dirac equation, and the equations for the gluon field strength tensor are:
\( \left[D_\mu , G^{\mu\nu} \right] = g_s j^\nu
which are similar to the Maxwell equations (when written in tensor notation), more specifically the Yang–Mills equations for quarks and gluons. The color charge four-current is the source of the gluon field strength tensor, analogous to the electromagnetic four-current as the source of the electromagnetic tensor, given by:
\( j^\nu = t^b j_b^\nu \,, \quad j_b^\nu = \bar{\psi}\gamma^\nu t^b \psi \,, \)
which is a conserved current since color charge is conserved, in other words the color four-current must satisfy the continuity equation:
\(\partial_\nu j^\nu = 0 \,. \)
See also
Quark confinement
Gell-Mann matrices
Field (physics)
Yang–Mills field
Eightfold Way (physics)
Einstein tensor
Wilson loop
Wess–Zumino gauge
References
Notes
K. Yagi, T. Hatsuda, Y. Miake (2005). Quark-Gluon Plasma: From Big Bang to Little Bang. Cambridge monographs on particle physics, nuclear physics, and cosmology 23. Cambridge University Press. pp. 17–18. ISBN 0-521-561-086.
W. Greiner, G. Schäfer (1994). "4". Quantum Chromodynamics. Springer. ISBN 3-540-57103-5.
S.O. Bilson-Thompson, D.B. Leinweber, A.G. Williams (2003). "Highly improved lattice field-strength tensor". Annals of Physics. 304(1) (Adelaide, Australia: Elsevier). pp. 1–21.
M. Eidemüller, H.G. Dosch, M. Jamin (1999). "The field strength correlator from QCD sum rules". Nucl.Phys.Proc.Suppl.86:421-425,2000 (Heidelberg, Germany). arXiv:hep-ph/9908318.
M. Shifman (2012). Advanced Topics in Quantum Field Theory: A Lecture Course. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521190843.
Further reading
Books
H. Fritzsch (1982). Quarks: the stuff of matter. Allen lane. ISBN 0-7139-15331.
B.R. Martin, G. Shaw (2009). Particle Physics. Manchester Physics Series (3rd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-03294-7.
S. Sarkar, H. Satz, B. Sinha (2009). The Physics of the Quark-Gluon Plasma: Introductory Lectures. Springer. ISBN 3642022855.
J. Thanh Van Tran (editor) (1987). Hadrons, Quarks and Gluons: Proceedings of the Hadronic Session of the Twenty-Second Rencontre de Moriond, Les Arcs-Savoie-France. Atlantica Séguier Frontières. ISBN 2863320483.
R. Alkofer, H. Reinhart (1995). Chiral Quark Dynamics. Springer. ISBN 3540601376.
K. Chung (2008). Hadronic Production of ψ(2S) Cross Section and Polarization. ProQuest. ISBN 0549597743.
J. Collins (2011). Foundations of Perturbative QCD. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521855330.
W.N.A. Cottingham, D.A.A. Greenwood (1998). Standard Model of Particle Physics. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521588324.
Selected papers
J.P. Maa, Q. Wang, G.P. Zhang (2012). "QCD evolutions of twist-3 chirality-odd operators". Physics Letters B. arXiv:1210.1006. Bibcode:2013PhLB..718.1358M. doi:10.1016/j.physletb.2012.12.007.
M. D’Elia, A. Di Giacomo, E. Meggiolaro (1997). "Field strength correlators in full QCD". Physics Letters B. arXiv:hep-lat/9705032. Bibcode:1997PhLB..408..315D. doi:10.1016/S0370-2693(97)00814-9.
A. Di Giacomo, M. D’elia, H. Panagopoulos, E. Meggiolaro (1998). "Gauge Invariant Field Strength Correlators In QCD". arXiv:hep-lat/9808056.
M. Neubert (1993). "A Virial Theorem for the Kinetic Energy of a Heavy Quark inside Hadrons". Physics Letters B. arXiv:hep-ph/9311232. Bibcode:1994PhLB..322..419N. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(94)91174-6.
M. Neubert, N. Brambilla, H.G. Dosch, A. Vairo (1998). "Field strength correlators and dual effective dynamics in QCD". Physical Review D. arXiv:hep-ph/9311232. Bibcode:1998PhRvD..58c4010B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.58.034010.
M. Neubert (1996). "QCD sum-rule calculation of the kinetic energy and chromo-interaction of heavy quarks inside mesons" (PDF). Physics Letters B.
External links
K. Ellis (2005). "QCD" (PDF). Fermilab.
"Chapter 2: The QCD Lagrangian" (PDF). Technische Universität München. Retrieved 2013-10-17.
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