Grassmann Integral
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In
mathematical physics Mathematical physics refers to the development of mathematics, mathematical methods for application to problems in physics. The ''Journal of Mathematical Physics'' defines the field as "the application of mathematics to problems in physics and t ...
, the Berezin integral, named after
Felix Berezin Felix Alexandrovich Berezin (russian: Фе́ликс Алекса́ндрович Бере́зин; 25 April 1931 – 14 July 1980) was a Soviet Russian mathematician and physicist known for his contributions to the theory of supersymmetry and sup ...
, (also known as Grassmann integral, after
Hermann Grassmann Hermann Günther Grassmann (german: link=no, Graßmann, ; 15 April 1809 – 26 September 1877) was a German polymath known in his day as a linguist and now also as a mathematician. He was also a physicist, general scholar, and publisher. His mat ...
), is a way to define integration for functions of
Grassmann variable In mathematical physics, a Grassmann number, named after Hermann Grassmann (also called an anticommuting number or supernumber), is an element of the exterior algebra over the complex numbers. The special case of a 1-dimensional algebra is known as ...
s (elements of the
exterior algebra In mathematics, the exterior algebra, or Grassmann algebra, named after Hermann Grassmann, is an algebra that uses the exterior product or wedge product as its multiplication. In mathematics, the exterior product or wedge product of vectors is ...
). It is not an
integral In mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented i ...
in the
Lebesgue Henri Léon Lebesgue (; June 28, 1875 – July 26, 1941) was a French mathematician known for his theory of integration, which was a generalization of the 17th-century concept of integration—summing the area between an axis and the curve of ...
sense; the word "integral" is used because the Berezin integral has properties analogous to the Lebesgue integral and because it extends the path integral in physics, where it is used as a sum over histories for
fermion In particle physics, a fermion is a particle that follows Fermi–Dirac statistics. Generally, it has a half-odd-integer spin: spin , spin , etc. In addition, these particles obey the Pauli exclusion principle. Fermions include all quarks an ...
s.


Definition

Let \Lambda^n be the exterior algebra of polynomials in anticommuting elements \theta_,\dots,\theta_ over the field of complex numbers. (The ordering of the generators \theta_1,\dots,\theta_n is fixed and defines the orientation of the exterior algebra.)


One variable

The ''Berezin integral'' over the sole Grassmann variable \theta = \theta_1 is defined to be a linear functional : \int f(\theta)+bg(\theta)\, d\theta = a\int f(\theta) \, d\theta + b\int g(\theta) \, d\theta, \quad a,b \in \C where we define : \int \theta \, d\theta = 1, \qquad \int \, d\theta = 0 so that : : \int \frac\partialf(\theta)\,d\theta = 0. These properties define the integral uniquely and imply : \int (a\theta+b)\, d\theta = a, \quad a,b \in \C. Take note that f(\theta)=a\theta + b is the most general function of \theta because Grassmann variables square to zero, so f(\theta) cannot have non-zero terms beyond linear order.


Multiple variables

The ''Berezin integral'' on \Lambda^ is defined to be the unique linear functional \int_\cdot\textrm\theta with the following properties: :\int_\theta_\cdots\theta_\,\mathrm\theta=1, :\int_\frac\,\mathrm\theta=0,\ i=1,\dots,n for any f\in\Lambda^n, where \partial/\partial\theta_ means the left or the right partial derivative. These properties define the integral uniquely. Notice that different conventions exist in the literature: Some authors define instead :\int_\theta_\cdots\theta_\,\mathrm\theta:=1. The formula :\int_f(\theta) \mathrm\theta=\int_\left( \cdots \int_\left(\int_f(\theta) \, \mathrm\theta_\right) \, \mathrm\theta_2 \cdots \right)\mathrm\theta_n expresses the Fubini law. On the right-hand side, the interior integral of a monomial f=g(\theta')\theta_ is set to be g( \theta'), where \theta'=\left(\theta_,\ldots,\theta_\right); the integral of f=g (\theta') vanishes. The integral with respect to \theta_ is calculated in the similar way and so on.


Change of Grassmann variables

Let \theta_=\theta_\left(\xi_,\ldots,\xi_\right),\ i=1,\ldots,n, be odd polynomials in some antisymmetric variables \xi_,\ldots,\xi_. The Jacobian is the matrix :D=\left\, where \partial /\partial\xi_ refers to the ''right derivative'' (\partial(\theta_1\theta_2) /\partial\theta_2 = \theta_1, \; \partial(\theta_1\theta_2) /\partial\theta_1 = -\theta_2). The formula for the coordinate change reads :\int f(\theta)\mathrm\theta=\int f(\theta( \xi))(\det D)^\mathrm\xi.


Integrating even and odd variables


Definition

Consider now the algebra \Lambda^ of functions of real commuting variables x=x_,\ldots,x_ and of anticommuting variables \theta_,\ldots,\theta_ (which is called the free superalgebra of dimension (m, n)). Intuitively, a function f=f(x,\theta) \in\Lambda^ is a function of m even (bosonic, commuting) variables and of n odd (fermionic, anti-commuting) variables. More formally, an element f=f(x,\theta) \in\Lambda^ is a function of the argument x that varies in an open set X\subset\R^ with values in the algebra \Lambda^. Suppose that this function is continuous and vanishes in the complement of a compact set K\subset\R^. The Berezin integral is the number :\int_f(x,\theta)\mathrm\theta \mathrmx=\int_\mathrmx\int_f(x,\theta)\mathrm\theta.


Change of even and odd variables

Let a coordinate transformation be given by x_=x_ (y,\xi),\ i=1,\ldots,m;\ \theta_=\theta_ (y,\xi),j=1,\ldots, n, where x_ are even and \theta_ are odd polynomials of \xi depending on even variables y. The Jacobian matrix of this transformation has the block form: :\mathrm=\frac= \begin A & B\\ C & D\end, where each even derivative \partial/\partial y_ commutes with all elements of the algebra \Lambda^; the odd derivatives commute with even elements and anticommute with odd elements. The entries of the diagonal blocks A=\partial x/\partial y and D=\partial\theta/\partial\xi are even and the entries of the off-diagonal blocks B=\partial x/\partial \xi,\ C=\partial\theta/\partial y are odd functions, where \partial /\partial\xi_ again mean ''right derivatives''. We now need the
Berezinian In mathematics and theoretical physics, the Berezinian or superdeterminant is a generalization of the determinant to the case of supermatrices. The name is for Felix Berezin. The Berezinian plays a role analogous to the determinant when considerin ...
(or ''superdeterminant'') of the matrix \mathrm, which is the even function :\mathrm=\det\left( A-BD^C\right) \det D^ defined when the function \det D is invertible in \Lambda^. Suppose that the real functions x_=x_i(y,0) define a smooth invertible map F:Y\to X of open sets X, Y in \R^ and the linear part of the map \xi\mapsto\theta=\theta(y,\xi) is invertible for each y\in Y. The general transformation law for the Berezin integral reads :\int_f(x,\theta)\mathrm\theta\mathrmx=\int_f(x(y,\xi),\theta (y,\xi)) \varepsilon \mathrm \xi\mathrmy =\int_f (x(y,\xi),\theta (y,\xi))\varepsilon\frac\mathrm\xi\mathrmy, where \varepsilon=\mathrm(\det\partial x(y,0)/\partial y) is the sign of the orientation of the map F. The superposition f(x(y,\xi),\theta(y,\xi)) is defined in the obvious way, if the functions x_(y,\xi) do not depend on \xi. In the general case, we write x_(y,\xi) =x_(y,0)+\delta_, where \delta_, i=1,\ldots,m are even nilpotent elements of \Lambda^ and set :f(x(y,\xi),\theta) =f(x(y,0),\theta) +\sum_i\frac(x(y,0),\theta) \delta_+\frac \sum_ \frac(x(y,0),\theta) \delta_\delta_+ \cdots, where the Taylor series is finite.


Useful formulas

The following formulas for Gaussian integrals are used often in the
path integral formulation The path integral formulation is a description in quantum mechanics that generalizes the action principle of classical mechanics. It replaces the classical notion of a single, unique classical trajectory for a system with a sum, or functional in ...
of
quantum field theory In theoretical physics, quantum field theory (QFT) is a theoretical framework that combines classical field theory, special relativity, and quantum mechanics. QFT is used in particle physics to construct physical models of subatomic particles and ...
: * \int \exp\left \theta^TA\eta\right\,d\theta\,d\eta = \det A with A being a complex n \times n matrix. * \int \exp\left \tfrac \theta^T M \theta\right\,d\theta = \begin \mathrm\, M & n \mbox \\ 0 & n \mbox \end with M being a complex skew-symmetric n \times n matrix, and \mathrm\, M being the
Pfaffian In mathematics, the determinant of a skew-symmetric matrix can always be written as the square of a polynomial in the matrix entries, a polynomial with integer coefficients that only depend on the size of the matrix. The value of this polynomial, ...
of M, which fulfills (\mathrm\, M)^2 = \det M. In the above formulas the notation d \theta = d\theta_1\cdots \, d\theta_n is used. From these formulas, other useful formulas follow (See Appendix A in) : *\int \exp\left theta^TA\eta +\theta^T J + K^T \eta \right\,d\eta_1\,d\theta_1\dots d\eta_n d\theta_n = \det A \,\,\exp K^T A^ J with A being an invertible n \times n matrix. Note that these integrals are all in the form of a partition function.


History

The mathematical theory of the integral with commuting and anticommuting variables was invented and developed by
Felix Berezin Felix Alexandrovich Berezin (russian: Фе́ликс Алекса́ндрович Бере́зин; 25 April 1931 – 14 July 1980) was a Soviet Russian mathematician and physicist known for his contributions to the theory of supersymmetry and sup ...
. Some important earlier insights were made by
David John Candlin David John Candlin (1928 in Croydon, Surrey – 4 December 2019) was an English physicist. He was known for developing the path integral formulation of the Fermionic field, inventing Grassmann integration for this purpose. He received his PhD ...
in 1956. Other authors contributed to these developments, including the physicists Khalatnikov (although his paper contains mistakes), Matthews and Salam, and Martin.


See also

*
Supermanifold In physics and mathematics, supermanifolds are generalizations of the manifold concept based on ideas coming from supersymmetry. Several definitions are in use, some of which are described below. Informal definition An informal definition is com ...
*
Berezinian In mathematics and theoretical physics, the Berezinian or superdeterminant is a generalization of the determinant to the case of supermatrices. The name is for Felix Berezin. The Berezinian plays a role analogous to the determinant when considerin ...


References


Further reading

* Theodore Voronov: ''Geometric integration theory on Supermanifolds'', Harwood Academic Publisher, * Berezin, Felix Alexandrovich: ''Introduction to Superanalysis'', Springer Netherlands, {{isbn, 978-90-277-1668-2 Multilinear algebra Differential forms Integral calculus Mathematical physics Quantum field theory Supersymmetry