Two-dimensional Yang–Mills Theory
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In mathematical physics, two-dimensional Yang–Mills theory is the special case of
Yang–Mills theory In mathematical physics, Yang–Mills theory is a gauge theory based on a special unitary group SU(''N''), or more generally any compact, reductive Lie algebra. Yang–Mills theory seeks to describe the behavior of elementary particles using th ...
in which the dimension of spacetime is taken to be two. This special case allows for a rigorously defined Yang–Mills measure, meaning that the (Euclidean) path integral can be interpreted as a
measure Measure may refer to: * Measurement, the assignment of a number to a characteristic of an object or event Law * Ballot measure, proposed legislation in the United States * Church of England Measure, legislation of the Church of England * Mea ...
on the set of connections modulo gauge transformations. This situation contrasts with the four-dimensional case, where a rigorous construction of the theory as a measure is currently unknown. An aspect of the subject of particular interest is the large-N limit, in which the structure group is taken to be the unitary group U(N) and then the N tends to infinity limit is taken. The large-N limit of two-dimensional Yang–Mills theory has connections to string theory.


Background

Interest in the Yang–Mills measure comes from a statistical mechanical or constructive quantum field theoretic approach to formulating a quantum theory for the Yang–Mills field. A
gauge field In physics, a gauge theory is a type of field theory in which the Lagrangian (and hence the dynamics of the system itself) does not change (is invariant) under local transformations according to certain smooth families of operations (Lie groups) ...
is described mathematically by a 1-form A on a principal G-bundle over a manifold M taking values in the
Lie algebra In mathematics, a Lie algebra (pronounced ) is a vector space \mathfrak g together with an Binary operation, operation called the Lie bracket, an Alternating multilinear map, alternating bilinear map \mathfrak g \times \mathfrak g \rightarrow ...
L(G) of the
Lie group In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group that is also a differentiable manifold. A manifold is a space that locally resembles Euclidean space, whereas groups define the abstract concept of a binary operation along with the additio ...
G. We assume that the structure group G, which describes the physical symmetries of the gauge field, is a compact Lie group with a bi-invariant metric on the Lie algebra L(G), and we also assume given a Riemannian metric on the manifold M. The Yang–Mills action functional is given by S_(A)=\frac \int_M \, F^A\, ^2\,d\sigma_M where F^A is the
curvature In mathematics, curvature is any of several strongly related concepts in geometry. Intuitively, the curvature is the amount by which a curve deviates from being a straight line, or a surface deviates from being a plane. For curves, the canonic ...
of the connection form A, the norm-squared in the integrand comes from the metric on the Lie algebra and the one on the base manifold, and \sigma_M is the Riemannian volume measure on M. The measure \mu_T is given formally by d\mu_T(A)= \frac e^ DA, as a normalized probability measure on the space of all connections on the bundle, with T>0 a parameter, and Z_T is a formal
normalizing constant The concept of a normalizing constant arises in probability theory and a variety of other areas of mathematics. The normalizing constant is used to reduce any probability function to a probability density function with total probability of one. ...
. More precisely, the probability measure is more likely to be meaningful on the space of orbits of connections under gauge transformations.


The Yang–Mills measure for two-dimensional manifolds

Study of Yang–Mills theory in two dimensions dates back at least to work of A. A. Migdal in 1975. Some formulas appearing in Migdal's work can, in retrospect, be seen to be connected to the heat kernel on the structure group of the theory. The role of the heat kernel was made more explicit in various works in the late 1970s, culminating in the introduction of the heat kernel action in work of Menotti and Onofri in 1981. In the continuum theory, the Yang–Mills measure \mu_T was rigorously defined for the case where M =^2 by Bruce Driver and by Leonard Gross, Christopher King, and Ambar Sengupta. For compact manifolds, both oriented and non-oriented, with or without boundary, with specified bundle topology, the Yang–Mills measure was constructed by Sengupta In this approach the 2-dimensional Yang–Mills measure is constructed by using a Gaussian measure on an infinite-dimensional space conditioned to satisfy relations implied by the topologies of the surface and of the bundle. Wilson loop variables (certain important variables on the space) were defined using stochastic differential equations and their expected values computed explicitly and found to agree with the results of the heat kernel action. Dana S. Fine used the formal Yang–Mills functional integral to compute loop expectation values. Other approaches include that of Klimek and Kondracki and Ashtekar et al. Thierry Lévy constructed the 2-dimensional Yang–Mills measure in a very general framework, starting with the loop-expectation value formulas and constructing the measure, somewhat analogously to Brownian motion measure being constructed from
transition probabilities A Markov chain or Markov process is a stochastic model describing a sequence of possible events in which the probability of each event depends only on the state attained in the previous event. Informally, this may be thought of as, "What happe ...
. Unlike other works that also aimed to construct the measure from loop expectation values, Lévy's construction makes it possible to consider a very wide family of loop observables. The discrete Yang–Mills measure is a term that has been used for the
lattice gauge theory In physics, lattice gauge theory is the study of gauge theories on a spacetime that has been discretized into a lattice. Gauge theories are important in particle physics, and include the prevailing theories of elementary particles: quantum elec ...
version of the Yang–Mills measure, especially for compact surfaces. The lattice in this case is a triangulation of the surface. Notable facts are: (i) the discrete Yang–Mills measure can encode the topology of the bundle over the continuum surface even if only the triangulation is used to define the measure; (ii) when two surfaces are sewn along a common boundary loop, the corresponding discrete Yang–Mills measures convolve to yield the measure for the combined surface.


Wilson loop expectation values in 2 dimensions

For a piecewise smooth loop \gamma on the base manifold M and a point u on the fiber in the principal G-bundle P\to M over the base point o\in M of the loop, there is the holonomy h_(A) of any connection A on the bundle. For regular loops \gamma_1, \ldots, \gamma_n, all based at o and any function \varphi on G^n the function A\mapsto \varphi\bigl(h_(A),\ldots, h_(A)\bigr) is called a Wilson loop variable, of interest mostly when \varphi is a product of traces of the holonomies in representations of the group G. With M being a two-dimensional Riemannian manifold the loop expectation values \int \varphi\bigl(h_(A),\ldots, h_(A)\bigr)\,d\mu_T(A) were computed in the above-mentioned works. If M is the plane then \int \varphi\bigl(h_(A) \bigr)\,d\mu_T(A) =\int_G \varphi(x) Q_(x)\,dx, where Q_t(y) is the
heat kernel In the mathematical study of heat conduction and diffusion, a heat kernel is the fundamental solution to the heat equation on a specified domain with appropriate boundary conditions. It is also one of the main tools in the study of the spectru ...
on the group G, a is the area enclosed by the loop \gamma, and the integration is with respect to unit-mass
Haar measure In mathematical analysis, the Haar measure assigns an "invariant volume" to subsets of locally compact topological groups, consequently defining an integral for functions on those groups. This measure was introduced by Alfréd Haar in 1933, though ...
. This formula was proved by Driver and by Gross et al. using the Gaussian measure construction of the Yang–Mills measure on the plane and by defining parallel transport by interpreting the equation of parallel transport as a Stratonovich stochastic differential equation. If M is the 2-sphere then \int \varphi\bigl(h_(A) \bigr)\,d\mu_T(A) =\frac \int_G \varphi(x) Q_(x)Q_(x^)\,dx, where now b is the area of the region "outside" the loop \gamma, and c is the total area of the sphere. This formula was proved by Sengupta using the conditioned Gaussian measure construction of the Yang–Mills measure and the result agrees with what one gets by using the heat kernel action of Menotti and Onofri. As an example for higher genus surfaces, if M is a
torus In geometry, a torus (plural tori, colloquially donut or doughnut) is a surface of revolution generated by revolving a circle in three-dimensional space about an axis that is coplanar with the circle. If the axis of revolution does not tou ...
, then \int \varphi\bigl(h_(A) \bigr)\,d\mu_T(A) =\frac, with c being the total area of the torus, and \gamma a contractible loop on the torus enclosing an area a. This, and counterparts in higher genus as well as for surfaces with boundary and for bundles with nontrivial topology, were proved by Sengupta. There is an extensive physics literature on loop expectation values in two-dimensional Yang–Mills theory. Many of the above formulas were known in the physics literature from the 1970s, with the results initially expressed in terms of a sum over the characters of the gauge group rather than the heat kernel and with the function \varphi being the trace in some representation of the group. Expressions involving the heat kernel then appeared explicitly in the form of the "heat kernel action" in work of Menotti and Onofri. The role of the
convolution In mathematics (in particular, functional analysis), convolution is a operation (mathematics), mathematical operation on two function (mathematics), functions ( and ) that produces a third function (f*g) that expresses how the shape of one is ...
property of the heat kernel was used in works of
Sergio Albeverio Sergio Albeverio (born 17 January 1939) is a Swiss mathematician and mathematical physicist working in numerous fields of mathematics and its applications. In particular he is known for his work in probability theory, analysis (including infini ...
et al. in constructing stochastic cosurface processes inspired by Yang–Mills theory and, indirectly, by Makeenko and Migdal in the physics literature.


The low-T limit

The Yang–Mills partition function is, formally, : \int e^\,DA In the two-dimensional case we can view this as being (proportional to) the denominator that appears in the loop expectation values. Thus, for example, the partition function for the torus would be \int_ Q_(aba^b^)\,da\,db, where S is the area of the torus. In two of the most impactful works in the field, Edward Witten showed that as T\downarrow 0 the partition function yields the volume of the
moduli space In mathematics, in particular algebraic geometry, a moduli space is a geometric space (usually a scheme or an algebraic stack) whose points represent algebro-geometric objects of some fixed kind, or isomorphism classes of such objects. Such spac ...
of flat connections with respect to a natural volume measure on the moduli space. This volume measure is associated to a natural symplectic structure on the moduli space when the surface is orientable, and is the torsion of a certain complex in the case where the surface is not orientable. Witten's discovery has been studied in different ways by several researchers. Let \mathcal^0_g denote the
moduli space In mathematics, in particular algebraic geometry, a moduli space is a geometric space (usually a scheme or an algebraic stack) whose points represent algebro-geometric objects of some fixed kind, or isomorphism classes of such objects. Such spac ...
of flat connections on a trivial bundle, with structure group being a compact connected semi-simple Lie group G whose Lie algebra is equipped with an Ad-invariant metric, over a compact two-dimensional orientable manifold of genus g\geq 2. Witten showed that the symplectic volume of this moduli space is given by where the sum is over all irreducible representations of G. This was proved rigorous by Sengupta (see also the works by
Lisa Jeffrey Lisa Claire Jeffrey FRSC is a Canadian mathematician, a professor of mathematics at the University of Toronto. In her research, she uses symplectic geometry to provide rigorous proofs of results in quantum field theory. Jeffrey graduated from P ...
and by Kefeng Liu). There is a large literature on the symplectic structure on the moduli space of flat connections, and more generally on the moduli space itself, the major early work being that of Michael Atiyah and Raoul Bott. Returning to the Yang–Mills measure, Sengupta proved that the measure itself converges in a weak sense to a suitably scaled multiple of the symplectic volume measure for orientable surfaces of genus \geq 2. Thierry Lévy and James R. Norris established a large deviations principle for this convergence, showing that the Yang–Mills measure encodes the Yang–Mills action functional even though this functional does not explicitly appear in the rigorous formulation of the measure.


The large-''N'' limit

The large-''N'' limit of gauge theories refers to the behavior of the theory for gauge groups of the form U(N), SU(N), O(N), SO(N), and other such families, as N goes to \uparrow \infty. There is a large physics literature on this subject, including major early works by Gerardus 't Hooft. A key tool in this analysis is the Makeenko–Migdal equation. In two dimensions, the Makeenko–Migdal equation takes a special form developed by Kazakov and Kostov. In the large-N limit, the 2-D form of the Makeenko–Migdal equation relates the Wilson loop functional for a complicated curve with multiple crossings to the product of Wilson loop functionals for a pair of simpler curves with at least one less crossing. In the case of the sphere or the plane, it was the proposed that the Makeenko–Migdal equation could (in principle) reduce the computation of Wilson loop functionals for arbitrary curves to the Wilson loop functional for a simple closed curve. In dimension 2, some of the major ideas were proposed by I. M. Singer, who named this limit the master field (a general notion in some areas of
physics Physics is the natural science that studies matter, its fundamental constituents, its motion and behavior through space and time, and the related entities of energy and force. "Physical science is that department of knowledge which r ...
). Xu studied the large-N limit of 2-dimensional Yang–Mills loop expectation values using ideas from random matrix theory. Sengupta computed the large-''N'' limit of loop expectation values in the plane and commented on the connection with free probability. Confirming one proposal of Singer, Michael Anshelevich and Sengupta showed that the large-''N'' limit of the Yang–Mills measure over the plane for the groups U(N) is given by a free probability theoretic counterpart of the Yang–Mills measure. An extensive study of the master field in the plane was made by Thierry Lévy. Several major contributions have been made by Bruce K. Driver, Brian C. Hall, and Todd Kemp, Franck Gabriel, and Antoine Dahlqvist. Dahlqvist and Norris have constructed the master field on the two-dimensional sphere. In spacetime dimension larger than 2, there is very little in terms of rigorous mathematical results.
Sourav Chatterjee Sourav Chatterjee (born November 1979) is an Indian mathematician, specializing in mathematical statistics and probability theory. Chatterjee is credited with work on the study of fluctuations in random structures, concentration and super-conce ...
has proved several results in large-''N'' gauge theory theory for dimension larger than 2. Chatterjee established an explicit formula for the leading term of the free energy of three-dimensional U(N) lattice gauge theory for any N, as the lattice spacing tends to zero. Let Z(n,\varepsilon ,g) be the partition function of d-dimensional U (N) lattice gauge theory with coupling strength g in the box with lattice spacing \varepsilon and size being n spacings in each direction. Chatterjee showed that in dimensions d=2 and 3, \log Z(n,\varepsilon ,g) is n^d \left( \frac(d-1)N^2\log(g^2\varepsilon^) +(d-1)\log\left( \frac \right) +N^2K_d\right) up to leading order in n, where K_d is a limiting free-energy term. A similar result was also obtained for in dimension 4, for n\to\infty, \varepsilon\to 0, and g\to 0 independently.


References

Differential topology Mathematical concepts Mathematical physics Measures (measure theory) Stochastic differential equations Gauge theories {{Improve categories, date=February 2021