Wednesday, January 21, 2015

quantum field theory - QED and anomaly



I've just started to learn anomalies in quantum field theories. I have a question.



  1. How to show that QED is free from vector current anomaly and what would happen if it were not? In other words, how can we show that $\partial_\mu j^\mu=0$ even at the quantum level?


As I understand, violation of current conservation will cause a violation of Ward identity. A violation of Ward identity is related to violation of unitarity.




  1. How does the unphysical photon polarization states appear in the theory through anomaly? And how do their appearance violate the unitarity of the theory?





  2. Why would the vector current anomaly be a problem in QED but not the chiral current anomaly? Don't we have to get rid of the axial current anomaly in QED?





Answer



1. How can we show that $\partial\cdot j\equiv 0$ at the quantum level?


For example, by showing that the Ward Identity holds. It should be more or less clear that the WI holds if and only if $\partial\cdot j=0$. There are multiple proofs of the validity of the WI; some of them assume that $\partial\cdot j=0$, and some of them use a diagrammatic analysis to show that the WI holds perturbatively (and this is in fact how Ward originally derive the identity, cf. 78.182). It is a very complicated combinatiorial problem (you have to show inductively that an arbitrary diagram is zero when you take $\varepsilon^\mu\to k^\mu$), but it can be done. Once you have proven that the WI holds to all orders in perturbation theory, you can logically conclude that $\partial\cdot j\equiv 0$. For a diagrammatic discussion of the WI, see for example Bjorken & Drell, section 17.9. See also Itzykson and Zuber, section 7-1-3. For scalar QED see Schwartz, section 9.4.


Alternatively, you can also show that $\partial\cdot j=0$ by showing that the path integral measure is invariant (à la Fujikawa) under global phase rotations. This implies that the vector current is not anomalous.


2.a. How does the unphysical photon polarization states appear in the theory through anomaly?


Take your favourite proof that the WI implies that the unphysical states do not contribute to $S$ matrix elements, and reverse it: assume that $\partial \cdot j\neq 0$ to convince yourself that now the unphysical states do contribute to $S$ matrix elements. Alternatively, make up your own modified QED theory using a non-conserved current and check for yourself that scattering amplitudes are not $\xi$ independent.


2.b. And how do their appearance violate the unitarity of the theory?



Morally speaking, because unphysical polarisations have negative norm. If the physical Hilbert space contains negative-norm states, the whole paradigm of probability amplitudes breaks down.


3. Why would the vector current anomaly be a problem in QED but not the chiral current anomaly?


Because in pure QED the axial current is not coupled to a gauge field, and therefore its conservation is not fundamental to the quantum theory. The axial anomaly in pure QED would be nothing but a curiosity of the theory (a nice reminder that classically conserved current need not survive cuantisation).


On the other hand, in QED the vector current is coupled to a gauge field, the photon field, and as such its conservation is crucial to the consistency of the theory: without it the WI fails, and therefore we lose unitarity (or covariance, depending on how you formulate the theory).


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