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- From: jbaez@zermelo.mit.edu (John C. Baez)
- Subject: Re: Symmetries, groups, and categories
- Message-ID: <1992Aug14.195651.22652@galois.mit.edu>
- Sender: news@galois.mit.edu
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- Organization: MIT Department of Mathematics, Cambridge, MA
- References: <1992Aug13.122004.19299@nuscc.nus.sg> <1992Aug13.182411.11593@galois.mit.edu> <4537@news.duke.edu>
- Date: Fri, 14 Aug 92 19:56:51 GMT
- Lines: 100
-
- In article <4537@news.duke.edu> dmrrsn@math.duke.edu (David R. Morrison) writes:
- >In article <1992Aug13.182411.11593@galois.mit.edu> jbaez@riesz.mit.edu (John C. Baez) writes:
- >>(In practice various sneaky things - infrared slavery and Higgses -
- >>conspire to cloak the conformal invariance of the fields in these
- >>cases, so the practiclal relevance of conformal symmetry is limited.)
-
- >OK, John, I'll bite: what's "infrared slavery"?
-
- I will give a brief explanation since probably someone else can give a
- better one. The strong force so important in nuclei is explained in the
- standard model as being due to the exchange of gluons. Gluons are
- vector bosons for a gauge field theory with gauge group SU(3), so-called
- "chromodynamics". As a gauge field they would classically satisfy the
- Yang-Mills equations, which are conformally invariant. But we never see
- free gluons zipping through empty space like photons, so it's hard to
- notice the conformal invariance of the Yang-Mills equations. Why do we
- never see free gluons? They call it "infrared slavery". Quantum
- effects SEEM to ensure that in SU(3) gauge theory one will never find a
- free "colored" particle, that is, one which carries the SU(3) charge.
- That's the "explanation" for why we never see quarks. But since
- chromodynamics is a nonabelian gauge theory (the group SU(3) is
- nonabelian) the gauge fields are themselves charged. (Unlike photons
- which are uncharged and arise from an abelian theory, with gauge group
- U(1).) So we never see free gluons either. We just see mesons and
- baryons, which are colorless (=zero net charge) composites of quarks and
- gluons.
-
- Why is infrared slavery - or "confinement" - a consequence of SU(3)
- quantum gauge field theory? This is one of those funny things due to
- renormalization that nobody quite understands yet. (Many people
- understand it better than me, though.) There is no "proof" of
- confinement, indeed for mathematical physicists this would be the holy
- grail of constructive quantum field theory. There are numerical
- calculations that seem to show that confinement occurs when you
- simulate chromodynamics. In any event, the crude story they always tell
- beginners is that colored particles in chromodynamics attract each other
- with a force that is *independent of distance*, as opposed to the
- good-old inverse square law. This is because the gluons carrying the
- force tend to form a "string" joining the two particles, rather than
- radiating out in all directions like photons do. (Why? Well, that's
- confinement. :-)) So to pull apart the quark-antiquark pair in a meson
- requires an energy proportional to how far you've pulled them apart,
- like sticky taffy. :-) Past a certain point the energy is enough so
- that it takes less energy just to create a new quark-antiquark pair:
-
- quark----------antiquark
-
- becomes
-
- quark---antiquark quark---antiquark
-
- So we never see lone quarks (or gluons).
-
- A better explanation involves an effective action for the gluon fields
- that one gets by doing renormalization theory, but this is technical and
- I forget enough details so that I don't dare trying to run through it.
-
- I should warn the reader of various cool possibilities, such as
- "glueballs" colorless composites made solely of gluons -- which have not
- been observed, but could (for all of our lousy understanding of
- chromodynamics) possibly exist. Also, at very high relative momenta,
- i.e. at very short distance scales, quarks and gluons ARE approximated
- well by free particles. This is so-called "asymptotic freedom" - the
- opposite of "infrared slavery". Some experimentalist can remind us when
- they first found evidence for this, which was a big boost for Feynman's
- "parton" model.
-
- Another cool thing is that superdense superheated plasmas of baryons and
- mesons can get so hot that the quarks become effectively free... I think
- Scott is working on torturing particles in this manner.
-
- >>We can think of this as a spacetime where two 1-dimensional circular
- >>universes collide and form one! Or we can think of it as a tubular
- >>Feynman diagram. Weird, huh?
- >
- >Gee, John, I hate to point this out but the tubular Feynman diagram
- >interpretation leads to string theory! I'm happy with it, being a
- >string theory fan myself, but from you...?
-
- I should make clear that there are only certain things about string
- theory that bug me, aside from the fact that people make such a big deal
- about it. One is that traditionally it has treated strings wiggling
- around in a background spacetime with a given metric. (So that the
- tubular Feynman diagrams are really surfaces IN, say, Minkowski space or
- some 26-dimensional analog thereof.) This is rather unfortunate if one
- is advocating string theory as an explanation of gravity, since in
- gravity it is the dynamics of the metric one is trying to explain!
- Writing string field actions that depend on a background metric sounds
- awfully like trying to do quantum gravity perturbing around a flat
- background metric. Maybe a string fan can say what the current state of
- the art is.
-
- In any event, in 2d TQFTs the tubular Feynman diagrams just represent
- the 2d spacetime itself, not the worldsheet of a string floating around
- "in" some spacetime. But there are many mathematical relationships
- between string theory and TQFTs and that's why these days I think there
- is something to some of the *math* of string theory. Also in the loop
- representation of quantum gravity one quickly runs into Chern-Simons
- theory, Wess-Zumino-Witten models, fusion rules and other pieces of
- jargon invented by string theorists.
-