Chiral model

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Soliton scattering process for two solitons in the integrable chiral model. The plot shows the energy density of the system, and the maxima represent the solitons. They approach along one axis, collide to form a single lump, then scatter at 90 degrees.
Soliton scattering process for two solitons in the integrable chiral model. The plot shows the energy density of the system, and the maxima represent the solitons.[1][2]

In nuclear physics, the chiral model, introduced by Feza Gürsey in 1960, is a phenomenological model describing effective interactions of mesons in the chiral limit (where the masses of the quarks go to zero), but without necessarily mentioning quarks at all. It is a nonlinear sigma model with the principal homogeneous space of a Lie group G as its target manifold. When the model was originally introduced, this Lie group was the SU(N), where N is the number of quark flavors. The Riemannian metric of the target manifold is given by a positive constant multiplied by the Killing form acting upon the Maurer–Cartan form of SU(N).

The internal global symmetry of this model is GL×GR, the left and right copies, respectively; where the left copy acts as the left action upon the target space, and the right copy acts as the right action. Phenomenologically, the left copy represents flavor rotations among the left-handed quarks, while the right copy describes rotations among the right-handed quarks, while these, L and R, are completely independent of each other. The axial pieces of these symmetries are spontaneously broken so that the corresponding scalar fields are the requisite Nambu−Goldstone bosons.

The model was later studied in the two-dimensional case as an integrable system, in particular an integrable field theory. Its integrability was shown by Faddeev and Reshetikhin in 1982 through the quantum inverse scattering method. The two-dimensional principal chiral model exhibits signatures of integrability such as a Lax pair/zero-curvature formulation, an infinite number of symmetries, and an underlying quantum group symmetry (in this case, Yangian symmetry).

This model admits topological solitons called skyrmions.

Departures from exact chiral symmetry are dealt with in chiral perturbation theory.

Mathematical formulation

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On a manifold (considered as the spacetime) M and a choice of compact Lie group G, the field content is a function U:MG. This defines a related field jμ=U1μU, a 𝔤-valued vector field (really, covector field) which is the Maurer–Cartan form. The principal chiral model is defined by the Lagrangian density =κ2tr(μU1μU)=κ2tr(jμjμ), where κ is a dimensionless coupling. In differential-geometric language, the field U is a section of a principal bundle π:PM with fibres isomorphic to the principal homogeneous space for M (hence why this defines the principal chiral model).

Phenomenology

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An outline of the original, 2-flavor model

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The chiral model of Gürsey (1960; also see Gell-Mann and Lévy) is now appreciated to be an effective theory of QCD with two light quarks, u, and d. The QCD Lagrangian is approximately invariant under independent global flavor rotations of the left- and right-handed quark fields,

{q𝖫q𝖫=L q𝖫=exp(i𝜽𝖫12𝝉)q𝖫q𝖱q𝖱=R q𝖱=exp(i𝜽𝖱12𝝉)q𝖱

where τ denote the Pauli matrices in the flavor space and θL , θ are the corresponding rotation angles.

The corresponding symmetry group  SU(2)𝖫×SU(2)𝖱  is the chiral group, controlled by the six conserved currents

Lμi=q¯𝖫γμτi2q𝖫,Rμi=q¯𝖱γμτi2q𝖱 ,

which can equally well be expressed in terms of the vector and axial-vector currents

Vμi=Lμi+Rμi,Aμi=RμiLμi.

The corresponding conserved charges generate the algebra of the chiral group,

[QIi,QIj]=iϵijkQIk[Q𝖫i,Q𝖱j]=0,

with I = L, R , or, equivalently,

[QVi,QVj]=iϵijkQVk,[QAi,QAj]=iϵijkQVk,[QVi,QAj]=iϵijkQAk.

Application of these commutation relations to hadronic reactions dominated current algebra calculations in the early 1970s.

At the level of hadrons, pseudoscalar mesons, the ambit of the chiral model, the chiral  SU(2)𝖫×SU(2)𝖱  group is spontaneously broken down to SU(2)V , by the QCD vacuum. That is, it is realized nonlinearly, in the Nambu–Goldstone mode: The QV annihilate the vacuum, but the QA do not! This is visualized nicely through a geometrical argument based on the fact that the Lie algebra of SU(2)𝖫×SU(2)𝖱  is isomorphic to that of SO(4). The unbroken subgroup, realized in the linear Wigner–Weyl mode, is  SO(3)SO(4)  which is locally isomorphic to SU(2) (V: isospin).

To construct a non-linear realization of SO(4), the representation describing four-dimensional rotations of a vector

(𝝅σ)(π1π2π3σ),

for an infinitesimal rotation parametrized by six angles

{θiV,A},i=1,2,3,

is given by

(𝝅σ)SO(4)(𝝅σ)=[𝟏4+i=13θiV Vi+i=13θiA Ai](𝝅σ)

where

i=13θiV Vi=(0θ3Vθ2V0θ3V0θ1V0θ2Vθ1V000000)i=13θiA Ai=(000θ1A000θ2A000θ3Aθ1Aθ2Aθ3A0).

The four real quantities (π, σ) define the smallest nontrivial chiral multiplet and represent the field content of the linear sigma model.

To switch from the above linear realization of SO(4) to the nonlinear one, we observe that, in fact, only three of the four components of (π, σ) are independent with respect to four-dimensional rotations. These three independent components correspond to coordinates on a hypersphere S3, where π and σ are subjected to the constraint

𝝅2+σ2=F2 ,

with F a pion decay constant with dimension = mass.

Utilizing this to eliminate σ yields the following transformation properties of π under SO(4),

{θV:𝝅𝝅=𝝅+𝜽V×𝝅θA:𝝅𝝅=𝝅+𝜽AF2𝝅2𝜽V,A{θiV,A},i=1,2,3.

The nonlinear terms (shifting π) on the right-hand side of the second equation underlie the nonlinear realization of SO(4). The chiral group  SU(2)𝖫×SU(2)𝖱SO(4)  is realized nonlinearly on the triplet of pions – which, however, still transform linearly under isospin  SU(2)VSO(3)  rotations parametrized through the angles  {𝜽V}. By contrast, the  {𝜽A}  represent the nonlinear "shifts" (spontaneous breaking).

Through the spinor map, these four-dimensional rotations of (π, σ) can also be conveniently written using 2×2 matrix notation by introducing the unitary matrix

U=1F(σ𝟏2+i𝝅𝝉) ,

and requiring the transformation properties of U under chiral rotations to be

UU=LUR ,

where θ𝖫=θVθA ,θ𝖱=θV+θA.

The transition to the nonlinear realization follows,

U=1F(F2𝝅2  𝟏2+i𝝅𝝉) ,π(2)=14F2  μU μU 𝗍𝗋 ,

where  𝗍𝗋  denotes the trace in the flavor space. This is a non-linear sigma model.

Terms involving  μμ U  or  μμ U  are not independent and can be brought to this form through partial integration. The constant 1/4F2 is chosen in such a way that the Lagrangian matches the usual free term for massless scalar fields when written in terms of the pions,

 π(2)=12μ𝝅μ𝝅+12(μ𝝅𝝅F)2+𝒪(π6).

Alternate Parametrization

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An alternative, equivalent (Gürsey, 1960), parameterization

𝝅𝝅sin(|π/F|)|π/F|,

yields a simpler expression for U,

U=𝟏cos|π/F|+iπ^𝝉sin|π/F|=ei𝝉𝝅/F.

Note the reparameterized π transform under

LUR=exp(i𝜽A𝝉/2i𝜽V𝝉/2)exp(i𝝅𝝉/F)exp(i𝜽A𝝉/2+i𝜽V𝝉/2)

so, then, manifestly identically to the above under isorotations, V; and similarly to the above, as

𝝅𝝅+𝜽AF+=𝝅+𝜽AF(|π/F|cot|π/F|)

under the broken symmetries, A, the shifts. This simpler expression generalizes readily (Cronin, 1967) to N light quarks, so SU(N)L×SU(N)R/SU(N)V.

Integrability

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Integrable chiral model

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Introduced by Richard S. Ward,[3] the integrable chiral model or Ward model is described in terms of a matrix-valued field J:3U(n) and is given by the partial differential equation t(J1Jt)x(J1Jx)y(J1Jy)[J1Jt,J1Jy]=0. It has a Lagrangian formulation with the expected kinetic term together with a term which resembles a Wess–Zumino–Witten term. It also has a formulation which is formally identical to the Bogomolny equations but with Lorentz signature. The relation between these formulations can be found in Dunajski (2010).

Many exact solutions are known.[4][5][6]

Two-dimensional principal chiral model

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Here the underlying manifold M is taken to be a Riemann surface, in particular the cylinder * or plane , conventionally given real coordinates τ,σ, where on the cylinder σσ+2π is a periodic coordinate. For application to string theory, this cylinder is the world sheet swept out by the closed string.[7]

Global symmetries

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The global symmetries act as internal symmetries on the group-valued field g(x) as ρL(g)g(x)=gg(x) and ρR(g)g(x)=g(x)g. The corresponding conserved currents from Noether's theorem are Lα=g1αg,Rα=αgg1. The equations of motion turn out to be equivalent to conservation of these currents, αLα=αRα=0, or, in coordinate-free form, d*L=d*R=0. The currents additionally satisfy the flatness condition, dL+12[L,L]=0 or, in coordinates, αLββLα+[Lα,Lβ]=0, and therefore the equations of motion can be formulated entirely in terms of the currents.

Upon quantization, the axial combination of these currents develop chiral anomalies, summarized in the above-mentioned topological WZWN term.

Lax formulation

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Consider the worldsheet in light-cone coordinates x±=t±x. The components of the appropriate Lax matrix are L±(x+,x;λ)=j±1λ. The requirement that the zero-curvature condition on L± for all λ is equivalent to the conservation of current and flatness of the current j=(j+,j), that is, the equations of motion from the principal chiral model (PCM).

See also

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References

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  • Georgi, H. (1984, 2009). Weak Interactions and Modern Particle Theory (Dover Books on Physics) Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value). online .
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