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Main Authors: Ma, Chen-Te, Pan, Yiwen, Zhang, Hui
Format: Preprint
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.00414
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author Ma, Chen-Te
Pan, Yiwen
Zhang, Hui
author_facet Ma, Chen-Te
Pan, Yiwen
Zhang, Hui
contents Spontaneous symmetry breaking occurs when the underlying laws of a physical system are symmetric, but the vacuum state chosen by the system is not. The (3+1)d $ϕ^4$ theory is relatively simple compared to other more complex theories, making it a good starting point for investigating the origin of non-trivial vacua. The adaptive perturbation method is a technique used to handle strongly coupled systems. The study of strongly correlated systems is useful in testing holography. It has been successful in strongly coupled QM and is being generalized to scalar field theory to analyze the system in the strong-coupling regime. The unperturbed Hamiltonian does not commute with the usual number operator. However, the quantized scalar field admits a plane-wave expansion when acting on the vacuum. While quantizing the scalar field theory, the field can be expanded into plane-wave modes, making the calculations more tractable. However, the Lorentz symmetry, which describes how physical laws remain the same under certain spacetime transformations, might not be manifest in this approach. The proposed elegant resummation of Feynman diagrams aims to restore the Lorentz symmetry in the calculations. The results obtained using this method are compared with numerical solutions for specific values of the coupling constant $λ= 1, 2, 4, 8, 16$. Finally, we find evidence for quantum triviality, where self-consistency of the theory in the UV requires $λ= 0$. This result implies that the $ϕ^4$ theory alone does not experience SSB, and the $\langle ϕ\rangle = 0$ phase is protected under the RG-flow by a boundary of Gaussian fixed-points.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2205_00414
institution arXiv
publishDate 2022
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Explore the Origin of Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking from Adaptive Perturbation Method
Ma, Chen-Te
Pan, Yiwen
Zhang, Hui
High Energy Physics - Theory
Spontaneous symmetry breaking occurs when the underlying laws of a physical system are symmetric, but the vacuum state chosen by the system is not. The (3+1)d $ϕ^4$ theory is relatively simple compared to other more complex theories, making it a good starting point for investigating the origin of non-trivial vacua. The adaptive perturbation method is a technique used to handle strongly coupled systems. The study of strongly correlated systems is useful in testing holography. It has been successful in strongly coupled QM and is being generalized to scalar field theory to analyze the system in the strong-coupling regime. The unperturbed Hamiltonian does not commute with the usual number operator. However, the quantized scalar field admits a plane-wave expansion when acting on the vacuum. While quantizing the scalar field theory, the field can be expanded into plane-wave modes, making the calculations more tractable. However, the Lorentz symmetry, which describes how physical laws remain the same under certain spacetime transformations, might not be manifest in this approach. The proposed elegant resummation of Feynman diagrams aims to restore the Lorentz symmetry in the calculations. The results obtained using this method are compared with numerical solutions for specific values of the coupling constant $λ= 1, 2, 4, 8, 16$. Finally, we find evidence for quantum triviality, where self-consistency of the theory in the UV requires $λ= 0$. This result implies that the $ϕ^4$ theory alone does not experience SSB, and the $\langle ϕ\rangle = 0$ phase is protected under the RG-flow by a boundary of Gaussian fixed-points.
title Explore the Origin of Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking from Adaptive Perturbation Method
topic High Energy Physics - Theory
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.00414