Causality and Renormalization in Finite-Time-Path Out-of-Equilibrium ϕ3 QFT
Abstract
:1. Introduction and Survey
2. Results
2.1. Conservation and Non-Conservation of Energy at Vertices
- If the vertex time is lower than the other times of all incoming propagators, there are additional contributions, and energy is not conserved at this vertex. The oscillations are just what we would expect from the Heisenberg uncertainty relations. It is how the time dependence emerges in the finite-time-path out-of-equilibrium QFT. The ill-defined pinching singularities—products of retarded and advanced propagators with the same , only partially eliminated for the Keldysh time-path [30]—do not appear here as the propagator energies and are different variables, so that the singularities do not coincide except at the point . Thus, the pertinent mathematical expressions are well defined.
- For some vertices, at least one incoming propagator is advanced (or more generally, time is lower at the other vertex of this propagator); then, integration over the (supposed to be UV finite) re-establishes energy conservation.
- The case of UV divergent integrals is interesting; looking at integrations done separately, one would expect energy conservation, but performing other integrals before, one notices that the result is ill-defined. The solution is in regularization: regulated quantities are finite, and (say, in the dimensional regularization) the energy conservation is re-established (as far as ).
2.2. UV Divergence at the Tadpole Subdiagram
2.3. UV Divergence at the Self-Energy Subdiagram
2.4. Self-Energy Diagram with Legs
3. Discussion and Conclusions
- The integrals ensuring the energy conservation at the vertices above and should have been done before taking the limit .
- The renormalized self-energies (, , and ) are not a linear combination of true retarded and advanced components. This is directly readable from the final result, which does not vanish as in all directions in a complex plane . This problem is present already in S-matrix theory, and we only recognize it properly as a causality problem, in the sense that the expected properties of the theta-function fail: or . While it is not clear what harm it does to the theory, one may introduce “composite objects” , , and to improve convergence, and the causality is “repaired”. Indeed in the Glaser–Epstein approach, they consider the perturbation expansion, in which only self-energy with a leg appears.
- The tadpole contribution splits into the energy-conserving, constant component, which is eliminated by renormalization condition, and the other energy nonconserving, time-dependent component, is finite after subtraction. These tadpole contributions are strongly oscillating with time and vanish as , in good agreement with the renormalization condition of the S-matrix theory.
- The regularization () is extended till the late phase of calculation.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
QFT | quantum field theory |
FTP | finite-time-path |
RT | renormalization theory |
DR | dimensional regularization |
UV | ultra-violet |
QED | quantum electrodynamics |
QCD | quantum chromodynamics |
Appendix A
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Dadić, I.; Klabučar, D. Causality and Renormalization in Finite-Time-Path Out-of-Equilibrium ϕ3 QFT. Particles 2019, 2, 92-102. https://doi.org/10.3390/particles2010008
Dadić I, Klabučar D. Causality and Renormalization in Finite-Time-Path Out-of-Equilibrium ϕ3 QFT. Particles. 2019; 2(1):92-102. https://doi.org/10.3390/particles2010008
Chicago/Turabian StyleDadić, Ivan, and Dubravko Klabučar. 2019. "Causality and Renormalization in Finite-Time-Path Out-of-Equilibrium ϕ3 QFT" Particles 2, no. 1: 92-102. https://doi.org/10.3390/particles2010008
APA StyleDadić, I., & Klabučar, D. (2019). Causality and Renormalization in Finite-Time-Path Out-of-Equilibrium ϕ3 QFT. Particles, 2(1), 92-102. https://doi.org/10.3390/particles2010008