Scalar Field Theories with Polynomial Shift Symmetries

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Scalar Field Theories with Polynomial Shift Symmetries. / Griffin, Tom; Grosvenor, Kevin John Torres; Horava, Petr; Yan, Ziqi.

I: Communications in Mathematical Physics, 02.12.2014.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Griffin, T, Grosvenor, KJT, Horava, P & Yan, Z 2014, 'Scalar Field Theories with Polynomial Shift Symmetries', Communications in Mathematical Physics. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00220-015-2461-2

APA

Griffin, T., Grosvenor, K. J. T., Horava, P., & Yan, Z. (2014). Scalar Field Theories with Polynomial Shift Symmetries. Communications in Mathematical Physics. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00220-015-2461-2

Vancouver

Griffin T, Grosvenor KJT, Horava P, Yan Z. Scalar Field Theories with Polynomial Shift Symmetries. Communications in Mathematical Physics. 2014 dec. 2. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00220-015-2461-2

Author

Griffin, Tom ; Grosvenor, Kevin John Torres ; Horava, Petr ; Yan, Ziqi. / Scalar Field Theories with Polynomial Shift Symmetries. I: Communications in Mathematical Physics. 2014.

Bibtex

@article{756367324b7b47fc8579d602fd71407e,
title = "Scalar Field Theories with Polynomial Shift Symmetries",
abstract = "We continue our study of naturalness in nonrelativistic QFTs of the Lifshitz type, focusing on scalar fields that can play the role of Nambu-Goldstone (NG) modes associated with spontaneous symmetry breaking. Such systems allow for an extension of the constant shift symmetry to a shift by a polynomial of degree $P$ in spatial coordinates. These {"}polynomial shift symmetries{"} in turn protect the technical naturalness of modes with a higher-order dispersion relation, and lead to a refinement of the proposed classification of infrared Gaussian fixed points available to describe NG modes in nonrelativistic theories. Generic interactions in such theories break the polynomial shift symmetry explicitly to the constant shift. It is thus natural to ask: Given a Gaussian fixed point with polynomial shift symmetry of degree $P$, what are the lowest-dimension operators that preserve this symmetry, and deform the theory into a self-interacting scalar field theory with the shift symmetry of degree $P$? To answer this (essentially cohomological) question, we develop a new graph-theoretical technique, and use it to prove several classification theorems. First, in the special case of $P=1$ (essentially equivalent to Galileons), we reproduce the known Galileon $N$-point invariants, and find their novel interpretation in terms of graph theory, as an equal-weight sum over all labeled trees with $N$ vertices. Then we extend the classification to $P>1$ and find a whole host of new invariants, including those that represent the most relevant (or least irrelevant) deformations of the corresponding Gaussian fixed points, and we study their uniqueness.",
keywords = "hep-th, hep-ph, math-ph, math.MP",
author = "Tom Griffin and Grosvenor, {Kevin John Torres} and Petr Horava and Ziqi Yan",
note = "70 pages. v2: minor clarifications, typos corrected, a reference added",
year = "2014",
month = dec,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1007/s00220-015-2461-2",
language = "English",
journal = "Communications in Mathematical Physics",
issn = "0010-3616",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Scalar Field Theories with Polynomial Shift Symmetries

AU - Griffin, Tom

AU - Grosvenor, Kevin John Torres

AU - Horava, Petr

AU - Yan, Ziqi

N1 - 70 pages. v2: minor clarifications, typos corrected, a reference added

PY - 2014/12/2

Y1 - 2014/12/2

N2 - We continue our study of naturalness in nonrelativistic QFTs of the Lifshitz type, focusing on scalar fields that can play the role of Nambu-Goldstone (NG) modes associated with spontaneous symmetry breaking. Such systems allow for an extension of the constant shift symmetry to a shift by a polynomial of degree $P$ in spatial coordinates. These "polynomial shift symmetries" in turn protect the technical naturalness of modes with a higher-order dispersion relation, and lead to a refinement of the proposed classification of infrared Gaussian fixed points available to describe NG modes in nonrelativistic theories. Generic interactions in such theories break the polynomial shift symmetry explicitly to the constant shift. It is thus natural to ask: Given a Gaussian fixed point with polynomial shift symmetry of degree $P$, what are the lowest-dimension operators that preserve this symmetry, and deform the theory into a self-interacting scalar field theory with the shift symmetry of degree $P$? To answer this (essentially cohomological) question, we develop a new graph-theoretical technique, and use it to prove several classification theorems. First, in the special case of $P=1$ (essentially equivalent to Galileons), we reproduce the known Galileon $N$-point invariants, and find their novel interpretation in terms of graph theory, as an equal-weight sum over all labeled trees with $N$ vertices. Then we extend the classification to $P>1$ and find a whole host of new invariants, including those that represent the most relevant (or least irrelevant) deformations of the corresponding Gaussian fixed points, and we study their uniqueness.

AB - We continue our study of naturalness in nonrelativistic QFTs of the Lifshitz type, focusing on scalar fields that can play the role of Nambu-Goldstone (NG) modes associated with spontaneous symmetry breaking. Such systems allow for an extension of the constant shift symmetry to a shift by a polynomial of degree $P$ in spatial coordinates. These "polynomial shift symmetries" in turn protect the technical naturalness of modes with a higher-order dispersion relation, and lead to a refinement of the proposed classification of infrared Gaussian fixed points available to describe NG modes in nonrelativistic theories. Generic interactions in such theories break the polynomial shift symmetry explicitly to the constant shift. It is thus natural to ask: Given a Gaussian fixed point with polynomial shift symmetry of degree $P$, what are the lowest-dimension operators that preserve this symmetry, and deform the theory into a self-interacting scalar field theory with the shift symmetry of degree $P$? To answer this (essentially cohomological) question, we develop a new graph-theoretical technique, and use it to prove several classification theorems. First, in the special case of $P=1$ (essentially equivalent to Galileons), we reproduce the known Galileon $N$-point invariants, and find their novel interpretation in terms of graph theory, as an equal-weight sum over all labeled trees with $N$ vertices. Then we extend the classification to $P>1$ and find a whole host of new invariants, including those that represent the most relevant (or least irrelevant) deformations of the corresponding Gaussian fixed points, and we study their uniqueness.

KW - hep-th

KW - hep-ph

KW - math-ph

KW - math.MP

U2 - 10.1007/s00220-015-2461-2

DO - 10.1007/s00220-015-2461-2

M3 - Journal article

JO - Communications in Mathematical Physics

JF - Communications in Mathematical Physics

SN - 0010-3616

ER -

ID: 168884192