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Questions tagged [quantum-anomalies]

This tag is for anomalies in a symmetry, either in classical or quantum theories. DO NOT USE THIS TAG for anomalies in a measurement.

101 votes
1 answer
10k views

Classical and quantum anomalies

I have read about anomalies in different contexts and ways. I would like to read an explanation that unified all these statements or points of view: Anomalies are due to the fact that quantum field ...
Diego Mazón's user avatar
  • 6,889
54 votes
2 answers
2k views

Symmetries of the Standard Model: exact, anomalous, spontaneously broken

There are a number of possible symmetries in fundamental physics, such as: Lorentz invariance (or actually, Poincaré invariance, which can itself be broken down into translation invariance and ...
Gro-Tsen's user avatar
  • 810
37 votes
1 answer
3k views

Instantons, anomalies, and 1-loop effects

A symmetry is anomalous when the path-integral measure does not respect it. One way this manifests itself is in the inability to regularize certain diagrams containing fermion loops in a way ...
user6013's user avatar
  • 913
29 votes
1 answer
2k views

Why do we assume local conformal transformations are symmetries in 2D CFT?

The global conformal group in 2D is $SL(2,\mathbb{C})$. It consists of the fractional linear transforms that map the Riemann sphere into itself bijectively and is finite dimensional. However, when ...
Dan's user avatar
  • 2,667
29 votes
1 answer
475 views

Can a theory gain symmetries through quantum corrections?

It is well known that not all symmetries are preserved when quantising a theory, as evinced by renormalising composite operators or by other means, which show that quantum corrections may alter a ...
user2062542's user avatar
28 votes
2 answers
7k views

Central charge in a $d=2$ CFT

I've always been confused by this very VERY basic and important fact about two-dimensional CFTs. I hope I can get a satisfactory explanation here. In a classical CFT, the generators of the conformal ...
Prahar's user avatar
  • 26.6k
24 votes
4 answers
7k views

Where is the Atiyah-Singer index theorem used in physics?

I'm trying to get motivated in learning the Atiyah-Singer index theorem. In most places I read about it, e.g. wikipedia, it is mentioned that the theorem is important in theoretical physics. So my ...
Eric's user avatar
  • 1,734
23 votes
2 answers
3k views

Why do some anomalies (only) lead to inconsistent quantum field theories

In connection with Classical and quantum anomalies, I'd like to ask for a simple explanation why some anomalies lead to valid quantum field theories while some others (happily absent in the standard ...
Arnold Neumaier's user avatar
21 votes
1 answer
786 views

Quantum symmetries that are not classical symmetries

An anomaly is a symmetry of the classical action that fails to be a symmetry of the path integral, due to non-invariance of the path integral measure. Does it ever occur that the opposite thing ...
asperanz's user avatar
  • 4,418
19 votes
1 answer
2k views

What's the real resolution of the $U(1)_A$ problem?

To recap the problem, consider QCD with three massless quark flavors. There is a symmetry $$SU(3)_L \times SU(3)_R \times U(1)_L \times U(1)_R$$ corresponding to independent rotations of the left-...
knzhou's user avatar
  • 103k
18 votes
2 answers
7k views

The phrase "Trace Anomaly" seems to be used in two different ways. What's the relation between the two?

I've seen the phrase "Trace Anomaly" refer to two seemingly different concepts, though I assume they must be related in some way I'm not seeing. The first way I've seen it used is in the manner, for ...
user26866's user avatar
  • 3,492
18 votes
3 answers
2k views

Homotopy $\pi_4(SU(2))=\mathbb{Z}_2$

Recently I read a paper using $$\pi_4(SU(2))=\mathbb{Z}_2.$$ Do you have any visualization or explanation of this result? More generally, how do physicists understand or calculate high dimension ...
Yingfei Gu's user avatar
  • 1,002
18 votes
2 answers
5k views

What is the difference between Chiral anomaly, ABJ anomaly, and Axial anomaly?

I get confuse with these three terms: Chiral anomaly, ABJ anomaly, and Axial anomaly. I can not find standard definition of these three. Is there anyone can describe precisely?
Eric's user avatar
  • 189
18 votes
5 answers
27k views

Why does string theory require 9 dimensions of space and one dimension of time?

String theorists say that there are many more dimensions out there, but they are too small to be detected. However, I do not understand why there are ten dimensions and not just any other number? ...
James Kujareevanich's user avatar
18 votes
2 answers
3k views

Chiral anomalies à la Fujikawa: Why don't we just take another measure?

When deriving the chiral anomaly in the non perturbative approach for a theory of massless Dirac fermions, you start by showing that the path-integral measure is not invariant unter the chiral ...
user9784's user avatar
  • 471
17 votes
2 answers
2k views

How is Berry phase connected with chiral anomaly?

Recently I've read in one article about very strange way to describe chiral anomaly on quasiclassical level (i.e., on the level of Boltzmann equation and distribution function). Starting from Weyl ...
Name YYY's user avatar
  • 8,901
17 votes
1 answer
659 views

Relation among anomaly, unitarity bound and renormalizability

There is something I'm not sure about that has come up in a comment to other question: Why do we not have spin greater than 2? It's a good question--- the violation of renormalizability is linked ...
Diego Mazón's user avatar
  • 6,889
16 votes
1 answer
2k views

QED and anomaly

I've just started to learn anomalies in quantum field theories. I have a question. How to show that QED is free from vector current anomaly and what would happen if it were not? In other words, how ...
SRS's user avatar
  • 26.8k
16 votes
1 answer
2k views

Why are two Higgs doublets required in SUSY?

I can't really understand why two Higgs doublets are required in SUSY. From the literature, I have found opaque explanations that say something along the lines of: the superpotential $W$ must be a ...
user788171's user avatar
16 votes
1 answer
975 views

Conformal/trace anomaly and index theorem

I am reading the chapters on characteristic classes and the index theorems in Nakahara. It is proven in the text that any chiral or gravitational anomaly $\mathcal{A}$ is given by $$\mathcal{A}=\int ...
Bulkilol's user avatar
  • 589
15 votes
2 answers
902 views

If gauge symmetries are fake, then why do we care if they are anomalous?

My understanding is that gauge symmetries are fake in that they are only redundancies of our description of the system that we put in (either knowingly or unknowingly) see Gauge symmetry is not a ...
DJBunk's user avatar
  • 3,758
14 votes
3 answers
3k views

How are anomalies possible?

From Matthew D. Shwartz Quantum Field Theory textbook, he writes: "Most of the time, a symmetry of a classical theory is also a symmetry of the quantum theory based on the same Lagrangian. When ...
Jbag1212's user avatar
  • 2,599
14 votes
2 answers
7k views

Chiral anomaly and decay of the pion

I am told that if all classical symmetries were reflected as quantum symmetries, the decay of the neutral pion $$\pi^0 ~\longrightarrow~ \gamma\gamma$$ would not happen. Why would the conservation of ...
Whelp's user avatar
  • 4,036
14 votes
1 answer
2k views

Chiral anomaly in odd spacetime dimensions

In odd number of space-time dimensions, the Fermions are not reducible (i.e. do not have left-chiral and right-chiral counterparts). Does this mean that there is no such thing as 'chiral' anomalies ...
QuantumDot's user avatar
  • 6,381
14 votes
2 answers
956 views

Can anomalies exist without gauge fields?

In Schwartz's QFT book, it is stated that anomalies cannot exist in a theory without gauge fields. This is because anomalies always give equations like $$\partial_\mu j^\mu \sim F \tilde{F}$$ where ...
knzhou's user avatar
  • 103k
14 votes
1 answer
817 views

Anomalies for not-on-site discrete gauge symmetries

If a symmetry group $G$ (let's say finite for simplicity) acts on a lattice theory by acting only on the vertex variables, I will call it ultralocal. Any ultralocal symmetry can be gauged. However, in ...
Ryan Thorngren's user avatar
14 votes
1 answer
2k views

't Hooft vs ABJ anomalies [closed]

At some point in our physics education, we begin to accumulate a bunch of slogans related to anomalies. At some (later, in my case) point, we learn that actually there were two different kinds of ...
user avatar
13 votes
2 answers
1k views

Is there a 2D manifold on which the Dirac equation has a zero mode?

The two-dimensional (2D) Dirac equation $(\sigma_1iD_1+\sigma_2 iD_2)\psi=E\psi$ admits zero mode ($E=0$) solutions on a non-trivial gauge background, such as the zero mode at the core of a U(1) gauge ...
Everett You's user avatar
  • 11.9k
13 votes
2 answers
1k views

On the Axial Anomaly

I know that if we start with a massive theory, the chiral states $L$ and $R$ remain coupled to each other in the massless limit. Because a charged Dirac particle of a given helicity can make a ...
user avatar
13 votes
1 answer
326 views

Does the Gibbons-Hawking boundary action have an anomaly inflow interpretation?

The Einstein-Hilbert action on a manifold $M$ with boundary is $$\frac{-1}{16\pi G}\int_M d^n x \sqrt{-g} R +\frac{1}{8\pi G} \int_{\partial M} d^{n-1}x \sqrt{|h|} K$$ where $K$ is the extrinsic ...
Dwagg's user avatar
  • 1,982

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