Quantum Yang-Mills-Weyl Dynamics in Schroedinger paradigm
Abstract
Inspired by F. Wilczek's QCD Lite, quantum Yang-Mills-Weyl Dynamics (YMWD) describes quantum interaction between gauge bosons (associated with a simple compact gauge Lie group G) and larks (massless chiral fields colored by an irreducible unitary representation of G). Schroedinger representation of this quantum Yang-Mills-Weyl theory is based on a sesqui-holomorphic operator calculus of infinite-dimensional operators with variational derivatives. The spectrum of the quantum YMWD, with initial data in the central euclidean ball of a radius 0<R<+∞, is self-similar in the inverse proportion to R. The spectrum is a sequence of eigenvalues convergent to +∞. The eigenvalues have finite multiplicities with respect to a von Neumann algebra with a regular trace. The same holds for the quantum self-interaction of vector Yang-Mills bosons (Theorem 4.1). Furthermore, the fundamental vacuum eigenvalue is a simple zero (Appendix A). Presumably, this is a solution of the existence problem for a quantum Yang-Mills theory that implies a positive spectral mass gap. The rigorous mathematical theory is non-perturbative with a running coupling constant as the only ad hoc parameter. The application of the first mathematical principles depends essentially on the properties of the compact simple Lie group G.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.