
TL;DR
This comprehensive lecture series explains the theoretical foundations of quantum anomalies, their derivations, implications, and cancellations in various dimensions, with applications to gauge theories and string theory.
Contribution
It provides a detailed, self-contained overview of anomaly derivations, their geometric interpretation, and the conditions for anomaly cancellation in diverse physical theories.
Findings
Anomalies are finite and local.
Conditions for anomaly cancellation are characterized.
Anomalies are related to characteristic classes and index theorems.
Abstract
These lectures on anomalies are relatively self-contained and intended for graduate students who are familiar with the basics of quantum field theory. We begin with several derivations of the abelian anomaly: anomalous transformation of the measure, explicit computation of the triangle Feynman diagram, relation to the index of the Euclidean Dirac operator. The chiral (non-abelian) gauge anomaly is derived by evaluating the anomalous triangle diagram with three non-abelian gauge fields coupled to a chiral fermion. We discuss in detail the relation between anomaly, current non-conservation and non-invariance of the effective action, with special emphasis on the derivation of the anomalous Slavnov-Taylor/Ward identities. We show why anomalies always are finite and local. A general characterization is given of gauge groups and fermion representations which may lead to anomalies in four…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Quantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions
