Current Groups and the Hamiltonian Anomaly
Ossi Niemim\"aki

TL;DR
This paper investigates the geometric and topological origins of the Hamiltonian anomaly in gauge theories, extending current group structures and analyzing anomaly terms through advanced mathematical tools, with explicit calculations on the three-sphere.
Contribution
It introduces higher geometric structures and extends current group models to analyze the Hamiltonian anomaly, providing a topological framework for understanding gauge invariance breaking.
Findings
Derived anomaly terms from topological classes like the Dixmier-Douady class.
Extended current group analysis to all space-time components.
Computed explicit anomalous commutators on the three-sphere.
Abstract
Gauge symmetry invariance is an indispensable aspect of the field-theoretic models in classical and quantum physics. Geometrically this symmetry is often modelled with current groups and current algebras, which are used to capture both the idea of gauge invariance and the algebraic structure of gauge currents related to the symmetry. The Hamiltonian anomaly is a well-known problem in the quantisation of massless fermion fields, originally manifesting as additional terms in current algebra commutators. The appearance of these anomalous terms is a signal of two things: that the gauge invariance of quantised Hamiltonian operators is broken, and that consequently it is not possible to coherently define a vacuum state over the physical configuration space of equivalent gauge connections. In this thesis we explore the geometric and topological origins of the Hamiltonian anomaly,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories · Homotopy and Cohomology in Algebraic Topology
