The classical dynamics of gauge theories in the deep infrared
Eanna E. Flanagan, Ibrahim Shehzad

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that conserved charges in gauge theories impose nontrivial constraints on scattering processes, revealing a coupling between soft and hard sectors that was previously thought to decouple, with implications for gravitational physics.
Contribution
It provides a classical analysis showing the coupling of soft and hard sectors in gauge theories, challenging the assumption of their decoupling and clarifying the role of conserved charges in scattering.
Findings
Soft and hard sectors are coupled at quartic order in electromagnetism.
Conserved charges impose nontrivial constraints on scattering.
Matching conditions at spatial infinity require modification.
Abstract
Gauge and gravitational theories in asymptotically flat settings possess infinitely many conserved charges associated with large gauge transformations or diffeomorphisms that are nontrivial at infinity. To what extent do these charges constrain the scattering in these theories? It has been claimed in the literature that the constraints are trivial, due to a decoupling of hard and soft sectors for which the conserved charges constrain only the dynamics in the soft sector. We show that the argument for this decoupling fails due to the failure in infinite dimensions of a property of symplectic geometry which holds in finite dimensions. Specializing to electromagnetism coupled to a massless charged scalar field in four dimensional Minkowski spacetime, we show explicitly that the two sectors are always coupled using a perturbative classical computation of the scattering map. Specifically,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
