The Nielsen Identities of the SM and the definition of mass
Paolo Gambino (1), Pietro Antonio Grassi (2) ((1) Tech. Univ., Munich, (2) Max-Planck-Inst. Munich)

TL;DR
This paper discusses the Nielsen identities in the Standard Model, demonstrating their role in ensuring gauge independence of physical quantities like particle masses and providing a formal framework for understanding gauge dependence in quantum field theory.
Contribution
It offers a practical introduction to Nielsen identities in the SM, proves gauge independence of the propagator's complex pole to all orders, and clarifies the formalism's utility in defining particle masses.
Findings
Gauge independence of the propagator's complex pole established to all orders.
Nielsen identities control gauge parameter dependence of Green functions.
Formalism aids in understanding gauge recombinations at higher orders.
Abstract
In a generic gauge theory the gauge parameter dependence of individual Green functions is controlled by the Nielsen identities, which originate from an enlarged BRST symmetry. We give a practical introduction to the Nielsen identities of the Standard Model (SM) and to their renormalization and illustrate the power of this elegant formalism in the case of the problem of the definition of mass.We prove to all orders in perturbation theory the gauge-independence of the complex pole of the propagator for all physical fields of the SM, in the most general case with mixing and CP violation. At the amplitude level, the formalism provides an intuitive and general understanding of the gauge recombinations which makes it particularly useful at higher orders. We also include in an appendix the explicit expressions for the fermionic two-point functions in a generic R_\xi gauge.
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