Relativistic center-vortex dynamics of a confining area law
John M. Cornwall (Department of Physics, Astronomy, UCLA)

TL;DR
This paper proves that in center-vortex theory, the Wilson-loop area law involves an extremal area, leading to a linear Regge trajectory with a slope matching string theory predictions, and explores quantum corrections and gauge potential relations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the area in the Wilson-loop area law must be extremal and connects the vortex dynamics to string-like Regge trajectories, providing a non-string quantum perspective.
Findings
Extremal-area law yields linear Regge trajectories with slope 1/(2π).
Large angular momentum suppresses quark kinetic terms, aligning with string expectations.
Quantum and classical corrections scale with ℓ^{-1/2} and match semiclassical string models.
Abstract
We offer a physicists' proof that center-vortex theory requires the area in the Wilson-loop area law to involve an extremal area. Area-law dynamics is determined by integrating over Wilson loops only, not over surface fluctuations for a fixed loop. Fluctuations leading to to perimeter-law corrections come from loop fluctuations as well as integration over finite -thickness center-vortex collective coordinates. In d=3 (or d=2+1) we exploit a contour form of the extremal area in isothermal which is similar to d=2 (or d=1+1) QCD in many respects, except that there are both quartic and quadratic terms in the action. One major result is that at large angular momentum \ell in d=3+1 the center-vortex extremal-area picture yields a linear Regge trajectory with Regge slope--string tension product \alpha'(0)K_F of 1/(2\pi), which is the canonical Veneziano/string value. In a curious effect…
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