BRST Operator
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theoretical physics Theoretical physics is a branch of physics that employs mathematical models and abstractions of physical objects and systems to rationalize, explain, and predict List of natural phenomena, natural phenomena. This is in contrast to experimental p ...
, the BRST formalism, or BRST quantization (where the ''BRST'' refers to the last names of
Carlo Becchi Carlo Maria Becchi (; born 20 October 1939) is an Italian theoretical physicist. Becchi studied at the University of Genoa, where he received his university degree in physics in 1962. In 1976, he became full professor for theoretical physics at ...
,
Alain Rouet Alain Rouet (born 1942 in France) is a French theoretical physicist, entrepreneur, poet, and novelist. Education and career At the École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures, Rouet graduated in 1969 with an engineering degree and in 1974 with a doct ...
,
Raymond Stora Raymond Félix Stora (18 September 1930 – 20 July 2015) was a French theoretical physicist. He was a researcher at Service de Physique Théorique at CEA Saclay, then a research director at the French National Centre for Scientific Research ...
and
Igor Tyutin Igor Viktorovich Tyutin (, transliteration: '; born 24 August 1940) is a Russian theoretical physicist, who works on quantum field theory. Tyutin is a professor at the Lebedev Institute in Moscow. In an unpublished Lebedev Institute report, he de ...
) denotes a relatively rigorous mathematical approach to quantizing a field theory with a
gauge symmetry In physics, a gauge theory is a type of field theory in which the Lagrangian, and hence the dynamics of the system itself, does not change under local transformations according to certain smooth families of operations (Lie groups). Formally, t ...
. Quantization rules in earlier
quantum field theory In theoretical physics, quantum field theory (QFT) is a theoretical framework that combines Field theory (physics), field theory and the principle of relativity with ideas behind quantum mechanics. QFT is used in particle physics to construct phy ...
(QFT) frameworks resembled "prescriptions" or "heuristics" more than proofs, especially in non-abelian QFT, where the use of " ghost fields" with superficially bizarre properties is almost unavoidable for technical reasons related to
renormalization Renormalization is a collection of techniques in quantum field theory, statistical field theory, and the theory of self-similar geometric structures, that is used to treat infinities arising in calculated quantities by altering values of the ...
and
anomaly cancellation In quantum physics an anomaly or quantum anomaly is the failure of a symmetry of a theory's classical action to be a symmetry of any regularization of the full quantum theory. In classical physics, a classical anomaly is the failure of a symmet ...
. The BRST global
supersymmetry Supersymmetry is a Theory, theoretical framework in physics that suggests the existence of a symmetry between Particle physics, particles with integer Spin (physics), spin (''bosons'') and particles with half-integer spin (''fermions''). It propo ...
introduced in the mid-1970s was quickly understood to rationalize the introduction of these
Faddeev–Popov ghost In physics, Faddeev–Popov ghosts (also called Faddeev–Popov gauge ghosts or Faddeev–Popov ghost fields) are extraneous fields which are introduced into gauge quantum field theories to maintain the consistency of the path integral form ...
s and their exclusion from "physical" asymptotic states when performing QFT calculations. Crucially, this symmetry of the path integral is preserved in loop order, and thus prevents introduction of counterterms which might spoil
renormalizability Renormalization is a collection of techniques in quantum field theory, statistical field theory, and the theory of self-similar geometric structures, that is used to treat infinities arising in calculated quantities by altering values of the ...
of gauge theories. Work by other authors a few years later related the BRST operator to the existence of a rigorous alternative to path integrals when quantizing a
gauge theory In physics, a gauge theory is a type of field theory in which the Lagrangian, and hence the dynamics of the system itself, does not change under local transformations according to certain smooth families of operations (Lie groups). Formally, t ...
. Only in the late 1980s, when QFT was reformulated in
fiber bundle In mathematics, and particularly topology, a fiber bundle ( ''Commonwealth English'': fibre bundle) is a space that is a product space, but may have a different topological structure. Specifically, the similarity between a space E and a pr ...
language for application to problems in the topology of low-dimensional manifolds (
topological quantum field theory In gauge theory and mathematical physics, a topological quantum field theory (or topological field theory or TQFT) is a quantum field theory that computes topological invariants. While TQFTs were invented by physicists, they are also of mathemati ...
), did it become apparent that the BRST "transformation" is fundamentally geometrical in character. In this light, "BRST quantization" becomes more than an alternate way to arrive at anomaly-cancelling ghosts. It is a different perspective on what the ghost fields represent, why the Faddeev–Popov method works, and how it is related to the use of
Hamiltonian mechanics In physics, Hamiltonian mechanics is a reformulation of Lagrangian mechanics that emerged in 1833. Introduced by Sir William Rowan Hamilton, Hamiltonian mechanics replaces (generalized) velocities \dot q^i used in Lagrangian mechanics with (gener ...
to construct a perturbative framework. The relationship between
gauge invariance In physics, a gauge theory is a type of field theory in which the Lagrangian, and hence the dynamics of the system itself, does not change under local transformations according to certain smooth families of operations (Lie groups). Formally, t ...
and "BRST invariance" forces the choice of a Hamiltonian system whose states are composed of "particles" according to the rules familiar from the
canonical quantization In physics, canonical quantization is a procedure for quantizing a classical theory, while attempting to preserve the formal structure, such as symmetries, of the classical theory to the greatest extent possible. Historically, this was not quit ...
formalism. This esoteric consistency condition therefore comes quite close to explaining how quanta and
fermions In particle physics, a fermion is a subatomic particle that follows Fermi–Dirac statistics. Fermions have a half-integer spin ( spin , spin , etc.) and obey the Pauli exclusion principle. These particles include all quarks and leptons and ...
arise in physics to begin with. In certain cases, notably
gravity In physics, gravity (), also known as gravitation or a gravitational interaction, is a fundamental interaction, a mutual attraction between all massive particles. On Earth, gravity takes a slightly different meaning: the observed force b ...
and
supergravity In theoretical physics, supergravity (supergravity theory; SUGRA for short) is a modern field theory that combines the principles of supersymmetry and general relativity; this is in contrast to non-gravitational supersymmetric theories such as ...
, BRST must be superseded by a more general formalism, the
Batalin–Vilkovisky formalism In theoretical physics, the Batalin–Vilkovisky (BV) formalism (named for Igor Batalin and Grigori Vilkovisky) was developed as a method for determining the ghost structure for Lagrangian gauge theories, such as gravity and supergravity, w ...
.


Technical summary

BRST quantization is a differential geometric approach to performing consistent, anomaly-free perturbative calculations in a non-abelian gauge theory. The analytical form of the BRST "transformation" and its relevance to
renormalization Renormalization is a collection of techniques in quantum field theory, statistical field theory, and the theory of self-similar geometric structures, that is used to treat infinities arising in calculated quantities by altering values of the ...
and
anomaly cancellation In quantum physics an anomaly or quantum anomaly is the failure of a symmetry of a theory's classical action to be a symmetry of any regularization of the full quantum theory. In classical physics, a classical anomaly is the failure of a symmet ...
were described by Carlo Maria Becchi,
Alain Rouet Alain Rouet (born 1942 in France) is a French theoretical physicist, entrepreneur, poet, and novelist. Education and career At the École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures, Rouet graduated in 1969 with an engineering degree and in 1974 with a doct ...
, and
Raymond Stora Raymond Félix Stora (18 September 1930 – 20 July 2015) was a French theoretical physicist. He was a researcher at Service de Physique Théorique at CEA Saclay, then a research director at the French National Centre for Scientific Research ...
in a series of papers culminating in the 1976 "Renormalization of gauge theories". The equivalent transformation and many of its properties were independently discovered by Igor Viktorovich Tyutin. Its significance for rigorous
canonical quantization In physics, canonical quantization is a procedure for quantizing a classical theory, while attempting to preserve the formal structure, such as symmetries, of the classical theory to the greatest extent possible. Historically, this was not quit ...
of a
Yang–Mills theory Yang–Mills theory is a quantum field theory for nuclear binding devised by Chen Ning Yang and Robert Mills in 1953, as well as a generic term for the class of similar theories. The Yang–Mills theory is a gauge theory based on a special un ...
and its correct application to the
Fock space The Fock space is an algebraic construction used in quantum mechanics to construct the quantum states space of a variable or unknown number of identical particles from a single particle Hilbert space . It is named after V. A. Fock who first intro ...
of instantaneous field configurations were elucidated by Taichiro Kugo and Izumi Ojima. Later work by many authors, notably Thomas Schücker and
Edward Witten Edward Witten (born August 26, 1951) is an American theoretical physics, theoretical physicist known for his contributions to string theory, topological quantum field theory, and various areas of mathematics. He is a professor emeritus in the sc ...
, has clarified the geometric significance of the BRST operator and related fields and emphasized its importance to
topological quantum field theory In gauge theory and mathematical physics, a topological quantum field theory (or topological field theory or TQFT) is a quantum field theory that computes topological invariants. While TQFTs were invented by physicists, they are also of mathemati ...
and
string theory In physics, string theory is a theoretical framework in which the point-like particles of particle physics are replaced by one-dimensional objects called strings. String theory describes how these strings propagate through space and intera ...
. In the BRST approach, one selects a perturbation-friendly
gauge fixing In the physics of gauge theories, gauge fixing (also called choosing a gauge) denotes a mathematical procedure for coping with redundant degrees of freedom in field variables. By definition, a gauge theory represents each physically distinct co ...
procedure for the
action principle In physics, action is a scalar quantity that describes how the balance of kinetic versus potential energy of a physical system changes with trajectory. Action is significant because it is an input to the principle of stationary action, an appr ...
of a gauge theory using the
differential geometry Differential geometry is a Mathematics, mathematical discipline that studies the geometry of smooth shapes and smooth spaces, otherwise known as smooth manifolds. It uses the techniques of Calculus, single variable calculus, vector calculus, lin ...
of the gauge bundle on which the field theory lives. One then quantizes the theory to obtain a
Hamiltonian system A Hamiltonian system is a dynamical system governed by Hamilton's equations. In physics, this dynamical system describes the evolution of a physical system such as a planetary system or an electron in an electromagnetic field. These systems can ...
in the
interaction picture In quantum mechanics, the interaction picture (also known as the interaction representation or Dirac picture after Paul Dirac, who introduced it) is an intermediate representation between the Schrödinger picture and the Heisenberg picture. Whe ...
in such a way that the "unphysical" fields introduced by the gauge fixing procedure resolve
gauge anomalies In theoretical physics, a gauge anomaly is an example of an anomaly (physics), anomaly: it is a feature of quantum mechanics—usually a one-loop diagram—that invalidates the gauge symmetry of a quantum field theory; i.e. of a gauge theory. Al ...
without appearing in the asymptotic
states State most commonly refers to: * State (polity), a centralized political organization that regulates law and society within a territory **Sovereign state, a sovereign polity in international law, commonly referred to as a country **Nation state, a ...
of the theory. The result is a set of
Feynman rules In theoretical physics, a Feynman diagram is a pictorial representation of the mathematical expressions describing the behavior and interaction of subatomic particles. The scheme is named after American physicist Richard Feynman, who introduced ...
for use in a
Dyson series In scattering theory, a part of mathematical physics, the Dyson series, formulated by Freeman Dyson, is a perturbative expansion of the time evolution operator in the interaction picture. Each term can be represented by a sum of Feynman diagrams. ...
perturbative expansion of the
S-matrix In physics, the ''S''-matrix or scattering matrix is a Matrix (mathematics), matrix that relates the initial state and the final state of a physical system undergoing a scattering, scattering process. It is used in quantum mechanics, scattering ...
which guarantee that it is
unitary Unitary may refer to: Mathematics * Unitary divisor * Unitary element * Unitary group * Unitary matrix * Unitary morphism * Unitary operator * Unitary transformation * Unitary representation * Unitarity (physics) * ''E''-unitary inverse semigr ...
and
renormalizable Renormalization is a collection of techniques in quantum field theory, statistical field theory, and the theory of self-similar geometric structures, that is used to treat infinities arising in calculated quantities by altering values of the ...
at each loop order—in short, a coherent approximation technique for making physical predictions about the results of
scattering In physics, scattering is a wide range of physical processes where moving particles or radiation of some form, such as light or sound, are forced to deviate from a straight trajectory by localized non-uniformities (including particles and radiat ...
experiments.


Classical BRST

This is related to a supersymplectic
manifold In mathematics, a manifold is a topological space that locally resembles Euclidean space near each point. More precisely, an n-dimensional manifold, or ''n-manifold'' for short, is a topological space with the property that each point has a N ...
where pure operators are graded by integral ghost numbers and we have a BRST
cohomology In mathematics, specifically in homology theory and algebraic topology, cohomology is a general term for a sequence of abelian groups, usually one associated with a topological space, often defined from a cochain complex. Cohomology can be viewed ...
.


Gauge transformations

From a practical perspective, a
quantum field theory In theoretical physics, quantum field theory (QFT) is a theoretical framework that combines Field theory (physics), field theory and the principle of relativity with ideas behind quantum mechanics. QFT is used in particle physics to construct phy ...
consists of an
action principle In physics, action is a scalar quantity that describes how the balance of kinetic versus potential energy of a physical system changes with trajectory. Action is significant because it is an input to the principle of stationary action, an appr ...
and a set of procedures for performing perturbative calculations. There are other kinds of "sanity checks" that can be performed on a quantum field theory to determine whether it fits qualitative phenomena such as
quark confinement In quantum chromodynamics (QCD), color confinement, often simply called confinement, is the phenomenon that color-charged particles (such as quarks and gluons) cannot be isolated, and therefore cannot be directly observed in normal conditions b ...
and
asymptotic freedom In quantum field theory, asymptotic freedom is a property of some gauge theory, gauge theories that causes interactions between particles to become asymptotically weaker as the energy scale increases and the corresponding length scale decreases. (A ...
. However, most of the predictive successes of quantum field theory, from
quantum electrodynamics In particle physics, quantum electrodynamics (QED) is the Theory of relativity, relativistic quantum field theory of electrodynamics. In essence, it describes how light and matter interact and is the first theory where full agreement between quant ...
to the present day, have been quantified by matching
S-matrix In physics, the ''S''-matrix or scattering matrix is a Matrix (mathematics), matrix that relates the initial state and the final state of a physical system undergoing a scattering, scattering process. It is used in quantum mechanics, scattering ...
calculations against the results of
scattering In physics, scattering is a wide range of physical processes where moving particles or radiation of some form, such as light or sound, are forced to deviate from a straight trajectory by localized non-uniformities (including particles and radiat ...
experiments. In the early days of QFT, one would have had to say that the quantization and
renormalization Renormalization is a collection of techniques in quantum field theory, statistical field theory, and the theory of self-similar geometric structures, that is used to treat infinities arising in calculated quantities by altering values of the ...
prescriptions were as much part of the model as the
Lagrangian density Lagrangian field theory is a formalism in classical field theory. It is the field-theoretic analogue of Lagrangian mechanics. Lagrangian mechanics is used to analyze the motion of a system of discrete particles each with a finite number of degrees ...
, especially when they relied on the powerful but mathematically ill-defined path integral formalism. It quickly became clear that QED was almost "magical" in its relative tractability, and that most of the ways that one might imagine extending it would not produce rational calculations. However, one class of field theories remained promising: gauge theories, in which the objects in the theory represent
equivalence classes In mathematics, when the elements of some set S have a notion of equivalence (formalized as an equivalence relation), then one may naturally split the set S into equivalence classes. These equivalence classes are constructed so that elements a ...
of physically indistinguishable field configurations, any two of which are related by a
gauge transformation In the physics of gauge theory, gauge theories, gauge fixing (also called choosing a gauge) denotes a mathematical procedure for coping with redundant Degrees of freedom (physics and chemistry), degrees of freedom in field (physics), field variab ...
. This generalizes the QED idea of a local change of phase to a more complicated
Lie group In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group (mathematics), group that is also a differentiable manifold, such that group multiplication and taking inverses are both differentiable. A manifold is a space that locally resembles Eucli ...
. QED itself is a gauge theory, as is
general relativity General relativity, also known as the general theory of relativity, and as Einstein's theory of gravity, is the differential geometry, geometric theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915 and is the current description of grav ...
, although the latter has proven resistant to quantization so far, for reasons related to renormalization. Another class of gauge theories with a non-Abelian gauge group, beginning with Yang–Mills theory, became amenable to quantization in the late 1960s and early 1970s, largely due to the work of Ludwig D. Faddeev, Victor Popov,
Bryce DeWitt Bryce Seligman DeWitt (born Carl Bryce Seligman; January 8, 1923 – September 23, 2004) was an American theoretical physicist noted for his work in gravitation and quantum field theory. Personal life He was born Carl Bryce Seligman, but he ...
, and
Gerardus 't Hooft Gerardus "Gerard" 't Hooft (; born July 5, 1946) is a Dutch theoretical physicist and professor at Utrecht University, the Netherlands. He shared the 1999 Nobel Prize in Physics with his thesis advisor Martinus J. G. Veltman "for elucidating t ...
. However, they remained very difficult to work with until the introduction of the BRST method. The BRST method provided the calculation techniques and renormalizability proofs needed to extract accurate results from both "unbroken" Yang–Mills theories and those in which the
Higgs mechanism In the Standard Model of particle physics, the Higgs mechanism is essential to explain the Mass generation, generation mechanism of the property "mass" for gauge bosons. Without the Higgs mechanism, all bosons (one of the two classes of particles ...
leads to
spontaneous symmetry breaking Spontaneous symmetry breaking is a spontaneous process of symmetry breaking, by which a physical system in a symmetric state spontaneously ends up in an asymmetric state. In particular, it can describe systems where the equations of motion o ...
. Representatives of these two types of Yang–Mills systems—
quantum chromodynamics In theoretical physics, quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is the study of the strong interaction between quarks mediated by gluons. Quarks are fundamental particles that make up composite hadrons such as the proton, neutron and pion. QCD is a type of ...
and
electroweak theory In particle physics, the electroweak interaction or electroweak force is the unified description of two of the fundamental interactions of nature: electromagnetism (electromagnetic interaction) and the weak interaction. Although these two forc ...
—appear in the
Standard Model The Standard Model of particle physics is the Scientific theory, theory describing three of the four known fundamental forces (electromagnetism, electromagnetic, weak interaction, weak and strong interactions – excluding gravity) in the unive ...
of
particle physics Particle physics or high-energy physics is the study of Elementary particle, fundamental particles and fundamental interaction, forces that constitute matter and radiation. The field also studies combinations of elementary particles up to the s ...
. It has proven rather more difficult to prove the ''existence'' of non-Abelian quantum field theory in a rigorous sense than to obtain accurate predictions using semi-heuristic calculation schemes. This is because analyzing a quantum field theory requires two mathematically interlocked perspectives: a
Lagrangian system In mathematics, a Lagrangian system is a pair , consisting of a smooth fiber bundle and a Lagrangian density , which yields the Euler–Lagrange differential operator acting on sections of . In classical mechanics, many dynamical systems are L ...
based on the action functional, composed of ''fields'' with distinct values at each point in spacetime and local operators which act on them, and a
Hamiltonian system A Hamiltonian system is a dynamical system governed by Hamilton's equations. In physics, this dynamical system describes the evolution of a physical system such as a planetary system or an electron in an electromagnetic field. These systems can ...
in the
Dirac picture In quantum mechanics, the interaction picture (also known as the interaction representation or Dirac picture after Paul Dirac, who introduced it) is an intermediate representation between the Schrödinger picture and the Heisenberg picture. Wher ...
, composed of ''states'' which characterize the entire system at a given time and
field operators In physics, canonical quantization is a procedure for quantizing a classical theory, while attempting to preserve the formal structure, such as symmetries, of the classical theory to the greatest extent possible. Historically, this was not quite ...
which act on them. What makes this so difficult in a gauge theory is that the objects of the theory are not really local fields on spacetime; they are right-invariant local fields on the principal gauge bundle, and different local sections through a portion of the gauge bundle, related by ''passive'' transformations, produce different Dirac pictures. What is more, a description of the system as a whole in terms of a set of fields contains many redundant degrees of freedom; the distinct configurations of the theory are equivalence classes of field configurations, so that two descriptions which are related to one another by a gauge transformation are also really the same physical configuration. The "solutions" of a quantized gauge theory exist not in a straightforward space of fields with values at every point in spacetime but in a
quotient space Quotient space may refer to a quotient set when the sets under consideration are considered as spaces. In particular: *Quotient space (topology), in case of topological spaces *Quotient space (linear algebra), in case of vector spaces *Quotient sp ...
(or cohomology) whose elements are equivalence classes of field configurations. Hiding in the BRST formalism is a system for parameterizing the variations associated with all possible active gauge transformations and correctly accounting for their physical irrelevance during the conversion of a Lagrangian system to a Hamiltonian system.


Gauge fixing and perturbation theory

The principle of gauge invariance is essential to constructing a workable quantum field theory. But it is generally not feasible to perform a perturbative calculation in a gauge theory without first "fixing the gauge"—adding terms to the
Lagrangian density Lagrangian field theory is a formalism in classical field theory. It is the field-theoretic analogue of Lagrangian mechanics. Lagrangian mechanics is used to analyze the motion of a system of discrete particles each with a finite number of degrees ...
of the action principle which "break the gauge symmetry" to suppress these "unphysical" degrees of freedom. The idea of
gauge fixing In the physics of gauge theories, gauge fixing (also called choosing a gauge) denotes a mathematical procedure for coping with redundant degrees of freedom in field variables. By definition, a gauge theory represents each physically distinct co ...
goes back to the
Lorenz gauge In electromagnetism, the Lorenz gauge condition or Lorenz gauge (after Ludvig Lorenz) is a partial gauge fixing of the electromagnetic vector potential by requiring \partial_\mu A^\mu = 0. The name is frequently confused with Hendrik Lorentz, who ...
approach to electromagnetism, which suppresses most of the excess degrees of freedom in the
four-potential An electromagnetic four-potential is a relativistic vector function from which the electromagnetic field can be derived. It combines both an electric scalar potential and a magnetic vector potential into a single four-vector.Gravitation, J.A. W ...
while retaining manifest
Lorentz invariance In a relativistic theory of physics, a Lorentz scalar is a scalar expression whose value is invariant under any Lorentz transformation. A Lorentz scalar may be generated from, e.g., the scalar product of vectors, or by contracting tensors. While ...
. The Lorenz gauge is a great simplification relative to Maxwell's field-strength approach to
classical electrodynamics Classical electromagnetism or classical electrodynamics is a branch of physics focused on the study of interactions between electric charges and currents using an extension of the classical Newtonian model. It is, therefore, a classical field th ...
, and illustrates why it is useful to deal with excess degrees of freedom in the
representation Representation may refer to: Law and politics *Representation (politics), political activities undertaken by elected representatives, as well as other theories ** Representative democracy, type of democracy in which elected officials represent a ...
of the objects in a theory at the Lagrangian stage, before passing over to
Hamiltonian mechanics In physics, Hamiltonian mechanics is a reformulation of Lagrangian mechanics that emerged in 1833. Introduced by Sir William Rowan Hamilton, Hamiltonian mechanics replaces (generalized) velocities \dot q^i used in Lagrangian mechanics with (gener ...
via the
Legendre transformation In mathematics, the Legendre transformation (or Legendre transform), first introduced by Adrien-Marie Legendre in 1787 when studying the minimal surface problem, is an involutive transformation on real-valued functions that are convex on a rea ...
. The Hamiltonian density is related to the Lie derivative of the Lagrangian density with respect to a unit timelike horizontal vector field on the gauge bundle. In a quantum mechanical context it is conventionally rescaled by a factor i \hbar. Integrating it by parts over a spacelike cross section recovers the form of the integrand familiar from
canonical quantization In physics, canonical quantization is a procedure for quantizing a classical theory, while attempting to preserve the formal structure, such as symmetries, of the classical theory to the greatest extent possible. Historically, this was not quit ...
. Because the definition of the Hamiltonian involves a unit time vector field on the base space, a
horizontal lift In differential geometry, an Ehresmann connection (after the French mathematician Charles Ehresmann who first formalized this concept) is a version of the notion of a connection, which makes sense on any smooth fiber bundle. In particular, it does ...
to the bundle space, and a spacelike surface "normal" (in the
Minkowski metric In physics, Minkowski space (or Minkowski spacetime) () is the main mathematical description of spacetime in the absence of general_relativity, gravitation. It combines inertial space and time manifolds into a four-dimensional model. The model ...
) to the unit time vector field at each point on the base manifold, it is dependent both on the
connection Connection may refer to: Mathematics *Connection (algebraic framework) *Connection (mathematics), a way of specifying a derivative of a geometrical object along a vector field on a manifold * Connection (affine bundle) *Connection (composite bun ...
and the choice of Lorentz
frame A frame is often a structural system that supports other components of a physical construction and/or steel frame that limits the construction's extent. Frame and FRAME may also refer to: Physical objects In building construction *Framing (con ...
, and is far from being globally defined. But it is an essential ingredient in the perturbative framework of quantum field theory, into which the quantized Hamiltonian enters via the
Dyson series In scattering theory, a part of mathematical physics, the Dyson series, formulated by Freeman Dyson, is a perturbative expansion of the time evolution operator in the interaction picture. Each term can be represented by a sum of Feynman diagrams. ...
. For perturbative purposes, we gather the configuration of all the fields of our theory on an entire three-dimensional horizontal spacelike cross section of ''P'' into one object (a
Fock state In quantum mechanics, a Fock state or number state is a quantum state that is an element of a Fock space with a well-defined number of particles (or quanta). These states are named after the Soviet physicist Vladimir Fock. Fock states play an im ...
), and then describe the "evolution" of this state over time using the
interaction picture In quantum mechanics, the interaction picture (also known as the interaction representation or Dirac picture after Paul Dirac, who introduced it) is an intermediate representation between the Schrödinger picture and the Heisenberg picture. Whe ...
. The Fock space is spanned by the multi-particle eigenstates of the "unperturbed" or "non-interaction" portion \mathcal_0 of the
Hamiltonian Hamiltonian may refer to: * Hamiltonian mechanics, a function that represents the total energy of a system * Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics), an operator corresponding to the total energy of that system ** Dyall Hamiltonian, a modified Hamiltonian ...
\mathcal. Hence the instantaneous description of any Fock state is a complex-amplitude-weighted sum of eigenstates of \mathcal_0. In the interaction picture, we relate Fock states at different times by prescribing that each eigenstate of the unperturbed Hamiltonian experiences a constant rate of phase rotation proportional to its
energy Energy () is the physical quantity, quantitative physical property, property that is transferred to a physical body, body or to a physical system, recognizable in the performance of Work (thermodynamics), work and in the form of heat and l ...
(the corresponding
eigenvalue In linear algebra, an eigenvector ( ) or characteristic vector is a vector that has its direction unchanged (or reversed) by a given linear transformation. More precisely, an eigenvector \mathbf v of a linear transformation T is scaled by a ...
of the unperturbed Hamiltonian). Hence, in the zero-order approximation, the set of weights characterizing a Fock state does not change over time, but the corresponding field configuration does. In higher approximations, the weights also change;
collider A collider is a type of particle accelerator that brings two opposing particle beams together such that the particles collide. Compared to other particle accelerators in which the moving particles collide with a stationary matter target, collid ...
experiments in
high-energy physics Particle physics or high-energy physics is the study of fundamental particles and forces that constitute matter and radiation. The field also studies combinations of elementary particles up to the scale of protons and neutrons, while the stu ...
amount to measurements of the rate of change in these weights (or rather integrals of them over distributions representing uncertainty in the initial and final conditions of a scattering event). The Dyson series captures the effect of the discrepancy between \mathcal_0 and the true Hamiltonian \mathcal, in the form of a
power series In mathematics, a power series (in one variable) is an infinite series of the form \sum_^\infty a_n \left(x - c\right)^n = a_0 + a_1 (x - c) + a_2 (x - c)^2 + \dots where ''a_n'' represents the coefficient of the ''n''th term and ''c'' is a co ...
in the
coupling constant In physics, a coupling constant or gauge coupling parameter (or, more simply, a coupling), is a number that determines the strength of the force exerted in an interaction. Originally, the coupling constant related the force acting between tw ...
''g''; it is the principal tool for making quantitative predictions from a quantum field theory. To use the Dyson series to calculate anything, one needs more than a gauge-invariant Lagrangian density; one also needs the quantization and gauge fixing prescriptions that enter into the
Feynman rules In theoretical physics, a Feynman diagram is a pictorial representation of the mathematical expressions describing the behavior and interaction of subatomic particles. The scheme is named after American physicist Richard Feynman, who introduced ...
of the theory. The Dyson series produces infinite integrals of various kinds when applied to the Hamiltonian of a particular QFT. This is partly because all usable quantum field theories to date must be considered effective field theories, describing only interactions on a certain range of energy scales that we can experimentally probe and therefore vulnerable to ultraviolet divergences. These are tolerable as long as they can be handled via standard techniques of
renormalization Renormalization is a collection of techniques in quantum field theory, statistical field theory, and the theory of self-similar geometric structures, that is used to treat infinities arising in calculated quantities by altering values of the ...
; they are not so tolerable when they result in an infinite series of infinite renormalizations or, worse, in an obviously unphysical prediction such as an uncancelled
gauge anomaly In theoretical physics, a gauge anomaly is an example of an anomaly: it is a feature of quantum mechanics—usually a one-loop diagram—that invalidates the gauge symmetry of a quantum field theory; i.e. of a gauge theory. All gauge anomalie ...
. There is a deep relationship between renormalizability and gauge invariance, which is easily lost in the course of attempts to obtain tractable Feynman rules by fixing the gauge.


Pre-BRST approaches to gauge fixing

The traditional gauge fixing prescriptions of continuum electrodynamics select a unique representative from each gauge-transformation-related equivalence class using a constraint equation such as the
Lorenz gauge In electromagnetism, the Lorenz gauge condition or Lorenz gauge (after Ludvig Lorenz) is a partial gauge fixing of the electromagnetic vector potential by requiring \partial_\mu A^\mu = 0. The name is frequently confused with Hendrik Lorentz, who ...
\partial^\mu A_\mu = 0. This sort of prescription can be applied to an Abelian gauge theory such as QED, although it results in some difficulty in explaining why the
Ward identities Ward may refer to: Division or unit * Hospital ward, a hospital division, floor, or room set aside for a particular class or group of patients, for example the psychiatric ward * Prison ward, a division of a penal institution such as a pris ...
of the classical theory carry over to the quantum theory—in other words, why
Feynman diagrams In theoretical physics, a Feynman diagram is a pictorial representation of the mathematical expressions describing the behavior and interaction of subatomic particles. The scheme is named after American physicist Richard Feynman, who introduced ...
containing internal longitudinally polarized
virtual photons A virtual particle is a theoretical transient particle that exhibits some of the characteristics of an ordinary particle, while having its existence limited by the uncertainty principle, which allows the virtual particles to spontaneously emer ...
do not contribute to
S-matrix In physics, the ''S''-matrix or scattering matrix is a Matrix (mathematics), matrix that relates the initial state and the final state of a physical system undergoing a scattering, scattering process. It is used in quantum mechanics, scattering ...
calculations. This approach also does not generalize well to non-Abelian gauge groups such as the SU(2)xU(1) of Yang–Mills electroweak theory and the SU(3) of quantum chromodynamics. It suffers from Gribov ambiguities and from the difficulty of defining a gauge fixing constraint that is in some sense "orthogonal" to physically significant changes in the field configuration. More sophisticated approaches do not attempt to apply a
delta function In mathematical analysis, the Dirac delta function (or distribution), also known as the unit impulse, is a generalized function on the real numbers, whose value is zero everywhere except at zero, and whose integral over the entire real lin ...
constraint to the gauge transformation degrees of freedom. Instead of "fixing" the gauge to a particular "constraint surface" in configuration space, one can break the gauge freedom with an additional, non-gauge-invariant term added to the Lagrangian density. In order to reproduce the successes of gauge fixing, this term is chosen to be minimal for the choice of gauge that corresponds to the desired constraint and to depend quadratically on the deviation of the gauge from the constraint surface. By the
stationary phase approximation In mathematics, the stationary phase approximation is a basic principle of asymptotic analysis, applying to functions given by integration against a rapidly-varying complex exponential. This method originates from the 19th century, and is due to G ...
on which the
Feynman path integral The path integral formulation is a description in quantum mechanics that generalizes the stationary action principle of classical mechanics. It replaces the classical notion of a single, unique classical trajectory for a system with a sum, or ...
is based, the dominant contribution to perturbative calculations will come from field configurations in the neighborhood of the constraint surface. The perturbative expansion associated with this Lagrangian, using the method of functional quantization, is generally referred to as the ''R''ξ gauge. It reduces in the case of an Abelian U(1) gauge to the same set of
Feynman rules In theoretical physics, a Feynman diagram is a pictorial representation of the mathematical expressions describing the behavior and interaction of subatomic particles. The scheme is named after American physicist Richard Feynman, who introduced ...
that one obtains in the method of
canonical quantization In physics, canonical quantization is a procedure for quantizing a classical theory, while attempting to preserve the formal structure, such as symmetries, of the classical theory to the greatest extent possible. Historically, this was not quit ...
. But there is an important difference: the broken gauge freedom appears in the
functional integral Functional integration is a collection of results in mathematics and physics where the domain of an integral is no longer a region of space, but a space of functions. Functional integrals arise in probability, in the study of partial differentia ...
as an additional factor in the overall normalization. This factor can only be pulled out of the perturbative expansion (and ignored) when the contribution to the Lagrangian of a perturbation along the gauge degrees of freedom is independent of the particular "physical" field configuration. This is the condition that fails to hold for non-Abelian gauge groups. If one ignores the problem and attempts to use the Feynman rules obtained from "naive" functional quantization, one finds that one's calculations contain unremovable anomalies. The problem of perturbative calculations in QCD was solved by introducing additional fields known as Faddeev–Popov ghosts, whose contribution to the gauge-fixed Lagrangian offsets the anomaly introduced by the coupling of "physical" and "unphysical" perturbations of the non-Abelian gauge field. From the functional quantization perspective, the "unphysical" perturbations of the field configuration (the gauge transformations) form a subspace of the space of all (infinitesimal) perturbations; in the non-Abelian case, the embedding of this subspace in the larger space depends on the configuration around which the perturbation takes place. The ghost term in the Lagrangian represents the
functional determinant In functional analysis, a branch of mathematics, it is sometimes possible to generalize the notion of the determinant of a square matrix of finite order (representing a linear transformation from a finite-dimensional vector space to itself) to the ...
of the
Jacobian In mathematics, a Jacobian, named for Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi, may refer to: *Jacobian matrix and determinant (and in particular, the robot Jacobian) *Jacobian elliptic functions *Jacobian variety * Jacobian ideal *Intermediate Jacobian In mat ...
of this embedding, and the properties of the ghost field are dictated by the exponent desired on the determinant in order to correct the functional measure on the remaining "physical" perturbation axes.


Gauge bundles and the vertical ideal

Intuition for the BRST formalism is provided by describing it geometrically, in the setting of
fiber bundle In mathematics, and particularly topology, a fiber bundle ( ''Commonwealth English'': fibre bundle) is a space that is a product space, but may have a different topological structure. Specifically, the similarity between a space E and a pr ...
s. This geometric setting contrasts with and illuminates the older traditional picture, that of algebra-valued fields on
Minkowski space In physics, Minkowski space (or Minkowski spacetime) () is the main mathematical description of spacetime in the absence of gravitation. It combines inertial space and time manifolds into a four-dimensional model. The model helps show how a ...
, provided in (earlier) quantum field theory texts. In this setting, a gauge field can be understood in one of two different ways. In one, the gauge field is a local
section Section, Sectioning, or Sectioned may refer to: Arts, entertainment and media * Section (music), a complete, but not independent, musical idea * Section (typography), a subdivision, especially of a chapter, in books and documents ** Section sig ...
of the fiber bundle. In the other, the gauge field is little more than the
connection Connection may refer to: Mathematics *Connection (algebraic framework) *Connection (mathematics), a way of specifying a derivative of a geometrical object along a vector field on a manifold * Connection (affine bundle) *Connection (composite bun ...
between adjacent fibers, defined on the entire length of the fiber. Corresponding to these two understandings, there are two ways to look at a gauge transformation. In the first case, a gauge transformation is just a change of local section. In
general relativity General relativity, also known as the general theory of relativity, and as Einstein's theory of gravity, is the differential geometry, geometric theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915 and is the current description of grav ...
, this is referred to as a
passive transformation Geometric transformations can be distinguished into two types: active or alibi transformations which change the physical position of a set of points relative to a fixed frame of reference or coordinate system (''alibi'' meaning "being somewher ...
. In the second view, a gauge transformation is a change of coordinates along the entire fiber (arising from multiplication by a group element ''g'') which induces a vertical diffeomorphism of the
principal bundle In mathematics, a principal bundle is a mathematical object that formalizes some of the essential features of the Cartesian product X \times G of a space X with a group G. In the same way as with the Cartesian product, a principal bundle P is equ ...
. This second viewpoint provides the geometric foundation for the BRST method. Unlike a passive transformation, it is well-defined globally on a principal bundle, with any structure group over an arbitrary manifold. That is, the BRST formalism can be developed to describe the quantization of ''any'' principle bundle on any manifold. For concreteness and relevance to conventional QFT, much of this article sticks to the case of a principal gauge bundle with compact fiber over 4-dimensional Minkowski space. A principal gauge bundle ''P'' over a 4-manifold ''M'' is locally isomorphic to ''U'' × ''F'', where ''U'' ⊂ R4 and the fiber ''F'' is isomorphic to a Lie group ''G'', the
gauge group A gauge group is a group of gauge symmetries of the Yang–Mills gauge theory of principal connections on a principal bundle. Given a principal bundle P\to X with a structure Lie group G, a gauge group is defined to be a group of its vertical ...
of the field theory (this is an isomorphism of manifold structures, not of group structures; there is no special surface in ''P'' corresponding to 1 in ''G'', so it is more proper to say that the fiber ''F'' is a ''G''-
torsor In mathematics, a principal homogeneous space, or torsor, for a group ''G'' is a homogeneous space ''X'' for ''G'' in which the stabilizer subgroup of every point is trivial. Equivalently, a principal homogeneous space for a group ''G'' is a no ...
). The most basic property as a fiber bundle is the "projection to the base space" π : ''P'' → ''M'', which defines the vertical directions on ''P'' (those lying within the fiber π−1(''p'') over each point ''p'' in ''M''). As a gauge bundle it has a left action of ''G'' on ''P'' which respects the fiber structure, and as a principal bundle it also has a right action of ''G'' on ''P'' which also respects the fiber structure and commutes with the left action. The left action of the
structure group In mathematics, and particularly topology, a fiber bundle ( ''Commonwealth English'': fibre bundle) is a space that is a product space, but may have a different topological structure. Specifically, the similarity between a space E and a p ...
''G'' on ''P'' corresponds to a change of
coordinate system In geometry, a coordinate system is a system that uses one or more numbers, or coordinates, to uniquely determine and standardize the position of the points or other geometric elements on a manifold such as Euclidean space. The coordinates are ...
on an individual fiber. The (global) right action ''Rg'' : ''P'' → ''P'' for a fixed ''g'' in ''G'' corresponds to an actual
automorphism In mathematics, an automorphism is an isomorphism from a mathematical object to itself. It is, in some sense, a symmetry of the object, and a way of mapping the object to itself while preserving all of its structure. The set of all automorphism ...
of each fiber and hence to a map of ''P'' to itself. In order for ''P'' to qualify as a principal ''G''-bundle, the global right action of each ''g'' in ''G'' must be an automorphism with respect to the manifold structure of ''P'' with a smooth dependence on ''g'', that is, a diffeomorphism ''P'' × ''G'' → ''P''. The existence of the global right action of the structure group picks out a special class of right invariant geometric objects on ''P''—those which do not change when they are pulled back along ''Rg'' for all values of ''g'' in ''G''. The most important right invariant objects on a principal bundle are the right invariant
vector fields In vector calculus and physics, a vector field is an assignment of a vector to each point in a space, most commonly Euclidean space \mathbb^n. A vector field on a plane can be visualized as a collection of arrows with given magnitudes and direct ...
, which form an
ideal Ideal may refer to: Philosophy * Ideal (ethics), values that one actively pursues as goals * Platonic ideal, a philosophical idea of trueness of form, associated with Plato Mathematics * Ideal (ring theory), special subsets of a ring considered ...
\mathfrak of the Lie algebra of infinitesimal diffeomorphisms on ''P''. Those vector fields on ''P'' which are both right invariant and vertical form an ideal V\mathfrak of \mathfrak, which has a relationship to the entire bundle ''P'' analogous to that of the Lie algebra \mathfrak of the gauge group ''G'' to the individual ''G''-torsor fiber ''F''. The "field theory" of interest is defined in terms of a set of "fields" (smooth maps into various vector spaces) defined on a principal gauge bundle ''P''. Different fields carry different representations of the gauge group ''G'', and perhaps of other
symmetry group In group theory, the symmetry group of a geometric object is the group of all transformations under which the object is invariant, endowed with the group operation of composition. Such a transformation is an invertible mapping of the amb ...
s of the manifold such as the
Poincaré group The Poincaré group, named after Henri Poincaré (1905), was first defined by Hermann Minkowski (1908) as the isometry group of Minkowski spacetime. It is a ten-dimensional non-abelian Lie group that is of importance as a model in our unde ...
. One may define the space Pl of local polynomials in these fields and their derivatives. The fundamental Lagrangian density of one's theory is presumed to lie in the subspace Pl_0 of polynomials which are real-valued and invariant under any unbroken non-gauge symmetry groups. It is also presumed to be invariant not only under the left action (passive coordinate transformations) and the global right action of the gauge group but also under local gauge transformations—pullback along the infinitesimal diffeomorphism associated with an arbitrary choice of right-invariant vertical vector field \epsilon \in V\mathfrak. Identifying local gauge transformations with a particular subspace of vector fields on the manifold ''P'' provides a better framework for dealing with infinite-dimensional infinitesimals:
differential geometry Differential geometry is a Mathematics, mathematical discipline that studies the geometry of smooth shapes and smooth spaces, otherwise known as smooth manifolds. It uses the techniques of Calculus, single variable calculus, vector calculus, lin ...
and the
exterior calculus In mathematics, differential forms provide a unified approach to define integrands over curves, surfaces, solids, and higher-dimensional manifolds. The modern notion of differential forms was pioneered by Élie Cartan. It has many applications, ...
. The change in a scalar field under pullback along an infinitesimal automorphism is captured in the
Lie derivative In differential geometry, the Lie derivative ( ), named after Sophus Lie by Władysław Ślebodziński, evaluates the change of a tensor field (including scalar functions, vector fields and one-forms), along the flow defined by another vector fi ...
, and the notion of retaining only the term linear in the vector field is implemented by separating it into the interior derivative and the
exterior derivative On a differentiable manifold, the exterior derivative extends the concept of the differential of a function to differential forms of higher degree. The exterior derivative was first described in its current form by Élie Cartan in 1899. The re ...
. In this context, "forms" and the exterior calculus refer exclusively to degrees of freedom which are dual to vector fields ''on the gauge bundle'', not to degrees of freedom expressed in (Greek) tensor indices on the base manifold or (Roman) matrix indices on the gauge algebra. The Lie derivative on a manifold is a globally well-defined operation in a way that the
partial derivative In mathematics, a partial derivative of a function of several variables is its derivative with respect to one of those variables, with the others held constant (as opposed to the total derivative, in which all variables are allowed to vary). P ...
is not. The proper generalization of Clairaut's theorem to the non-trivial manifold structure of ''P'' is given by the
Lie bracket of vector fields In the mathematical field of differential topology, the Lie bracket of vector fields, also known as the Jacobi–Lie bracket or the commutator of vector fields, is an operator that assigns to any two vector fields X and Y on a smooth manifo ...
and the nilpotence of the
exterior derivative On a differentiable manifold, the exterior derivative extends the concept of the differential of a function to differential forms of higher degree. The exterior derivative was first described in its current form by Élie Cartan in 1899. The re ...
. This provides an essential tool for computation: the
generalized Stokes theorem In vector calculus and differential geometry the generalized Stokes theorem (sometimes with apostrophe as Stokes' theorem or Stokes's theorem), also called the Stokes–Cartan theorem, is a statement about the integration of differential forms o ...
, which allows integration by parts and then elimination of the surface term, as long as the integrand drops off rapidly enough in directions where there is an open boundary. (This is not a trivial assumption, but can be dealt with by
renormalization Renormalization is a collection of techniques in quantum field theory, statistical field theory, and the theory of self-similar geometric structures, that is used to treat infinities arising in calculated quantities by altering values of the ...
techniques such as
dimensional regularization __NOTOC__ In theoretical physics, dimensional regularization is a method introduced by Juan José Giambiagi and as well as – independently and more comprehensively – by Gerard 't Hooft and Martinus J. G. Veltman for regularizing integral ...
as long as the surface term can be made gauge invariant.)


BRST operator and asymptotic Fock space

Central to the BRST formalism is the BRST operator s_B, defined as the tangent to the Ward operator W(\delta\lambda). The Ward operator on each field may be identified (up to a sign convention) with the
Lie derivative In differential geometry, the Lie derivative ( ), named after Sophus Lie by Władysław Ślebodziński, evaluates the change of a tensor field (including scalar functions, vector fields and one-forms), along the flow defined by another vector fi ...
along the vertical vector field associated with the local gauge transformation \delta\lambda appearing as a parameter of the Ward operator. The BRST operator s_B on fields resembles the
exterior derivative On a differentiable manifold, the exterior derivative extends the concept of the differential of a function to differential forms of higher degree. The exterior derivative was first described in its current form by Élie Cartan in 1899. The re ...
on the gauge bundle, or rather to its restriction to a reduced space of
alternating form In mathematics, the exterior algebra or Grassmann algebra of a vector space V is an associative algebra that contains V, which has a product, called exterior product or wedge product and denoted with \wedge, such that v\wedge v=0 for every vector ...
s which are defined only on vertical vector fields. The Ward and BRST operators are related (up to a phase convention introduced by Kugo and Ojima, whose notation we will follow in the treatment of state vectors below) by W(\delta\lambda) X = \delta\lambda\; s_B X. Here, X \in _0 is a zero-form (scalar). The space _0 is the space of real-valued polynomials in the fields and their derivatives that are invariant under any (unbroken) non-gauge symmetry groups. Like the exterior derivative, the BRST operator is
nilpotent In mathematics, an element x of a ring (mathematics), ring R is called nilpotent if there exists some positive integer n, called the index (or sometimes the degree), such that x^n=0. The term, along with its sister Idempotent (ring theory), idem ...
of degree 2, i. e., (s_B)^2 = 0. The variation of any "BRST-
exact form In mathematics, especially vector calculus and differential topology, a closed form is a differential form ''α'' whose exterior derivative is zero (); and an exact form is a differential form, ''α'', that is the exterior derivative of another dif ...
" s_B X with respect to a local gauge transformation \delta\lambda is given by the interior derivative \iota_. It is :\begin \left iota_, s_B \right s_B X &= \iota_ (s_B s_B X) + s_B \left (\iota_ (s_B X) \right ) \\ &= s_B \left (\iota_ (s_B X) \right ) \end Note that this is also exact. The Hamiltonian perturbative formalism is carried out not on the fiber bundle, but on a local section. In this formalism, adding a BRST-exact term to a gauge invariant Lagrangian density preserves the relation s_BX=0. This implies that there is a related operator Q_B on the state space for which _B, \mathcal= 0. That is, the BRST operator on Fock states is a conserved charge of the
Hamiltonian system A Hamiltonian system is a dynamical system governed by Hamilton's equations. In physics, this dynamical system describes the evolution of a physical system such as a planetary system or an electron in an electromagnetic field. These systems can ...
. This implies that the
time evolution operator Time evolution is the change of state brought about by the passage of time, applicable to systems with internal state (also called ''stateful systems''). In this formulation, ''time'' is not required to be a continuous parameter, but may be discr ...
in a
Dyson series In scattering theory, a part of mathematical physics, the Dyson series, formulated by Freeman Dyson, is a perturbative expansion of the time evolution operator in the interaction picture. Each term can be represented by a sum of Feynman diagrams. ...
calculation will not evolve a field configuration obeying Q_B , \Psi_i\rangle = 0 into a later configuration with Q_B , \Psi_f\rangle \neq 0 (or vice versa). The nilpotence of the BRST operator can be understood as saying that its
image An image or picture is a visual representation. An image can be Two-dimensional space, two-dimensional, such as a drawing, painting, or photograph, or Three-dimensional space, three-dimensional, such as a carving or sculpture. Images may be di ...
(the space of BRST
exact form In mathematics, especially vector calculus and differential topology, a closed form is a differential form ''α'' whose exterior derivative is zero (); and an exact form is a differential form, ''α'', that is the exterior derivative of another dif ...
s) lies entirely within its
kernel Kernel may refer to: Computing * Kernel (operating system), the central component of most operating systems * Kernel (image processing), a matrix used for image convolution * Compute kernel, in GPGPU programming * Kernel method, in machine learnin ...
(the space of BRST closed forms). The "true" Lagrangian, presumed to be invariant under local gauge transformations, is in the kernel of the BRST operator but not in its image. This implies that the universe of initial and final conditions can be limited to asymptotic "states" or field configurations at timelike infinity, where the interaction Lagrangian is "turned off". These states lie in the kernel of Q_B, but as the construction is invariant, the scattering matrix remains unitary. BRST-closed and exact states are defined similarly to BRST-closed and exact fields; closed states are annihilated by Q_B, while exact states are those obtainable by applying Q_B to some arbitrary field configuration. When defining the asymptotic states, the states that lie inside the image of Q_B can also be suppressed, but the reasoning is a bit subtler. Having postulated that the "true" Lagrangian of the theory is gauge invariant, the true "states" of the Hamiltonian system are equivalence classes under local gauge transformation; in other words, two initial or final states in the Hamiltonian picture that differ only by a BRST-exact state are physically equivalent. However, the use of a BRST-exact gauge breaking prescription does not guarantee that the interaction Hamiltonian will preserve any particular subspace of closed field configurations that are orthogonal to the space of exact configurations. This is a crucial point, often mishandled in QFT textbooks. There is no ''a priori'' inner product on field configurations built into the action principle; such an inner product is constructed as part of the Hamiltonian perturbative apparatus. The quantization prescription in the
interaction picture In quantum mechanics, the interaction picture (also known as the interaction representation or Dirac picture after Paul Dirac, who introduced it) is an intermediate representation between the Schrödinger picture and the Heisenberg picture. Whe ...
is to build a vector space of BRST-closed configurations at a particular time, such that this can be converted into a
Fock space The Fock space is an algebraic construction used in quantum mechanics to construct the quantum states space of a variable or unknown number of identical particles from a single particle Hilbert space . It is named after V. A. Fock who first intro ...
of intermediate states suitable for Hamiltonian perturbation. As is conventional for
second quantization Second quantization, also referred to as occupation number representation, is a formalism used to describe and analyze quantum many-body systems. In quantum field theory, it is known as canonical quantization, in which the fields (typically as ...
, the Fock space is provided with
ladder operators In linear algebra (and its application to quantum mechanics), a raising or lowering operator (collectively known as ladder operators) is an operator that increases or decreases the eigenvalue of another operator. In quantum mechanics, the raisin ...
for the energy-momentum eigenconfigurations (particles) of each field, complete with appropriate (anti-)commutation rules, as well as a positive semi-definite
inner product In mathematics, an inner product space (or, rarely, a Hausdorff pre-Hilbert space) is a real vector space or a complex vector space with an operation called an inner product. The inner product of two vectors in the space is a scalar, ofte ...
. The
inner product In mathematics, an inner product space (or, rarely, a Hausdorff pre-Hilbert space) is a real vector space or a complex vector space with an operation called an inner product. The inner product of two vectors in the space is a scalar, ofte ...
is required to be
singular Singular may refer to: * Singular, the grammatical number that denotes a unit quantity, as opposed to the plural and other forms * Singular or sounder, a group of boar, see List of animal names * Singular (band), a Thai jazz pop duo *'' Singula ...
exclusively along directions that correspond to BRST-exact eigenstates of the unperturbed Hamiltonian. This ensures that any pair of BRST-closed Fock states can be freely chosen out of the two equivalence classes of asymptotic field configurations corresponding to particular initial and final eigenstates of the (unbroken) free-field Hamiltonian. The desired quantization prescriptions provide a ''quotient'' Fock space isomorphic to the BRST cohomology, in which each BRST-closed equivalence class of intermediate states (differing only by an exact state) is represented by exactly one state that contains no quanta of the BRST-exact fields. This is the appropriate Fock space for the ''asymptotic'' states of the theory. The singularity of the inner product along BRST-exact degrees of freedom ensures that the physical scattering matrix contains only physical fields. This is in contrast to the (naive, gauge-fixed) Lagrangian dynamics, in which unphysical particles are propagated to the asymptotic states. By working in the cohomology, each asymptotic state is guaranteed to have one (and only one) corresponding physical state (free of ghosts). The operator Q_B is
Hermitian {{Short description, none Numerous things are named after the French mathematician Charles Hermite (1822–1901): Hermite * Cubic Hermite spline, a type of third-degree spline * Gauss–Hermite quadrature, an extension of Gaussian quadrature me ...
and non-zero, yet its square is zero. This implies that the Fock space of all states prior to the cohomological reduction has an indefinite norm, and so is not a Hilbert space. This requires that a
Krein space In mathematics, in the field of functional analysis, an indefinite inner product space :(K, \langle \cdot,\,\cdot \rangle, J) is an infinite-dimensional complex vector space K equipped with both an indefinite inner product :\langle \cdot,\,\cdot ...
for the BRST-closed intermediate Fock states, with the time reversal operator playing the role of the "fundamental symmetry" relating the Lorentz-invariant and positive semi-definite inner products. The asymptotic state space is then the Hilbert space obtained by quotienting BRST-exact states out of the Krein space. To summarize: no field introduced as part of a BRST gauge fixing procedure will appear in asymptotic states of the gauge-fixed theory. However, this does not imply that these "unphysical" fields are absent in the intermediate states of a perturbative calculation! This is because perturbative calculations are done in the
interaction picture In quantum mechanics, the interaction picture (also known as the interaction representation or Dirac picture after Paul Dirac, who introduced it) is an intermediate representation between the Schrödinger picture and the Heisenberg picture. Whe ...
. They implicitly involve initial and final states of the non-interaction Hamiltonian \mathcal_0, gradually transformed into states of the full Hamiltonian in accordance with the
adiabatic theorem The adiabatic theorem is a concept in quantum mechanics. Its original form, due to Max Born and Vladimir Fock (1928), was stated as follows: :''A physical system remains in its instantaneous eigenstate if a given perturbation is acting on it sl ...
by "turning on" the interaction Hamiltonian (the gauge coupling). The expansion of the
Dyson series In scattering theory, a part of mathematical physics, the Dyson series, formulated by Freeman Dyson, is a perturbative expansion of the time evolution operator in the interaction picture. Each term can be represented by a sum of Feynman diagrams. ...
in terms of
Feynman diagrams In theoretical physics, a Feynman diagram is a pictorial representation of the mathematical expressions describing the behavior and interaction of subatomic particles. The scheme is named after American physicist Richard Feynman, who introduced ...
will include vertices that couple "physical" particles (those that can appear in asymptotic states of the free Hamiltonian) to "unphysical" particles (states of fields that live outside the
kernel Kernel may refer to: Computing * Kernel (operating system), the central component of most operating systems * Kernel (image processing), a matrix used for image convolution * Compute kernel, in GPGPU programming * Kernel method, in machine learnin ...
of s_B or inside the
image An image or picture is a visual representation. An image can be Two-dimensional space, two-dimensional, such as a drawing, painting, or photograph, or Three-dimensional space, three-dimensional, such as a carving or sculpture. Images may be di ...
of s_B) and vertices that couple "unphysical" particles to one another.


Kugo–Ojima answer to unitarity questions

T. Kugo and I. Ojima are commonly credited with the discovery of the principal QCD
color confinement In quantum chromodynamics (QCD), color confinement, often simply called confinement, is the phenomenon that color-charged particles (such as quarks and gluons) cannot be isolated, and therefore cannot be directly observed in normal conditions b ...
criterion. Their role in obtaining a correct version of the BRST formalism in the Lagrangian framework seems to be less widely appreciated. It is enlightening to inspect their variant of the BRST transformation, which emphasizes the
hermitian {{Short description, none Numerous things are named after the French mathematician Charles Hermite (1822–1901): Hermite * Cubic Hermite spline, a type of third-degree spline * Gauss–Hermite quadrature, an extension of Gaussian quadrature me ...
properties of the newly introduced fields, before proceeding from an entirely geometrical angle. The \mathfrak-valued
gauge fixing In the physics of gauge theories, gauge fixing (also called choosing a gauge) denotes a mathematical procedure for coping with redundant degrees of freedom in field variables. By definition, a gauge theory represents each physically distinct co ...
conditions are taken to be G=\xi\partial^\mu A_\mu, where \xi is a positive number determining the gauge. There are other possible gauge fixings, but are outside of the present scope. The fields appearing in the Lagrangian are: * The QCD color field, that is, the \mathfrak-valued connection form A_\mu. * The
Faddeev–Popov ghost In physics, Faddeev–Popov ghosts (also called Faddeev–Popov gauge ghosts or Faddeev–Popov ghost fields) are extraneous fields which are introduced into gauge quantum field theories to maintain the consistency of the path integral form ...
c^i, which is a \mathfrak-valued scalar field with fermionic statistics. * The antighost b_i=\bar_i, also a \mathfrak-valued scalar field with fermionic statistics. * The
auxiliary field In physics, and especially quantum field theory, an auxiliary field is one whose equations of motion admit a single solution. Therefore, the Lagrangian (field theory), Lagrangian describing such a Field (physics), field A contains an algebraic quadr ...
B_i which is a \mathfrak-valued scalar field with bosonic statistics. The field c is used to deal with the gauge transformations, wheareas b and B deal with the gauge fixings. There actually are some subtleties associated with the gauge fixing due to Gribov ambiguities but they will not be covered here. The BRST
Lagrangian density Lagrangian field theory is a formalism in classical field theory. It is the field-theoretic analogue of Lagrangian mechanics. Lagrangian mechanics is used to analyze the motion of a system of discrete particles each with a finite number of degrees ...
is :\mathcal = \mathcal_\textrm(\psi,\,A_\mu^a) - \operatorname ^F_ \operatorname B \operatorname G \operatorname partial^\mu b D_\mu c/math> Here, D_\mu is the
covariant derivative In mathematics and physics, covariance is a measure of how much two variables change together, and may refer to: Statistics * Covariance matrix, a matrix of covariances between a number of variables * Covariance or cross-covariance between ...
with respect to the gauge field (connection) A_\mu. The Faddeev–Popov ghost field c has a geometrical interpretation as a version of the
Maurer–Cartan form In mathematics, the Maurer–Cartan form for a Lie group is a distinguished differential one-form on that carries the basic infinitesimal information about the structure of . It was much used by Élie Cartan as a basic ingredient of his met ...
on V\mathfrak, which relates each right-invariant vertical vector field \delta\lambda \in V\mathfrak to its representation (up to a phase) as a \mathfrak-valued field. This field must enter into the formulas for infinitesimal gauge transformations on objects (such as fermions \psi, gauge bosons A_\mu, and the ghost c itself) which carry a non-trivial representation of the gauge group. While the Lagrangian density isn't BRST invariant, its integral over all of spacetime, the action is. The transformation of the fields under an infinitessimal gauge transformation \delta\lambda is given by :\begin \delta \psi_i &= \delta\lambda D_i c \\ \delta A_\mu &= \delta\lambda D_\mu c \\ \delta c &= \delta\lambda \tfrac
, c The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. Some typefaces render it as a small line, slightly curved or straight, but inclined from the vertical; others give it the appearance of a miniature fille ...
\\ \delta b= \delta\bar &= \delta\lambda B \\ \delta B &= 0 \end Note that cdot,\cdot/math> is the
Lie bracket In mathematics, a Lie algebra (pronounced ) is a vector space \mathfrak g together with an operation called the Lie bracket, an alternating bilinear map \mathfrak g \times \mathfrak g \rightarrow \mathfrak g, that satisfies the Jacobi identit ...
, NOT the
commutator In mathematics, the commutator gives an indication of the extent to which a certain binary operation fails to be commutative. There are different definitions used in group theory and ring theory. Group theory The commutator of two elements, ...
. These may be written in an equivalent form, using the charge operator Q_B instead of \delta\lambda. The BRST charge operator Q_B is defined as :Q_B = c^i \left(L_i-\frac 12 _k b_j c^k\right) where L_i are the infinitesimal generators of the
Lie group In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group (mathematics), group that is also a differentiable manifold, such that group multiplication and taking inverses are both differentiable. A manifold is a space that locally resembles Eucli ...
, and f_^k are its
structure constant In mathematics, the structure constants or structure coefficients of an algebra over a field are the coefficients of the basis expansion (into linear combination of basis vectors) of the products of basis vectors. Because the product operation in ...
s. Using this, the transformation is given as :\begin Q_B A_\mu &= D_\mu c \\ Q_B c &= ,c\\ Q_B b &= B \\ Q_B B &= 0 \end The details of the matter sector \psi are unspecified, as is left the form of the Ward operator on it; these are unimportant so long as the representation of the gauge algebra on the matter fields is consistent with their coupling to \delta A_\mu. The properties of the other fields are fundamentally analytical rather than geometric. The bias is towards connections with \partial^\mu A_\mu = 0 is gauge-dependent and has no particular geometrical significance. The anti-ghost b=\bar is nothing but a
Lagrange multiplier In mathematical optimization, the method of Lagrange multipliers is a strategy for finding the local maxima and minima of a function (mathematics), function subject to constraint (mathematics), equation constraints (i.e., subject to the conditio ...
for the gauge fixing term, and the properties of the scalar field B are entirely dictated by the relationship \delta \bar = i \delta\lambda B. These fields are all Hermitian in Kugo–Ojima conventions, but the parameter \delta\lambda is an anti-Hermitian "anti-commuting ''c''-number". This results in some unnecessary awkwardness with regard to phases and passing infinitesimal parameters through operators; this can be resolved with a change of conventions. We already know, from the relation of the BRST operator to the exterior derivative and the Faddeev–Popov ghost to the Maurer–Cartan form, that the ghost c corresponds (up to a phase) to a \mathfrak-valued 1-form on V\mathfrak. In order for integration of a term like -i (\partial^\mu \bar) D_\mu c to be meaningful, the anti-ghost \bar must carry representations of these two Lie algebras—the vertical ideal V\mathfrak and the gauge algebra \mathfrak—dual to those carried by the ghost. In geometric terms, \bar must be fiberwise dual to \mathfrak and one rank short of being a top form on V\mathfrak. Likewise, the
auxiliary field In physics, and especially quantum field theory, an auxiliary field is one whose equations of motion admit a single solution. Therefore, the Lagrangian (field theory), Lagrangian describing such a Field (physics), field A contains an algebraic quadr ...
B must carry the same representation of \mathfrak (up to a phase) as \bar, as well as the representation of V\mathfrak dual to its trivial representation on A_\mu . That is, B is a fiberwise \mathfrak-dual top form on V\mathfrak. The one-particle states of the theory are discussed in the adiabatically decoupled limit ''g'' → 0. There are two kinds of quanta in the Fock space of the gauge-fixed Hamiltonian that lie entirely outside the kernel of the BRST operator: those of the Faddeev–Popov anti-ghost \bar and the forward polarized gauge boson. This is because no combination of fields containing \bar is annihilated by s_B and the Lagrangian has a gauge breaking term that is equal, up to a divergence, to :s_B \left (\bar \left (i \partial^\mu A_\mu - \tfrac \xi s_B \bar \right ) \right ). Likewise, there are two kinds of quanta that will lie entirely in the image of the BRST operator: those of the Faddeev–Popov ghost c and the scalar field B, which is "eaten" by completing the square in the functional integral to become the backward polarized gauge boson. These are the four types of "unphysical" quanta which do not appear in the asymptotic states of a perturbative calculation. The anti-ghost is taken to be a
Lorentz scalar In a relativistic theory of physics, a Lorentz scalar is a scalar expression whose value is invariant under any Lorentz transformation. A Lorentz scalar may be generated from, e.g., the scalar product of vectors, or by contracting tensors. Whil ...
for the sake of Poincaré invariance in -i (\partial^\mu \bar) D_\mu c. However, its (anti-)commutation law relative to c ''i.e.'' its quantization prescription, which ignores the
spin–statistics theorem The spin–statistics theorem proves that the observed relationship between the intrinsic spin of a particle (angular momentum not due to the orbital motion) and the quantum particle statistics of collections of such particles is a consequence of ...
by giving
Fermi–Dirac statistics Fermi–Dirac statistics is a type of quantum statistics that applies to the physics of a system consisting of many non-interacting, identical particles that obey the Pauli exclusion principle. A result is the Fermi–Dirac distribution of part ...
to a spin-0 particle—will be given by the requirement that the
inner product In mathematics, an inner product space (or, rarely, a Hausdorff pre-Hilbert space) is a real vector space or a complex vector space with an operation called an inner product. The inner product of two vectors in the space is a scalar, ofte ...
on our Fock space of asymptotic states be
singular Singular may refer to: * Singular, the grammatical number that denotes a unit quantity, as opposed to the plural and other forms * Singular or sounder, a group of boar, see List of animal names * Singular (band), a Thai jazz pop duo *'' Singula ...
along directions corresponding to the raising and lowering operators of some combination of non-BRST-closed and BRST-exact fields. This last statement is the key to "BRST quantization", as opposed to mere "BRST symmetry" or "BRST transformation". :''(Needs to be completed in the language of BRST cohomology, with reference to the Kugo–Ojima treatment of asymptotic Fock space.)''


Gauge fixing in BRST quantization

While the BRST symmetry, with its corresponding charge ''Q'', elegantly captures the essence of gauge invariance, it presents a challenge for path integral quantization. The naive path integral, summing over all gauge configurations, vastly overcounts physically distinct states due to the redundancy introduced by gauge transformations. This overcounting manifests as a divergence in the path integral arising from integrating over the gauge orbits. To address this, we introduce a gauge-fixing procedure within the BRST framework. The core idea is to restrict the path integral to a representative set of gauge configurations, eliminating the redundant gauge degrees of freedom. This is achieved by introducing a gauge-fixing function, denoted ''f(A)'', where ''A'' represents the gauge field. The specific choice of ''f(A)'' determines the gauge. Different choices lead to different representations of the same physical theory, though the final physical results must be independent of this choice. The gauge-fixing procedure within BRST quantization is implemented by adding a term to the Lagrangian density that depends on both the gauge-fixing function and the ghost fields. This term is constructed to be BRST-exact, meaning it can be written as the BRST variation of some quantity. This ensures that the modified action still possesses BRST symmetry. A general form for the gauge-fixing Lagrangian density is: L_ = -i Q(f(A) * \bar) where \bar is the antighost field. The factor of ''-i'' is a convention. Since ''Q² = 0'', the BRST variation of ''Lgf'' is zero, preserving the BRST invariance of the total action. Let's illustrate this with two common examples: 1. Gupta-Bleuler (Lorenz) Gauge in Electromagnetism: In this gauge, the gauge-fixing function is f(A) = \partial_\mu A^\mu. The gauge-fixing Lagrangian density becomes: L_ = -i Q( (\partial_\mu A^\mu) * \bar) = -i ( (\partial_\mu \partial^\mu c) * \bar - (\partial_\mu A^\mu) * B ) where ''B'' is an auxiliary Nakanishi-Lautrup field introduced to rewrite the gauge condition. After integrating out ''B'' in the path integral, we obtain the familiar form: L_ = -\frac (\partial_\mu A^\mu)^2 + (\partial _\mu \bar)(\partial^\mu c) where ''ξ'' is a gauge parameter. The Lorenz gauge corresponds to the Feynman gauge (''ξ = 1''). Note that the ghost fields remain coupled to the gauge field through the BRST variation. 2. ξ-Gauges in Yang-Mills Theories: For non-Abelian gauge theories, a generalized class of ξ-gauges can be defined with the gauge-fixing function f(A) = \partial_\mu A^ + \xi B^a, where ''a'' is the gauge group index. The gauge-fixing Lagrangian density then becomes: L_ = -i Q( (\partial_\mu A^ + \xi B^a) * \bar^a ) = B^a(\partial_\mu A^) + (\xi/2)B^a B^a + \bar^a(\partial _\mu D^\mu c)^a where ''Dμ'' is the covariant derivative. The auxiliary field ''Ba'' can be integrated out, resulting in: L_ = -\frac (\partial _\mu A^)^2 + \bar^a(\partial_\mu D^\mu c)^a Again, ''ξ'' is a gauge parameter, and different choices of ''ξ'' correspond to different gauges within this family. The introduction of the gauge-fixing term ''Lgf'' modifies the action and consequently the path integral. Crucially, the BRST symmetry is preserved, ensuring that physical observables remain independent of the gauge choice. Furthermore, the gauge-fixing procedure breaks the original gauge symmetry of the classical action, making the path integral well-defined. The ghost fields, originally introduced to compensate for the unphysical degrees of freedom, now play a crucial role in maintaining the unitarity of the theory in the quantized version.


Mathematical approach

This section only applies to classical gauge theories. ''i.e.'' those that can be described with
first class constraints In physics, a first-class constraint is a dynamical quantity in a constrained Hamiltonian system whose Poisson bracket with all the other constraints vanishes on the constraint surface in phase space (the surface implicitly defined by the simultan ...
. The more general formalism is described using the
Batalin–Vilkovisky formalism In theoretical physics, the Batalin–Vilkovisky (BV) formalism (named for Igor Batalin and Grigori Vilkovisky) was developed as a method for determining the ghost structure for Lagrangian gauge theories, such as gravity and supergravity, w ...
. The BRST construction applies to a situation of a
Hamiltonian action In mathematics, specifically in symplectic geometry, the momentum map (or, by false etymology, moment map) is a tool associated with a Hamiltonian action of a Lie group on a symplectic manifold, used to construct conserved quantities for the acti ...
of a gauge group G on a
phase space The phase space of a physical system is the set of all possible physical states of the system when described by a given parameterization. Each possible state corresponds uniquely to a point in the phase space. For mechanical systems, the p ...
M. Let be the Lie algebra of G and 0\in ^* a regular value of the
moment map In mathematics, specifically in symplectic geometry, the momentum map (or, by false etymology, moment map) is a tool associated with a Hamiltonian action of a Lie group on a symplectic manifold, used to construct conserved quantities for the action. ...
\Phi: M\to ^* . Let M_0=\Phi^(0) . Assume the G-action on M_0 is free and proper, and consider the space \tilde M of G-orbits on M_0. The
Hamiltonian mechanics In physics, Hamiltonian mechanics is a reformulation of Lagrangian mechanics that emerged in 1833. Introduced by Sir William Rowan Hamilton, Hamiltonian mechanics replaces (generalized) velocities \dot q^i used in Lagrangian mechanics with (gener ...
of a gauge theory is described by r
first class constraints In physics, a first-class constraint is a dynamical quantity in a constrained Hamiltonian system whose Poisson bracket with all the other constraints vanishes on the constraint surface in phase space (the surface implicitly defined by the simultan ...
\Phi_i acting upon a symplectic space M. M_0 is the submanifold satisfying the first class constraints. The action of the gauge symmetry partitions M_0 into gauge orbits. The symplectic reduction is the quotient of M_0 by the gauge orbits. According to
algebraic geometry Algebraic geometry is a branch of mathematics which uses abstract algebraic techniques, mainly from commutative algebra, to solve geometry, geometrical problems. Classically, it studies zero of a function, zeros of multivariate polynomials; th ...
, the set of smooth functions over a space is a ring. The Koszul-Tate complex (the first class constraints aren't regular in general) describes the algebra associated with the symplectic reduction in terms of the algebra C^\infty(M). First, using equations defining M_0 inside M , construct a
Koszul complex In mathematics, the Koszul complex was first introduced to define a cohomology theory for Lie algebras, by Jean-Louis Koszul (see Lie algebra cohomology). It turned out to be a useful general construction in homological algebra. As a tool, its ho ...
: ... \to K^1(\Phi) \to C^(M) \to 0 so that H^0(K(\Phi))=C^\infty(M_0) and H^p(K(\Phi))=0 for p\ne 0. Then, for the fibration M_0 \to \tilde M one considers the complex of vertical exterior forms (\Omega^\cdot_(M_0), d_) . Locally, \Omega^\cdot_(M_0) is isomorphic to \Lambda^\cdot V^* \otimes C^(\tilde M) , where \Lambda^\cdot V^* is the exterior algebra of the dual of a vector space V . Using the Koszul resolution defined earlier, one obtains a bigraded complex : K^ = \Lambda^i V^* \otimes \Lambda^j V \otimes C^(M). Finally (and this is the most nontrivial step), a differential s_B is defined on K=\oplus_ K^ which lifts d_ to K and such that (s_B)^2 = 0 and : H^0_ = C^(\tilde M) with respect to the grading by the ghost number : K^n = \oplus_ K^ . Thus, the BRST operator or BRST differential s_B accomplishes on the level of functions what symplectic reduction does on the level of manifolds. There are two antiderivations, \delta and d which
anticommute In mathematics, anticommutativity is a specific property of some non-commutative mathematical operations. Swapping the position of two arguments of an antisymmetric operation yields a result which is the ''inverse'' of the result with unswapped ...
with each other. The BRST antiderivation s_B is given by \delta + d + \mathrm. The operator s_B is
nilpotent In mathematics, an element x of a ring (mathematics), ring R is called nilpotent if there exists some positive integer n, called the index (or sometimes the degree), such that x^n=0. The term, along with its sister Idempotent (ring theory), idem ...
; s^2=(\delta+d)^2=\delta^2 + d^2 + (\delta d + d\delta) = 0 Consider the
supercommutative algebra In mathematics, a supercommutative (associative) algebra is a superalgebra (i.e. a Z2-graded algebra) such that for any two homogeneous elements ''x'', ''y'' we have :yx = (-1)^xy , where , ''x'', denotes the grade of the element and is 0 or 1 ...
generated by C^\infty(M) and
Grassman Grassmann, Graßmann or Grassman is a German surname. Notable people with the surname include: ; Grassmann * Dietrich Graßmann (1920–1991), German Luftwaffe pilot * Hans Grassmann (born 1960), German physicist * Hermann Grassmann Hermann ...
odd generators \mathcal_i, i.e. the
tensor product In mathematics, the tensor product V \otimes W of two vector spaces V and W (over the same field) is a vector space to which is associated a bilinear map V\times W \rightarrow V\otimes W that maps a pair (v,w),\ v\in V, w\in W to an element of ...
of a Grassman algebra and C^\infty(M). There is a unique antiderivation \delta satisfying \delta \mathcal_i = -\Phi_i and \delta f=0 for all f\in C^\infty(M). The zeroth homology is given by C^\infty(M_0). A longitudinal vector field on M_0 is a vector field over M_0 which is tangent everywhere to the gauge orbits. The
Lie bracket In mathematics, a Lie algebra (pronounced ) is a vector space \mathfrak g together with an operation called the Lie bracket, an alternating bilinear map \mathfrak g \times \mathfrak g \rightarrow \mathfrak g, that satisfies the Jacobi identit ...
of two longitudinal vector fields is itself another longitudinal vector field. Longitudinal p-forms are dual to the exterior algebra of p-vectors. d is essentially the longitudinal
exterior derivative On a differentiable manifold, the exterior derivative extends the concept of the differential of a function to differential forms of higher degree. The exterior derivative was first described in its current form by Élie Cartan in 1899. The re ...
defined by :\begin d\omega(V_0, \ldots, V_k) = & \sum_i(-1)^ d_ ( \omega (V_0, \ldots, \widehat V_i, \ldots,V_k ))\\ & + \sum_(-1)^\omega ( _i, V_j V_0, \ldots, \widehat V_i, \ldots, \widehat V_j, \ldots, V_k) \end The zeroth cohomology of the longitudinal exterior derivative is the algebra of gauge invariant functions. The BRST construction applies when one has a
Hamiltonian action In mathematics, specifically in symplectic geometry, the momentum map (or, by false etymology, moment map) is a tool associated with a Hamiltonian action of a Lie group on a symplectic manifold, used to construct conserved quantities for the acti ...
of a
compact Compact as used in politics may refer broadly to a pact or treaty; in more specific cases it may refer to: * Interstate compact, a type of agreement used by U.S. states * Blood compact, an ancient ritual of the Philippines * Compact government, a t ...
,
connected Connected may refer to: Film and television * ''Connected'' (2008 film), a Hong Kong remake of the American movie ''Cellular'' * '' Connected: An Autoblogography About Love, Death & Technology'', a 2011 documentary film * ''Connected'' (2015 TV ...
Lie group In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group (mathematics), group that is also a differentiable manifold, such that group multiplication and taking inverses are both differentiable. A manifold is a space that locally resembles Eucli ...
G on a
phase space The phase space of a physical system is the set of all possible physical states of the system when described by a given parameterization. Each possible state corresponds uniquely to a point in the phase space. For mechanical systems, the p ...
M. Let \mathfrak be the
Lie algebra In mathematics, a Lie algebra (pronounced ) is a vector space \mathfrak g together with an operation called the Lie bracket, an alternating bilinear map \mathfrak g \times \mathfrak g \rightarrow \mathfrak g, that satisfies the Jacobi ident ...
of G (via the
Lie group–Lie algebra correspondence In mathematics, Lie group–Lie algebra correspondence allows one to correspond a Lie group to a Lie algebra or vice versa, and study the conditions for such a relationship. Lie groups that are Isomorphism, isomorphic to each other have Lie algebra ...
) and 0 \in \mathfrak^* (the
dual Dual or Duals may refer to: Paired/two things * Dual (mathematics), a notion of paired concepts that mirror one another ** Dual (category theory), a formalization of mathematical duality *** see more cases in :Duality theories * Dual number, a nu ...
of \mathfrak) a regular value of the
momentum map In mathematics, specifically in symplectic geometry, the momentum map (or, by false etymology, moment map) is a tool associated with a Hamiltonian action of a Lie group on a symplectic manifold, used to construct conserved quantities for the action. ...
\Phi: M\to \mathfrak^*. Let M_0=\Phi^(0) . Assume the G-action on M_0 is free and proper, and consider the space \widetilde M = M_0/G of G-orbits on M_0, which is also known as a symplectic reduction quotient \widetilde M = M/\!\!/G. First, using the
regular sequence In commutative algebra, a regular sequence is a sequence of elements of a commutative ring which are as independent as possible, in a precise sense. This is the algebraic analogue of the geometric notion of a complete intersection. Definitions Giv ...
of functions defining M_0 inside M, construct a
Koszul complex In mathematics, the Koszul complex was first introduced to define a cohomology theory for Lie algebras, by Jean-Louis Koszul (see Lie algebra cohomology). It turned out to be a useful general construction in homological algebra. As a tool, its ho ...
:\Lambda^\bullet \otimes C^(M). The differential, \delta, on this complex is an odd C^\infty(M)-linear
derivation (differential algebra) In mathematics, a derivation is a function on an algebra that generalizes certain features of the derivative operator. Specifically, given an algebra ''A'' over a ring or a field ''K'', a ''K''-derivation is a ''K''-linear map that satisfies L ...
of the graded C^\infty(M)-algebra \Lambda^\bullet \otimes C^(M) . This odd derivation is defined by extending the
Lie algebra homomorphism In mathematics, a Lie algebra (pronounced ) is a vector space \mathfrak g together with an operation called the Lie bracket, an alternating bilinear map \mathfrak g \times \mathfrak g \rightarrow \mathfrak g, that satisfies the Jacobi identi ...
\to C^(M) of the Hamiltonian action. The resulting Koszul complex is the Koszul complex of the S()-module C^\infty(M), where S(\mathfrak) is the symmetric algebra of \mathfrak, and the module structure comes from a ring homomorphism S() \to C^(M) induced by the Hamiltonian action \mathfrak \to C^(M). This Koszul complex is a resolution of the S()-module C^(M_0) , that is, : H^(\Lambda^\bullet \otimes C^(M),\delta) = \begin C^(M_0) & j = 0 \\ 0 & j \neq 0 \end Then, consider the Chevalley–Eilenberg complex for the Koszul complex \Lambda^\bullet \otimes C^(M) considered as a
differential graded module Differential may refer to: Mathematics * Differential (mathematics) comprises multiple related meanings of the word, both in calculus and differential geometry, such as an infinitesimal change in the value of a function * Differential algebra * ...
over the Lie algebra \mathfrak: : K^ = C^\bullet \left (\mathfrak g,\Lambda^\bullet \otimes C^(M) \right ) = \Lambda^\bullet ^* \otimes \Lambda^\bullet \otimes C^(M). The "horizontal" differential d: K^ \to K^ is defined on the coefficients : \Lambda^\bullet \otimes C^(M) by the action of \mathfrak and on \Lambda^\bullet ^* as the
exterior derivative On a differentiable manifold, the exterior derivative extends the concept of the differential of a function to differential forms of higher degree. The exterior derivative was first described in its current form by Élie Cartan in 1899. The re ...
of
right Rights are law, legal, social, or ethics, ethical principles of freedom or Entitlement (fair division), entitlement; that is, rights are the fundamental normative rules about what is allowed of people or owed to people according to some legal sy ...
-
invariant Invariant and invariance may refer to: Computer science * Invariant (computer science), an expression whose value doesn't change during program execution ** Loop invariant, a property of a program loop that is true before (and after) each iteratio ...
differential forms on the Lie group G, whose Lie algebra is \mathfrak. Let Tot(''K'') be a complex such that :\operatorname(K)^n =\bigoplus\nolimits_ K^ with a differential ''D'' = ''d'' + δ. The
cohomology group In mathematics, specifically in homology theory and algebraic topology, cohomology is a general term for a sequence of abelian groups, usually one associated with a topological space, often defined from a cochain complex. Cohomology can be viewed ...
s of (Tot(''K''), ''D'') are computed using a
spectral sequence In homological algebra and algebraic topology, a spectral sequence is a means of computing homology groups by taking successive approximations. Spectral sequences are a generalization of exact sequences, and since their introduction by , they h ...
associated to the double complex (K^, d, \delta). The first term of the spectral sequence computes the cohomology of the "vertical" differential \delta: : E_1^ = H^j (K^,\delta) = \Lambda^i ^* \otimes C^(M_0), if ''j'' = 0 and zero otherwise. The first term of the spectral sequence may be interpreted as the complex of vertical differential forms : (\Omega^\bullet(M_0), d_) for the
fiber bundle In mathematics, and particularly topology, a fiber bundle ( ''Commonwealth English'': fibre bundle) is a space that is a product space, but may have a different topological structure. Specifically, the similarity between a space E and a pr ...
M_0 \to \widetilde M . The second term of the spectral sequence computes the cohomology of the "horizontal" differential d on E_1^: : E_2^ \cong H^i(E_1^,d) = C^(M_0)^g = C^(\widetilde M), if i = j= 0 and zero otherwise. The spectral sequence collapses at the second term, so that E_^ = E_2^ , which is concentrated in degree zero. Therefore, : H^p (\operatorname(K), D ) = C^(M_0)^g = C^(\widetilde M), if ''p'' = 0 and 0 otherwise.


See also

*
Batalin–Vilkovisky formalism In theoretical physics, the Batalin–Vilkovisky (BV) formalism (named for Igor Batalin and Grigori Vilkovisky) was developed as a method for determining the ghost structure for Lagrangian gauge theories, such as gravity and supergravity, w ...
*
Quantum chromodynamics In theoretical physics, quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is the study of the strong interaction between quarks mediated by gluons. Quarks are fundamental particles that make up composite hadrons such as the proton, neutron and pion. QCD is a type of ...


References


Citations


Textbook treatments

* Chapter 16 of Peskin & Schroeder ( or ) applies the "BRST symmetry" to reason about anomaly cancellation in the Faddeev–Popov Lagrangian. This is a good start for QFT non-experts, although the connections to geometry are omitted and the treatment of asymptotic Fock space is only a sketch. * Chapter 12 of M. Göckeler and T. Schücker ( or ) discusses the relationship between the BRST formalism and the geometry of gauge bundles. It is substantially similar to Schücker's 1987 paper.Thomas Schücker
"The cohomological construction of Stora's solutions."
Comm. Math. Phys. 109 (1) 167 - 175, 1987.


Mathematical treatment

* *


Primary literature

Original BRST papers: * * * * * I.V. Tyutin
"Gauge Invariance in Field Theory and Statistical Physics in Operator Formalism"
Lebedev Physics Institute preprint 39 (1975), arXiv:0812.0580. * * A more accessible version of Kugo–Ojima is available online in a series of papers, starting with: {{cite journal , last1=Kugo , first1=T. , last2=Ojima , first2=I. , title=Manifestly Covariant Canonical Formulation of the Yang-Mills Field Theories. I: -- General Formalism -- , journal=Progress of Theoretical Physics , publisher=Oxford University Press (OUP) , volume=60 , issue=6 , date=1978-12-01 , issn=0033-068X , doi=10.1143/ptp.60.1869 , pages=1869–1889, doi-access=free, bibcode=1978PThPh..60.1869K This is probably the single best reference for BRST quantization in quantum mechanical (as opposed to geometrical) language. * Much insight about the relationship between topological invariants and the BRST operator may be found in: E. Witten
"Topological quantum field theory"
Commun. Math. Phys. 117, 3 (1988), pp. 353–386


Alternate perspectives

* BRST systems are briefly analyzed from an operator theory perspective in: S. S. Horuzhy and A. V. Voronin
"Remarks on Mathematical Structure of BRST Theories"
Comm. Math. Phys. 123, 4 (1989) pp. 677–685 * A measure-theoretic perspective on the BRST method may be found i
Carlo Becchi's 1996 lecture notes


External links


Brst cohomology on arxiv.org
Gauge theories Quantum chromodynamics Cohomology theories