Regularization scheme independence?

In summary: This is handled by the BPHZ scheme (Zimmermann's forrest formula). After you've done the appropriate subtractions from the integrand, you are left is a UV finite integral over the loop momenta.So, there are different ways to do this, and it all depends on the renormalization scheme.
  • #1
geoduck
258
2
How can two different regularization schemes give the same physical results?

This seems unbelievable.

If you impose the same renormalization conditions, then in all regularization schemes, the cutoff, or dimension, or the heavy masses get absorbed into constants in such a way that the leftover finite piece is the same?

Is there a proof of this?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
This is a somewhat tricky issue. In general there can be a dependence on the regularization scheme, and one must be careful, how one defines the physical (finite) quantities, i.e., the renormalization scheme.

In a Dyson-renormalizable theory, the renormalization scheme for the S-matrix is fixed by a finite number of renormalization conditions, which can be formulated as conditions for a finite number of proper vertex functions. Then there is no need for any regularization scheme, but you can read the naive Feynman rules as rules to build the integrands of the loop integrals. The integrals themselves are usually divergent, but now you use the renormalization conditions to subtract these divergences. For diagrams with more than two loops this is complicated by the fact that a diagram in general has not only overall divergences but contains divergent subdiagrams. This is handled by the BPHZ scheme (Zimmermann's forrest formula). After you've done the appropriate subtractions from the integrand, you are left is a UV finite integral over the loop momenta.

Using a regularization scheme as an intermediate step can simplify the task, because you can do the integrals first and then the subtractions. Here, you have to be careful to choose a renormalization scheme which does not violate the symmetries that may be important for the renormalizability of the theory. E.g., in QED the four-photon vertex is superficially logarithmically divergent but in reality it's finite due to the gauge invariance, leading to Ward-Takahashi identities. If you violate gauge invariance (which is in fact very easy), such arguments won't apply. Here, you choose a renormalization scheme which keeps the regularized theory gauge invariant. The most elegant one is dimensional regularizatio, invented by 't Hooft in his proof of the renormalizability of non-abelian gauge theories. Another scheme is the Pauli-Villars regularization. Of course, you can also use the regularization free BPHZ renormalization, but this may become a bit cumbersome, because you cannot subtract the divergent vertex parts at 0 external momenta since the photon is massless, and you'll introduce artificial IR divergences which are not easily dealt with. So you have to subtract with the external momenta at some spacelike point, which introduces a renormalization scale. This is necessarily the case in any theory, containing massless particles. So here, dimensional regularization may be more convenient.

Although many symmetries are robust under dimensional regularization, there is one exception, and that's for chiral models like the electroweak sector of the standard model. Here, the trouble is that there is no unique way to treat the matrix [itex]\gamma^5=\mathrm{i} \gamma^0 \gamma^1 \gamma^2 \gamma^3[/itex] in four dimensions or the Levi-Civita tensor [itex]\epsilon^{\mu \nu \rho \sigma}[/itex].

The deeper reason for this issue, however, is that in general the renormalization conditions of the above kind are not complete. Here, you need additional constraints. E.g., there may anomalies occur, which means that not all symmetries of the classical action survive quantization. In the case of chiral couplings the [itex]\mathrm{U}(1)_L \times \mathrm{U}(1)_R[/itex] symmetry is anomalously broken and thus not all the currents are conserved. Here, in addition to the usual renormalization conditions one has to specify which linear combination of the Noether currents of the classical field theory has to stay conserved to get a unique specification of the renormalization scheme. In the case of the standard model the [itex]\mathrm{U}(1)_V[/itex] has to survive, because otherwise you run into trouble with electromagnetic gauge invariance. This also leads to a dimensional regularization scheme with special properties for the chiral [itex]\gamma^5[/itex] matrix in other than 4 space-time dimensions (the socalled 't Hooft definition, according to which [itex]\gamma^5[/itex] anticommutes with the first 4 [itex]\gamma[/itex] matrices but commutes with all others).

In any case, if the renormalization scheme is fixed completely, the S-matrix is independent of the used regularization scheme. This independence of the physical quantities (transition-matrix elements, cross sections) leads to the socalled renormalization group equations, which describe, e.g., the running of the coupling with the renormalization scale, etc.

A lot about this you find in my QFT manuscript (however, it still lacks a chapter on anomalies):

http://fias.uni-frankfurt.de/~hees/publ/lect.pdf
 
  • #3
vanhees71 said:
In a Dyson-renormalizable theory, the renormalization scheme for the S-matrix is fixed by a finite number of renormalization conditions, which can be formulated as conditions for a finite number of proper vertex functions. Then there is no need for any regularization scheme, but you can read the naive Feynman rules as rules to build the integrands of the loop integrals.

So once you have the renormalization conditions on a finite number of proper vertex functions, you still have to do the integrals, which diverge. You can regulate the integrals in a number of ways, but once you enforce the renormalization conditions on the vertex functions, they should all give the same result?

To me it looks like the renormalization conditions amount to a boundary condition at a single point. For example say for a 3-point vertex V(k1,k2,k3) you want the renormalization condition V(0,0,0)=λ, where λ is experimentally measured at the kinematic point (0,0,0).

In different regularization schemes, before enforcing the renormalization condition, you get different Vi's that are different functions of k1,k2,k3. But once you enforce Vi(0,0,0)=λ on each of the Vi's from different regularization schemes i, then all the Vi's become the same?

Getting all the Vi's to agree at one kinetmatic point is like saying I can match Ax^6 and Bx by using the condition V(1)=1, thereby requiring A=B=1. But surely if the amplitude is x^6 that is different than the amplitude being x, even though both obey the renormalization condition?

This is handled by the BPHZ scheme (Zimmermann's forrest formula). After you've done the appropriate subtractions from the integrand, you are left is a UV finite integral over the loop momenta.

You can enforce the renormalization conditions before doing the integrals? I thought it was the other way around. For example, in BPHZ I thought you perturb around the free Lagrangian but using renormalized values, and your interactions are the difference between the bare and renormalized Lagrangians plus any intrinsic interaction. You then do the integrals with whatever regulator you choose, and choose the counter-terms correspondingly so that the results obey the renormalization conditions. So it seems the subtractions occur after integration, and not at the level of the integrand.

Although many symmetries are robust under dimensional regularization, there is one exception, and that's for chiral models like the electroweak sector of the standard model. Here, the trouble is that there is no unique way to treat the matrix [itex]\gamma^5=\mathrm{i} \gamma^0 \gamma^1 \gamma^2 \gamma^3[/itex] in four dimensions or the Levi-Civita tensor [itex]\epsilon^{\mu \nu \rho \sigma}[/itex].

What regularization scheme is then used on the electroweak sector? Is it possible to use dimensional regularization for QED, and then a different scheme for the weak interaction? I thought you have to be consistent with your regularization scheme: you can only choose one? What if you're studying a process where both QED and weak interactions contribute to your process?

A lot about this you find in my QFT manuscript (however, it still lacks a chapter on anomalies):

http://fias.uni-frankfurt.de/~hees/publ/lect.pdf

Thanks. I'll check it out!
 
Last edited:
  • #4
geoduck said:
In different regularization schemes, before enforcing the renormalization condition, you get different Vi's that are different functions of k1,k2,k3. But once you enforce Vi(0,0,0)=λ on each of the Vi's from different regularization schemes i, then all the Vi's become the same?
Yes, because they only differ by a constant. (More generally, by a polynomial in the momenta. but with enough renormalization conditions, analogous to V(0,0,0)=λ, to determine all the coefficients in this polynomial.)
 
  • #5
Avodyne said:
Yes, because they only differ by a constant. (More generally, by a polynomial in the momenta. but with enough renormalization conditions, analogous to V(0,0,0)=λ, to determine all the coefficients in this polynomial.)

Would the proof go something like this:

Suppose you have an integral of the form I(p)=∫dx/(x+p) with renormalization condition I(k)=λ.

If you take the derivative w.r.t. 'p', then the expression converges, so if you can expand about your renormalization point k:

I(p)=I(k)+I'(k)*(p-k)+...

then regularization won't affect I'(k) since I'(k) is finite anyway, and different types of regularization correspond to different I(k) which is not yet equal to λ. Now in each regularization scheme I(k) is really something that's infinite, so in order to get I(k) in each scheme to equal λ you have to define counter-terms or change your bare couplings such that I(k) becomes λ for each scheme?

So each scheme has: I(p)=λ+I'(k)*(p-k)+...?

So is this the reason that vanhees71 said that you never have to consider divergent integrals or regularization? Just take the derivative of the integrand from the start! What's the point of things like dimensional reguarlization? Does taking derivatives violate some sort of symmetry? What's the name of just taking derivatives from the start instead of having a regularization scheme (edit: oh, I guess this is what vanhees71 calls subtraction scheme, and it's a renormalization scheme rather than a regularization scheme).

Will integrals like I(p)=∫dx/(x+p) always be analytic in p so that the Taylor expansion is valid?

addendum:

Quick question. If you have:

I(p)=I(k)+I'(k)*(p-k)+...

and choose your bare constants to cancel cutoffs in your regulator such that:

I(k)=λ

doesn't that affect I'(k), since I'(k) depends on those same bare constants? So you've made I(k) finite, but at the expense of I'(k)!
 
Last edited:

1. What is regularization scheme independence?

Regularization scheme independence is a property of a physical theory or model where the calculated results are independent of the specific regularization scheme used.

2. Why is regularization scheme independence important?

This property is important because it ensures that the results obtained from a physical theory are not dependent on the specific regularization scheme chosen, making the results more reliable and robust.

3. How is regularization scheme independence achieved?

Regularization scheme independence is achieved by using a regularization scheme that is valid for all possible values of the parameters in the model. This can be accomplished by choosing a regularization scheme that is well-defined and does not introduce any biases or inconsistencies in the calculations.

4. What are some examples of regularization scheme independence in science?

Regularization scheme independence is commonly seen in fields such as quantum field theory, statistical physics, and astrophysics. For example, in quantum field theory, the renormalization process ensures that the physical results obtained are independent of the specific regularization scheme used.

5. Are there any limitations to regularization scheme independence?

While regularization scheme independence is a desirable property, it is not always achievable. In some cases, the results may still have a small dependence on the chosen regularization scheme, but this dependence can often be minimized by carefully choosing an appropriate scheme and performing additional checks and tests on the results.

Similar threads

Replies
5
Views
722
Replies
2
Views
406
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
1
Views
463
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
5
Views
1K
Replies
2
Views
4K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
4
Views
1K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
1
Views
826
Replies
6
Views
757
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
1
Views
2K
Back
Top