Gauge breaking and Faddeev-Popov ghost particles

In summary, ghosts are introduced in quantum field theory to maintain gauge invariance, even when the symmetry is explicitly broken by adding a gauge breaking term to the Lagrangian. These non-physical degrees of freedom become physical and are necessary for perturbatively evaluating the orbit density of the gauge fixed surface.
  • #1
Michael Price
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In QFT, if we add a gauge breaking term to the Lagrangian, do we still need to introduce ghost particles?
Summary: In QFT, if we add a gauge breaking term to the Lagrangian, do we still need to introduce Faddeev-Popov ghost particles?

Ghosts seems to be introduced to maintain gauge invariance. But suppose we have eliminated the gauge invariance, from the start, by explicitly introducing a gauge breaking term to the Lagrangian? Do we still need to introduce ghosts?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_(physics)
 
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  • #2
Ghosts can be thought of as non-physical degrees of freedom that appear in mathematical expressions. They are non-physical in the sense that different values of these degrees cannot be distinguished physically. For instance, different values of the angle ##\varphi## in a rotation-invariant theory cannot be distinguished physically, so the variable ##\varphi## can be thought of as a kind of "ghost". When the symmetry is explicitly broken, those degrees of freedom do not go away. Instead, they become physical. The ghosts "materialize", so to speak.
 
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  • #3
Demystifier said:
Ghosts can be thought of as non-physical degrees of freedom that appear in mathematical expressions. They are non-physical in the sense that different values of these degrees cannot be distinguished physically. For instance, different values of the angle ##\varphi## in a rotation-invariant theory cannot be distinguished physically, so the variable ##\varphi## can be thought of as a kind of "ghost". When the symmetry is explicitly broken, those degrees of freedom do not go away. Instead, they become physical. The ghosts "materialize", so to speak.
But why would the ghosts be introduced if there is no gauge symmetry, if we have destroyed it by added a gauge breaker to the Lagrangian? Haven't we just restricted the dynamics of the gauge bosons a bit more? I.e. removed a degree or degrees of freedom.
 
  • #4
I am not sure what you are asking.

First, with your reference to gauge theories it makes most sense you are talking about Faddeev-Popov ghosts, but then the wiki page you linked lists a bunch of other possible meanings of ghost, so which one are you asking about?

Second, assuming you are talking about Faddeev-Popov, do you mean why we need ghosts after adding a gauge fixing term, or are you talking about explicit breaking like adding a mass to W and Z bosons in SU(2) theory in a naive way?
 
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  • #5
Dr.AbeNikIanEdL said:
I am not sure what you are asking.

Second, assuming you are talking about Faddeev-Popov, do you mean why we need ghosts after adding a gauge fixing term, or are you talking about explicit breaking like adding a mass to W and Z bosons in SU(2) theory in a naive way?
Yes, I mean Faddeev-Popov ghosts and explicit symmetry breaking by adding a gauge breaking/fixing term (e.g. to enforce the Feynman gauge) to the Lagrangian. Not about W/Z mass terms.

Sorry should have linked to the more specific article.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faddeev–Popov_ghost
PS I've edited my original post to clarify things.
 
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  • #6
In Gauge Theories the fields ##A_{\mu}## overdescribe the physics. In the path integral approach the space of all such fields ##\mathcal{V}## is too large. This is essentially due to the fact that the dynamics of massless spin-1 bosons don't exactly correspond to that of local fields. Note: The dynamics are still local, but just not in direct correspondance with local fields. However since local fields are so mathematically neat to work with and allow you perform renormalization easily we continue to use them.

An entire family of fields ##A^{G}_{\mu}## which are transformations of some fixed ##A_{\mu}## by a gauge transformation ##G## all describe the same physical situation. Such families are called gauge orbits.

So we should be integrating over ##\mathcal{V}/\mathcal{G}## and we do this by selecting out a surface on ##\mathcal{V}## by using a delta function or some similar trick. The delta function then selects out one field from each gauge orbit, defining a surface ##\mathcal{S}## which should give the same physics as ##\mathcal{V}/\mathcal{G}##.

However it turns out that the gauge orbits are more "clumped" at some points on the surface than others, i.e. there can be areas of the surface with a higher density of orbits intersecting it there. The density of orbits is given by ##\det\left(\partial^{\mu}D_{\mu}\right)##. To use perturbation theory one needs a way to evaluate this density perturbatively.

Luckily we know that functional determinants can be evaluated with fermionic path integrals. Thus we replace the determinant with a path integral over a new fermionic set of fields.

So in essence ghosts are ways of perturbatively evaluating the orbit density of your gauge fixed surface. There will be an orbit density to this surface regardless of whether you have a gauge breaking term or not. The gauge breaking term is present to prevent a contradiction between the Maxwell equations, non-triviality and local fields.
 
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  • #7
Michael Price said:
Yes, I mean Faddeev-Popov ghosts and explicit symmetry breaking by adding a gauge breaking/fixing term (e.g. to enforce the Feynman gauge) to the Lagrangian. Not about W/Z mass terms.
Ok, in that case you still need ghosts. From a pragmatic point of view, there are contributions form unphysical states, and you need to subtract them out, and adding ghost particles is the way to do that. Without introducing the gauge fixing term, you would not even get to the stage where one can see this problem. It is probably better to view the introduction of ghosts as part of the gauge fixing procedure for non-abelean theories.
 
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  • #8
Michael Price said:
Yes, I mean Faddeev-Popov ghosts and explicit symmetry breaking by adding a gauge breaking/fixing term (e.g. to enforce the Feynman gauge) to the Lagrangian.
With this term added you get an infinite family of inequivalent theories, parameterized by the new coupling constant ##\lambda## needed. The original theory is recovered only in the limit where ##\lambda\to 0##. All other values give theories with explicitly broken gauge symmetry.

DarMM said:
In Gauge Theories the fields ##A_{\mu}## overdescribe the physics.
Only if there is no explictly broken gauge invariance, i.e., when ##\lambda=0##. If ##\lambda\ne0##, the physics is changed, and all degrees of freedom of the fields ##A_{\mu}## are physical. Then no gauge can be fixed as there is no gauge symmetry in the classical Lagrangian with ##\lambda\ne0##.
DarMM said:
So in essence ghosts are ways of perturbatively evaluating the orbit density of your gauge fixed surface. There will be an orbit density to this surface regardless of whether you have a gauge breaking term or not.
But this orbit density is irrelevant except in the limit where the gauge breaking term vanishes. Of course, this is the situation where the original gauge invariant theory would be recovered.
 
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  • #9
A. Neumaier said:
Only if there is no explictly broken gauge invariance, i.e., when ##\lambda=0##. If ##\lambda\ne0##, the physics is changed, and all degrees of freedom of the fields ##A_{\mu}## are physical. Then no gauge can be fixed as there is no gauge symmetry in the classical Lagrangian with ##\lambda\ne0##.

But this orbit density is irrelevant except in the limit where the gauge breaking term vanishes. Of course, this is the situation where the original gauge invariant theory would be recovered.
When the gauge symmetry is broken the state space is full of unphysical states with negative norm and forms a Krein space. So are these degrees of freedom really "physical" in any sense, the resultant space has no sensible physical interpretation, it's just an intermediate stage used to permit calculations in the physical theory with local operators.

If you don't implement the conditions that restore the physical theory then the path integral is just an abstract stochastic process with no relation to any sensible quantum field theory. So yes if you keep the gauge broken then the orbit density doesn't matter, but why is that fact even relevant?
 
  • #10
Demystifier said:
Ghosts can be thought of as non-physical degrees of freedom that appear in mathematical expressions. They are non-physical in the sense that different values of these degrees cannot be distinguished physically. For instance, different values of the angle ##\varphi## in a rotation-invariant theory cannot be distinguished physically, so the variable ##\varphi## can be thought of as a kind of "ghost". When the symmetry is explicitly broken, those degrees of freedom do not go away. Instead, they become physical. The ghosts "materialize", so to speak.
A local gauge symmetry cannot be spontaneously broken (Elitzur's theorem). What happens instead is the "Anderson-Higgs-et-al mechanism", and you get massive gauge bosons by "eating up" the would-be-Goldstone modes. In non-unitary gauges the would-be-Goldstone bosons become ghosts as the Faddeev-Popov ghosts. These are good ghosts, cancelling unphysical degrees of freedom in gauge theories.
 
  • #11
DarMM said:
When the gauge symmetry is broken the state space is full of unphysical states with negative norm and forms a Krein space.
No. This is the case only assuming that you have already adjoined the ghost field. Without doing this, the situation is completely different:

When the gauge symmetry is explicitly broken the theory is unrenormalizable, which means that (unlike in the renormalizable case) the manifold of perturbatively (and canonically) renormalized field theories associated with it is infinite-dimensional, due to the infinitely many counterterms. Nothing at all is rigorously known about the resulting nonperturbative situation.
 
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  • #12
A. Neumaier said:
When the gauge symmetry is explicitly broken the theory is unrenormalizable,[...]
Is this the reason for Faddeev-Popov ghosts? I.e. To keep the theory renormalisable we mustn't explicitly break the gauge symmetry, and so, to maintain gauge symmetry, we are forced to go down the FP ghost route?
 
  • #13
Michael Price said:
Is this the reason for Faddeev-Popov ghosts? I.e. To keep the theory renormalisable we mustn't explicitly break the gauge symmetry, and so, to maintain gauge symmetry, we are forced to go down the FP ghost route?
More or less, yes. Actually the gauge symmetry is lost anyway but instead the BRST supersymmetry appears.
 
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  • #14
DarMM said:
When the gauge symmetry is broken the state space is full of unphysical states with negative norm and forms a Krein space. So are these degrees of freedom really "physical" in any sense, the resultant space has no sensible physical interpretation, it's just an intermediate stage used to permit calculations in the physical theory with local operators.
Not necessarily. The unphysical states with negative norms have been introduced into the theory intentionally, by design, to make relativistic symmetry "manifest", by Gupta and Bleuer. They replaced another, earlier, quantization scheme proposed by Fermi and Dirac, which introduced different commutation rules for the temporal [itex]A_0[/itex] and the spatial [itex]A_i[/itex] components. The resulting observable predictions were nonetheless Lorentz-covariant, but this destroyed the covariance at the fundamental level.

Once one does not insist on gauge invariance being fundamental (else, the question would not make sense), but considers it as something approximate, emergent, one can as well consider relativistic symmetry as emergent. Instead, negative norms make no sense at all. In this case, it makes sense to use the older approach, given that it avoids any negative norms.
 
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  • #15
I think gauge symmetry is pretty unavoidable when dealing with massless vector fields (and I guess also for massless fields of higher spin too). That's because the little group in the massless case is ##\text{ISO}(2)## or rather its covering group, i.e., the symmetry group of the Euclidean plane. If you do not want to have continuously many intrinsic ("polarization like") degrees of freedom, you must make the translations of this group act trivially, and this is afaik only possible using gauge symmetry. Then only the rotations around the three momentum are realized non-trivially giving rise to the two physical polarization degrees (it's only two for massless particles with spin ##\geq 1/2## and not ##(2s+1)## as for massive particles, where the little group is ##\text{SO}(3)## or rather its covering group ##\text{SU}(2)##) of freedom with helicity as the corresponding observable.
 
  • #16
A. Neumaier said:
When the gauge symmetry is explicitly broken the theory is unrenormalizable
Exactly what way are we breaking gauge symmetry here? Adding a mass?
 
  • #17
The FP formalism fixes the gauge but doesn't break gauge symmetry. Choosing the background-field gauge you can even get a gauge-invariant effective action. Usually if you start with a gauge theory and break the gauge symmetry explicitly the theory becomes unphysical. Adding naively a mass term in non-Abelian gauge theories makes the theory unphysical, and thus you have to use the Anderon-Higgs-et-al mechanism to describe massive non-Abelian gauge bosons, and usually you have at least a physical Higgs boson left. (In)famously the predicted Higgs boson in the SM has been discovered. In the Abelian case you can introduce a mass term without breaking local gauge invariance (Stueckelberg formalism).
 
  • #18
I know all of that, but I don't really understand in what sense we are "adjoining ghosts". My understanding is that if you break gauge symmetry by adding the usual gauge breaking term to the Lagrangian:
$$\lambda\partial_{\mu}\partial^{\nu}A_{\nu}$$
then the state space immediately has negative norm states.
 
  • #19
Michael Price said:
But why would the ghosts be introduced if there is no gauge symmetry, if we have destroyed it by added a gauge breaker to the Lagrangian? Haven't we just restricted the dynamics of the gauge bosons a bit more? I.e. removed a degree or degrees of freedom.
When you add a symmetry breaking term (don't confuse it with a gauge fixing term, that's different), you don't remove degrees of freedom. Just the opposite, you add new degrees.
 
  • #20
DarMM said:
I know all of that, but I don't really understand in what sense we are "adjoining ghosts". My understanding is that if you break gauge symmetry by adding the usual gauge breaking term to the Lagrangian:
$$\lambda\partial_{\mu}\partial^{\nu}A_{\nu}$$
then the state space immediately has negative norm states.
I've no clue what "adjoining ghosts" means, but we introduce them in FP procedure to get a perturbative handle on the functional determinant introduced when integrating over the gauge group. The unphysical gauge-field degrees of freedom and the FP ghost conspire such as to cancel the unphysical degrees of freedom in physical (i.e., gauge-invariant) quantities, leading finally (order by order perturbation theory) to a univary S-matrix. No negative-norm states are physical of course. Formally it's a bit tricky a proof making use of the BRST symmetry and the associated Slavnov-Taylor identities. Everything becomes much simpler in the background-field gauge, where you deal with gauge-invariant effective actions and you can do with Ward-Takahashi identities as in the Abelian (QED) case.
 
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  • #21
As I said I know all that, that's what I'm saying. I don't understand what @A. Neumaier is saying.
 
  • #22
I know that you know that. I answered for the rest of PF readers too ;-). I'm reminded of Einstein's dictum about mathematicians in 1908 after he read Minkowski's famous article, but as is well known this was a premature statement since Einstein later realized how important math really is for his work, and he regretted not to have attended Minkowski's lectures in Zürich. Usually you have to work hard to translate the mathematicians' jargon into physicists' jargon. Sometimes it's impossible though...
 
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  • #23
vanhees71 said:
I know that you know that. I answered for the rest of PF readers too ;-)
Ah of course, very sensible, my apologies.
 
  • #24
DarMM said:
Exactly what way are we breaking gauge symmetry here? Adding a mass?
It doesn't matter for my argument. Intended in the original question (made precise in post #5 was apparently a term proportional to ##(\nabla\cdot A)^2## or another gauge-fixing term.
DarMM said:
My understanding is that if you break gauge symmetry by adding the usual gauge breaking term to the Lagrangian:
$$\lambda\partial_{\mu}\partial^{\nu}A_{\nu}$$
then the state space immediately has negative norm states.
This term is not a scalar, hence is not eligible. If you add ##\lambda(\nabla\cdot A)^2## with ##\lambda\ne0##, the Lagragian is no longer renormalizable, and renormalized perturbation theory needs new constants at each order. Apart from that, everything is canonical and hence in a Hilbert space setting.
Negative norm states are absent; they never appear in canonical quantization.

Negative norm states enter only through the coupling with a ghost field in a path integral approach, There the integrand only goes over a quotient space and integrating formally over gauged-fixed representatives (ignoring Gribov copies) needs to be compensated by a functional determinant, which is modeled by an unphysical ghost field. Only at this stage, definiteness can no longer be maintained.
 
  • #25
A. Neumaier said:
This term is not a scalar, hence is not eligible. If you add ##\lambda(\nabla\cdot A)^2## with ##\lambda\ne0##, the Lagragian is no longer renormalizable, and renormalized perturbation theory needs new constants at each order.
The term I gave is the modification to the equations of motion, not the Lagrangian. The Lagrangian term giving it is essentially the same as your term there.

If you add such a term then the inner product cannot be positive semi-definite due to essentially a Reeh-Schlideder argument . See Strocchi "An Introduction to Non-perturbative Foundations of Quantum Field Theory" Proposition 3.3 p.155.
 
  • #26
A. Neumaier said:
When the gauge symmetry is explicitly broken the theory is unrenormalizable, which means that (unlike in the renormalizable case) the manifold of perturbatively (and canonically) renormalized field theories associated with it is infinite-dimensional, due to the infinitely many counterterms. Nothing at all is known about the resulting nonperturbative situation.
This sounds strange, given that in the Wilsonian approach it is quite clear what to do with this sort of infinity. The non-renormalizable theory has to be understood as an effective field theory, and there is a critical length at which the effective field theory fails. One can now assume that all the terms have a similar order of magnitude at this critical distance. And then one can see what survives in the large distance limit. These are, first of all, renormalizable components. Then there are a few lowest order non-renormalizable ones.

Given this purely qualitative consideration, one can already make a qualitative guess. The renormalizable part of a massive gauge theory is the massless, gauge-invariant theory. The massive part gives a short distance force, thus, vanishes for large distances anyway (as suggested above).

We have to do this anyway, given that gravity is non-renormalizable, and this gives already a nice suggestion for the critical length. So, all that remains to be done would be to consider the lowest order non-renormalizable terms and what they give, say, for the massive gauge theories at Planck scale.

If this has been done somewhere, I would be very interested in the results. It not, I would be interested to understand why this has not been done.

(The same question appears for gauge theories with anomalies. Here I would guess that one can even predict qualitatively with more certainty that the anomalous part will be suppressed, thus, becomes very weak in comparison with the non-anomalous gauge fields. Here I would wonder why this method has not been used to extend the SM gauge group, given that one would not even have to invent a mechanism to suppress the additional gauge fields.)
 
  • #27
DarMM said:
The term I gave is the modification to the equations of motion, not the Lagrangian. The Lagrangian term giving it is essentially the same as your term there.

If you add such a term then the inner product cannot be positive semi-definite due to essentially a Reeh-Schlideder argument . See Strocchi "An Introduction to Non-perturbative Foundations of Quantum Field Theory" Proposition 3.3 p.155.
I have currently no access to this book, but there cannot be any rigorous results of this kind on a theory that is by definition not gauge invariant. As I remember Strocchi assumes from the start that there is gauge invariance, and then shows that it cannot be locally realized in a Hilbett space. But once the extra term is added, the theory is manifestly gauge noninvariant, hence Strocchi's assumption is not met.
 
  • #28
One gets the "negative-norm states" not only in the path-integral formalism but of course in the equivalent operator formalism too. You use the BRST symmetry of the complete gauge-fixed Lagrangian including FP ghosts to define the constraint conditions for the physical states leading to a positive definite norm and a unitary S-matrix. For details, see

T. Kugo, I. Ojima, Manifestly Covariant Canonical
Formulation of the Yang-Mills Field Theories. I, Progress of
Theoretical Physics 60 (1978) 1869.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1143/PTP.60.1869

T. Kugo, O. Ojima, Manifestly Covariant Canonical
Formulation of Yang-Mills Field Theories. II: SU (2)
Higgs-Kibble Model with Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking,
Progress of theoretical physics 61 (1979) 294.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1143/PTP.61.294

T. Kugo, I. Ojima, Manifestly Covariant Canonical
Formulation of Yang-Mills Field Theories. III—Pure
Yang-Mills Theories without Spontaneous Symmetry
Breaking, Progress of Theoretical Physics 61 (1979) 644.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1143/PTP.61.644
 
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  • #29
A. Neumaier said:
I have currently no access to this book, but there cannot be any rigorous results of this kind on a theory that is by definition not gauge invariant. As I remember Strocchi assumes from the start that there is gauge invariance, and then shows that it cannot be locally realized in a Hilbett space. But once the extra term is added, the theory is manifestly gauge noninvariant, hence Strocchi's assumption is not met.
Perhaps I'm not really understanding what is meant here then. To me this all goes back to @vanhees71 post where vector fields have too many components to model massless particles directly as they are reps of ##ISO(2)##. For that reason modelling massless particles with local fields means there will be gauge symmetry. Unless you mean to model massive particles?
 
  • #30
Elias1960 said:
This sounds strange, given that in the Wilsonian approach it is quite clear what to do with this sort of infinity. The non-renormalizable theory has to be understood as an effective field theory,
Yes, on the level of perturbation theory, one can say a lot. But I had meant nothing is known rigorously.
(DarMM is a mathematical physicist.)
vanhees71 said:
One gets the "negative-norm states" not only in the path-integral formalism but of course in the equivalent operator formalism too.
But only if one adds ghosts (or other unphysical degrees of freedom) to preserve manifest gauge symmetry. Not for the family of modified theories where this is explicitly broken by nonrenormalizable terms.
 
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  • #31
It's not clear to me, what you mean. Are you referring to something like the "unitary gauge"?

Also in the simpler abelian case, where you can use the Gupta-Bleuler formalism, you have "negative-norm states" first but then introduce the constraint conditions for physical states. In the original form of the Gupta-Bleuler formalism there are no FP ghosts introduced. This has been done for QED by Feynman first. Using the FP formalism for abelian gauge fields in the standard covariant gauges, the FP ghosts are non-interacting and thus play no role in the Feynman rules for physical S-matrix elements.

Of course all this is defined (though mathematically not rigorously) within perturbative QFT only.
 
  • #32
vanhees71 said:
It's not clear to me, what you mean. Are you referring to something like the "unitary gauge"?
No; it was a general remark. If there is no gauge symmetry then there is nothing to fix. Adding a gauge symmetry violating term of any sort, in particular the one the OP requested,
Michael Price said:
explicit symmetry breaking by adding a gauge breaking/fixing term (e.g. to enforce the Feynman gauge) to the Lagrangian.
changes the family of field theories considered to a bigger class, of which only a set of measure zero corresponds to the original gauge invariant family. Thus gauge considerations become irrelevant for the bigger class, since there the longitudinal component is physical (but with a singularity at vanishing couplng). Thus it doesn't make sense to introduce ghosts or unphysical Gupta-Bleuler degrees of freedom. Thus also no indefinite inner product.
 
  • #33
Thus it's describing a theory with massive bosons right?
 
  • #34
DarMM said:
Thus it's describing a theory with massive bosons right?
I guess so. The added term will generate infinitely many other counterterms, most likely also including a mass term. In the resulting infinite-dimensional manifold of theories there is probably a distinguished finite-dimensional manifold of theories corresponding in a nonperturbative sense to the original family, but for lack of nonperturbative theory no one knows how to select it. Thus one needs to truncate the family and live with an effective theory.
 
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  • #35
Okay, if we are taking the gauge breaking term as a mass term not as a term to weaken the Gauss law, which it must be if it has physical longitudinal polarized states, then I agree.

As you said we know very little about the nonperturbative behaviour of such theories, they're usually ignored due to being nonrenormalizable, but that might not be valid.
 
<h2>1. What is gauge breaking?</h2><p>Gauge breaking refers to the phenomenon in which a gauge symmetry is no longer preserved in a physical system. This can happen when the system is subject to external influences, such as interactions with other particles. Gauge breaking can also occur in the process of spontaneous symmetry breaking, where the vacuum state of a system is not invariant under the gauge symmetry.</p><h2>2. What are Faddeev-Popov ghost particles?</h2><p>Faddeev-Popov ghost particles are theoretical particles that arise in certain quantum field theories, specifically those with gauge symmetries. They are called "ghost" particles because they do not have physical properties like mass or spin, and cannot be directly observed. They are introduced in the Faddeev-Popov method, a mathematical technique used to deal with gauge symmetries in quantum field theories.</p><h2>3. Why are Faddeev-Popov ghost particles necessary?</h2><p>Faddeev-Popov ghost particles are necessary in certain quantum field theories because they help to maintain the gauge symmetry of the theory. Without them, certain calculations would not be possible and the theory would not be consistent. They also play a role in the renormalization process, which is important for making predictions in quantum field theory.</p><h2>4. How do Faddeev-Popov ghost particles affect the physical interpretation of a theory?</h2><p>Faddeev-Popov ghost particles do not have direct physical interpretations, as they cannot be observed. However, they are important for maintaining the gauge symmetry of a theory and allowing for consistent calculations. In some cases, the presence of ghost particles can lead to physical consequences, such as the appearance of unphysical states in the theory.</p><h2>5. Are Faddeev-Popov ghost particles a confirmed aspect of particle physics?</h2><p>Yes, Faddeev-Popov ghost particles are a well-established concept in particle physics and are used in many quantum field theories, including the Standard Model. They have been confirmed through various experimental and theoretical studies, and their role in maintaining gauge symmetry has been crucial for the development of modern particle physics theories.</p>

1. What is gauge breaking?

Gauge breaking refers to the phenomenon in which a gauge symmetry is no longer preserved in a physical system. This can happen when the system is subject to external influences, such as interactions with other particles. Gauge breaking can also occur in the process of spontaneous symmetry breaking, where the vacuum state of a system is not invariant under the gauge symmetry.

2. What are Faddeev-Popov ghost particles?

Faddeev-Popov ghost particles are theoretical particles that arise in certain quantum field theories, specifically those with gauge symmetries. They are called "ghost" particles because they do not have physical properties like mass or spin, and cannot be directly observed. They are introduced in the Faddeev-Popov method, a mathematical technique used to deal with gauge symmetries in quantum field theories.

3. Why are Faddeev-Popov ghost particles necessary?

Faddeev-Popov ghost particles are necessary in certain quantum field theories because they help to maintain the gauge symmetry of the theory. Without them, certain calculations would not be possible and the theory would not be consistent. They also play a role in the renormalization process, which is important for making predictions in quantum field theory.

4. How do Faddeev-Popov ghost particles affect the physical interpretation of a theory?

Faddeev-Popov ghost particles do not have direct physical interpretations, as they cannot be observed. However, they are important for maintaining the gauge symmetry of a theory and allowing for consistent calculations. In some cases, the presence of ghost particles can lead to physical consequences, such as the appearance of unphysical states in the theory.

5. Are Faddeev-Popov ghost particles a confirmed aspect of particle physics?

Yes, Faddeev-Popov ghost particles are a well-established concept in particle physics and are used in many quantum field theories, including the Standard Model. They have been confirmed through various experimental and theoretical studies, and their role in maintaining gauge symmetry has been crucial for the development of modern particle physics theories.

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