vanhees71 said:
The OP was correct in a naive way. Indeed you can calculate expectation values of time-ordered products by path integrals, i.e.,
$$\langle \mathcal{T}_c \phi(x_1) \phi(x_2) \cdots \phi (x_N) \rangle=\int \mathrm{D} \phi \exp (\mathrm{i} S[\phi]) \phi(x_1) \phi(x_1) \phi(x_2) \cdots \phi (x_N).$$
For ##N=1## you get the formula in the OP.
However, the path integral is not well-defined, and to evaluate it you must make some approximations. The usual way is the saddle-point expansion, and for this you have to expand around a (local) minimum of the "free" action, which in this case is around ##\phi \neq 0##.
So would you say this is correct to 2nd order:
$$\int d\phi \, e^{iS[\phi]} \phi=\int d\phi \, e^{iS[\phi_c]+i/2 S^{(2)}[\phi_c](\phi-\phi_c)^2} \phi=\int d\phi\, e^{iS[\phi_c]+i/2 S^{(2)}[\phi_c](\phi)^2}(\phi_c+\phi)=\phi_c$$
where we used oddness of integrand and translational shift invariance in the last step, which to Demystifier's point, the latter is not always allowed? Isn't it odd though that the approximate answer (saddle point) gives the correct answer, but the more exact approach (straight up do the integral) indicates zero? I realize that the original integral can be regarded as saddle point expansion about \phi=0 taken up to fourth order, but presumably, if you were to Taylor expand the action about \phi=\sqrt{\frac{\mu^2}{2 \lambda}} and keep all orders in the Taylor expansion, you would get zero for \langle \phi(x) \rangle? It seems natural to trust the fourth order expansion of the action about \phi=0 more than the 2nd order expansion about \phi=\sqrt{\frac{\mu^2}{2 \lambda}}, because the fourth order expansion about \phi=0 is exact.
Demystifier said:
In this path integral one does not integrate over all field configurations, but only over those that satisfy some "boundary condition". So to define the path integral, one must define the boundary condition, namely the value of ##\phi## at ##t\rightarrow\pm\infty##. The choice of the boundary condition corresponds to the choice of the state one calls "vacuum". If you choose ##\phi=0## at the boundary, this corresponds to the "vacuum" in which ##\langle\phi\rangle=0##. When symmetry is spontaneously broken, this is not the "vacuum" you are actually interested in. You are interested in another vacuum in which ##\langle\phi\rangle=v## is the minimum of the potential, so you must choose the appropriate boundary condition. A convenient way to do this is to write
$$\phi=v+\varphi$$
where ##\varphi## is a new integration variable which satisfies the "standard" boundary condition ##\varphi=0## at ##t\rightarrow\pm\infty##.
I thought the the selection of the true ground state automatically followed from either the i \epsilon prescription (e.g. adding +i\epsilon \phi^2(x) to the potential) or a Wick rotation. That is, if I have a good enough computer, then for any scalar field theory in Minkowski space, if I add i\epsilon \phi^2(x) to the potential and do the path integral with no restrictions on the integration range of \phi(x), then only the ground state survives the path integration when \epsilon\rightarrow 0. So in addition to the i \epsilon prescription, the fields must go to their global classical minimum at infinity?
What about the true global minimum (I believe, but I'm not sure, that in the true ground state, the expectation value of the field operator is the minimum of the effective action) - shouldn't we be expanding about the true minimum instead of the classical minimum?
Also, you mentioned that the vacuum in which \langle\phi\rangle=0 is not the one I'm interested in. What's interesting is that in Bose-Einstein condensation, the *vacuum* |0\rangle is the state for which \langle\phi\rangle=0, which is not the true *ground* state |\Omega\rangle which has particles in it (the condensate, i.e., a^\dagger a |\Omega\rangle=n|\Omega\rangle whereas a^\dagger a|0\rangle=0), which is a coherent state |\Omega \rangle=e^{i \phi_c a^\dagger}|0\rangle. I'm not as familiar with particle physics, but is there something similar with the Higgs field in that the ground state is filled with particles, or is the ground state empty and only excitations above the ground state are Higgs particles?
Thanks everyone.