Part 4 - Reduced Models
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2009
Summary
“I've just caught you in a contradiction. Don't you see.” He proudly lettered “Contradiction” on his pad with his thick black pencil.
J. Heller, Catch-22The large-N reduction was first discovered in 1982 by Eguchi and Kawai [EK82], who showed that the SU(N) Yang–Mills theory on a d-dimensional space-time is equivalent at N = ∞ to the one at a point. This construction is based on an extra symmetry of the reduced model which should not be broken spontaneously.
Soon after that it was recognized that this symmetry is, in fact, broken for d > 2. Two ways were proposed to cure the construction: the quenching prescription [BHN82] and the twisting prescription [GO83a]. Each of these two prescriptions results in a reduced model which recovers multicolor QCD both on the lattice and in the continuum.
While the reduced models look like a great simplification, since the space-time is reduced to a point, they still involve an integration over d infinite matrices which is, in fact, a continual path integral. For some years it was not clear whether or not this is a real simplification of the original theory which can make it solvable, so the point of view on the reduced models was that they are just an elegant representation at large N.
The recent interest in reduced models has arisen from the matrix-model formulation [BFS97, IKK97] of M-theory combining all types of superstring theories. The novel point of view on the reduced models is that they are equivalent [CDS98] to gauge theories on noncommutative space.
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- Methods of Contemporary Gauge Theory , pp. 323 - 324Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002