Glueballs in a Hamiltonian light-front approach to pure-glue QCD
Physical Review D - Particles, Fields, Gravitation and Cosmology, ISSN: 0556-2821, Vol: 62, Issue: 2, Page: 1-41
2000
- 13Citations
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Metrics Details
- Citations13
- Citation Indexes13
- 13
- CrossRef10
Article Description
We calculate a renormalized Hamiltonian for pure-glue QCD and diagonalize it. The renormalization procedure is designed to produce a Hamiltonian that will yield physical states that rapidly converge in an expansion in free-particle Fock-space sectors. To make this possible, we use light-front field theory to isolate vacuum effects, and we place a smooth cutoff on the Hamiltonian to force its free-state matrix elements to quickly decrease as the difference of the free masses of the states increases. The cutoff violates a number of physical principles of light-front pure-glue QCD, including Lorentz covariance and gauge covariance. This means that the operators in the Hamiltonian are not required to respect these physical principles. However, by requiring the Hamiltonian to produce cutoff-independent physical quantities and by requiring it to respect the unviolated physical principles of pure-glue QCD, we are able to derive recursion relations that define the Hamiltonian to all orders in perturbation theory in terms of the running coupling. We approximate all physical states as two-gluon states (thus they are relatively simple single-glueball states), and use our recursion relations to calculate to second order the part of the Hamiltonian that is required to compute the spectrum. We diagonalize the Hamiltonian using basis-function expansions for the gluons' color, spin, and momentum degrees of freedom. We examine the sensitivity of our results to the cutoff and use them to analyze the nonperturbative scale dependence of the coupling. We investigate the effect of the dynamical rotational symmetry of light-front field theory on the rotational degeneracies of the spectrum and compare the spectrum to recent results from other approaches. Finally, we examine our wave functions and analyze the various sources of error in our calculation. ©2000 The American Physical Society.
Bibliographic Details
http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85037205736&origin=inward; http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.62.025005; https://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.62.025005; http://harvest.aps.org/v2/journals/articles/10.1103/PhysRevD.62.025005/fulltext; http://link.aps.org/article/10.1103/PhysRevD.62.025005
American Physical Society (APS)
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