enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Yang–Mills theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YangMills_theory

    YangMills theory is a quantum field theory for nuclear binding devised by Chen Ning Yang and Robert Mills in 1953, as well as a generic term for the class of similar theories. The YangMills theory is a gauge theory based on a special unitary group SU( n ) , or more generally any compact Lie group .

  3. Yang–Mills existence and mass gap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YangMills_existence_and...

    Quantum YangMills theory with a non-abelian gauge group and no quarks is an exception, because asymptotic freedom characterizes this theory, meaning that it has a trivial UV fixed point. Hence it is the simplest nontrivial constructive QFT in 4 dimensions. (QCD is a more complicated theory because it involves quarks.)

  4. Yang–Mills equations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YangMills_equations

    In physics and mathematics, and especially differential geometry and gauge theory, the YangMills equations are a system of partial differential equations for a connection on a vector bundle or principal bundle. They arise in physics as the Euler–Lagrange equations of the YangMills action functional. They have also found significant use ...

  5. N = 4 supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N_=_4_supersymmetric_Yang...

    N = 4 super YangMills can be derived from a simpler 10-dimensional theory, and yet supergravity and M-theory exist in 11 dimensions. The connection is that if the gauge group U(N) of SYM becomes infinite as it becomes equivalent to an 11-dimensional theory known as matrix theory. [citation needed]

  6. Millennium Prize Problems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium_Prize_Problems

    Quantum YangMills theory is the current grounding for the majority of theoretical applications of thought to the reality and potential realities of elementary particle physics. [19] The theory is a generalization of the Maxwell theory of electromagnetism where the chromo-electromagnetic field itself carries

  7. Instanton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instanton

    A well understood and illustrative example of an instanton and its interpretation can be found in the context of a QFT with a non-abelian gauge group, [note 2] a YangMills theory. For a YangMills theory these inequivalent sectors can be (in an appropriate gauge) classified by the third homotopy group of SU(2) (whose group manifold is the ...

  8. N = 1 supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N_=_1_supersymmetric_Yang...

    In theoretical physics, more specifically in quantum field theory and supersymmetry, supersymmetric YangMills, also known as super YangMills and abbreviated to SYM, is a supersymmetric generalization of YangMills theory, which is a gauge theory that plays an important part in the mathematical formulation of forces in particle physics.

  9. Deformed Hermitian Yang–Mills equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deformed_Hermitian_Yang...

    In this section we present the dHYM equation as explained in the mathematical literature by Collins-Xie-Yau. [3]The deformed Hermitian–YangMills equation is a fully non-linear partial differential equation for a Hermitian metric on a line bundle over a compact Kähler manifold, or more generally for a real (,)-form.