Home  

Random  

Nearby  



Log in  



Settings  



Donate  



About Wikipedia  

Disclaimers  



Wikipedia





Functional renormalization group





Article  

Talk  



Language  

Watch  

Edit  





Intheoretical physics, functional renormalization group (FRG) is an implementation of the renormalization group (RG) concept which is used in quantum and statistical field theory, especially when dealing with strongly interacting systems. The method combines functional methods of quantum field theory with the intuitive renormalization group idea of Kenneth G. Wilson. This technique allows to interpolate smoothly between the known microscopic laws and the complicated macroscopic phenomena in physical systems. In this sense, it bridges the transition from simplicity of microphysics to complexity of macrophysics. Figuratively speaking, FRG acts as a microscope with a variable resolution. One starts with a high-resolution picture of the known microphysical laws and subsequently decreases the resolution to obtain a coarse-grained picture of macroscopic collective phenomena. The method is nonperturbative, meaning that it does not rely on an expansion in a small coupling constant. Mathematically, FRG is based on an exact functional differential equation for a scale-dependent effective action.

The flow equation for the effective action

edit

Inquantum field theory, the effective action   is an analogue of the classical action functional   and depends on the fields of a given theory. It includes all quantum and thermal fluctuations. Variation of   yields exact quantum field equations, for example for cosmology or the electrodynamics of superconductors. Mathematically,   is the generating functional of the one-particle irreducible Feynman diagrams. Interesting physics, as propagators and effective couplings for interactions, can be straightforwardly extracted from it. In a generic interacting field theory the effective action  , however, is difficult to obtain. FRG provides a practical tool to calculate   employing the renormalization group concept.

The central object in FRG is a scale-dependent effective action functional   often called average action or flowing action. The dependence on the RG sliding scale   is introduced by adding a regulator (infrared cutoff)   to the full inverse propagator  . Roughly speaking, the regulator   decouples slow modes with momenta   by giving them a large mass, while high momentum modes are not affected. Thus,   includes all quantum and statistical fluctuations with momenta  . The flowing action   obeys the exact functional flow equation

 

derived by Christof Wetterich and Tim R. Morris in 1993. Here   denotes a derivative with respect to the RG scale   at fixed values of the fields. Furthermore,   denotes the functional derivative of   from the left-hand-side and the right-hand-side respectively, due to the tensor structure of the equation. This feature is often shown simplified by the second derivative of the effective action. The functional differential equation for   must be supplemented with the initial condition  , where the "classical action"   describes the physics at the microscopic ultraviolet scale  . Importantly, in the infrared limit   the full effective action   is obtained. In the Wetterich equation   denotes a supertrace which sums over momenta, frequencies, internal indices, and fields (taking bosons with a plus and fermions with a minus sign). The exact flow equation for   has a one-loop structure. This is an important simplification compared to perturbation theory, where multi-loop diagrams must be included. The second functional derivative   is the full inverse field propagator modified by the presence of the regulator  .

The renormalization group evolution of   can be illustrated in the theory space, which is a multi-dimensional space of all possible running couplings   allowed by the symmetries of the problem. As schematically shown in the figure, at the microscopic ultraviolet scale   one starts with the initial condition  .

 
Renormalization group flow in the theory space of all possible couplings allowed by symmetries.

As the sliding scale   is lowered, the flowing action   evolves in the theory space according to the functional flow equation. The choice of the regulator   is not unique, which introduces some scheme dependence into the renormalization group flow. For this reason, different choices of the regulator   correspond to the different paths in the figure. At the infrared scale  , however, the full effective action   is recovered for every choice of the cut-off  , and all trajectories meet at the same point in the theory space.

In most cases of interest the Wetterich equation can only be solved approximately. Usually some type of expansion of   is performed, which is then truncated at finite order leading to a finite system of ordinary differential equations. Different systematic expansion schemes (such as the derivative expansion, vertex expansion, etc.) were developed. The choice of the suitable scheme should be physically motivated and depends on a given problem. The expansions do not necessarily involve a small parameter (like an interaction coupling constant) and thus they are, in general, of nonperturbative nature.

Note however, that due to multiple choices regarding (prefactor-)conventions and the concrete definition of the effective action, one can find other (equivalent) versions of the Wetterich equation in the literature.[1]

Aspects of functional renormalization

edit

Functional renormalization-group for Wick-ordered effective interaction

edit

Contrary to the flow equation for the effective action, this scheme is formulated for the effective interaction

 

which generates n-particle interaction vertices, amputated by the bare propagators  ;   is the "standard" generating functional for the n-particle Green functions.

The Wick ordering of effective interaction with respect to Green function   can be defined by

 .

where   is the Laplacian in the field space. This operation is similar to Normal order and excludes from the interaction all possible terms, formed by a convolution of source fields with respective Green function D. Introducing some cutoff   the Polchinskii equation

 

takes the form of the Wick-ordered equation

 

where

 

Applications

edit

The method was applied to numerous problems in physics, e.g.:

See also

edit

References

edit

Papers

edit
  1. ^ Kopietz, Peter; Bartosch, Lorenz; Schütz, Florian (2010). Introduction to the Functional Renormalization Group. Springer. ISBN 9783642050947.

Pedagogic reviews

edit

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Functional_renormalization_group&oldid=1178231165"
 



Last edited on 2 October 2023, at 10:24  





Languages

 



This page is not available in other languages.
 

Wikipedia


This page was last edited on 2 October 2023, at 10:24 (UTC).

Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted.



Privacy policy

About Wikipedia

Disclaimers

Contact Wikipedia

Code of Conduct

Developers

Statistics

Cookie statement

Terms of Use

Desktop