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Phys. Rev. D 40, 1246–1254 (1989)

Meaning of the BRS Lagrangian theory

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Hung Cheng and Er-Cheng Tsai
Department of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139

Received 11 December 1987; published in the issue dated 15 August 1989

A simplified treatment of the Becchi-Rouet-Stora (BRS) Lagrangian theory is presented. With this treatment we show that the BRS Lagrangian theory in general, and the Feynman-gauge field theory in particular, are effective theories, not the physical theory, and the Feynman gauge is not, strictly speaking, a gauge. The relationship between the quantum states in the BRS Lagrangian theory and those in the physical theory is explicitly given. We also show that one may obtain matrix elements of gauge-invariant operators in the physical theory by calculating corresponding ones in the BRS Lagrangian theory. The formulas which equate such matrix elements are called correspondence formulas. The correspondence formula for the S matrix enables us to equate the scattering amplitudes in the physical theory with those in the BRS Lagrangian theory, thus a proof of the unitary of the Feynman-gauge (as well as other covariant gauges) Feynman rules is rendered unnecessary. This treatment can be applied to various gauge field theories and the examples of the pure Yang-Mills theory and a gauge field theory with a Higgs field is explicitly worked out.

© 1989 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.40.1246
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.40.1246
PACS: