Set-up of the S.M.E.

The Screened Massive Expansion of pure Yang-Mill theory is defined by a simple shift of the kinetic \mathcal{L}_{0} and interaction \mathcal{L}_{\text{int}} terms of the gauge-fixed, renormalized Faddeev-Popov Lagrangian:

\mathcal{L}_{0}\to \mathcal{L}_{0}+\delta\mathcal{L}\ ,\qquad \mathcal{L}_{\text{int}}\to \mathcal{L}_{\text{int}}-\delta\mathcal{L}\ ,

where \delta\mathcal{L} is chosen so that the zero-order transverse gluon propagator \Delta_{0}^{\mu\nu}(p) is massive rather than massless:

\delta\mathcal{L}=\frac{m^{2}}{2}\,A_{\mu}^{a}\,t^{\mu\nu}(p)A_{\nu}^{a} \qquad\Longrightarrow\qquad\Delta_{0}^{\mu\nu}(p)=\frac{1}{p^{2}+m^{2}}\ t^{\mu\nu}(p)+\xi \frac{1}{p^{2}}\ \ell^{\mu\nu}(p)\ .

The shift gives rise to a new two-point gluon vertex \delta\Gamma^{\mu\nu}(p),

\delta\Gamma^{\mu\nu}(p)=m^{2}t^{\mu\nu}(p)\ ,

which must be included in the Feynman rules of perturbation theory.

In full QCD, in addition to the shift of the gluon sector, a shift is also performed in the quark sector. Namely, the kinetic \mathcal{L}_{q,0} and interaction \mathcal{L}_{q,\text{int}} terms of the quark Lagrangian are redefined so that the light quarks propagate with a mass M which is much larger than their bare (UV) mass M_{B}, and not related to the latter by perturbative corrections:

\mathcal{L}_{q,0}\to \mathcal{L}_{q,0}+\delta\mathcal{L}_{q}\ ,\qquad \mathcal{L}_{q,\text{int}}\to \mathcal{L}_{q,\text{int}}-\delta\mathcal{L}_{q}\ ,

where

\delta\mathcal{L}_{q}=(M-M_{B}Z_{\psi})\overline{\psi}\psi \qquad\Longrightarrow\qquad S_{0}(p)=\frac{1}{-i\slashed{p}+M}\ ,

S_{0}(p) being the zero-order quark propagator. The two-point quark vertex \delta\Gamma_{q}(p),

\delta\Gamma_{q}(p)=-(M-M_{B}Z_{\psi})\ ,

is then also included in the Feynman rules of the theory.


Features of the S.M.E.

The Screened Massive Expansion of QCD:

  • reduces to ordinary perturbation theory in the UV limit (in particular, it is renormalizable),

  • yields propagators which are in very good agreement with the lattice data in Euclidean space,

  • can be extended to the whole complex Minkowski space to study features such as the complex-conjugate poles of the gluon and quark propagators,

  • can be made self-contained when optimized by principles of gauge invariance,

  • yields a strong running coupling which is finite (no Landau poles) and small enough to allow the use of perturbation theory.


The gluon propagator

In a general covariant gauge, the one-loop gluon polarization \Pi(p^{2}) can be expressed in terms of three functions, F(s), F_{\xi}(s) and F_{Q}(s),

\Pi(p^{2})=-\alpha p^{2} \left(F(s)+\xi F_{\xi}(s)+N_{f} F_{Q}(s)+\text{const.}\right)\ ,

or four, if the contribution F_{Q}^{(cr)}(s) due to the crossed quark loop is also included in the polarization,

\Pi(p^{2})=-\alpha p^{2} \left(F(s)+\xi F_{\xi}(s)+N_{f} F_{Q}(s)+N_{f} F_{Q}^{(cr)}(s)+\text{const.}\right)\ .

In this documentation, we refer to the first choice as the uncrossed (type='uc') variant of the gluon propagator, and to the second choice as the crossed (type='cr') variant of the gluon propagator. In pure Yang-Mills theory (no quarks, i.e., N_{f}=0), this distinction is irrelevant, since there are no quark loops in the gluon polarization.

The function F_{Q}^{(cr)}(s) can be obtained by differentiating F_{Q}(s) with respect to the quark chiral mass,

F_{Q}^{(cr)}(s)=-M\frac{\partial}{\partial M}\,F_{Q}(s)\ .

The inverse gluon dressing function J^{-1}(s) is then given by

J^{-1}(s)&=1+\alpha \left(F(s) + \xi F_{\xi}(s)+N_{f} F_{Q}(s)\right)+ \text{const.}=\\
         &=\alpha \left(F(s) + \xi F_{\xi}(s)+N_{f} F_{Q}(s)+F_{0}\right)

for the uncrossed variant of the propagator, or

J^{-1}(s)=\alpha \left(F(s) + \xi F_{\xi}(s)+N_{f} F_{Q}(s)+N_{f}F_{Q}^{(cr)}(s)+F_{0}\right)

for its crossed variant. In the above equations, F_{0} is an additive renormalization constant.

The functions F(s), F_{\xi}(s), F_{Q}(s) and F_{Q}^{(cr)}(s) are defined in the SmeQcd.oneloop.gluon module, together with the gluon propagator \Delta(p^{2}), dressing function J(s),

J(s)=p^{2}\Delta(p^{2})\ ,

and spectral function (in Minkowski space) \rho_{\Delta}(p^{2}_{M}),

\rho_{\Delta}(p^{2}_{M})=2\, \mathrm{Im} \{\Delta(-p_{M}^{2}-i\varepsilon)\}\ .


The ghost propagator

In a general covariant gauge, the one-loop ghost self-energy \Sigma_{\text{gh}}(p^{2}) can be expressed in terms of two functions, G(s) and G_{\xi}(s):

\Sigma_{\text{gh}}(p^{2})=-\alpha p^{2} \left(G(s)+\xi G_{\xi}(s)+\text{const.}\right)\ .

The inverse ghost dressing function \chi^{-1}(s) is then given by

\chi^{-1}(s)=1+\alpha \left(G(s) + \xi G_{\xi}(s)\right)+ \text{const.}=\alpha \left(G(s) + \xi G_{\xi}(s)+G_{0}\right)\ ,

where G_{0} is an additive renormalization constant.

The functions G(s) and G_{\xi}(s) are defined in the SmeQcd.oneloop.ghost module together with the ghost propagator \mathcal{G}(p^{2}), dressing function \chi(s),

\chi(s)=p^{2}\mathcal{G}(p^{2})\ ,

and spectral function (in Minkowski space) \rho_{\mathcal{G}}(p^{2}_{M}),

\rho_{\mathcal{G}}(p^{2}_{M})=2\, \mathrm{Im} \{\mathcal{G}(-p_{M}^{2}-i\varepsilon)\}\ .


The quark propagator

The quark self-energy \Sigma(p^{2}) can be expressed as

\Sigma(p^{2})=i\slashed{p}\,\Sigma_{V}(p^{2})+\Sigma_{S}(p^{2})\ ,

where \Sigma_{V}(p^{2}) and \Sigma_{S}(p^{2}) are scalar functions. To one loop, if only the ordinary quark loop and quark-crossed quark loop are included in the quark self-energy, we say that the quark propagator is computed in the minimalistic scheme (type='ms'). If, on the other hand, the gluon-crossed quark loop is also included in the self-energy, we say that the propagator is computed in the vertex-wise scheme (type='vw'). Finally, we refer to a scheme in which the internal gluon line is replaced by the principal part of the dressed gluon propagator as the complex-conjugate scheme (type='cc').

In the minimalistic scheme, the quark self-energy is given by the sum \Sigma^{(2)}(p^{2}) of the ordinary quark loop \Sigma^{(2)}(p^{1}) and of the quark-crossed loop:

\Sigma(p^{2})=\Sigma^{(2)}(p^{2})\ .

In the vertex-wise scheme, the gluon-crossed \Sigma^{(gl)}(p^{2}) loop is also added to the self-energy:

\Sigma(p^{2})=\Sigma^{(2)}(p^{2})+\Sigma^{(gl)}(p^{2})\ .

In the complex-conjugate scheme, the quark-self energy is given by two terms, each of which is obtained by replacing m^{2}\to p_{0}^{2} – where p_{0}^{2} is the Minkowski gluon pole – in \Sigma^{(2)}(p^{2}), and multiplying the term by the corresponding residue R:

\Sigma(p^{2})=R\left[\Sigma^{(2)}(p^{2})\right]_{m^{2}\to p_{0}^{2}}+\overline{R}\left[\Sigma^{(2)}(p^{2})\right]_{m^{2}\to \overline{p_{0}^{2}}}\ .

For an in-depth discussion of the minimalistic, vertex-wise and complex-conjugate schemes, see G. Comitini, D. Rizzo, M. Battello, and F. Siringo, Phys. Rev. D 104, 074020 (2021).

In any scheme, the quark propagator S(p) can be expressed as

S(p)=\frac{Z(p^{2})}{p^{2}+\mathcal{M}^{2}(p^{2})}\,\left(i\slashed{p}+\mathcal{M}(p^{2})\right)\ ,

where

Z(p^{2})=\frac{1}{A(p^{2})}\ ,\qquad\mathcal{M}(p^{2})=\frac{B(p^{2})}{A(p^{2})}\ ,

and the functions A(p^{2}) and B(p^{2}) are obtained from the quark self-energy as

A(p^{2}) = Z_{\psi}-\Sigma_{V}(p^{2})\ ,\qquad B(p^{2}) = M_{B}Z_{\psi}+\Sigma_{S}(p^{2})\ .

In the above equations, Z_{\psi} is the quark field-strength renormalization constant. To one loop, the following quantities are often used in place of Z_{\psi} and M_{B}:

H_{0}=3\pi Z_{\psi}/\alpha_{s}\ ,\qquad K_{0}=\pi M_{B} Z_{\psi}/\alpha_{s}\ .

The function p^{2}+\mathcal{M}^{2}(p^{2}) is also denoted by Q(p^{2}),

Q(p^{2})=p^{2}+\mathcal{M}^{2}(p^{2})\ .

The vector and scalar components of the functions \Sigma^{(1)}(p^{2}), \Sigma^{(2)}(p^{2}) and \Sigma^{(gl)}(p^{2}) are defined in the module PySmeQcd.oneloop.quark, together with the functions A(p^{2}), B(p^{2}), Z(p^{2}), \mathcal{M}(p^{2}), Q(p^{2}), the vector and scalar components S_{V/S}(p^{2}) of the quark propagator,

S(p)=i\slashed{p}\,S_{V}(p^{2})+S_{S}(p^{2})\ ,

and the vector and scalar components \rho_{S_{V/S}}(p^{2}_{M}) of the quark spectral function in Minkowski space,

\rho_{S_{V/S}}(p^{2}_{M})=2\, \mathrm{Im} \{S_{V/S}(-p_{M}^{2}-i\varepsilon)\}\ .

References

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  7. G. Comitini, arXiv:1803.02335 (2018)

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  14. F. Siringo and G. Comitini, Phys. Rev. D 103, 074014 (2021)

  15. G. Comitini, D. Rizzo, M. Battello, and F. Siringo, Phys. Rev. D 104, 074020 (2021)