In quantum field theory, the Wightman distributions can be analytically continued to analytic functions in Euclidean space with the domain restricted to the ordered set of points in Euclidean space with no coinciding points.[1] These functions are called the Schwinger functions (named after Julian Schwinger) and they are real-analytic, symmetric under the permutation of arguments (antisymmetric for fermionic fields), Euclidean covariant and satisfy a property known as reflection positivity. Properties of Schwinger functions are known as Osterwalder–Schrader axioms (named after Konrad Osterwalder and Robert Schrader).[2] Schwinger functions are also referred to as Euclidean correlation functions.
Here we describe Osterwalder–Schrader (OS) axioms for a Euclidean quantum field theory of a Hermitian scalar field
\phi(x)
x\inRd
The Schwinger functions of
\phi
Sn(x1,\ldots,xn)\equiv\langle\phi(x1)\phi(x2)\ldots\phi(xn)\rangle, xk\inRd.
OS axioms from are numbered (E0)-(E4) and have the following meaning:
Temperedness axiom (E0) says that Schwinger functions are tempered distributions away from coincident points. This means that they can be integrated against Schwartz test functions which vanish with all their derivatives at configurations where two or more points coincide. It can be shown from this axiom and other OS axioms (but not the linear growth condition) that Schwinger functions are in fact real-analytic away from coincident points.
Euclidean covariance axiom (E1) says that Schwinger functions transform covariantly under rotations and translations, namely:
Sn(x1,\ldots,xn)=Sn(Rx1+b,\ldots,Rxn+b)
for an arbitrary rotation matrix
R\inSO(d)
b\inRd
Symmetry axiom (E3) says that Schwinger functions are invariant under permutations of points:
Sn(x1,\ldots,xn)=Sn(x\pi(1),\ldots,x\pi(n))
where
\pi
\{1,\ldots,n\}
Cluster property (E4) says that Schwinger function
Sp+q
SpSq
\limb\toSp+q(x1,\ldots,xp,xp+1+b,\ldots,xp+q+b) =Sp(x1,\ldots,xp)Sq(xp+1,\ldots,xp+q)
The limit is understood in the sense of distributions. There is also a technical assumption that the two groups of points lie on two sides of the
x0=0
b
0 | |
x | |
p>0, |
0 | |
x | |
p+1 |
0 | |
,\ldots,x | |
p+q |
<0, b0=0.
Positivity axioms (E2) asserts the following property called (Osterwalder–Schrader) reflection positivity. Pick any arbitrary coordinate τ and pick a test function fN with N points as its arguments. Assume fN has its support in the "time-ordered" subset of N points with 0 < τ1 < ... < τN. Choose one such fN for each positive N, with the f's being zero for all N larger than some integer M. Given a point
x
x\theta
\summ,n\int
dx | |
d | |
1 |
…
dx | |
d | |
m |
dy | |
d | |
1 |
…
dy | |
d | |
n |
Sm+n(x1,...,xm,y1,...,yn)f
* | |
m) |
fn(y1,...,yn)\geq0
where * represents complex conjugation.
Sometimes in theoretical physics literature reflection positivity is stated as the requirement that the Schwinger function of arbitrary even order should be non-negative if points are inserted symmetrically with respect to the
\tau=0
S2n(x1,...,x
\theta | |
1)\geq |
0
This property indeed follows from the reflection positivity but it is weaker than full reflection positivity.
One way of (formally) constructing Schwinger functions which satisfy the above properties is through the Euclidean path integral. In particular, Euclidean path integrals (formally) satisfy reflection positivity. Let F be any polynomial functional of the field φ which only depends upon the value of φ(x) for those points x whose τ coordinates are nonnegative. Then
\intl{D}\phiF[\phi(x)]F[\phi(x\theta)]*e-S[\phi]=\intl{D}\phi0
\int | |
\phi+(\tau=0)=\phi0 |
l{D}\phi+
-S+[\phi+] | |
F[\phi | |
+]e |
\int | |
\phi-(\tau=0)=\phi0 |
l{D}\phi-
\theta] | |
F[(\phi | |
-) |
*
-S-[\phi-] | |
e |
.
Since the action S is real and can be split into
S+
\phi+
S-
\phi-
The Osterwalder–Schrader theorem[4] states that Euclidean Schwinger functions which satisfy the above axioms (E0)-(E4) and an additional property (E0') called linear growth condition can be analytically continued to Lorentzian Wightman distributions which satisfy Wightman axioms and thus define a quantum field theory.
This condition, called (E0') in, asserts that when the Schwinger function of order
n
f
|Sn(f)|\leq\sigman|f|C ⋅ ,
where
C\inN
|f|C ⋅
N=C ⋅ n
|f|N=
\sup | |
|\alpha|\leqN,x\inRd |
|(1+|x|)ND\alphaf(x)|,
and
\sigman
\sigman\leqA(n!)B
A,B
Linear growth condition is subtle as it has to be satisfied for all Schwinger functions simultaneously. It also has not been derived from the Wightman axioms, so that the system of OS axioms (E0)-(E4) plus the linear growth condition (E0') appears to be stronger than the Wightman axioms.
At first, Osterwalder and Schrader claimed a stronger theorem that the axioms (E0)-(E4) by themselves imply the Wightman axioms, however their proof contained an error which could not be corrected without adding extra assumptions. Two years later they published a new theorem, with the linear growth condition added as an assumption, and a correct proof. The new proof is based on a complicated inductive argument (proposed also by Vladimir Glaser),[5] by which the region of analyticity of Schwinger functions is gradually extended towards the Minkowski space, and Wightman distributions are recovered as a limit. The linear growth condition (E0') is crucially used to show that the limit exists and is a tempered distribution.
Osterwalder's and Schrader's paper also contains another theorem replacing (E0') by yet another assumption called
\check{(E0)
\check{(E0)
An alternative approach to axiomatization of Euclidean correlators is described by Glimm and Jaffe in their book.[6] In this approach one assumes that one is given a measure
d\mu
\phi\inD'(Rd)
S(f)=\inte\phi(f)d\mu, f\inD(Rd)
which is assumed to satisfy properties OS0-OS4:
z=(z1,\ldots,zn)\mapsto
n | |
S\left(\sum | |
i=1 |
zifi\right)
z\inRn
n
fi\inD(Rd)
d\mu
S(f)
f
|S(f)|\leq\exp\left(C\intddx|f(x)|\right)
S(f)
f(x)\mapstof(Rx+b)
fi\inD(Rd)
x0>0
\thetafi(x)=fi(\thetax)
\theta
Mij=S(fi+\thetafj)
(D'(Rd),d\mu)
Although the above axioms were named by Glimm and Jaffe (OS0)-(OS4) in honor of Osterwalder and Schrader, they are not equivalent to the Osterwalder–Schrader axioms.
Given (OS0)-(OS4), one can define Schwinger functions of
\phi
d\mu
Note however that the full quantum field theory will contain infinitely many other local operators apart from
\phi
\phi2
\phi4
\phi
d\mu
To summarize, the axioms called (OS0)-(OS4) by Glimm and Jaffe are stronger than the OS axioms as far as the correlators of the field
\phi
These axioms were proposed by Edward Nelson.[7] See also their description in the book of Barry Simon.[8] Like in the above axioms by Glimm and Jaffe, one assumes that the field
\phi\inD'(Rd)
d\mu
\phi