3.1. Yang–Mills Theories
Let us present here an extended version of Yang–Mills theory that will allow us to illustrate the emergence of gauge symmetries. Our starting point is the most general quadratic and Lorentz-invariant Lagrangian giving rise to second-order differential equations that can be written for a set of
N vector fields
, with the latin indices (
running from 1 to
N:
up to a boundary term which we skip here. We have introduced the notation
, where ∇ is the affine connection compatible with
, and we have introduced the non-degenerate matrix
and the mass matrix
. The case which is especially interesting for us is the massless case
, since it is a generic feature that field theories emerging around Fermi points in condensed-matter systems give rise to massless excitations [
5]. Masses can be acquired in a second step through a Higgs-like mechanism. However, for the moment, we will keep the
term since it is instructive to study the massive and massless cases as representatives of the two possible situations described in the previous section regarding the mechanism for the emergence of gauge symmetries. The equations of motion can be derived straightforwardly from action (
3) by taking a simple functional derivative,
It is possible to identify a set of symmetries for this theory associated with the following transformations:
where
are functions that need to obey
The currents associated with these symmetries, once evaluated on shell, can be written as follows [
15]:
Notice that the first part of this equation is a superpotential and hence it does not contribute to the charges. Furthermore, the second term vanishes if we restrict ourselves to the subspace
of solutions of Equation (
4) satisfying
. Hence, projecting onto the subspace
makes the current acquire the form of a gauge current encapsulated in Equation (
2). Notice that although Equation (
7) is associated with a transformation whose generators
are spacetime-dependent local functions, it does not constitute a gauge transformation a priori. Gauge transformations are associated with local transformations whose generators are arbitrary functions of spacetime. However, in our case they are constrained to obey Equation (
6). Thus, the transformation we are discussing does not constitute a gauge transformation from the beginning although it is generated by local functions. A further discussion of this point with a concrete example can be found in Sections 2.1 and 2.2 from [
14].
The projection introduced above is quite natural once we consider the dynamical equations that the scalar fields
obey, which can be obtained by taking the divergence in Equation (
4):
We have a set of sourceless Klein–Gordon equations for these scalars , and hence it is quite natural to restrict ourselves to the subspace defined by , since there are no Lorentz-invariant sources that might generate excitations of these scalars. From this point onwards, there are two possible situations which we discuss below.
Massive case . In this case no gauge symmetries emerge, since the putative emergent gauge symmetries from Equations (
5) and (
6) do not leave
invariant. Actually, they translate into the following map for
which takes
to a non-vanishing value for
.
Massless case . In this case gauge symmetries emerge naturally, since the transformations from Equations (
5) and (
6) become gauge symmetries by leaving the scalar fields
invariant (note that the last term of (
9) now vanishes).
It is better to pause at this point to summarize what we have obtained so far and what are we pursuing for the non-linear theory. We began with the most general Lorentz-invariant vector field theory for a set of
N vector fields
. If these vector fields represent massless excitations, we have shown that the coupling to a conserved current leads to a set of sourceless Klein–Gordon equations for the scalar sector of the theory. Since no excitations can be produced within that subspace, we have removed the scalar sector by projecting onto the subspace
. The resulting effective field theory that we have found displays emergent gauge symmetries given by Equation (
5), with
satisfying
. Notice that these transformations are just the residual gauge symmetries of linearized Yang–Mills theory after the Lorenz gauge is chosen.
The next natural step would be to study non-linear vector-field theories. Among the possible non-linear vector-field theories, Yang–Mills theories are special since their gauge symmetry avoids the propagation of ghosts when one linearizes them. Furthermore, they are such that they can be derived from the linear theory through a bootstrapping procedure in which one analyzes the self-coupling of the theory [
19]. However, such procedure does not lead to a unique theory by itself due to the ambiguities inherent to the definition of a Noether current [
20,
21], at least not with further specifications [
22]. The combination of the mechanism introduced here for the emergence of gauge symmetries with the bootstrapping procedure allowed us to make an incursion on the non-linear vector-field theories that are free from instabilities. We present here the main idea and refer the reader to [
15] for further technical details.
The idea of the bootstrapping procedure is the following. Consider a linear field theory displaying a symmetry and hence having a conserved current which we call
. We assume that our theory couples perturbatively to such current in such a way that we recover a smooth limit for the free theory when we take the coupling constant to be zero. We call such a coupling constant
g. Thus, schematically we will have equations of motion of the form
To derive the right-hand side from an action principle, we would need to add a suitable interacting term
to the action such that
However, notice that
, which needs to be also symmetric under the transformations that we introduce for the bootstrapping procedure, would contribute to the conserved current due to Noether’s theorem. Hence, we would obtain a contribution to the current of the form
which we would want to derive from an action principle, from
. In this way, we would obtain an infinite set of constraints for the successive actions
and
. More concretely, we would have
where
is obtained from
through Noether’s theorem. In this way, it is possible to obtain a potentially infinite set of equations which we would need to solve in order to find the non-linear theory described by the action
There are two points we want to stress. First, we need to remember that conserved currents are defined up to the addition of identically conserved quantities. Hence, at each order in the bootstrapping procedure we have ambiguities that need to be taken into account. For instance, in the gravitational context they are crucial to recover general relativity from Fierz–Pauli theory through this procedure [
23]. Second, at each order we need to ensure that the generated contribution to the action
is still invariant under the symmetry transformations that were used to define the current
. This imposes non-trivial constraints on the partial actions [
15].
For the case of emergent Yang–Mills theories, we need to consider the following quadratic action as the starting point,
which is the action from Equation (
3) with
, as we demand for the emergence of gauge symmetries. We have omitted the material content which we will discuss later, and we have restricted ourselves to the case
for the sake of simplicity. The symmetries that we can identify to begin the bootstrapping procedure are the following rigid transformations:
where
is the arbitrary real constant and
is a constant tensor antisymmetric in the first two indices, i.e., obeying
.
It turns out that the bootstrapping procedure imposes two non-trivial constraints that must be fulfilled to be self-consistent [
15]. On the one hand, the constants
must be the structure constants of a semi-simple compact Lie Algebra for the symmetry in Equation (
15) to be also a symmetry of
. On the other hand, we need to impose the constraint
to avoid breaking the bootstrapping procedure since, if we do not impose it, the equations of motion cannot be derived from an action principle. The resulting action from the bootstrapping procedure can be written as
where
g is the coupling constant introduced above,
is a Lagrange multiplier that enforces the constraints
, and we have introduced the object
This resulting theory has the properties that we were looking for. Namely, its
limit is the free emergent linearized Yang–Mills theory discussed above. The same comment applies to the infinitesimal emergent non-linear gauge transformations, given by
with the fields
obeying
These reduce to the emergent gauge symmetries of the linear theory from Equations (
5) and (
6) in the
. These transformations are such that they preserve the subspace
defined by the constraint
. Finally, we notice that the inclusion of matter is straightforward, since the bootstrapping procedure in the matter sector is disentangled from the bootstrapping procedure in the gauge sector that we have sketched here. The self-consistency constraint that appears in the matter sector is that the fields need to transform under a representation of the gauge group whose associated Lie Algebra has the structure constants
that we introduced above. For scalar fields, this procedure needs two iterations, like for the Yang–Mills case, whereas for fermionic fields it requires just one iteration to be completed.
This has been just a brief summary of how an emergent Yang–Mills theory can be obtained by a suitable combination of the mechanism introduced in
Section 2 and the bootstrapping procedure. For further details, see [
15]. In the following we will focus on a situation that has not been studied previously.
3.2. Linear Graviton Physics
The discussion of the case for a symmetric tensor field
is completely parallel to the above section. The first step is to write down the most general quadratic Lorentz-invariant action for such a field. This means that the
-field is a good variable to describe our effective field theory. For instance, it can represent the deformations of a given condensed-matter-system near a Fermi point, as we have explained in the introduction. Therefore, the resulting effective theory does not need be gauge-invariant: this is definitely asking too much since everything we know about it at this stage is that it can be described by a field
. Explicitly, this action has the form
where indices are raised and lowered with the flat spacetime metric
, we have introduced the trace of the field
as
, and we have introduced the dimensionless parameters
and the mass parameters
.
We can also include a coupling to matter by adding a term of the form
to the previous Lagrangian, with the properties of
being discussed in more detail below (for the moment we will just assume that it is a symmetric tensor). The equations of motion can be computed by performing a variational derivative, which results in
where we have introduced the notation
and we will keep using it throughout this section.
Before moving forward, it is better to pause and discuss the values of the parameters
and
for which the system has a gauge symmetry from the beginning, in order to avoid those cases in the discussion of emergent gauge symmetries. We will follow the discussion of [
24]. On the one hand, for
, the equations of motion are invariant under the group of linearized transverse diffemorphisms, whose infinitesimal transformations are generated by a divergenceless vector field
as follows:
In addition, for
,
we can relax the condition on the divergence for the vector field
and recover the full group of linearized diffeomorphisms, i.e., one recovers the Fierz–Pauli theory [
25], i.e., transformations generated by arbitrary vector fields
as
We could have considered a set of transformations that is slightly more general than the ones introduced here, namely transformations generated also by a vector field
as
However, these transformations do not add anything new. To understand this, we first notice that when we put the masses equal to zero
, a field redefinition of the form
(with
in order for it to be invertible) leaves the functional form of the Lagrangian invariant at the expense of changing the parameters
and
as [
24]
Had we begun with the case
, for which the theory is invariant under the whole set of diffeomorphisms, we would have ended up with new parameters
and
Furthermore, notice that within this new parametrization of field space, the theory is not invariant under the standard transformations of the form (
23) but transformations of the form (
24) with
. Thus, it is clear that the more general set of transformations of the form (
24) is included in the set of transformations of the form of ordinary linear diffeomorphisms (
23) upon, possibly, a field redefinition. Hence, we will focus only on the set of transformations (
23) since the transformations (
24) do not add anything new.
On the other hand, if
and the parameters
satisfy the relations
and
, we have the following Weyl transformations, generated by a scalar field
, as gauge transformations:
This Weyl symmetry can be combined with transverse diffeomorphisms to build the so-called linearized WTDiff (Weyl transverse-diffeomorphism) invariant gravity by choosing
, which guarantees that transverse diffeomorphisms are gauge symmetries as explained above. This forces
and
(this corresponds precisely to the case of considering the theory with
and performing a putative field redefinition of the form (
25) with the limiting value
for which the transformation becomes singular. Thus, it is not a true field redefinition since one can not recover the trace of
h from the transformed field [
24]).
The Fierz–Pauli theory (with the whole linearized group of diffeomorphisms) and WTDiff (with linearized Weyl and transverse diffeomorphism transformations) are the two largest possible gauge symmetry groups for a tensor field
[
24].
Once we have discussed the choices of parameters for which the theory displays gauge symmetries, let us go back to the discussion of emergent gauge symmetries. We will be assuming that the parameters
are such that the theory is
generic, in the sense that the coefficients of the different terms that will appear from now in equations of motion, conserved currents, etc. do not vanish. Furthermore, we will assume that they take generic values different from the ones that endow action (
20) with gauge symmetries from the beginning. The discussion of special choices of the parameters has been moved to
Appendix A since it just involves the analysis of different particular cases and does not affect the main point of this section.
Following the discussion in
Section 2, the first step is to identify a set of physical symmetries in our system that can become potential gauge symmetries. The key observation is that the following transformations
with the field
obeying the following conditions,
are physical symmetries of the action defined in Equation (
20). This can be seen by computing their Noether currents. The previous expression can be written in a more illustrative form as
with
. As we are interested in physical symmetries that can become emergent gauge symmetries, let us concentrate on the massless case. Then we have
Taking the trace of the equation on the first line (contracting with ), we obtain that and thus . Imposing also that goes to zero at infinity, we deduce that .
At this stage and as an aside, it is interesting to realize that the condition
for a given vector field
can be extracted by requiring that the infinitesimal transformations from Equation (
31) leave the subspace of
invariant, obeying the following (putative gauge) condition of the form
Let us now pass to explicitly analyze the structure of the Noether charges. Applying Noether’s theorem to the symmetries satisfying Equation (
31) and suitably rearranging the terms, we get the following expression for the current with
,
where the terms in the previous expressions read
The charges associated with these currents
do not identically vanish as long as we avoid the particular choices of parameters discussed above. We can also check that by restricting to a subspace of solutions satisfying the condition (
35) one is still not able to make all Noether charges associated with the symmetry
to vanish with full generality.
However, we can focus our attention on a reduced set of symmetries, defined as transformations of the form (
31) with the generators obeying
Notice that these conditions automatically ensure that
, since they correspond to independently putting to zero the two terms entering the definition of
in (
33). It is not difficult to realize that the corresponding Noether charges all vanish when restricted to a subspace of solutions of the theory, which we call
, characterized by the conditions
The conditions from Equation (
41) for the transformations (
31) introduced above precisely correspond to the subset of such transformations that preserve the conditions from Equation (
42). We will come back to this point shortly. Furthermore, notice that the conditions defining this subspace are Lorentz-invariant themselves.
To see why when we restrict ourselves to the subspace of solutions
the Noether charges of the symmetries satisfying Equation (
41) identically vanish, it is useful to notice that we have rearranged the conserved current (
36) in a sum of four pieces, where:
- 1
The first term, , vanishes on shell within the subspace ;
- 2
The second term, given by the divergence of , is a superpotential;
- 3
The third term, , vanishes identically if we take the transformations such that ;
- 4
The fourth term, , is such that it also identically vanishes within the subspace .
This discussion allows us to conclude that if we define a projection onto the subspace , defined by the constraints and , of the massless theory, these physical symmetries become emergent gauge symmetries within that subspace. We will discuss in a moment how this subspace could be selected dynamically.
In addition to the diffeomorphism-like transformations from Equation (
31) already discussed, we can also ask whether the Weyl transformations introduced in Equation (
30) can become emergent gauge symmetries using the same mechanism. The first step is identifying the following Weyl-like physical symmetries of the theory, given by the transformations
where the scalar field
needs to obey the following equation:
Taking the trace of this equation and considering the case
, we find the condition
and plugging it back in (
43) we find the condition
for the Weyl transformations to be symmetries of the theory. The solutions to this equations are of the following form
Now, we can compute the Noether currents associated with these symmetries which read
where we recall that we have set the masses to zero
. To ensure that these transformations correspond to gauge symmetries, we need to ensure that they have trivial Noether charges. For that purpose, we have two options.
First case:. If we take
we need to restrict ourselves to the subspace
in order to have a trivial current. However, notice that these transformations do not preserve such subspace and hence we would be in the first situation described in
Section 2, namely the non-emergence of gauge symmetry.
Second case:. In this second case we can relax the condition on
h to be
in order to have a trivial current. Notice that these transformations preserve the subspace
and hence this second option corresponds to the second situation described in
Section 2, i.e., the emergence of gauge symmetry. More explicitly, to have WTDiff emergent transformations, we need to restrict ourselves to the same subspace
introduced above. We recall that such space is defined by the conditions (
42) and that we need to choose it because the emergent Weyl gauge symmetries preserve them and the Noether currents restricted to such subspace give identically vanishing charges. Hence, we conclude that it is possible to also find emergent Weyl symmetries with the mechanism introduced in
Section 2.
It is interesting to realize that the space in which we find the emergence of gauge symmetries is the same independently of whether we are trying to find the closest theory to Fierz–Pauli theory or to linearized WTDiff within this emergent paradigm. In fact, a (non-transverse) diffeomorphism generated by a vector field with constant divergence , such as the ones we have considered above, is equivalent to the composition of a transverse diffeomorphisms generated by the transverse part of such vector field and a Weyl transformation generated by a constant scalar field with . Both of them can be seen to produce constant shifts in h and hence preserve the subspace . In other words, when we understand the conditions defining subspace , i.e., , as gauge fixing conditions for either Fierz–Pauli or linearized WTDiff, the residual gauge symmetries that leave such subspace invariant for both theories are exactly the same. Thus, whether one decides to understand the emergent gauge theory we have built as having a Fierz–Pauli flavor or a linearized WTDiff flavor is inconsequential for the discussion at the linear level.
Now, let us pass to discuss under which conditions the space
is selected naturally by the dynamics of the theory. If we assume that the tensor
is conserved, taking the divergence of the equations of motion uncovers a structural constraint:
Taking an additional divergence we find
Given this structural equation, which is a wave equation without a source, we can argue as we have already done before that the following solutions are selected dynamically,
Plugging this condition into Equation (
48) we obtain
and applying again the argument that the lack of sources selects naturally the trivial solution, we conclude that
Notice that this condition does not imply that the two terms in the previous expression are zero independently. For this to happen one needs to impose further constraints.
One possibility is to further require that the trace of
is a constant over spacetime. Taking the trace of the equations of motion for the field
and introducing the following notation
, we find
Taking a derivative, using the assumption of constant trace for the current, i.e.,
, and using also (
50) we obtain the following condition (assuming that the parameters do not take specific values, which we discuss in
Appendix A):
Again, for a generic system, and applying the argument that the lack of sources leads naturally to the trivial solution, we obtain the condition
. Inserting this condition in Equation (
52) we precisely see that the subspace
introduced in Equation (
42) is naturally recovered. Thus, under the assumption of coupling to a conserved current
with constant trace,
, we have found that the system develops emergent gauge symmetries that can either be understood as emergent diffeomorphisms or emergent Weyl-transverse diffeomorphisms.
Let us summarize the discussion concerning the emergence of gauge symmetries for the two-index symmetric tensor field
up to this point. We have managed to prove that for the most general Lorentz-invariant theory constructed from such tensor field, the mechanism presented in
Section 2 works and provides us with emergent gauge symmetries. At the linear level, the gauge transformations that emerge can be either understood as the manifestation within this emergent framework of either linearized diffeomorphisms or linearized Weyl and transverse diffeomorphisms transformations. To put it explicitly, consider any generic Lorentz-invariant theory of
which fulfills the following conditions:
- 1
It describes massless excitations, namely the masses from the Lagrangian in Equation (
20) are equal to zero (
).
- 2
It couples to a two-index symmetric source that is conserved, i.e., divergenceless .
- 3
The source has constant trace, namely .
Our analysis implies that at the linear level, such a theory has a natural truncation that is indistinguishable from either Fierz–Pauli theory or linearized WTDiff theory in the gauge described by (
42). Notice that, instead of a projection to a given dynamical subspace of the theory, for these theories we understand the conditions
as gauge fixing conditions. Actually, we emphasize that Fierz–Pauli theory and linearized WTDiff are indistinguishable in this specific gauge, in the sense that the residual gauge transformations that emerge are of the same form. This is the reason for understanding this emergent gauge theory as the manifestation of either WTDiff and Fierz–Pauli theory in the emergent framework: both theories are indistinguishable in this specific gauge.
The extension to the non-linear regime of the gravitational case through a bootstrapping procedure is expected to be much more involved than for the vector-field case discussed in
Section 3.1 and it is left for future work. It constitutes an ongoing project on which we expect to report soon. Here we simply advance that the source of this difficulty arises, apart from the obvious technical complications appearing due to the presence of much more terms in the Lagrangian, from the nature of the non-linear terms appearing in the series generated through the bootstrapping procedure. Whereas for vector fields there appears a finite series that finishes after two iterations, for gravity we need to deal with an infinite “formal” series to obtain the non-linear theory [
22,
26].