Lecture 5 Exercise
Lecture 5. Massless Amplitudes* Zhong-Zhi Xianyu
In the last lecture, we studied the minimal couplings for a matter particle emitting a massless spinning particle and derived nontrivial constraints for them. Now we turn to self-interactions of massless spinning particles. From now on, we will shamelessly assume the analyticity of amplitudes in general. That is, the most singular behavior in an amplitude can only be on-shell poles where the amplitudes should factorize consistently.
For certain classes of interaction, the constraints of analyticity plus spacetime symmetry is so strong that it is possible to determine the tree-level amplitudes completely. (We will specify what does tree-level mean without a field theory.) This is traditionally called a bootstrap program. The starting point is 3-point amplitudes (amplitudes with three external states). Then we use various consistent conditions to build 4-point and higher-point functions. The 3-point amplitudes are certainly not physical objects, but they are useful building blocks.
We will focus on 3-point amplitudes in this lecture and 4-point in the next one. However, before this, we need to introduce a bit more language to properly describe these object, namely the spinor-helicity variables.
§1 Spinor-Helicity Formalism
In short, in spinor-helicity formalism, we use spinors to describe all kinematic dependences of an amplitude. Let us make it clear from the very beginning: There is no fermions involved in our study (although fermions can certainly be included in this formalism) and all spinors are c-number valued.
Recall that a scattering amplitude
However, this representation is inconvenient for two reasons:
are constrained by on-shell conditions, so they include redundant degrees of freedom. - More importantly, for massless states, the polarization tensors
are defined only up to gauge transforms: They are not Lorentz covariant and even more redundant.
The spinor-helicity variables are designed to overcome these problems and to provide a better representation. The trick is this: We use the fact that the Lorentz group is, at least locally, a product of two
Recall that an
and
The spinor indices can be raised/lowered by
Now comes a key observation: Since a Lorentz vector
There is another representation: Using
There is a useful identity for
Now, let us consider kinematics of massless amplitudes.
First, all on-shell momenta are null:
A conventional notation:
Thus,
The inner products are Lorentz scalars:
In particular:
In case you find these angle and square brackets too abstract, let us work them out explicitly. Let
Then, you can check that a possible set of spinors are:
spin down | spin up left-handed
Clearly, from a null
As for the phase, we can fix it for a reference momentum
In particular, under a given LGT with respect to
We have turned all null momenta into spinors. To use them to represent scattering amplitudes, we need to use spinors to express polarization tensors.
Taking spin-1 polarization as an example: Let a photon have
has one Lorentz index ; has helicity or or ; is dimensionless. ( is dim-1/2)
Clearly, only
Generalization to massless spin-
Now, let us check how does
Here we have used
which is the familiar rule
So, the upshot of this section is that a massless scattering amplitude can be constructed entirely from angle and square brackets, so that we can forget about polarization tensors.
§2 Three-Point Massless Amplitudes
Armed with spinor-helicity variables, we can now try to carry out a program of constructing all possible scattering amplitudes consistent with basic principles. Starting from 3-point amplitudes as "seeds."
In reality, no 3-point amplitude is nonzero due to kinematic constraint:
3 real momenta | on-shell | Translation invariance | Lorentz invariance
In other words, all independent Lorentz scalars constructed from external momenta are zero:
Here we have converted to a more conventional notation
However, if we allow
Also, throughout the rest of this lecture (and the next), we switch to a convention that all momenta point inward. That is, all out-state momenta are flipped, and all out-state helicities flipped:
- The momentum conservation now reads
; - An outgoing state of
helicity is endowed with a polarization tensor .
Given 3 massless particles of species
where, for example, we use
Now, we constrain the form of
First, we consider the Poincar'e symmetry:
a. First,
So, we conclude that either
Next, we consider separate LGTs, say, separate rotations for Particle
This almost fixes the form of
Then, the above transform rules imply:
Therefore,
Similarly, we can try an ansatz with square brackets and get:
We have used up all symmetry constraints. Next, we use the analytic properties. Note that
and
Negative dimensions are not allowed as they give pole in
So, to summarize:
Moreover, parity swaps
Let us emphasize again that these results (and the following special cases) do not rely on either a quantum field theory or its perturbative expansion and so are fully non-perturbative.
Examples Now let us look at concrete examples. We will only consider amplitudes of three particles of the same spin
Of course, the three spin-
To say more about them, we need a generalized version of spin-statistics. Basically, spin-statistics says that the exchange of two identical bosonic/fermionic particles yields a phase of
Here we adopt a generalized spin-statistics, which is essentially a prescription (or, a choice of basis) saying that we get a phase of
Massless odd-spin particles cannot have cubic self-interaction with less than 3 species.
In particular, a photon cannot have cubic self-interaction (even non-perturbatively). However, this does not mean that a photon cannot self-interact; It can at the 4-point level. (You may know light-by-light scattering. We may come back to this example later.)
Let us look at the special cases of spin-1 and spin-2.
For spin-1:
At this point,
Note that the 3-point amplitude
From a QFT viewpoint: the
For spin-2, we can have a single species being self-interacting. So we will only consider one species for simplicity and drop the flavor (species) index:
Again, we take
By the way, at the 3-point level, we see again a curious fact that the kinematic factor of
Exercise
(1) For null momentum
Using
We can decompose this matrix into the outer product of the left and right spinors. For the circumstances where
So the decomposition is
and
We use the antisymmetric tensor to raise the indexes, which gives the covariant form of the tensor
This will give out the form of the covariant matrix
Given the relationship
(2) Please show, for a null momentum
For a null momentum, the ket
The 3 independent LGTs are
- Rotation around
: -type transform: -type transform:
First consider the rotation around
So ket
Then, we calculate the transformation matrix for the
where
And the rotation matrix
So the total transformation matrix is
The ket
Another
The ket
(3) Compute the tree-level 3-point amplitude of 3 gluons
(4) How does a photon talk to a graviton? Can a photon be weighty and can a graviton be charged? Please answer these questions by going through the following steps.
(a) Please find all 3-point massless amplitudes of 1 spin-1 and 2 spin-2 particles consistent with LGT properties. Please do the same for 2 spin-1 and 1 spin-1 particles.
(b) Apply various consistent conditions to identify consistent amplitudes among results from (a). How many different ways can a photon talk to a graviton? Which one is the one realized in general relativity?
(5) [This is a non-exercise; Do it only if you really want to!] Please start from the Einstein-Hilbert action
Comments on References
Spinor-helicity formalism is commonly taught in modern textbooks of quantum field theory, such as [2] and [3], but the conventions may differ a lot. So, be careful. In particular, the convention used in our lectures is not identical to any of references mentioned here and below.
Consistent three-point and four-point massless amplitudes are originally studied in [4]. See also [5] for a nice pedagogical review.
References
[1] S. Weinberg, The Quantum theory of fields. Vol. 1: Foundations. Cambridge University Press, 6, 2005.
[2] M. D. Schwartz, Quantum Field Theory and the Standard Model. Cambridge University Press, 3, 2014.
[3] M. Srednicki, Quantum field theory. Cambridge University Press, 1, 2007.
[4] P. Benincasa and F. Cachazo, "Consistency Conditions on the S-Matrix of Massless Particles," arXiv:0705.4305 [hep-th].
[5] C. Cheung, "TASI lectures on scattering amplitudes.," in Theoretical Advanced Study Institute in Elementary Particle Physics: Anticipating the Next Discoveries in Particle Physics, pp. 571–623. 2018. arXiv:1708.03872 [hep-ph].
