An introduction to the confinement problem

Bibliographic Information

An introduction to the confinement problem

Jeff Greensite

(Lecture notes in physics, v. 821)

Springer, c2011

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book addresses the confinement problem, which quite generally deals with the behavior of non-abelian gauge theories, and the force which is mediated by gauge fields, at large distances. The word "confinement" in the context of hadronic physics originally referred to the fact that quarks and gluons appear to be trapped inside mesons and baryons, from which they cannot escape. There are other, and possibly deeper meanings that can be attached to the term, and these will be explored in this book. Although the confinement problem is far from solved, much is now known about the general features of the confining force, and there are a number of very well motivated theories of confinement which are under active investigation. This volume gives a both pedagogical and concise introduction and overview of the main ideas in this field, their attractive features, and, as appropriate, their shortcomings.

Table of Contents

Introduction.- Global Symmetry, Local Symmetry, and the Lattice.- What is Confinement?- Order Parameters for Confinement.- Properties of the Confining Force.- Confinement From Center Vortices I.- Monopoles, Calorons, and Dual Superconductivity.- Coulomb Confinement.- Ghosts, Gluons, and Dyson-Schwinger Equations.- Large-N, Planar Diagrams, and the Gluon-Chain Model.- The Vacuum Wavefunctional.- Anti-deSitter Space and Confinement.- Concluding Remarks.- Index.

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