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Phenomenology of a Noncommutative Spacetime Xavier Calmet University of Brussels (ULB)

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Phenomenology of a Noncommutative Spacetime. Xavier Calmet University of Brussels (ULB). Outline. Why do we believe in a minimal length Motivations and goals Local gauge symmetries on noncommutative spaces Bounds on space-time noncommutativity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Phenomenology of a Noncommutative Spacetime

Xavier Calmet

University of Brussels (ULB)

Page 2: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Outline

• Why do we believe in a minimal length • Motivations and goals• Local gauge symmetries on noncommutative

spaces• Bounds on space-time noncommutativity• Space-Time symmetries of noncommutative spaces• Gravity on noncommutative spaces• Conclusions

Page 3: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Why do we believe in a minimal length?

Page 4: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

A minimal length from QM and GR

Assumptions:• Hoop Conjecture (GR): if an amount of

energy E is confined to a ball of size R, where R < E, then that region will eventually evolve into a black hole.

• Quantum Mechanics: uncertainty relation.

Claim: GR and QM imply that no operational procedure exists which can measure a distance less than the Planck length.

Minimal Ball of uncertainty:Consider a particle of Energy E which is not already a Black hole.Its size r must satisfy:

where 1/E is the Compton wavelength and E comes from the Hoop Conjecture. We find:

Page 5: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Our concrete model:

We assume that the position operator

has discrete eigenvalues separated by a

distance lP or smaller.

Could an interferometer do better?

Page 6: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• Let us start from the standard inequality:

• Suppose that the position of a test mass is measured at time t=0 and again at a later time. The position operator at a later time t is:

• The commutator between the position operators at t=0 and t is

• so using the standard inequality we have:

Page 7: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• At least one of the uncertainties x(0) or x(t) must be larger than:

• A measurement of the discreteness of x(0) requires two position measurements, so it is limited by the greater of

x(0) or x(t):

• This is the bound we obtain from Quantum Mechanics.

Page 8: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• To avoid gravitational collapse, the size R of our measuring device must also grow such that R > M.

• However, by causality R cannot exceed t.• GR and causality imply:

• Combined with the QM bound, they require x > 1 in Planck units or

• This derivation was not specific to an interferometer - the result is device independent: no device subject to quantum mechanics, gravity and causality can exclude the quantization of position on distances less than the Planck length.

Page 9: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Motivations• Space-time noncommutativity is an extension of quantum

mechanics:

Heisenberg algebra:

is extended with new noncommutative (NC) relations:

that lead to new uncertainty relations:

Page 10: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• This is a nice analogy to the Heisenberg uncertainty relations.

• Quantum mechanics and general relativity considered together imply the existence of a minimal length in Nature: Gauge theories with a fundamental length are thus very interesting.

• A class of models with a fundamental length are gauge theories on noncommutative spaces (length ).

• Noncommutative coordinates appear in nature: e.g. electron in a strong B field (first Landau level can be described in terms of NC coordinates). Tools which are developed can prove useful for solid states physics.

Page 11: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• Idea of a noncommutative space-time is not new! It can be traced back to Snyder, Heisenberg, Pauli etc. At that time the motivation was that a cutoff could provide a solution to the infinities appearing in quantum field theory.

• Nowadays, we know that renormalization does the job for infinites of the Standard Model, but modifying space-time at short distances will help for quantum gravity.

Page 12: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• Furthermore, the Standard Model needs to be extended if it is

coupled to gravity since it is then inconsistent: noncommutative

gauge theories are a natural candidate to solve this problem.

• Another motivation is string theory where these noncommutative

relations appear. But the situation is in that case very different!

Page 13: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Gauge Symmetries on Noncommutative Spaces

Page 14: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Goals

• How does the Standard Model of particle physics which is a gauge theory based on the group SU(3)SU(2)U(1), emerge as a low energy action of a noncommutative gauge theory?

• The main difficulty is to implement symmetries on NC spaces.

• We need to understand how to implement SU(N) gauge symmetries on NC spaces.

• Are there space-time symmetries (Lorentz invariance) for noncommutative spaces?

Page 15: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Symmetries and Particle Physicscommutative space-time case

Impose invariance of the action under certain transformations.

Two symmetries are crucial in order to formulate the Standard Model of particle physics:

- Space-time: Lorentz invariance, and combinations of C, P and T e.g.:

- Local gauge symmetries

Page 16: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Enveloping algebra approach to NC

• Goal: derive low energy effective actions for NC actions which are too difficult to handle.

• Strategy: map NC actions to an effective action on a commutative space-time such that higher order operators describe this special property of space-time.

• There is an alternative to taking fields in the Lie algebra: consider fields in the enveloping algebra

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Page 17: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Definitions and Gauge Transf.

def. 1: consider the algebra

algebra of noncommutative functions

def. 2: generators of the algebra: ``coordinates´´

def. 3: : elements of the algebra

infinitesimal gauge transformation:

note that the coordinates do not transform under a

gauge transformation:

Page 18: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

one has:

that’s not covariant! Introduce a covariant coordinate

such that

i.e. let’s set

this implies:

that’s the central result: relation between coord. gauge fields and Yang-Mills fields!

That’s not trivial: problem with direct product!

Page 19: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Star product & Weyl quantization

def: commutative algebra of functions:

aim: construct a vector space isomorphism W. Choose a way to “decompose” elements of :

(basis):

Page 20: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

we need to def. the product (noncommutative multiplication) in :

Weyl quantization procedure:

Let us use the Campbell-Baker-Hausdorff formula:

We then have:

Page 21: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

to leading order:

We now have the first map:

we know how to replace the argument of the functions, i.e. the NC coordinates by usual coordinates: price to pay is the star product. This is done using the isomorphism .

The second map will map the function , this second map (Seiberg-Witten map) is linked to gauge invariance, more later.

Page 22: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Field TheoryLet us start from the relations:

the Yang-Mills gauge potential is defined as

has the usual transformation property:

The covariant coordinate leads to the Yang-Mills potential!

Page 23: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Local gauge theories on NC spaces• Let be Lie-algebra valued gauge transformations, the

commutator:

is a gauge transformation only for U(N) gauge transformations in the (anti)fundamental or adjoint representation.

Problem: Standard Model requires SU(N)!BUT, it can close for all groups if we take the fields and gauge transformations to be in the enveloping algebra:

Is there an infinite number of degrees of freedom? No! They can be reduced using Seiberg-Witten maps!

Page 24: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Consistency condition and Seiberg-Witten map

1. Replace the noncommutative variable by a commutative one. Price to pay is the introduction of the star product:

2. Let us consider the commutator once again:

Page 25: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Let us now assume that are in the enveloping algebra:

one finds

in 0th order in and

in the leading order in .

Page 26: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Previous partial differential equation is solved by:

Expanding the star product and the fields via the SW maps in the leading order in theta, one finds:

Page 27: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

SM on NC Space-TimeProblems:a) direct product of groups

b) charge quantization

c) Yukawa couplings

d) “Trace” in the enveloping algebra

Solutions:a) One can’t introduce 3 NC gauge potentials:

must remain covariant!

solution: introduce a master field:

SW map for

Note that

Page 28: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

b) Charge quantization problem:

solution to charge quantization: introduce n NC photons:

Too many degrees of freedom?

No Seiberg-Witten map!

there is only one classical photon!

Page 29: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

c) Yukawa couplings: left/right makes a difference!Complication for Yukawa couplings:

is not NC gauge invariant if transforms only on the r.h.s. or l.h.s.

Solution:

Hybrid SW map:

with

Page 30: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

d) trace for the gauge part of the action:

is a huge matrix. There is not a unique way to fix the trace, gauge inv. only requires:

Minimal model:

Page 31: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Other choice

Page 32: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime
Page 33: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

How to bound these models?

Tree levelTree level + test of

Lorentz inv.

Quantum levelQuantum level + test of

Lorentz inv.

Rigorous but low scale not a direct test: Warning!

High energy scale accessible but It’s maybe not yet clear how to build a quantum theory: Warning!

High energy accessible but not yet clear how to regularize this theory and not a direct test: Warning!

Page 34: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• What is θ?

0c01

Λ12

c02

Λ22

c03

Λ32

−c01

Λ12 0

c13

Λ42

c14

Λ52

−c02

Λ22 −

c13

Λ42 0

c24

Λ62

−c03

Λ32 −

c14

Λ52 −

c24

Λ62 0

⎜⎜⎜⎜⎜⎜⎜⎜⎜⎜

⎟⎟⎟⎟⎟⎟⎟⎟⎟⎟

So in principle we have 6 scales!

Page 35: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Bounds on NC scaleFrom colliders:• Lots of corrections to SM processes, but large background:

search for rare decays.• Smoking gun for NC: Z--> or Z--> g g.

• Limit on ΛNC from LEP is around 143 GeV.

Page 36: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Bounds on NC scaleFrom colliders:• Lots of corrections to SM processes, but large background:

search for rare decays.• Smoking gun for NC: Z--> or Z--> g g.

• Limit on ΛNC from LEP is around 250 GeV

From low energy experiments:•Bounds on

imply ΛNC 10TeV from atomic clock comparison (Be9).

Note that the bound comes from Lorentz violation, and is thus not a

“direct” test of the noncommutative nature of space-time.

Page 37: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

“Quantum Level” Bound

• One loop operator generated in NCQCD:

(Carlson et al. hep-ph/0107291), but there is a problem with that paper: operator giving the bound

is actually vanishing.

• They considered the one loop correction to the quark mass and wavefunction renormalization and performed their calculation using Pauli-Villars regularization:

Page 38: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• They considered 3 operators separately

• Bound from first operator: this is wrong!!! Let us look again at the matrix element:

• Using the Dirac equation it is obviously vanishing. Quarks are onshell at this order in perturbation theory.

Page 39: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Quantum Mechanics and EDM

• There are claims in the literature that EDMs can put very tight bounds on the scale for spacetime noncommutativity.

• A formulation of Quantum Mechanics on a NC spacetime is needed to address this question.

• Let us start from the QED action on a NC spacetime:

Page 40: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• Two maps lead to the following action:

Page 41: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• And the Dirac eq. easily follows:

• Let us now prepare the non-relativistic expansion:

• And we

Page 42: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• From this it is easy to obtain the low energy Hamiltonian:

• 3 operators are CP violating:

Page 43: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• Let us look at one of them:

• However it is not of the shape: i.e. there is no spin flip!

• Experiments searching for an EDM are not sensitive to this operator: there is no bound!

• These experiments measure the energy difference between a two-levels system. Here the effect cancels out.

Page 44: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Space-time symmetries of NC spaces

Consider NC:

Furthermore, one has the Heisenberg algebra:

Let us now do a variable transformation:

It leads to the following algebra:

Page 45: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Let us consider transformations of the commuting coordinates:

one also has

The invariant length is given by:

It is invariant if

We can now implement this transformation for the NC coordinates:

Page 46: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

The invariant length is given by:

the derivative is given by:

it transforms as

under a noncommutative Lorentz transformation.

Page 47: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

The NC Yang-Mills potential transforms as:

and the covariant derivative as:

The field strength transforms as:

and a spinor as:

Page 48: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• This represents an extension of special relativity. The limit 0 is well defined: one recovers the usual Lorentz invariance. Note: we do not deform the Poincaré algebra!

• It is easy to verify that the actions discussed previously are indeed invariant under these transformations.

• This symmetry is important because bounds on space-time noncommutativity come from bounds on Lorentz violation (atomic clocks). The bounds will be affected.

• Any operator derived from loop calculations must be invariant under this symmetry: beware of artifacts of regularization procedure.

Page 49: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• Let us look at the light cone of a photon on a NC spacetime:

• which is not !

• Let us now compute (at equal time) the expectation value of the commutator between and as done by Greenberg. It is proportional to

He concludes that microcausality is violated. However this precisely corresponds to our light cone: microcausality is not violated!

Is microcausality violated?

Page 50: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Quantization of Noncommutative QED

• Misuse of the term effective theory: mapped theory?

• Seiberg-Witten expansion is an expansion in .

• If one expands in and then quantize the theory (expansion in terms of one can miss important resummation effects.

• This is indeed the case because of the vertices phases as we shall see.

• Let us start from the unexpanded action:

• Fields are representation of the Lorentz group: quantize the fields which are in the enveloping algebra.

gg

g

Page 51: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• Add Faddeev-Popov terms

• Feynman rules are then given by:

Page 52: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• It is then straightforward to compute the beta function

• And the renormalized vertex :

• The quantized and renormalized action can then be mapped on a commutative spacetime.

• The vertex correction is given by

Page 53: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Gravity on Noncommutative Spaces

Page 54: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Gravity on noncommutative spaces

• Hypothesis: is a constant of nature and it has the same value in every coordinate frame.

• Well if that is the situation, what are the coordinate transformations allowed by the NC algebra:

• Let us consider the transformations:

and study the NC algebra:

• It is invariant iff

• The solutions are:

• They form a subgroup of 4-Volume preserving coord. transformations.

Page 55: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• We now want to implement this symmetry for a NC gravity action. We consider iso(3,1) but restrict ourselves to the coord. transformations that preserve

• Consider the enveloping algebra:

• Consistency condition:

Page 56: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• Differential equations:

0th order in :

1st order in :

Solution:

Now for the spin connection:

One thus has:

Page 57: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• For the field strength one has:

• classically one has:

• Note that our covariant derivative is torsion free.

• Field strength for the local Lorentz symmetry:

• Noncommutative Riemann tensor:

Page 58: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• we can then define a noncommutative Ricci tensor:

• and a noncommutative Ricci scalar:

• It is easy to see that the leading order correction is vanishing:

• with which vanishes!

• Second order corrections have to be calculated.

• However the result is quite complicated.

• It implies a that we need to know solutions to the consistency conditions to second order in theta.

• OK get ready for the result:

Page 59: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime
Page 60: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

• Action:

• Equations of motion

• Can be massaged into:

• Remarkable: on a canonical NC spacetime: the cosmological constant is an integration constant uncorrelated to parameters of the action!

Page 61: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Some open questions

• Understand how to formulate gravity on NC spaces (non constant ).

• CMB signatures of NC physics?• Do NC black holes have singularities? What about horizon?

Hawking radiation? Information loss?• Is quantum gravity formulated on NC spaces renormalizable? • Fine tuning issues and NC physics. Certain short distance

modifications of space-time can modify the high energy behavior of loops.

• New ideas to break gauge symmetries: after all lots of ideas come from solid state physics and we have quite a few models in solid state physics that are described by NC gauge theories. This will lead to new phenomenology for the LHC.

Page 62: Phenomenology of a   Noncommutative Spacetime

Conclusions• Noncommutative gauge theories are examples of non-local

theories with a minimal length.• SU(N) gauge symmetries, which are crucial for the Standard

Model, can be implemented on noncommutative spaces.• Noncommutative Lorentz transformations can be

introduced.• Constraints are not very severe! Bounds of the order of few

TeV only.• Lots of open issues e.g. Loops, general relativity: work in

progress!• Applications to solid state physics, cosmology etc.• Even if there is a grand desert, Planck scale physics might

be accessible with low energy experiments.• Exciting field in development.