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==VMD and Hidden Local Symmetry==
==VMD and Hidden Local Symmetry==
Whilst the ultraviolet description of the standard model is based on QCD, work over many decades has involved writing a low energy effective description of QCD, and further, positing a possible ``dual'' description. One such popular description is that of the hidden local symmetry <ref> Nonlinear Realization and Hidden Local Symmetries,Bando, Masako and Kugo, Taichiro and Yamawaki, Koichi, DOI: 10.1016/0370-1573(88)90019-1 </ref>. It is based on the idea that
Whilst the ultraviolet description of the standard model is based on QCD, work over many decades has involved writing a low energy effective description of QCD, and further, positing a possible ``dual`` description. One such popular description is that of the hidden local symmetry <ref> Nonlinear Realization and Hidden Local Symmetries,Bando, Masako and Kugo, Taichiro and Yamawaki, Koichi, DOI: 10.1016/0370-1573(88)90019-1 </ref>. The dual description is based on the idea of emergence of gauge symmetries in the infrared of strongly coupled theories. Gauge symmetries are not really physical symmetries (only the global elements of the local gauge group are physical). This emergent property of gauge symmetries was demonstrated in Seiberg duality <ref> Electric - magnetic duality in supersymmetric nonAbelian gauge theories , Seiberg, N., hep-th/9411149<\ref>



==Attacks on VMD==
==Attacks on VMD==

Revision as of 11:14, 22 November 2012

In physics, vector meson dominance (VMD) was a model developed by J. J. Sakurai[1] in the 1960s before the advent of Quantum chromodynamics in order to describe interactions between photons and hadronic matter.

In particular the hadronic components of the physical photon consist of the lightest vector mesons and . Therefore, interactions between photons and hadronic matter occur by the exchange of a hadron between the dressed photon and the hadronic target.

Background

Measurements of the interaction between energetic photons and hadrons show that the interaction is much more intense than expected by the interaction of merely photons with the hadron's electric charge. Furthermore, the interaction of energetic photons with protons is similar to the interaction of photons with neutrons[2] in spite of the fact that the electric charge structures of protons and neutrons are substantially different.

According to VMD, the photon is a superposition of the pure electromagnetic photon (which interacts only with electric charges) and vector meson.

Just after 1970, when more accurate data on the above processes became available, some discrepancies with the VMD predictions appeared and new extensions of the model were published.[3] These theories are known as Generalized Vector Meson Dominance theories (GVMD).


VMD and Hidden Local Symmetry

Whilst the ultraviolet description of the standard model is based on QCD, work over many decades has involved writing a low energy effective description of QCD, and further, positing a possible ``dual`` description. One such popular description is that of the hidden local symmetry [4]. The dual description is based on the idea of emergence of gauge symmetries in the infrared of strongly coupled theories. Gauge symmetries are not really physical symmetries (only the global elements of the local gauge group are physical). This emergent property of gauge symmetries was demonstrated in Seiberg duality Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). J.I. Friedman summarizes the situation of VMD as follows: "...this eliminated the model [VMD] as a possible description of deep inelastic scattering... calculations of the generalized vector-dominance failed in general to describe the data over the full kinematic range..."

The theoretical basis of VMD raised doubts as well. According to VMD a photon is a superposition of pure electromagnetic photon which always moves in the speed of light and hadronic matter which always moves in lower speed. Therefore the VMD idea seems to contradict Special Relativity.[5]

Today, VMD is not considered as part of the Standard Model.[6]

Hadronic contribution to the photon propagator in the VMD model

Notes

  1. ^ Theory of strong interactions, J. J. Sakurai, Ann. Phys., 11 (1960)
  2. ^ Bauer, T. H., Spital, R. D., Yennie, D. R. and Pipkin, F. M, The hadronic properties of the photon in high-energy interactions, Rev. Mod. Phys. 50, 261–436 (1978), pages 292-293
  3. ^ Generalized vector dominance and inelastic electron nucleon scattering—the small ′ region, Sakurai J. J. and Schildknecht D., Phys. Lett., 40B (1972) 121
  4. ^ Nonlinear Realization and Hidden Local Symmetries,Bando, Masako and Kugo, Taichiro and Yamawaki, Koichi, DOI: 10.1016/0370-1573(88)90019-1
  5. ^ E. Comay Remarks on Photon-Hadron Interactions, Apeiron vol. 10, 87 (2003)
  6. ^ H.B. O’Connell, B.C. Pearce, A.W. Thomas and A.G. Williams, Rho-omega mixing, vector meson dominance and the pion form-factor, Prog. Nucl. Part. Phys. 39 (1997) 201-252