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Joint Lecture Groningen-Osaka

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1 Joint Lecture Groningen-Osaka
Spontaneous Breaking of Chiral Symmetry in Hadron Physics 30 Sep 09:00- CEST/16:00- JST Atsushi HOSAKA 07 Oct 09:00- CEST/16:00- JST Nuclear Structure 21 Oct 09:00- CEST/16:00- JST Nasser KALANTAR-NAYESTANAKI 28 Oct 09:00- CET/17:00- JST Low-energy tests of the Standard Model 25 Nov 09:00- CET/17:00- JST Rob TIMMERMANS 02 Dec 09:00- CET/17:00- JST Relativistic chiral mean field model description of finite nuclei 09 Dec 09:00- CET/17:00- JST Hiroshi TOKI 16 Dec 09:00- CET/17:00- JST WRAP-UP/DISCUSSION

2 Spontaneous Breaking of Chiral Symmetry in Hadron Physics
• What does spontaneous mean? • What is the breaking of Symmetry? • What is chiral? • What is hadron?

3 Contents • General discussions Aspects of symmetry and
of spontaneous breaking • Concrete examples NJL model for hadron physics

4 What is symmetric and What is broken symmetry

5 Symmetry The key concept in the modern Physics Example of translation

6 Symmetry The key concept in the modern Physics Example of translation
Symmetric Translation causes nothing Uniform density

7 Symmetry The key concept in the modern Physics Example of translation
Symmetric Translation causes nothing Uniform density Less symmetric

8 Symmetry The key concept in the modern Physics Example of translation
Symmetric Translation causes nothing Uniform density Less symmetric Translation changes the location of the cluster Localize Clusterize

9 Symmetry Example of rotation Symmetric

10 Symmetry Example of rotation Symmetric Rotation causes nothing
Spherical

11 Symmetry Example of rotation Symmetric Rotation causes nothing
Spherical Less symmetric

12 Symmetry Example of rotation Symmetric Rotation causes nothing
Spherical Less symmetric Rotation changes the appearance Deformed

13 Symmetry Example of rotation Symmetric Rotation causes nothing Random
Less symmetric Rotation changes the appearacnce Ordered

14 Spontaneous breaking Symmetric Simple Disordered Less symmetric
Complex Ordered

15 Spontaneous breaking Phase transition Symmetric Simple Disordered
Symmetry is spontaneously broken (Dynamical: due to interactions) Phase transition Reality in our world Less symmetric Complex Ordered With Variety

16 Role of interaction High temperature Kinetic motion > Interaction
Random Like gas

17 Role of interaction High temperature Kinetic motion > Interaction
Random Like gas Interaction breaks the symmetry => Spontaneously broken

18 Role of interaction High temperature Kinetic motion > Interaction
Random Like gas Interaction breaks the symmetry => Spontaneously broken Low temperature Kinetic motion < Interaction Ordered Like solid

19 Examples of interaction
(1) Translational invariance H is invariant under This causes localization (clustering) of a two-particle system (2) Rotational invariance This causes deformation of two-particle system (deuteron)

20 Isospin (flavor), chiral, color, ….
(3) Isospin invariance Iso-spinor Iso-vector “Internal symmetry” Isospin (flavor), chiral, color, ….

21 Recover the broken symmetry
Low T High T This does not mean the phase transition between them There is a special way to recover the broken symmetry

22 Recover the broken symmetry
Symmetry transformation Translation Rotation p

23 Recover the broken symmetry
Symmetry transformation Translation Rotation p This does not require energy => Zero energy mode Classical mechanics: No need to move an object on a flat/smooth surface W = Fs = 0 Field theory: Appearance of a massless particle => pion m = 0

24 Quantum mechanics Uncertainty principle

25 Quantum mechanics Starts to move Zeromode excitations
Uncertainty principle p Starts to move Uncertainty principle Flctuations Zeromode excitations

26 Quantum mechanics Starts to move Zeromode excitations
Uncertainty principle p Starts to move Uncertainty principle Flctuations Zeromode excitations For small moment of inertia => Easy to fluctuate Symmetric states are realized in the quantum world For large moment of inertia => hard to move Symmetry is left broken ~ Classical world

27 Collective vs single particle motion

28 Collective vs single particle motion
Nambu- Goldstone Boson = Pion In these motions, the shape does not change. The objects move collectively (simultaneously)

29 Collective vs single particle motion
Nambu- Goldstone Boson = Pion In these motions, the shape does not change. The objects move collectively (simultaneously) Massive Modes= Mass generation Change in the shape requires more energy. Parts move => Motion of fewer particles

30 Hadrons

31 Where to study? Electromagnetic interaction Strong interaction
Molecule Many-body dynamics of electrons around atomic nuclei and/or ions Atom Subatomic physics Strong interaction Nucleus Many-body dynamics of nucleons => Nuclear Physics mesons Many-body-dynamics of quarks and gluson => Hadron physics Nucleons Mesons Quarks

32 Where to study? Electromagnetic interaction Subatomic physics
Molecule Many-body dynamics of electrons around atomic nuclei and/or ions Atom Subatomic physics Strong interaction Nucleus Many-body dynamics of nucleons => Nuclear Physics mesons Many-body-dynamics of quarks and gluons Hadron Physics Nucleons Mesons Quarks

33 Atoms Many-electron system => Periodic table Many-electron system
Ne = 1, 2, 3…. [One dimensional plot] Many-electron system

34 Nuclei Many-nucleon system (protons and neutrons)

35 Nuclei Many-nucleon system (protons and neutrons) => Nucleat chart
Np = 1, 2, 3….  Nn = 1, 2, 3…. => [Two-dimensional plot] Proton number Neutron number

36 Hadrons Particle Data Many(?)-quark system (u, d, c, s, b, t)
Proton/neutron

37 Particle Data Table Mesons Baryons

38 Hadrons Particle Data However Why?
Many(?)-quark system (u, d, c, s, b, t) Particle Data Proton/neutron However Only qq and qqq? Why? Mesons Baryons

39 Problems of hadron physics
Clay Mathematics Institute, Millennium Problems Millennium Problems In order to celebrate mathematics in the new millennium, The Clay Mathematics Institute of Cambridge, Massachusetts (CMI) has named seven Prize Problems. The Scientific Advisory Board of CMI selected these problems, focusing on important classic questions that have resisted solution over the years. The Board of Directors of CMI designated a $7 million prize fund for the solution to these problems, with $1 million allocated to each. During the Millennium Meeting held on May 24, 2000 at the Collège de France, Timothy Gowers presented a lecture entitled The Importance of Mathematics, aimed for the general public, while John Tate and Michael Atiyah spoke on the problems. The CMI invited specialists to formulate each problem.

40 7 Yang-Mills Theory => QCD
1Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer Conjecture 2Hodge Conjecture 3Navier-Stokes Equations 4P vs NP 5Poincare Conjecture 6Riemann Hypothesis 7 Yang-Mills Theory => QCD A. Jaffe and E. Witten It must have a “mass gap,” that is, there must be some strictly positive constant ∆ such that every excitation of the vacuum has energy at least ∆. It must have “quark confinement,” that is, even though the theory is described in terms of elementary fields, such as the quarks, that transform non-trivially under S U (3), the physical particle states – such as the proton, neutron, and pion – are S U (3)-invariant. It must have “chiral symmetry breaking,” which means that the vacuum is potentially invari- ant (in the limit that the quark bare masses vanish) only under a certain subgroup of the full symmetry group that acts on the quark fields.

41 Where qqqq, qqqqq and more ?
Tetraquark Pentaquark Exotic hadrons

42 Spontaneous breaking of chiral () symmetry
Yoichiro Nambu

43 Spontaneous breaking of chiral () symmetry
Potential energy surface of the vacuum Yoichiro Nambu Chiral order parameter Quarks & gluons Confinement, Mass generation Hadrons & nuclei

44 Dynamics of Spontaneous symmetry breaking in the strongly interacting system

45 Tasks of Physics • Find the ultimate law of everything
• Reconstruct phenomena from the law They are not independent due to the presence of interactions We are on the vacuum. Particles are the excitations of the vacuum. Complicated system Physics is to find the properties of the vacuum and its excitations in the presence of interactions

46 In the microscopic world
A particle Vacuum = Ground state is not empty Particles are interacting with the vacuum A simply looking system can be more complicated due to the interaction and change its properties drastically. E.G. from quarks to Hadrons with mass generation

47 Analogy with BCS QED Phonon exchange ee Cooper pair Order parameter
Gauge (local) symmetry Superconductivity

48 Analogy with BCS QED QCD Phonon exchange ee Strong interaction qq
Cooper pair Quark-antiquark pair Order parameter Gauge (local) symmetry Superconductivity Flavor (global) symmetry Nambu-Goldstone boson

49 • Gap in energy spectrum • Mass of particles
Superconductivity Hadrons • Gap in energy spectrum • Mass of particles E = 0 Ground state D Vacuum N N* M Dirac mass Majorana mass • Meissner effect • Exclusion of color electric field Super Normal Super Normal

50 Chiral symmetry Hand Left Right
Chiral symmetry => Left-hand world has a symmetry (law) Right-hand world has a symmetry (law) If they mix, we say that chiral symmetry is broken

51 Massless fermion c c’ = c S-frame S’-frame Right-handed Right-handed
We can not pass the particle moving at the speed of light c c’ = c Spin Chirality remains unchanged Spin S-frame S’-frame Right-handed Right-handed Right-left do not mixing Right and left can be independent Isospin (internal) symmetry can be introduced separately

52 Massive fermion v v’ Right-handed Left-handed
Spin Spin Boost can change from right to left Right-handed Left-handed The word chiral (handedness) comes from this For massive particle, right and left mix => Chiral symmetry is broken

53 Summary 1 Symmetry can be spontaneously broken by interactions.
Symmetry and broken phase can change each other. (Temperature, density, …) In the broken phase, symmetry is recovered by the presence the Nambu-Goldstone mode. Zero energy mode ~ pion Collective, and single particle modes are distinguished. The zero mode (pions) governs the dynamics at low energy.

54 Summary 2 Hadrons are made of quarks and gluons
Baryons qqq, mesons qq*, others (exotics)?? Quark properties changes drastically by the strong interaction (nearly massless -> massive) Chiral symmetry is broken spontaneously Quark masses are dynamically generated (by interaction) Pions become massless (Nambu-Goldstone mode)

55 Dynamics of L and R <=> V and A
V = R + L, A = R - L Potential Vacuum point Only one Infinitely many on -> choose one V A A V Pions[NG boson] appear

56 Where and how pions appear
Quarks and gluons Strong interaction dynamics Quarks and mesons Mass generation Constituent (quasi) quarks Pions π π π q q q q q


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