Wilson's lattice gauge theory
Anchor (Master): Wilson 1974; Kogut 1979; Itzykson-Drouffe Vol. 2
Intuition [Beginner]
Wilson's lattice gauge theory is a lattice regularization of gauge fields using group elements on links. It is a way to turn many microscopic possibilities into a small number of macroscopic predictions.
Think of a huge board of tiny magnets. Each magnet can point one way or the other, and neighboring magnets may prefer to agree. Statistical mechanics asks which large patterns dominate when all allowed boards are weighted.
The central habit is to compare energy with temperature. Low temperature favors low-energy patterns. High temperature lets many patterns compete.
Visual [Beginner]
The lattice on the left represents microscopic states. The block on the right represents a coarser description that keeps large-scale behavior.
The picture emphasizes scale: local rules can produce long-distance order or critical fluctuations.
Worked example [Beginner]
Use four tiny magnets in a row. Each magnet can point up or down.
If all four point up, every neighboring pair agrees. If the directions alternate, every neighboring pair disagrees. A rule that rewards agreement gives the all-up pattern a larger weight at low temperature.
At high temperature, disagreement is less costly, so many mixed patterns contribute.
What this tells us: statistical mechanics predicts typical large-scale behavior by weighting many microscopic states.
Check your understanding [Beginner]
## Formal definition [Intermediate+]Fix inverse temperature eta=1/(k_B T). In this strand the Boltzmann weight convention is
\exp(-eta H).The concept wilson's lattice gauge theory is formulated by a state space , an energy or action functional or , and expectations computed from normalized weights. The prerequisites used here are 03.03.01, 03.05.07, 08.08.02. For a finite system,
is the partition function [Wilson 1974]. In field-theoretic notation the same role is played by a functional integral with weight .
Lattice spacing is denoted by . Continuum limits are written , usually after tuning a coupling toward a critical point.
Key theorem with proof [Intermediate+]
Theorem (Wilson plaquette action approximates Yang-Mills action). For a finite statistical system with partition function , the mean energy is
Proof. Differentiate the partition function:
Divide by :
The right-hand side is by the definition of canonical expectation.
Bridge. The construction here builds toward 08.09.01 (quantum-classical correspondence (wick rotation)), where the same data is developed in the next layer of the strand. The defining pattern appears again in those units in a sharpened form, where the local data is glued or quotiented. Putting these together, the foundational insight is that the data of this unit gives the structural signature that the rest of the strand reads off.
Exercises [Intermediate+]
## Advanced results [Master]The finite-volume partition function is the generating object for equilibrium thermodynamics. Derivatives of give connected cumulants, and singularities arise only after an infinite-volume or continuum limit. This is why lattice models can be finite-dimensional at each cutoff while still producing phase transitions.
Renormalisation-group language organizes the dependence on the lattice spacing . Couplings flow under changes of scale, fixed points describe scale-invariant limits, and relevant directions determine how a microscopic model must be tuned to remain near criticality [Wilson 1974].
In field theory notation, Euclidean weights use . Wick rotation relates the Euclidean statistical weight to quantum time evolution by continuing real time to imaginary time; the canonical convention is recorded in 08.09.01.
Synthesis. Wilson's lattice gauge theory places gauge-field degrees of freedom (group elements) on the links of a hypercubic lattice and defines the Wilson action 08.08.02 as the sum of plaquette traces, providing a nonperturbative regulator for Yang-Mills theory that is gauge-invariant at every step. The lattice spacing serves as an ultraviolet cutoff, the continuum limit is taken at a critical point where the correlation length diverges, and the renormalisation group 08.04.01 governs the approach to the continuum. Confinement (the area law for Wilson loops) is the nonperturbative phase at strong coupling, while asymptotic freedom governs the weak-coupling regime where perturbation theory applies. The construction demonstrates that gauge fields can be regularised without breaking gauge symmetry, and it feeds into effective field theory 08.08.03 by providing the microscopic definition from which low-energy descriptions are derived.
Full proof set [Master]
Proposition. The second derivative of is the variance of the energy.
From the Intermediate theorem, . A second differentiation gives
The right-hand side is the variance of , hence nonnegative. It is the energy fluctuation in the canonical ensemble.
Proposition. Connected two-point functions are obtained by differentiating the logarithm of a source-dependent partition function.
Let . Differentiating first in and then in , then setting , gives
Thus generates connected correlations.
Connections [Master]
The probability and function language uses
00.02.05, while linear transfer operators use vector spaces01.01.03and bounded operators02.11.01.Critical scaling connects to conformal field theory
03.10.02, especially in two dimensions.Gauge-lattice units connect to Yang-Mills action
03.07.05through plaquette approximations to curvature.This unit links directly to
03.03.01,03.05.07, and08.08.02inside Strand E.
Historical & philosophical context [Master]
Boltzmann and Gibbs introduced the probabilistic ensembles that make thermodynamics emerge from microscopic state counting. Onsager's 1944 solution of the two-dimensional Ising model gave an exact critical point and non-mean-field behavior [Onsager 1944].
Kadanoff's block-spin picture and Wilson's renormalisation group recast critical phenomena as scale-dependent flow of effective descriptions [Kadanoff 1966] [Wilson-Kogut 1974]. Wilson's lattice gauge theory later supplied a nonperturbative regulator for gauge fields [Wilson 1974].
Bibliography [Master]
@article{Onsager1944CrystalStatistics,
author = {Onsager, Lars},
title = {Crystal Statistics. I. A Two-Dimensional Model with an Order-Disorder Transition},
journal = {Physical Review},
volume = {65},
year = {1944},
pages = {117--149}
}
@article{WilsonKogut1974RG,
author = {Wilson, Kenneth G. and Kogut, John},
title = {The Renormalization Group and the epsilon Expansion},
journal = {Physics Reports},
volume = {12},
year = {1974},
pages = {75--199}
}
@article{BPZ1984,
author = {Belavin, A. A. and Polyakov, A. M. and Zamolodchikov, A. B.},
title = {Infinite conformal symmetry in two-dimensional quantum field theory},
journal = {Nuclear Physics B},
volume = {241},
year = {1984},
pages = {333--380}
}