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Topics and Lectures

Geometry, reduction and quantization

Geometry of Dirac structures
Henrique Bursztyn
(IMPA, Brazil)

Cohomological formulae for the equivariant index of a transversally elliptic operator
Paul-Emile Paradan
(Montpellier, France)

Holomorphic structures and unitary connections on Hermitian vector bundles
Florent Schaffhauser
(Keio, Japan)


Multizeta, polylogarithms and periods in quantum field theory


Iterated integrals in quantum field theory
Francis Brown
(Paris VII, France)


A Prologomon to Renormalization
Sylvie Paycha
(Clermont-Ferrand, France)


Introduction to Feynman integrals
Stefan Weinzierl
(Mainz, Germany)


Geometry of quantum fields and the standard model


Geometric issues in Quantum Field Theory and String Theory
Luis J. Boya
(Zaragoza, Spain)


Geometric Aspects of the Standard Model and the Mysteries of Matter
Florian Scheck
(Mainz, Germany)

Abstract:

The basic structure of gauge theories seems to distinguish radiation from matter as two categories of different origin. The vector or tensor bosons which are the carriers of the fundamental forces, belong to what may be termed radiation. They are described by geometric theories, i.e. Yang-Mills theories or, in the case of general relativity, by semi-Riemannian geometry in dimension four. To a large extent, they are classical theories.
Matter, i.e. quarks and leptons and composites thereof, a priori, seems to belong to a different kind of physics which, at first sight, does not exhibit an underlying geometrical structure. As soon as one enters the quantum world, however, the two categories start mingling their waters.

The Higgs particle plays a rather enigmatic role. Its phenomenological role in providing mass terms for some of the vector bosons and for the fermions of the theory suggests that it be another form of matter. Models based on noncommutative geometry, in turn, classify the Higgs field in the generalized Yang-Mills connection, besides the gauge bosons, and hence declare it to be part of radiation. Quarks and leptons are described by a Dirac operator which in its mass sector exhibits a significant, though mysterious structure. Dirac operators, in turn, are the driving vehicles in constructing noncommutative geometries designed to generalize Yang-Mills theory.

We work out several of these themes, both by way of construction and by means of instructive examples. We start with a schematic description of Yang-Mills theories including spontaneous symmetry breaking (SSB) within the classical geometric framework, and including matter particles. In a first excursion to quantum field theory we describe the stratification of the space of connections and its relevance to anomalies. In order to clarify the phenomenological basis on which Yang-Mills theories of fundamental interactions are built, we describe some of the most pertinent phenomenological features of leptons and of quarks. Via the Dirac operator describing leptons and quarks we turn to constructions of the standard model in the framework of noncommutative geometry. This, in turn leads us to a closer analysis of the mass sector and state mixing phenomena of fermions. The intricacies of quantization are illustrated by a semi-realistic model for massive and massless vector bosons.




 
 
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