In quantum chromodynamics (and also N = 1 super quantum chromodynamics) with massless flavors, if the number of flavors, Nf, is sufficiently small (i.e. small enough to guarantee asymptotic freedom, depending on the number of colors), the theory can flow to an interacting conformal fixed point of the renormalization group. If the value of the coupling at that point is less than one (i.e. one can perform perturbation theory in weak coupling), then the fixed point is called a Banks–Zaks fixed point. The existence of the fixed point was first reported in 1974 by Alexander Belavin and Alexander A. Migdal and by William E. Caswell, and later used by Tom Banks and Alex Zaks in their analysis of the phase structure of vector-like gauge theories with massless fermions. The name Caswell–Banks–Zaks fixed point is also used.

Description

Suppose that we find that the beta function of a theory up to two loops has the form

β ( g ) = − b 0 g 3 + b 1 g 5 + O ( g 7 ) {\displaystyle \beta (g)=-b_{0}g^{3}+b_{1}g^{5}+{\mathcal {O}}(g^{7})\,}

where b 0 {\displaystyle b_{0}} and b 1 {\displaystyle b_{1}} are positive constants. Then there exists a value g = g ∗ {\displaystyle g=g_{\ast }} such that β ( g ∗ ) = 0 {\displaystyle \beta (g_{\ast })=0}:

g ∗ 2 = b 0 b 1 . {\displaystyle g_{\ast }^{2}={\frac {b_{0}}{b_{1}}}.}

If we can arrange b 0 {\displaystyle b_{0}} to be smaller than b 1 {\displaystyle b_{1}}, then we have g ∗ 2 < 1 {\displaystyle g_{\ast }^{2}<1}. It follows that when the theory flows to the IR it is a conformal, weakly coupled theory with coupling g ∗ {\displaystyle g_{\ast }}.

For the case of a non-Abelian gauge theory with gauge group S U ( N c ) {\displaystyle SU(N_{c})} and Dirac fermions in the fundamental representation of the gauge group for the flavored particles we have

b 0 = 1 16 π 2 1 3 ( 11 N c − 2 N f ) and b 1 = − 1 ( 16 π 2 ) 2 ( 34 3 N c 2 − 1 2 N f ( 2 N c 2 − 1 N c + 20 3 N c ) ) {\displaystyle b_{0}={\frac {1}{16\pi ^{2}}}{\frac {1}{3}}(11N_{c}-2N_{f})\;\;\;\;{\text{ and }}\;\;\;\;b_{1}=-{\frac {1}{(16\pi ^{2})^{2}}}\left({\frac {34}{3}}N_{c}^{2}-{\frac {1}{2}}N_{f}\left(2{\frac {N_{c}^{2}-1}{N_{c}}}+{\frac {20}{3}}N_{c}\right)\right)}

where N c {\displaystyle N_{c}} is the number of colors and N f {\displaystyle N_{f}} the number of flavors. Then N f {\displaystyle N_{f}} should lie just below 11 2 N c {\displaystyle {\tfrac {11}{2}}N_{c}} in order for the Banks–Zaks fixed point to appear. Note that this fixed point only occurs if, in addition to the previous requirement on N f {\displaystyle N_{f}} (which guarantees asymptotic freedom),

11 2 N c > N f > 34 N c 3 ( 13 N c 2 − 3 ) {\displaystyle {\frac {11}{2}}N_{c}>N_{f}>{\frac {34N_{c}^{3}}{(13N_{c}^{2}-3)}}}

where the lower bound comes from requiring b 1 > 0 {\displaystyle b_{1}>0}. This way b 1 {\displaystyle b_{1}} remains positive while − b 0 {\displaystyle -b_{0}} is still negative (see first equation in article) and one can solve β ( g ) = 0 {\displaystyle \beta (g)=0} with real solutions for g {\displaystyle g}. The coefficient b 1 {\displaystyle b_{1}} was first correctly computed by Caswell, while the earlier paper by Belavin and Migdal has a wrong answer.

See also

  • T. J. Hollowood, "Renormalization Group and Fixed Points in Quantum Field Theory", Springer, 2013, ISBN 978-3-642-36311-5.