quantum algorithms:
algebraic quantum field theory (perturbative, on curved spacetimes, homotopical)
quantum mechanical system, quantum probability
interacting field quantization
In physics, a Lagrangian quantum field theory is a quantum field theory (QFT) which arises via some version of quantization from a Lagrangian density on (the jet bundle of) some field bundle, hence from a prequantum field theory.
Most QFTs that are being considered are Lagrangian quantum field theories. Indeed all of traditional perturbative quantum field theory, subsuming in particular QED, EW, QCD, pQG and hence the standard model of particle physics, is Lagrangian.
But not all QFTs are Lagrangian; or at least they need not have been explicitly constructed via quantization from a Lagrangian density, even if they could be constructed this way:
For example self-dual higher gauge theory (such as the chiral WZW model, which is “one half” of the Lagrangian WZW model) is thought not to be Lagrangian. Still, these self-dual higher gauge theories are thought be be defined via the holographic principle as the holographic boundary of a QFT that is Lagrangian: higher dimensional Chern-Simons theory.
Many topological quantum field theories may be constructed by abstract algebraic means. Famous examples are the A-model/B-model topological string worldvolume theories, which may abstractly be constructed from Calabi-Yau A-∞ categories. Still, these were originally conceived of as topological twists of a Lagrangian field theory, namely of the 2-dimensional supersymmetric sigma-model with target space a 3-dimensional Calabi-Yau manifold.
Similarly, some classes of 2d CFTs may be constructed by purely algebraic means, in particular the construction of 2d rational conformal field theory is completely reduced to an algebraic construction in suitable modular tensor categories by the FRS-theorem on rational 2d CFT. This includes the (chiral or non-chiral) WZW model mentioned above, but there are also 2d CFTs that are thought to be genuinely “non-geometric”, such as the Gepner model.
On smooth sets as a convenient category for variational calculus of Lagrangian classical field theory:
Last revised on December 29, 2023 at 08:23:07. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.