algebraic quantum field theory (perturbative, on curved spacetimes, homotopical)
quantum mechanical system, quantum probability
interacting field quantization
In perturbative quantum field theory the Schwinger-Dyson equation (Dyson 49, Schwinger 51) equates, on-shell, the time-ordered product of the functional derivative of the action functional for a free field theory and another observable with the time ordering of the corresponding functional derivative of just itself, times (imaginary unit times Planck's constant):
(e.q. Henneaux-Teitelboim 92, (15.25), Rejzner 16, remark 7.7).
This may be understood as a special case of the quantum-correction of the BV-differential by the BV-operator in pQFT, which is hence also called the Schwinger-Dyson operator; see there.
Often (1) is displayed before spacetime-smearing of observables in terms of operator products of operator-valued distributions
which makes the distributional Schwinger-Dyson equation read
(e.q. Dermisek 09)
In particular this means that if for all then
Since (by the principle of extremal action) the equation
is the Euler-Lagrange equation of motion (for the classical field theory) “at ”, this may be interpreted as saying that the classical equations of motion for fields at still hold for time-ordered quantum expectation values, as long as all other observables are evaluated away from ; while if observables do coincide at then there is a correction (governed by the BV-operator of the theory, see this prop.).
For details and proof see at BV-operator this prop., following Rejzner 16, remark 7.7, following Henneaux-Teitelboim 92, section 15.5.3
Precursor discussion for quantum mechanics (QFT in -dimensions) goes back to
The Dyson-Schwinger equation is named after:
Freeman Dyson, The S Matrix in Quantum Electrodynamics, Phys. Rev. 75: 1736 (1949) (doi:10.1103/PhysRev.75.1736)
Julian Schwinger, On Green’s functions of quantized fields I + II, PNAS. 37: 452–459 (1951) (doi:10.1073/pnas.37.7.452)
The traditional informal account in terms of path integral-heuristics is reviewed for instance in
Marc Henneaux, Claudio Teitelboim, section 15.1.4, 15.5.1, 15.5.3 of Quantization of Gauge Systems, Princeton University Press 1992.
Radovan Dermisek, Schwinger-Dyson equations, 2009 (pdf)
A rigorous derivation in terms of BV-formalism in causal perturbation theory/pAQFT is provided in
For discussion in the context of the master Ward identity, see
See also
Discussion of round chord diagrams organizing Dyson-Schwinger equations:
Nicolas Marie, Karen Yeats, A chord diagram expansion coming from some Dyson-Schwinger equations, Communications in Number Theory and Physics, 7(2):251291, 2013 (arXiv:1210.5457)
Markus Hihn, Karen Yeats, Generalized chord diagram expansions of Dyson-Schwinger equations, Ann. Inst. Henri Poincar Comb. Phys. Interact. 6 no 4:573-605 (arXiv:1602.02550)
Paul-Hermann Balduf, Amelia Cantwell, Kurusch Ebrahimi-Fard, Lukas Nabergall, Nicholas Olson-Harris, Karen Yeats, Tubings, chord diagrams, and Dyson-Schwinger equations [arXiv:2302.02019]
Review in:
Last revised on December 18, 2023 at 09:21:30. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.