nLab BV-BRST formalism

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Contents

Idea

In physics and specifically in field theory, the BV-BRST formalism is a tool in homological algebra, higher differential geometry and derived geometry to handle the intersection- and quotient-constructions that appear

  1. in the construction of reduced phase spaces of Lagrangian field theories, in particular including gauge theories; (“Lagrangian BV”)

  2. in symplectic reduction of phase spaces (“Hamiltonian BV”)

In either case the BRST-BV complex C (P BV)C^\infty(P^{BV}) is a model in dg-geometry of a joint homotopy intersection and homotopy quotient, hence of an (∞,1)-colimit and (∞,1)-limit, of a space in higher differential geometry/derived geometry.

Accordingly, the BRST-BV complex is built from two main pieces:

  1. it contains in positive degree a BRST-complex: the Chevalley-Eilenberg algebra of the ∞-Lie algebroid which is the homotopy quotient (action Lie algebroid) of the gauge group (in Lagrangian BV) or of the group of flows generated by the constraints (in Hamiltonian BFV) – which is in general an ∞-group in either case – acting on configuration space CC;

Lagrangian BV

Classical BV as homological resolution of reduced phase space

The classical Lagrangian BV-BRST complex of a Lagrangian field theory is, under suitable conditions, a homological resolution of the homotopy intersection with the Euler-Lagrange equations of motion (this is the BV part) of the homotopy quotient by the infinitesimal symmetries of the Lagrangian (this is the BRST part), and hence a homological model of the reduced phase space of the Lagrangian field theory.

A detailed introduction to the classical Lagrangian BV-BRST formalism is at

Quantum BV as homological (path-)integration

We discuss here the interpretation of the quantum BV-complex as a homological implementation of integration thought of as path integral-quantization (in perturbative quantum field theory).

We indicate how on a finite dimensional smooth manifold the BV-algebra appearing in Lagrangian BV-formalism is the dual of the de Rham complex of configuration space in the presence of a volume form and how, by extention, this allows to interpret the BV-complex as a means for defining (path-)integration over general configuration spaces of fields by passing to BV-cochain cohomology.

(The interpretation of the BV-differential as the dual de Rham differential necessary for this is due to (Witten 90) (Schwarz 92). A particularly clear-sighted account of the general relation is in Gwilliam 2013 ).

Further below we discuss the generalization of these relation in terms of Poincaré duality on Hochschild (co)homology.

  1. The idea of path integral quantization

  2. Multivector fields dual to differential forms

  3. The quantum master equation: the path integral measure is a closed form

  4. Integration over manifolds by BV cohomology

  5. BV-quantization

  6. Path integration and quantum observables by BV-cohomology

The idea of path integal quantization

The path integral in quantum field theory is supposed to be the integral over a configuration space XX of fields ϕ\phi using a measure μ S\mu_S which is thought of in the form

μ S(ϕ)exp(iS(ϕ))μ(ϕ)ϕX, \mu_S(\phi) \coloneqq \exp\left(\frac{i}{\hbar} S\left(\phi\right)\right) \cdot \mu(\phi) \;\;\;\; \phi \in X \,,

for μ\mu some other measure and S:XS : X \to \mathbb{R} the action functional of the theory.

For ff a smooth function on the space of fields its value as an observable of the system is supposed to be what would be the expectation value

f S= ϕFieldsf(ϕ)μ(ϕ) ϕFieldsμ(ϕ) \langle f \rangle_S = \frac{\int_{\phi \in Fields} f(\phi) \cdot \mu(\phi)}{\int_{\phi \in Fields} \mu(\phi) }

if the measure existed. Of course this does not make sense in terms of the usual notion of integration against measures since such measures do not exists except in the simplest situation. But there is a cohomological notion of integration where instead of actually performing an integral, we identify its value, if it exists, with a cohomology class and generally interpret that cohomology class as the expectation value, even if an actual integral against a measure does not exist. This is what BV formalism achieves, which we discuss after some preliminaries below in Integration over manifolds by BV cohomology.

Multivector fields dual to differential forms

If one thinks of XX as an ordinary (d<)(d \lt \infty)-dimensional smooth manifold, then μ S\mu_S will be given by a volume form, μ SΩ d(X)\mu_S \in \Omega^d(X). By contraction of multivector fields with differential forms, every choice of volume form on XX induces an isomorphism between differential forms and polyvector fields

μ:Ω (X) dΓ(TX), \mu \colon \Omega^\bullet(X) \stackrel{\simeq}{\longrightarrow} \wedge^{d-\bullet} \Gamma(T X) \,,

which is usefully thought of as reversing degrees. Under this isomorphism the deRham differential maps to a divergence operator, the BV-operator, conventionally denoted

Δμd dRμ 1 \Delta \;\coloneqq\; \mu \circ d_{dR} \circ \mu^{-1}

which interacts naturally with the canonical bracket on multivector fields: the Schouten bracket. (See at polyvector field for more details.)

Definition

For XX an oriented smooth manifold of dimension nn \in \mathbb{N} and for μΩ n(X)\mu \in \Omega^n(X)a volume form, write

BV(X,μ)( Γ(TX),Δ μ) BV(X, \mu) \coloneqq (\wedge^\bullet \Gamma(T X), \Delta_\mu)

for the cochain complex induced on multivector fields by dualizing the de Rham differential with μ\mu.

Remark

The Schouten bracket on BV(X,μ)BV(X,\mu) makes this cochain complex a Poisson 0-algebra.

For more see at relation between BV and BD.

The quantum master equation: the path integral measure is a closed form

Observe that

  • if we think of

    • the measure μ\mu as some closed reference differential form on XX;

    • the exponentiated action functional exp(iS())exp\left(\frac{i}{\hbar}S\left(-\right)\right) as a multivector field on XX;

    • the expression exp(iS())μexp(\frac{i}{\hbar}S(-)) \mu as the contraction of this multivector field with μ\mu

  • then the BV quantum master equaton Δexp(iS)=0\Delta \exp(\frac{i}{\hbar}S) = 0 says nothing but that exp(iS())μexp(\frac{i}{\hbar}S(-)) \mu is a closed differential form.

  • If we furthermore take into account that in the presence of gauge symmetries the space XX is not a plain manifold but the L L_\infty-algebroid of the gauge symmetries acting on the space of fields, hence an NQ-supermanifold (whose Chevalley-Eilenberg algebra is the BRST complex), then this just says that exp(iS)μ\exp(\frac{i}{\hbar}S) \mu is an integrable form in the sense of integration theory of supermanifolds.

This means that Lagrangian BV formalism is nothing but a way of describing closed differential forms on Lie infinity-algebroid in terms of multivectors contracted into a reference differention form. The multivectors dual to degree 0 elements in the L L_\infty-algebroid are the so-called “anti-fields”, while those dual to the higher degree elements are the so-called “anti-ghosts”.

Integration over manifolds by BV-cohomology

The following proposition about integration of differential nn-forms is the archetype for interpreting cohomology in BV-complexes in terms of integration.

Example

On the open ball of dimension nn, the integration of differential forms of compact support :Ω cp n\int \;\colon\; \Omega^n_{cp} \to \mathbb{R} is equivalently given by the projection onto the quotient by the exact forms, hence by passing to cochain cohomology in the truncated de Rham complex C (B n)Ω n1(B n)Ω n(B n)C^\infty(B^n) \to \cdots \to \Omega^{n-1}(B^n) \to \Omega^n(B^n).

See at kernel of integration is the exact differential forms for details.

This “integration without integration” is discussed in more detail at Lie integration.

Let XX be a closed oriented smooth manifold of finite number dimension nn and let μ SΩ n(X)\mu_S \in \Omega^n(X) be any volume form. Let again

BV(X,μ S)( Γ(TX),Δ μ S) BV(X,\mu_S) \coloneqq( \wedge^\bullet \Gamma(T X), \Delta_{\mu_S} )

be the corresponding dual cochain complex of the de Rham complex by def. above.

Definition

For fC (X)f \in C^\infty(X) a smooth function, its expectation value with respect to μ S\mu_S is

f μ S Xfμ S Xμ S. \langle f\rangle_{\mu_S} \coloneqq \frac{ \int_X f \cdot \mu_S }{\int_X \mu_S } \,.

Write [] BV[-]_{BV} for the cochain cohomology classes in the BV complex BV(X,μ S)BV(X, \mu_S).

Proposition

For fBV(X,μ S) 0C (X)f \in BV(X,\mu_S)_0 \simeq C^\infty(X) the cohomology class of ff in the BV complex is the expectation value of ff, def. times the cohomology class of the unit function 1:

[f] BV=f μ S[1] BV. [f]_{BV} = \langle f\rangle_{\mu_S} [1]_{BV} \,.

See (Gwilliam 13, lemma 2.2.2).

BV quantization

Let XX be a closed manifold as above and write BV(X,μ)BV(X, \mu) for the BV-complex def. , induced by a given volume form μΩ n(X)\mu \in \Omega^n(X).

Proposition

If SC (X)S \in C^\infty(X) then the BV-complex induced via def. by the volume form

μ Sexp(1S)μ \mu_S \coloneqq \exp\left(\frac{1}{\hbar} S\right) \cdot \mu

(for any constant \hbar to be read as Planck's constant) has BV-differential related to that of μ\mu itself by

Δ μ S=Δ μ+1ι dS, \Delta_{\mu_S} = \Delta_\mu + \frac{1}{\hbar}\iota_{d S} \,,

where ι dS: Γ(TX) 1Γ(TX)\iota_{d S} : \wedge^\bullet \Gamma(T X) \to \wedge^{\bullet-1} \Gamma(T X) is the operation of acting with a vector field on SS by differentiation, extended as a graded derivation to multivector fields.

Proposition

The complex

BV cl(X,S)( Γ(TX),ι dS) BV_{cl}(X, S) \coloneqq (\wedge^\bullet \Gamma(T X), \iota_{d S})

is the derived critical locus of the function SS.

By the discussion at derived critical locus.

Remark

Prop. and prop. together say that the BV-complex of a manifold XX for a volume form μ S\mu_S shifted from a background volume form μ\mu by a function exp(1S)\exp\left(\frac{1}{\hbar} S\right) is an \hbar-deformation of the derived critical locus of SS by a contribution of the background volume form μ\mu.

We call ( Γ(TX),ι dS)(\wedge^\bullet \Gamma(T X), \iota_{d S}) the classical BV complex and ( Γ(TX),ι dS+Δ μ)(\wedge^\bullet \Gamma(T X), \iota_{d S} + \hbar \Delta_{\mu} ) the quantum BV complex of the manifold XX equipped with the function SS and the voume form μ\mu.

The crucial idea now is the following.

Remark

(central idea of BV quantization)

In the above discussion of BV complexes over finite-dimensional manifolds, the construction of the classical BV complex in remark as a derived critical locus directly makes sense in great generality for action functionals SS defined on spaces of fields more general than finite-dimensional smooth manifolds. (It makes sense in a general context of differential cohesion, see at differential cohesive infinity-topos – critical locus). On the other hand, the construction of the quantum BV complex as the dual to the de Rham complex by a volume form by def. breaks down as soon as the space of fields is no longer a finite dimensional manifold, hence breaks down for all but the most degenerate quantum field theories. But by remark we may instead think of the quantum BV complex as a certain deformation of the classical BV complex, and that notion continues to make sense in full generality.

And once such a deformation of a critical locus has been obtained, we may read prop. the other way round and regard the cochain cohomology of the deformed complex as the definition of quantum expectation values of observables.

See for instance (Park, 2.1)

In order to implement this idea, we need to axiomatize those properties of classical BV complexes and their quantum deformation as above which we demand to be preserved by the generalization away from finite dimensional manifolds. This is what the following definitions do.

Definition

A classical BV complex is a cochain complex equipped with the structure of a Poisson 0-algebra.

Definition

A quantum BV complex or Beilinson-Drinfeld algebra is a \mathbb{Z}-graded algebra AA over the ring [[]]\mathbb{R} [ [ \hbar ] ] of formal power series in a formal constant \hbar, equipped with a Poisson bracket {,}\{-,-\} of degree 1 and with an operator Δ:AA\Delta \colon A \to A of degree 1 which satisfies:

  1. Δ 2=0\Delta^2 = 0

  2. Δ(ab)=(Δa)b+(1) |a|a(Δb)+{a,b}\Delta( a b) = (\Delta a) b + (-1)^{\vert a\vert} a (\Delta b) + \hbar \{a,b\} for all homogenous elements a,bAa, b \in A

In (Gwilliam 2013) this is def. 2.2.5.

Remark

A Beilinson-Drinfeld algebra is not a dg-algebra with differential Δ\Delta: the Poisson bracket {,}\hbar \{-,-\} measures the failure for the differential to satisfy the Leibniz rule. In particular the Δ\Delta-cohomology is not an associative algebra.

In this respect the notion of BV-quantization via BD-algebras differs from other traditional notions of BV-quantization, where one demands the quantum BV-complex to be a noncommutative dg-algebra deformation of the classical BV complex. But instead the BD-algebras induced by a local action functional and varying over open subsets of spacetime/worldvolume form a factorization algebra and that encodes the algebra of observables: the factorization algebra of observables (see there for more).

But:

Definition

For A A_\hbar a Beilinson-Drinfeld algebra, its classical limit is the tensor product of algebras

A =0A [[]] A_{\hbar = 0} \coloneqq A_\hbar \otimes_{\mathbb{R}[ [ \hbar ] ]} \mathbb{R}

hence the result of setting the formal parameter \hbar (“Planck's constant”) to 0.

Remark

The classical limit of a Beilinson-Drinfeld algebra is canonically a classical BV-complex, def. .

Definition

For A =0A_{\hbar = 0} a classical BV complex, def. , a BV quantization of it is a Beilinson-Drinfeld algebra A A_{\hbar}, def. whose classical limit, def. , is the given A =0A_{\hbar = 0}.

In (Gwilliam 2013) this is def. 2.2.6.

action functionalkinetic actioninteractionpath integral measure
exp(S(ϕ))μ=\exp(-S(\phi)) \cdot \mu = exp((ϕ,Qϕ))\exp(-(\phi, Q \phi)) \cdotexp(I(ϕ))\exp(I(\phi)) \cdotμ\mu
BV differentialelliptic complex +antibracket with interaction +BV-Laplacian
d q=d_q =QQ +{I,}\{I,-\} +Δ\hbar \Delta

Quantum observables by BV-cohomology

Definition

Given a quantum BV-complex, its cochain cohomology are the expectation values of observables of the theory.

Specifically, an observable is a closed element ff in the quantum BV-complex and its expectation value is its image [f][f] in cochain cohomology.

Remark

Given a quantum BV-complex by def. its cochain cohomology is, by definition, a perturbation of that of its classical limit BV complex, def. . Accordingly, the quantum observables may be computed from the classical observables by the homological perturbation lemma. For free field theories this yields Wick's lemma and Feynman diagrams for computing observables. (Gwilliam 2013, section 2.3).

Remark

For local theories (…) gauge fixing operator (…) Hodge theory (…)

(…)

Poincaré duality on Hochschild (co)homology and framed little disk algebra

The above duality between differential forms and multivector field may be understood in a more general context.

Multivector fields may be understood in terms of Hochschild cohomology of CC. Under the identification of Hochschild homology/cyclic homology with the de Rham complex the product of the action functional exp(iS())\exp(i S(-)) with a formal measure volvol on CC is regarded as a cycle in cyclic homology. Or rather, an isomorphism with Hochschild cohomology is picked, and interpreted as a choice of volume form volvol and exp(iS())\exp(i S(-)) is regarded as a cocycle in cyclic cohomology, hence as a multivector field whose closure condition Δexp(iS())=0\Delta \exp(i S(-)) = 0 is the quantum master equation of BV-formalism.

By the identification of Hochschild cohomology
with functions on derived loop spaces we know that the operator Δ\Delta encodes the rotation of loops. Accordingly, the resuling BV-algebra has an interpretation as an algebra over (the homology of) the framed little disk operad.

For certain algebras AA there exists Poincaré duality between Hochschild cohomology and Hochschild homology

τ:HH i(A)HH ni(A) \tau : HH_i(A) \to HH^{n-i}(A)

(VanDenBergh) and this takes the Connes coboundary operator to the BV operator (Ginzburg).

Non-perturbative

On non-perturbative enhancements of BV-BRST formalism cast in (differential) cohesive ( , 1 ) (\infty,1) -topos theory:

Hamiltonian BFV – Homotopical Poisson reduction

The following is a rough survey of homotopical Poisson reduction, following (Stasheff 96).

Let (X,{,})(X, \{-,-\}) be a smooth Poisson manifold.

Let AC (X)A \coloneqq C^\infty(X) be its algebra of smooth functions.

Consider

  • an ideal IAI \subset A

  • that is closed under the Poisson bracket

    {I,I}I\{I,I\} \subset I

    (one says that we have first class constraint or that the 0-locus of II is coisotropic)

By the Poisson bracket II acts on AA. The Poisson reduction of XX by II is the combined

  1. passage to the 0-locus of II, which algebraically (dually) is passage to the quotient algebra A/IA/I;

  2. passage to the quotient of XX by the II-action, which dually is the passage to the invariant subalgebra A IA^I.

This may be achieved in different orders:

Definition

The Sniatycky-Weinstein reduction is the object

A SW:=(A/I) I. A_{SW} := (A/I)^I \,.

The Dirac reduction is

A Dirac:=N(I)/I A_{Dirac} := N(I)/I

where N(I)={fA|{f,I}I}N(I) = \{f \in A | \{f, I\} \subset I\} is the “subalgebra of observables”.

Proposition

These two algebras are isomorphic

A red:=A SWA Dirac. A_{red} := A_{SW} \simeq A_{Dirac} \,.
Example

Suppose a Lie algebra 𝔤\mathfrak{g} acts on the Poisson manifold XX, by Hamiltonian vector fields. This is equivalently encoded in a moment map μ:X𝔤 *\mu : X \to \mathfrak{g}^*.

Let then II be the ideal of functions that vanish on μ 1(0)\mu^{-1}(0). This is always coisotropic.

Then A redA_{red} is the algebraic dual to the preimage μ 1(0)\mu^{-1}(0) quotiented by the Lie algebra action: the “constraint surface” quotiented by the symmetries.

In fact, if 0 is a regular value of μ\mu then X red:=μ 1(0)/GX_{red} := \mu^{-1}(0)/G is a submanifold and

A redC (X red). A_{red} \simeq C^\infty(X_{red}) \,.

We now discuss the BRST-BV complex for the set of constraints II on (X,{,})(X, \{-,-\}), which will be a resolution of A redA_{red} in the following sense:

  • instead of forming the quotient X/GX/G we form the action groupoid or quotient stack X//GX//G. More precisely we do this for the infinitesimal action and consider a quotient Lie algebroid;

  • instead of forming the intersecton X| I=0X|_{I = 0} we consider its derived locus.

Let {T 1,,T N}\{T_1, \cdots, T_N\} be any finite set of generators of the ideal II. Then there exists a non-positively graded cochain complex on the graded algebra

ASym(V), A \otimes Sym(V) \,,

where VV is a graded vector space in non-positive degree and Sym(V)Sym(V) is its symmetric tensor algebra: the Koszul-Tate resolution of C (X)/IC^\infty(X)/I.

Then on

ASym(V)Sym(V *) A \otimes Sym(V) \otimes Sym(V^*)

(with V *V^* in non-negative degree)

there is an evident graded generalization of the Poisson bracket on AA, which is on VV and V *V^* just the canonical pairing.

Write {c α}\{c^\alpha\} for the basis for V *V^*, called the ghost. Write {π α}\{\pi_\alpha\} for the dual basis on VV, called the ghost momenta.

Theorem

(Henneaux, Stasheff et al.)

(homological perturbation theory)

There exists an element

ΩAS(V)S(V *) \Omega \in A \otimes S(V) \otimes S(V^*)

the BRST-BV charge such that

  • {Ω,Ω}=0\{\Omega, \Omega\} = 0, so that (AS(V)S(V *),d:={Ω,})(A\otimes S(V) \otimes S(V^*), d := \{\Omega, -\}) is a cochain complex, in fact a dg-algebra;

  • the cochain cohomology is

    H 0(AS(V)S(V *),d={Ω,})=A/I H^0(A \otimes S(V) \otimes S(V^*), d = \{\Omega, -\}) = A/I \;
    H <0(AS(V)S(V *),d={Ω,})=0 H^{\lt 0}(A \otimes S(V) \otimes S(V^*), d = \{\Omega, -\}) = 0 \;

    (which says that this is in non-positive degree a resolution of the constraint locus A/IA/I)

  • If II is a regular ideal (meaing that VV can be chosen to be concentrated in degree 1) or the vanishing ideal of a coisotropic submanifold, then the cohomology in positive degree

    H 0(AS(V)S(V *),d={Ω,0})H (CE(A/I,I/I 2)) H^{\bullet \geq 0}(A \otimes S(V) \otimes S(V^*), d = \{\Omega, 0\}) \simeq H^\bullet(CE(A/I, I/I^2))

    is isomorphic to the Lie algebroid cohomology of the Lie algebroid whose Lie-Rinehart algebra is (A/I,I/I 2)(A/I, I/I^2)

    (which says that in positive degree the BRST-BV complex is a resolution of the action Lie algebroid of {I,}\{I,-\} acting on XX).

Theorem

(Oh-Park, Cattaneo-Felder) If CXC \subset X is coisotropic, there is an L-infinity algebra-structure on Γ(NC)\wedge^\bullet \Gamma(N C) such that the induced bracket on H 0=A redH^0 = A_{red} is the given one;

Theorem

(Schätz) The BRST-BV complex with {,}\{-,-\} as its Lie bracket is quasi-isomorphic to the above.

References

General

A classical standard references for the Lagrangian formalism is

  • Marc Henneaux, Lectures on the Antifield-BRST formalism for gauge theories, Nuclear Physics B (Proceedings Supplement) 18A (1990) 47-106 (pdf)

Similarly the bulk of the textbook

considers the Hamiltonian formulation. Chapters 17 and 18 are about the Lagrangian (“antifield”) formulation, with section 18.4 devoted to the relation between the two.

The L-infinity algebroid-structure of the local BV-BRST complex on the jet bundle is made manifest in

  • Glenn Barnich, equation(3) of A note on gauge systems from the point of view of Lie algebroids, in P. Kielanowski, V. Buchstaber, A. Odzijewicz,

    M. Schlichenmaier, T Voronov, (eds.) XXIX Workshop on Geometric Methods in Physics, vol. 1307 of AIP Conference Proceedings, 1307, 7 (2010) (arXiv:1010.0899, doi:/10.1063/1.3527427)

Formulation as homotopy AQFT:

Review in the context of higher geometry:

Lagrangian BV

For Lagrangian theories

The original articles are

Review:

Geometrical aspects were pioneered in

A systematic account of the classical master equation is also in

Generalization from Lie algebra-actions to actual algebraic group-actions:

Other discussions include

  • Domenico Fiorenza, An introduction to the Batalin-Vilkovisky formalism, Lecture given at the Recontres Mathématiques de Glanon, July 2003, arXiv:math/0402057

  • Alberto Cattaneo, From topological field theory to deformation quantization and reduction, ICM 2006. (pdf)

  • M. Bächtold, On the finite dimensional BV formalism, 2005. (pdf)

  • Carlo Albert, Bea Bleile, Jürg Fröhlich, Batalin-Vilkovisky integrals in finite dimensions, arXiv/0812.0464

  • Qiu and Zabzine, Introduction to Graded Geometry, Batalin-Vilkovisky Formalism and their Applications, arXiv/1105.2680.

The perturbative quantization of gauge theories (Yang-Mills theory) in causal perturbation theory/perturbative AQFT is discussed (for trivial principal bundles and restricted to gauge invariant observables) via BRST-complex/BV-formalism in

and surveyed in

  • Kasia Rejzner, section 7 of Perturbative algebraic quantum field theory Springer 2016 (web)

Discussion for field theories with boundary conditions and going in the direction of extended field theory/local quantum field theory is in

A discussion of BV-BRST formalism in the general context of perturbative quantum field theory is in

Relation to Feynman diagrams is made explicit in

See also

The interpretation of the BV quantum master equation as a description of closed differential forms acting as measures on infinite-dimensional spaces of fields is described in

This isomorphisms between the de Rham complex and the complex of polyvector fields is reviewed for instance on p. 3 of

  • Thomas Willwacher, Damien Calaque Formality of cyclic cochains (arXiv:0806.4095)

and in section 2 of

A discussion in the general context of BV-algebras is in

  • Claude Roger, Gerstenhaber and Batalin-Vilkovisky algebras, Archivum mathematicum, Volume 45 (2009), No. 4 (pdf)

The generalization of this to Poincaré duality on Hochschild (co)homollogy is in

  • M. Van den Bergh, A relation between Hochschild homology and cohomology for Gorenstein rings . Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 126 (1998), 1345–1348; (JSTOR)

    Correction: Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 130 (2002), 2809–2810.

with more on that in

The application in string theory/string field theory is discussed in

  • B. Zwiebach, Closed string field theory: Quantum action and the B-V master equation, Nucl. Phys. B 390, 33-152 (1993)

A mathematically oriented reformulation of some of this (in the context of TCFT ) is in

Here the analog of the virtual fundamental class on the moduli space of surfaces is realized as a solution to the BV-master equation.

The perspective on the BV-complex as a derived critical locus is indicated in

  • Kevin Costello, Owen Gwilliam, Factorization algebras in perturbative quantum field theory – Derived critical locus (weblass=‘newWikiWord’>Derived%20critical%20locus?</span>))

A clear discussion of the BV-complex as a means for homological path integral quantization is in

  • Owen Gwilliam, Factorization algebras and free field theories PhD thesis (2013) (pdf)

Related Chern-Simons type graded action functionals are discussed also in

Lectures, discussing also the relation to the graph complex are

  • Jian Qiu, Maxim Zabzine, Introduction to graded geometry, Batalin-Vilkovisky formalism and their applications, arxiv/1105.2680; Knot weight systems from graded symplectic geometry, arxiv/1110.5234; Odd Chern-Simons theory, Lie algebra cohomology and characteristic classes, arxiv/0912.1243
  • Klaus Fredenhagen, Katarzyna Rejzner, Batalin-Vilkovisky formalism in perturbative algebraic quantum field theory, arxiv/1110.5232

Gluing aspects are in focus of the program explained in

  • Alberto S. Cattaneo, Pavel Mnev, Nicolai Reshetikhin, Perturbative BV theories with Segal-like gluing, arxiv/1602.00741

On extracting L L_\infty -algebras from BV-formalism around a solutio, encoding tree level Feynman diagrams:

For non-Lagrangian theories

The whole formalism also applies to the locus of solutions of differential equations that are not necessarily the Euler-Lagrange equations of an action functional. Discussion of this more general case is in

  • D.S. Kaparulin, S.L. Lyakhovich, A.A. Sharapov, Local BRST cohomology in (non-)Lagrangian field theory (arXiv:1106.4252)

  • D.S. Kaparulin, S.L. Lyakhovich, A.A. Sharapov, Rigid Symmetries and Conservation Laws in Non-Lagrangian Field Theory (arXiv:1001.0091)

  • S.L. Lyakhovich, A.A. Sharapov, Quantizing non-Lagrangian gauge theories: an augmentation method (arXiv:hep-th/0612086)

  • S.L. Lyakhovich, A.A. Sharapov, BRST theory without Hamiltonian and Lagrangian (arXiv:hep-th/0411247)

Section 4.5 of

This also makes the connection to

  • P. Olver, Applications of Lie Groups to Differential Equations (Springer-Verlag, Berlin) (1986)

See also via quantum L-infinity algebras:

Review:

  • Sebastian Albrecht: Formulation of Batalin-Vilkovisky Field Theories as Homotopy Lie Algebras, Munich (2022) [pdf]

For CFT/vertex algebras

A class of “free” vertex algebras are also quantized using Batalin-Vilkovisky formalism, with results on quantization of BCOV theory important for understanding mirror symmetry, in

Hamiltonian BFV

BRST formalism is discussed in

The original references on Hamiltonian BFV formalism are

  • Igor Batalin, Grigori Vilkovisky, Relativistic S-matrix of dynamical systems with boson and fermion constraints , Phys. Lett. B69 (1977) 309-312;

  • Igor Batalin, Efim Fradkin, A generalized canonical formalism and quantization of reducible gauge theories , Phys. Lett. B122 (1983) 157-164.

Homological Poisson reduction is discussed in

Remarks on the homotopy theory interpretation of BRST-BV are in

  • Jim Stasheff, The (secret?) homological algebra of the Batalin-Vilkovisky approach (arXiv)

A standard textbook on the application of BRST-BV to gauge theory is

Multisymplectic BRST

In the context of multisymplectic geometry

  • Sean Hrabak, Ambient Diffeomorphism Symmetries of Embedded Submanifolds, Multisymplectic BRST and Pseudoholomorphic Embeddings (arXiv:math-ph/9904026)

  • Sean Hrabak, On a Multisymplectic Formulation of the Classical BRST symmetry for First Order Field Theories Part I: Algebraic Structures (arXiv:math-ph/9901012)

  • Sean Hrabak, On a Multisymplectic Formulation of the Classical BRST Symmetry for First Order Field Theories Part II: Geometric Structures (arXiv:math-ph/9901013)

based on

  • I. Kanatchikov, On field theoretic generalizations of a Poisson algebra, Rept.Math.Phys. 40 (1997) 225 (arXiv:hep-th/9710069)

Last revised on June 6, 2024 at 00:18:20. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.