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Mathematical methods in classical mechanics, classical and quantum field theory, quantum mechanics, statistical mechanics, condensed matter, nuclear and atomic physics.
26
votes
Accepted
Hilbert's sixth problem and QFT description
The reason is that there is no mathematically rigorous construction of any interacting quantum field theory in four space-time dimensions to this date. Because of that, one has not been able so far to …
26
votes
Who says understanding physics helps mathematicians? (A reference request) [Take the word "w...
Quoting the first two paragraphs of V. I. Arnol'd, On teaching mathematics, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 53 (1998) 229-234, translated to English in Russian Math. Surveys 53 (1998) 229-236 (a transcription may a …
21
votes
Accepted
QFT and mathematical rigor
As Abdelmalek Abdesselam pointed in his comment to the OP, the axiomatic approach to QFT is rather concerned with answering the question "what is a quantum field?". This is stated right at the Preface …
17
votes
Accepted
References request: constructive quantum field theory
The standard reference for constructive QFT is the classic book by J. Glimm and A. Jaffe, Quantum Physics: a Functional Integral Point of View (2nd. ed., Springer-Verlag, 1988). It is certainly more t …
16
votes
Accepted
Rigorous construction of fermionic field theory?
There is the construction of the C${}^*\!$-algebra of canonical anticommutation relations (CAR's), which is actually somewhat easier than the construction of free bosonic fields: given any complex pre …
12
votes
Accepted
How unique is a conformal compactification?
For Lorentzian manifolds, the conformal completion need not be compact. A typical example is the universal covering of the $d$-dimensional anti-de Sitter space-time (the maximally symmetric solution o …
12
votes
Why does Riesz's Representation Theorem apply in quantum mechanics?
$\DeclareMathOperator\Ann{Ann}\DeclareMathOperator\Tr{Tr}$My answer is somewhat complementary to Nik Weaver's, and admitedly more focused on Question 2 since I have nothing more to add to the latter r …
12
votes
Accepted
Question on Lorentzian geometry
The signature convention $(−,+,\cdots,+)$ is more commonly used in General Relativity and Lorentzian geometry because of the desire among their practicioners to make a closer parallel to Riemannian ge …
10
votes
Physical meaning of the Lebesgue measure
I believe the crucial point behind the physical significance of Lebesgue measure as opposed to Jordan measure boils down to the issue of completeness, as Gerald Edgar remarked in part (2) of his answe …
10
votes
What mathematical treatment is there on the renormalization group flow in a space of Lagrang...
A small complement to Abdelmalek Abdesselam's answer: on the rigorous, non-perturbative side, there is also a recent (originally two-part, now turned into three-part) exposition by Jonathan Dimock, av …
9
votes
Accepted
Initial conditions in the Klein-Gordon equation
One must remark that derivatives in Sobolev spaces are usually taken in the sense of distributions: given $k\in\mathbb{N}_0=\{0,1,2,\ldots\}$, $H^k(\mathbb{R}^n)$ is the space of tempered distribution …
8
votes
Topology on Minkowski space $\mathbb{R}^{4}$ and Lorentz invariant measure
Judging by your notation, I reckon you are getting the background for your questions from the Appendix to Section IX.8 of the book by M. Reed and B. Simon, Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics II: F …
8
votes
Accepted
Hamilton equations for Classical Field Theory
There is a fundamental misunderstanding in your translation of Hamilton's formalism to classical field theory, which pertains to the proper identification of dynamical variables.
In classical mechanic …
5
votes
Accepted
Wick product of free fields and wave front sets in the sense of Lars Hörmander
The answer to both questions is no. This is due to two facts:
The Klein-Gordon two-point distribution $\omega_2(x,y)=\langle\Omega,\phi(x)\phi(y)\Omega\rangle$ in $\mathbb{R}^4$, where $\Omega_1=\Ome …
4
votes
Quantum fields and infinite tensor products
The "infinite tensor product" picture may be useful as a sort of concrete image of the state space of a quantum field theory, but in practice is rarely used because of the technical difficulties it br …