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Mathematical methods in classical mechanics, classical and quantum field theory, quantum mechanics, statistical mechanics, condensed matter, nuclear and atomic physics.

5 votes
Accepted

Equivalence of the construction of the Lagrangian in a book of Sternberg to the "usual" cons...

There is no essential contradiction between the definitions in the two references that you gave, except that the one given in the nLab entry is more general. Sternberg defines the Lagrangian (functio …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
3 votes

Is there a relationship between Fourier transformations and cotangent spaces?

Since the question asked for a reference for this relation between the Fourier and Legendre transforms, here's one: Guillemin & Sternberg, Geometric Asymptotics (AMS, 1990). See in particular the …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
3 votes

Standard model of particle physics for mathematicians

G. Scharf, Quantum Gauge Theories: Spin One and Two http://books.google.com/books?id=DsFauPtuAoYC (can be downloaded as a PDF) https://books.google.de/books?id=0DvBDAAAQBAJ (it seems the book c …
8 votes

Classical geometric interpretation of spinors

The following is an elaboration of the point of view that spinors are "square roots" of vectors (or rather of isotropic vectors). I will restrict my attention to 3-dimensional Euclidean vectors, becau …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
13 votes
Accepted

Mathematical foundations of Quantum Field Theory

If I read your updated question correctly, you are asking whether people have considered non-linear modifications of quantum mechanics in order to accommodate interacting QFTs. I'm sure someone, somew …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
11 votes

How can simple physical "proofs" of mathematical facts be made rigorous?

Both proofs in the question are of the following type. Suppose you want to prove a certain identity among numbers $X$, say $f(X)=0$. If you can find another function $g(X,Y)$ such that $f(X)=g(X,Y)$ f …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
6 votes
Accepted

Limit of a double integral

I believe these integrals can be evaluated directly in the $\varepsilon=0$ limit by interpreting the result of the inner integral as a distribution. $$ \int\limits_0^\infty dq \, q^{n+1} \, e^{iq(\tau …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
2 votes
Accepted

Choosing a coordinate transformation

I will add here some more details to expand my comment. Any two functions $Y_1(x^3,x^4)$ and $Y_2(x^3,x^4)$ give local coordinates on any open domain of the $(x^3,x^4)$-plane where their Jacobian dete …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
7 votes

Two point function of a free scalar field in Euclidean space-time

Your argument starts with the assumption that there is such a thing as a "Euclidean free scalar field", as an operator valued function or distribution. And this is where it goes wrong. Obviously, you …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
8 votes

Fermionic Wick Theorem

Here's a trick to recover the fermionic signs, knowing the bosonic formulas. First, introduce a sufficient number of algebraically independent "c-numbers" $\epsilon_k$, that are only required to anti- …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
4 votes

Van Vleck-Morette Determinant

For Lorentzian geometry (which uses the same formulas as Riemannian geometry up to a few signs) you can find a pretty concise definition of this determinant and the equivalence of these two formulas i …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
4 votes
Accepted

Functional/variational derivative and the Leibniz rule

Connection of functional derivative with variational derivative: $\frac{\delta}{\delta\phi(x)} F[\phi] = \frac{\delta F[\phi]}{\delta\phi}(x)$. Note that the variational derivative carries an extra co …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
5 votes

What do correlation functions compute in CFT?

If you are happy with the interpretation you give at the bottom of your question for the correlation function $G_2(x,y)=\langle0|\phi(x)\phi(y)|0\rangle$ for a quantum field on Minkowski space, then i …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
4 votes

Meaning of a phrase from "The algebra of grand unified theories".

Some physical background is needed to interpret phrases like these. In quantum mechanics, interactions between two particles (either composite or elementary) are described by an operator, called a Ham …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
7 votes

An integral with Gamma functions

To clarify, for those who have not looked at the reference, the integral identity in question is $$ \int_{\mathbb{R}^d} \frac{d^dq}{(q^2)^{\nu_1} ((k-q)^2)^{\nu_2}} = \frac{\Gamma(d/2-\nu_1)\Gamma …
Igor Khavkine's user avatar

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