Hamiltonian light-front field theory in a basis function approach

J. P. Vary, H. Honkanen, Jun Li, P. Maris, S. J. Brodsky, A. Harindranath, G. F. de Teramond, P. Sternberg, E. G. Ng, and C. Yang
Phys. Rev. C 81, 035205 – Published 19 March 2010

Abstract

Hamiltonian light-front quantum field theory constitutes a framework for the nonperturbative solution of invariant masses and correlated parton amplitudes of self-bound systems. By choosing the light-front gauge and adopting a basis function representation, a large, sparse, Hamiltonian matrix for mass eigenstates of gauge theories is obtained that is solvable by adapting the ab initio no-core methods of nuclear many-body theory. Full covariance is recovered in the continuum limit, the infinite matrix limit. There is considerable freedom in the choice of the orthonormal and complete set of basis functions with convenience and convergence rates providing key considerations. Here we use a two-dimensional harmonic oscillator basis for transverse modes that corresponds with eigensolutions of the soft-wall anti-de Sitter/quantum chromodynamics (AdS/QCD) model obtained from light-front holography. We outline our approach and present illustrative features of some noninteracting systems in a cavity. We illustrate the first steps toward solving quantum electrodynamics (QED) by obtaining the mass eigenstates of an electron in a cavity in small basis spaces and discuss the computational challenges.

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  • Received 13 May 2009

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.81.035205

©2010 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

J. P. Vary1, H. Honkanen1, Jun Li1, P. Maris1, S. J. Brodsky2, A. Harindranath3, G. F. de Teramond4, P. Sternberg5,*, E. G. Ng5, and C. Yang5

  • 1Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011, USA
  • 2Stanford Linear Accelerator Center National Accelerator Laboratory, Stanford University, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA
  • 3Theory Group, Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, 1/AF, Bidhannagar, Kolkata 700064, India
  • 4Universidad de Costa Rica, Apartado 2060, San José, Costa Rica
  • 5Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, USA

  • *Present address: ILOG Inc., Incline Village, Nevada.

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Vol. 81, Iss. 3 — March 2010

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