Nuclear Physics A481 (1988) 727-764 North-Holland, Amsterdam
THE GENERALIZED
HEDGEHOG
AND
SOLITON M. FIOLHAIS’*Z
K. GOEKE=,
THE PROJECTED
CHIRAL
MODEL
F. GRIMMER’
and
J.N.
URBANO’
’ Departamenfo de Fisica, Universidade de Coimbra, P-3000 Coimbra, Portugal ’ Institut fiir Kerphysik, Kernforschungsanlage Jiilich GmbH, D-51 70 Jiilich, West Germany ’ Institut fiir 7’heoretische Physik II, Ruhr-Universiilir Bochum, D-4630 Bochum, West Germany Received 5 October 1987 (Revised 20 November 1987) Abstract: The linear chirai soliton
model with quark fields and elementary pion and sigma fields is solved in order to describe static properties of the nucleon and the delta resonance. To this end a Fock state of the system is constructed which consists of three valence quarks in a 1s orbit with a generalized hedgehog spin-Aavour configuration cos q/ul) - sin nldf). Coherent states are used to provide a quantum description for the mesonic parts of the total wave function. The corresponding classical pion field also exhibits a generalized hedgehog structure. In a pure mean field approximation the variation of the total energy results in the ordinary hedgehog form (q = 45”). In a quantized approach, however, the generalized hedgehog baryon is projected onto states with good spin and isospin and then noticeable deviations from the simple hedgehog form occur (n=20’), if the relevant degrees of freedom of the wave functions are varied after the projection. Various nucleon properties are calculated. These include proton and neutron charge radii, and the magnetic moment of the proton for which good agreement with experiment is obtained. The absolute value of the neutron magnetic moment comes out too large, similarly as the axial vector coupling constant and the pion-nucleon-nucleon coupling constant. However, due to the generalization of the hedgehog, the Goldberger-Treiman relation and a corresponding virial theorem are fulfdled. Variation of the quark-meson coupling parameter g and the sigma mass m, shows that the g, is always about 40% too large compared to experiment. The concepts and results of the projections are compared with the semiclassical collective quantization method. it is demonstrated that noticeable deviations occur for the delta-nucleon splitting, the isovector squared charge radius and the axial vector coupling constant.
1. Introduction
Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is currently considered as the fundamental theory of the strong interaction ‘). It is basically characterized by three properties, i.e. confinement, asymptotic freedom, and chiral symmetry. The first two are a consequence of the colour-W(3) gauge invariance, the third one holds for massless quarks and is hence to a great extent valid for systems involving up- and down-quarks only. The long distance, nonperturbative regime of QCD has so far not yet been solved. Only lattice gauge calculations ‘) have provided some information on this regime but the tremendous numerical difficulties place these calculations at the borderhne of the capacity of present day computers. This is why in recent years there is an increasing interest of theoreticians in effective phenomenological field theories which replace the complex interacting quark-gluon system by a simpler 0375-9474/88/$03.50 @ Elsevier Science Publishers (North-Holland Physics Publishing Division)
B.V.
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
728
one involving the relevant Recently
quark and boson degrees there
fields. The hope is that by this one concentrates
of freedom
has been
in the nonperturbative
much
type 3-5) and its chiral invariant
interest
in soliton
generalization
models
suggested
and Levy “). The latter model allows for spontaneously involves
besides
quarks
a sigma field (scalar,
scalar, isovector). By a slight explicit breaking the hypothesis of the partial conservation of The models provide solitonic solutions from and delta can be extracted *-16). The quarks
on
regime. of the Friedberg-Lee
in fact earlier by Gell-Mann broken
isoscalar)
chiral symmetry
and
and a pion field (pseudo-
of the chiral symmetry one can fulfil the axial vector current 6Z7)(PCAC). which the properties of the nucleon are not confined absolutely and it is
hoped that the baryon properties in the low energy region are governed mainly by binding forces, describable in these models, rather than confining interactions. There are some attempts to incorporate confinement also into these models; however, so far the results are not conclusive ‘7,‘8). In addition, a generalization of the model to include vector mesons has been suggested I’). An alternative type of soliton model, also of high current interest, was proposed some time ago by Skyrme 20). In this approach the quarks are assumed to be integrated out and only boson fields of pion and sigma character occur. The baryon number is identified with a topological winding number. The soliton of this model, called skyrmion, is quantized in a semiclassical way 2’) in order to obtain observables of the nucleon and delta. Technically the skyrmion is easy to handle and many properties of this model have been studied by now, see e.g. for reviews refs. 22V23). In the present paper we consider the lagrangian of the linear chiral soliton model first suggested by Gell-Man and Levy “). It has been recently considered by several authors with special attention to providing solutions with proper angular momentum and isospin quantum numbers ‘07’2-‘6) in order to identify the nucleon and the delta isobar. Basically
two sorts of methods
have been suggested.
One consists
in assuming
hedgehog structures for the quarks and the pions and to apply projection techniques to the mean field solution ‘23’3). The other is the coherent pair approach 14,15) in which coherent states with suitable tensorial properties are constructed and coupled with bare nucleon
and delta quark states. There are also some suggestions
lo) for a
simplified projection technique in which the meson fields are considered as roughly classical, although this limit is not reached in the actual calculations. All the above approaches reproduce in some way the nucleon and delta properties. However, there is one common weakness in these solutions: They noticeably violate the Goldberger-Treiman relation and they do not give unique values for the pionnucleon-nucleon coupling constant, since they violate also an associated virial theorem. Since the Goldberger-Treiman relation is intimately connected with the chiral symmetry, i.e. the basic constituent of the chiral models, its violation is a serious shortcoming. In addition, the quality of the lagrangian as such cannot be judged since one does not know whether insufficiencies in the results should be attributed to the lagrangian, to the method to solve the equations of motion, or to both.
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
It is, therefore,
the first objective
the chiral
soliton
model
associated
virial
theorem.
structures,
which
of the present
fulfills
Since
model
consists
projections
on angular
technique,
than the coherent
of using a generalized
momentum
to construct
the Goldberger-Treiman
the projection
seems to be more appropriate
the present
paper
129
J and isospin
relation applied
of
and the
to hedgehog
pair approximation
hedgehog quantum
a solution
24*38),
ansatz 16) and separate
numbers
T of the nucleon
and the delta. Preliminary results of these calculations have already been published 16). In contrast to the ordinary hedgehog ansatz the generalized one also provides J # T states and hence allows for a more detailed study of the low-lying baryon spectrum. The second objective is to compare the projection theory with the standard semi-classical collective quantization method used e.g. in the Skyrme model. This will be done by a direct comparison
of our numbers
with those of Cohen
and
Broniowski 40). The various assumptions entering the collective quantization method will be evaluated by considering sum rules and narrow rotational overlaps. The paper is organized as follows: Sect. 2 introduces the lagrangian and reviews some of its general properties. Sect. 3 discusses the generalized hedgehog mean field solution, its formal background and some numerical results. Some remarks are made about the Dirac sea. The projection technique is presented in sect. 4, after the general outline and the review of the sum rules, the derivations of the various overlaps are sketched and the numerical procedure is shortly described. The general formalism to obtain observable quantities is presented in sect. 5. Numerical results concerning the projected soliton solutions are presented and discussed in sect. 6. This includes the Goldberger-Treiman relation, comparison with experimental data, an exposure of trends, and the presentation of excited baryon resonances. A conceptual and numerical comparison with the collective quantization method is performed in sect. 7. A summary,
general
discussions
and an outlook
in sect. 8, finalize
the paper.
2. The lagrangian Following Gell-Mann and Levy “) the lagrangian fields, q^(x), sigma and pion fields, G(x) and k(x),
involving operators of quark respectively, can be written as
~(x)=~(iyC”a,)~+~a”~a,~+_cia”~;ra,~-gg(~+ji7’my,)q*-U(&,,) with the self-interaction
(2.1)
potential U(~,,)=ah2(~*+~2-v2)2+C~++.
For c = 0 the lagrangian in the infinitesimal limit
is invariant
under
the chiral transformation,
(2.2) which reads
s*=(1++iy5~‘x)$, * 4 = $(l +;iy5T * x) , &=&‘+7;‘x $=&‘-&x,
3 (2.3)
M. Fiolhais
730
et al. / Generalized
where x is a real infinitesimal
isovector
and time (global
The corresponding
symmetry).
hedgehog
pseudoscalar
quantity, current
independent
on space
is the axial vector current
AI=~ty,Y57q*$.~a~~-~a”~, which
for
c = 0 is fully
spontaneously
broken
PA,
conserved,
with the vacuum
(2.4)
= 0. In nature
the chiral
symmetry
is
values
(Ol$( r)jO) = nrv = 0 , (Ol&( r)[O) = uv f 0,
Since
(2.5)
the corresponding
Goldstone boson is the pion, which has a finite mass symmetry is also explictly broken, which means that conservation of the axial current (PCAC), PA, = cn. Now,
m, = 0.1396 GeV, the chiral
we have only partial according
to the hypothesis
we should
have
of PCAC,
PA,
which
has been
experimentally
= fwrnin,
where fw = 0.093 GeV is the pion decay constant. To achieve theory we must identify c = f,mL. To fix the other parameters
confirmed,
(2.6) this in the present of the lagrangian it
is helpful to shift the sigma field, G(r) = G,,(r) + u, and to rewrite new field GO. One gets
-&JA~u~-A~v~~,+c)-A~~,,&,&~-[~A~(&v~)+cu,+~],
it in terms of the
(2.7)
We now demand that the vacuum nr, = (+,)= 0 is a solution of the lagrangian at the mean field level. From this we get A‘ov( at - v*) + c = 0. Furthermore we demand the pion field to have the proper tail associated to the physical pion mass. This yields A ‘( oz - v’) = rni . Together with c =fpmf, from the axial vector current we obtain uv = -f*. For the calculations and the following formulae we prefer to change the signs g+ -g,
Go-+ -Go,
n+
-n,
u,+
-(T, and we get altogether
2 ~2+$,
(2.8)
where mf, can be read off from the sigma mass term of the lagrangian. Due to the finite value a, = f, the quarks have an asymptotic mass of &. Thus confinement is not described for finite g. Whereas the mass of the pion is known it is not clear
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
which value to assume for rnrr since the physical The suggestions
reach from the m-meson
0.7 GeV) to the lowest glueballs the results
of the present
meaning
of the u-particle
in the nucleon-nucleon
(m, = 0.7 - 1.2 GeV). Actually,
model
731
are rather
insensitive
long as it is larger than 0.6 GeV. Hence throughout
is unclear.
interaction
(m, =
as we shall see later,
to the actual
value of m, as
the paper, if not otherwise
stated,
we use m, = 1.2 GeV. With the conjugate
momenta
i),(r)
and p,(r)
of the sigma and the pion field,
respectively, the hamiltonian density can be written in a way from which one can identify the kinetic energy of the quarks, the asymptotic quark mass, the quark-sigma interaction, the quark-pion interaction, the kinetic energy of the sigma and the pion fields, and the nonlinear sigma-pion energy.
with %!?Jr) = $(r)(-ia x,,(r)
* V)q^(r) ,
= &i(rMr),
Z&r) = gi(rMr)&(r) , ZJr)
= gi(r)[hT . %r)lq^(r),
XN,(r)=~A2[(&(r) +(2&i(r)+4f,Go(r))&(r)
* &(r))2+6~(r)+4f,G~(r) . G(r)],
%f~(r)=~[~~(r)+(V~o(r))2+m~(~o(r))2], %$(r)=t[P,(r)P,(r)+V&(r).V&(r)+mZ,&(r)*+(r)]. The formulation
of the projections
becomes
(2.10) simple
if one uses for &
and &
the
Fock space representation &=;
dkw,(k)(a+(k)a(k)++), I
fir=;
; ,=I
dkw,(k)(b:(k)b,(k)+;),
withw,(k)=(k2+m~)“2,w,(k)=(k2+m~)”2
(2.11)
and a(k) and b,(k) being the boson
annihilation operators for a sigma and a pion in the momentum t = 1,2,3 indicates the Cartesian isospin component.
state
I/r). The
3. The generalized hedgehog mean field soliton This section deals with the derivation soliton. The mean field approximation
and numerical calculation of the mean field consists in assuming a pure product Fock
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
732
state for the quarks equations
and classical
can be derived
states and the classical principle
states. This view is adopted
this procedure
is equivalent
Fock space if one describes
in the present
variational
The corresponding
of the static energy with respect
fields. Actually
in an full quark-boson
to nonrelativistic
fields for the bosons.
by variation
theories
static
to the quark
to a variational
the bosons
by coherent
paper since it allows easily to use analogies
like Hartree-Fock
and motivates
also the use
of projection techniques. Although coherent states are explicitly formulated in a given basis the final results in the mean field approach are independent on the basis chosen since only expectation values of normal ordered products of boson field operators are required. The latter feature is no longer true for projected will therefore be discussed at the beginning of sect. 4. We start the present
section
the free basis used throughout
3.1. COHERENT
by reviewing
some properties
results and
of coherent
states in
this paper.
STATES
In the following
we list some properties
of boson
sigma field as example. The G(r) and its conjugate be expanded in the free basis as dk (2w,(k))p”2(a(k)
G(r) = (2~)~~‘~
coherent
states taking
momentum
operator
eik.‘+u+(k)
e-ik’r),
the free g_(r)
(3.11
I Fu(r)
where
u(k)
is defined
= --i(277y3’2
dk ($w,(k))“2(a(k)
and w(k) have been already by a(k)
of the annihilation
= 0. A coherent
defined
eik”-a’(k)
e-i“‘r),
in sect. 2. The boson
state 1.X) is defined
can
(3.2) vacuum
(0)
such that it is an eigenstate
operator a(k)P)
=
rl(k)P) ,
(3.3)
yielding
12) = N-“2 exp
(3.4)
with N being a normalization constant such that (2 1.X) = 1. From the above definitions it follows directly that the coherent states have to a large extent classical properties as e.g. (~I:~n(r):I~)=(~I~(r)I~)“,
(q:P:(r):p)=o,
(3.5)
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
where
the normal
following coherent
ordering
expressions
is done
are useful
with respect
to evaluate
733
to the boson
matrix
elements
vacuum between
IO). The different
states:
with (I, 1I,) = N;“2N;“2 from which one gets immediately Analogous
formulae
exp
dk
rlfYk)rl2(k)
the normalization
factor of eq. (3.4).
exist for the pion field and the corresponding
coherent
state (3.8)
3.2. THE
GENERALIZED
HEDGEHOG
In the mean field approximation to have the form
SOLITON
the Fock state for the hedgehog
baryon
Ihl) = ldtl>lalh)l~)*
is assumed
(3.9)
Here Iq;J = c:c:c:lO), where the CT creates a quark of colour i in a space-spinflavour state which is the same for all colours and which is assumed to be nodeless Is valence orbital (rlc'l0) =
with Ix) being a spin-flavour
7k( ;)I’)
function.
If one assumes
circle, i.e. if (El(17,,162(r) +rr2(r)lflr,,,)lE) that Ix) has to be of hedgehog type
=ft,
the fields to be on the chiral
then it has been
IXhh)=4wHm and the pion coherent
state In,,)
(3.10)
iv(YiiJ.
shown
in ref. “)
(3.11)
must be such that
Ip
Q(r),
t=1
n,(r) = Ubhl~,(r)l4h) = 5 @i(r), I
t=2
!;ZWr),
t=3.
(3.12)
734
Actually
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
some recent investigations
is not necessary smallest
energy,
quark hedgehog
and
for quarks
the vacuum,
in s-states
is bound
of each component momentum
In a pure mean field solution
solution
with The
I$,,,,) both have the property
that
operators,
(J + T) I&,I,)= 0,
the solitonic
structure.
of the grand
and isospin
of the chiral circle
to have the hedgehog
Ixhh) and also the total hedgehog
they are eigenstates T are the angular
generally
besides
show 44) that the assumption
spin G = J+ T, where J and respectively.
(J+T)Ix,,d=O.
there is no need to generalize
(3.13) the hedgehog
structure.
However, in an angular momentum and isospin projection formalism, which goes beyond the mean field, the hedgehog is no longer distinguished and hence the spin-flavour function 1~) unknown. We do not try to generalize the considerations of ref. “) to include projected states. We prefer to use the convenient parametrization of Ix). Ix)=
R(P)@h[lul)cos 11-Id?) sin 71
(3.14)
as suggested in refs. 1’,27). Since R(p) and d( /?) are simple rotations around the y-axis in spin and isospin space, respectively, we consider only the n-degree of freedom explicitly and assume the generalized hedgehog structure r6)
IX& = Id>~0s77-Id?) sin 7,
(3.15)
which reduces to the ordinary hedgehog for n = 45”. The IX& is no longer eigenstate of all three components of the grand spin G, but only of the third one: (3.16)
(-J + TJ) I xgd = 0 .
One can show, by means of a simple variational calculation in the spirit of refs. ‘1X27) that in the mean field approximation the pion field compatible with eq. (3.15) yields a coherent
state Ifl,,)
with the property
(IIJ~,(r)lQJ
= f
@2(r)
,
If
t=2
(3.17)
I
Q%(r),
t=3
with a,(r) = &(r). Of course this reduces again to the ordinary hedgehog for Q,(r) = (P2( r) = 03(r). With this pion field and a spherical sigma field also the total generalized hedgehog I&h) = is eigenstate
of the third grand
Is;tl)ln,tl)l~)
(3.18)
spin component (-‘3 +
TdMgd= 0 .
(3.19)
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized 3.3. THE
EQUATIONS
Using
the ansatz
written
OF MOTION
(3.18)
FOR THE
hedgehog
GENERALIZED
for the generalized
hedgehog
735 HEDGEHOG
the total
SOLITON
energy
can be
with
dr*(r):IICTgd
&I, = (&hl:
(3.20)
yielding E,,,=h
j- drr’{$
[
+f
I
+fh’~~‘+:,(8o:+4~:o:+30:)+40’1:(20:+0:))~}. The equations
of motion
are obtained
(3.21)
by varying
O3 while treating r] as a fixed parameter of the quark wave functions,
Egh with respect
to be determined
drr2(u2+
to u, v, a, D1,
later. The normalization
v’) = 1 ,
(3.22)
I is incorporated E. The resulting
into the variational solitonic equations
principle are
by means
of the Lagrange
multiplier
dV
-=-2v+[~-g(~+~~)lu-g[S~,sin277+f~3]v, ar
r
a2a ar2=-Tar
3 ar2
2~+m~~+~g(u2-v2)+A2[cr3+3f~~2+f(2@~+@~)(c7+f~)],
a@, 2@, =-- 2 -+,+ rdr
r
m2, @, +&
sin (2v)guv
+A2[~~:+~~:+(T((++2~=)]~,) a2Q3 -= ar2
a& 20, -- 2 -+,+m7,sD3+&guv rar
r
+h2[~~:+~~:+(+(~+2fx)]~3.
(3.23)
M. Fiolhais
136
These equations
et al. / Generalized
hedgehog
have to be solved with the boundary
au -=O, ar and at r + 00 we have a(a)
v=o
@=O,
= 0 and @ stands
au
-= dr
-u
at r = 0
conditions
(3.24)
for @, and @,: 1
( > m,+-
r
,
r(l+m,r)~~=(2+2m,r+m2,r2)@, u[r(gf,+e)“2+
(gf= - s)-“~]
The third of the conditions
- r(gf,
(3.25) limits the quark -gf,G&S
+ s)“~v
eigenvalue
(3.25)
= 0.
to the range (3.26)
+gf,
For a given E the actual solutions of eq. (3.23) are obtained by the program COLSYS written by Ascher, Christiansen and Russel 25726).
3.4. THE
GENERALIZED
HEDGEHOG
SOLITON:
package
RESULTS
Some basic features of the solitonic solutions of eq. (3.23) are illustrated using the pure hedgehog. Due to the nonlinearity of the problem there exist two qualitatively different solutions. One is the vacuum, which is characterized by the absence of valence quarks, u(r) = v(r) = 0, by the absence of the pion field, Q(r) = 0, and by a constant Th is solution exists for any g and its energy is zero. sigma field, (El&(r)lE)=f=. with the critical g,-3.8, there occur two solutions (see fig. 1). One is For g>g,,
1 .so> C
c? ,l.OO0-l
,/ .'
: w
0.50-
0.00 3
I 4
I 5
I 6
I 7
1 a
9 Fig. 1. Hedgehog
energy
as function
of g. The total energy coupling constant
is shown g.
as a function
of the quark-meson
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
nonrelativistic
with E close to gf,, whose energy
of three free quarks, solution
i.e. 3gf,.
with E around
with increasing presented
as functions
approaches
for large g the limit
The other is the one of interest,
zero, it is localized
g. The reason
seen in fig. 2 where
131
around
for this particular
for various
g’s the norms
it is the relativistic
the origin and its energy decreases behaviour
of the solutions
of the quark
of the scaled single-particle
can be
wave functions
energy E’ = e/d,.
are
For sufficiently
large g there exist two solutions with norm equal to one converging both to a single solution at the critical g = g,. For g < g, no solution of norm one exists. 4.00 3.50 3.00 2.50 r g 2.00 i
-1.00
-.60
-30
-.40
-.20 quark
Fig. 2. Quark
.40
.60
.a0
norm as function of the quark eigenvalue. For various coupling norm N is shown as a function of the quark eigenvalue.
Fig. 3 shows the r-dependence solution for the hedgehog it is defined as (El6(r)lZ) one expects
.OO .20
1.00
eigenvalue
of the functions
constants
g the quark
u, v, @ and u of the relativistic
and for 77= 20”. The vacuum value of the u is zero because = a(r) +fr. The @(r) shows a p-wave Yukawa tail. As
for a relativistic
solution,
the lower component
of the Dirac spinor
is
appreciable. Qualitatively all the fields discussed in this paper are of this shape. It is interesting to see the effect of n on the pion field, displayed in fig. 4. For 71 =
0” the generalized
quark
hedgehog
is Ixe,,( n = 0’)) = 1u&) which yields
an axial
symmetric configuration in spin and isospin space. Hence only uncharged pions should constitute the cloud and indeed for n = 0” the @, = $ = 0. A similar effect happens at 77= 90” such that altogether the relevant interval for n is 0 s n s 45”.
3.5. POLARIZATION
OF THE
DIRAC
SEA
The calculations in this paper are performed by considering three valence quarks only, ignoring the polarization of the Dirac sea. The question arises how far such a procedure is justified. The only calculations with the present lagrangian involving
M.
738
-3
Fiolhais
et
al.
)
I
I
I
I
.oo
20
.40
.60
.80
/ Generalized
hedgehog
I
I
1.00
1.20
I
I
I
1.40
1.60
1.80
2.00
r (fm)
Fig. 3. The quark fields and the sigma field. The radial dependencies of the quark wavefunctions u and o and of the sigma field are plotted for various values of the mixing angle. The solid line corresponds to the hedgehog (7 = 45”) and the dotted line to n = 20”.
sea quarks have been published by Ripka and Kahana in a series of clearly written and assume the sigma papers 8335). They consider hedgehog mean field solutions and the pion fields to be on the chiral circle and to be given in a convenient parametrization. By this the extension R of the soliton can be varied from outside, the relevant parameter being the dimensionless quantity X = 2Rgf,/ AC. In fig. 6 of their paper 35) it is demonstrated that the contribution of the sea quarks to the total integrated
baryon
density
is negligible
for solitons
with X s 2. The calculations
in
__________________
‘\
\
\
-
PHI
\
\
i \
\
xy
‘:
‘\ \
iL/’ :
\ \<’
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
r W Fig. 4. Pion fields for various mixing angles. The radial dependencies the pion field are shown for various angles. The solid, dashed-dotted n = 45”, 20” and O”, respectively.
of the different components and dotted lines correspond
of to
M. Fiolhais et al. 1 Generalized hedgehog
our present
paper are self-consistent
corresponding the baryon
to X = 2.8. Hence number
contribution. following
is significant
A similar
ones and result all in solitons in our case the contribution but probably
feature
size, although
it may stabilize
quark
contributes
with R = 0.6 fm
of the sea quarks
not dominating
can be seen for the total
fig. 2 of ref. 35), the Dirac sea basically
of the present
139
to
over the valence energy
to which,
only to 20% for solitons
at a different
radius
if sea quarks
and
their polarization are taken into account. Altogether, there are indications, by no means a proof, that indeed the valence quarks are the dominating part for the solitons considered in this paper. It is, however, not known how other observables react to the polarization of the Dirac sea and this question certainly has to be studied in the near future. Such an investigation will not be simple because one has to combine
projection
techniques
with renormalization
schemes.
4. Projection theory The hedgehog baryonic mean field state II,&,) and its generalization I$& are no eigenstates of the angular momentum J2, J3 and of the isospin T2, T3. They are however
linear
combinations
of them, i.e.
I*)=JT E, cc;:;1J, a
T,
CY,
M, MT)
.
T
(4.1)
Here the (J, T, a, M, MT) are simultaneous eigenstates of J2, J3, T2, T3 and LYstands for an additional quantum number, which just distinguishes states of the same J, T, M, MT. The 1J, T, a, M, MT) are model states of the proton, the neutron, the A ++, etc., and contain therefore the physical information one is looking for. Hence they are the states one is interested in and the mean field state II/J) is only a means to construct them. They niques 28,29) in analogy techniques have been cloud 24,29,30)and to the
are extracted from I+) by Peierls-Yoccoz with the treatment of deformed nuclei.
applied by several authors to bag models with a pion chiral soliton model ‘2*‘3*‘6).In ref. ‘) a simplified procedure
is used, where the quantum In the present
projection techThese projection
formalism
fluctuations we expanded
of the pion field are not taken into account. the boson
fields into the corresponding
free basis and constructed a coherent Fock state in the same basis, see eqs. (3.1), (3.4) and (3.8). Whereas for a pure mean field approach all bases are equivalent this is no longer true for the projection. The pure mean field approach requires only the knowledge of the classical boson fields which are the expectation values of the field operators in any basis between the corresponding coherent states. In the projection formalism, however, overlaps are required, i.e. matrix elements of the field operators between rotated coherent states, and those overlaps depend on the basis chosen. A good basis would consist in the boson small amplitude eigenmodes around the mean field solution. The coherent state to be used in the projection would then be the boson vacuum associated with the eigenmodes. Such a basis
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
740
would
have the advantage
small amplitude
that the correlations
vibrations
would
other hand, such a calculation
be taken
not known
into account
would be extremely
and even then one does not know whether the most important
influences
to low energy
in the projection.
complicated
the choice
mode
On the
correlations
are
Actually
it is
like rotations.
of the basis
and
and time consuming
those small amplitude
ones for a large amplitude
at all what
corresponding
has on the projected
quantities, in particular if the projections are done before the variation. This is even not known in nonrelativistic nuclear physics where the analogues of the present calculations with the free basis and the eigenmode basis correspond to projected Hartree-Fock and projected RPA. In the present paper we ignore these problems and use the free plane wave basis, within which all properties are then determined variationally. It is understood, that the effects of the choice of the basis on projected properties require some detailed investigations.
4.1. GENERAL
PROJECTION
FORMALISM
The states IJ, T, a, M, MT) of eq. (4.1) can be obtained projection
from I+) by means
of the
operator (4.2)
and an analogous expression operators for spin and isospin
for P&,,.
The R(R)
R(CY,p, ?) = eieJ,
and
i(d)
are the rotation
,-‘@, emiYJ3,
ii(G, /j, +I = em;“r3 e-iET2 e-i+T,. The explicit
formula
for the normalized I J, T a, M MT) = ,;
and the projected
energy
(4.3)
states IJ, T, a, M, MT) reads 1T
g(K/=pT)Pk P;T,&)
(4.4)
E’ JTa) = (J, T, CY,M, MTjHl J, T, a, M, MT) is given by
where the properties
PJfK’M’ are used for the derivation. ation procedure C K’K:
P’MK
=
sJJf&,,Q,‘P;~K
The ggpT) are the results of a nonorthogonal
(h~~~,,K;-E’JT”‘n~~~K.K:)g’KJ~l=O
(4.6) diagonaliz-
(4.7)
741
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
with the kernels h’JT’
KKTK’K;=(~lHPJKK,P~TK;IICl) 9
(J-0
nKK,K,K;=(cCrlPJKK~P=TK;I~). The cr distinguishes
the various
solutions
T. The g(K2T’ can be normalized
for a given set of quantum
(4.8) numbers
J and
such that ( JTa” gK’K;
(JTn)*
c gKKT
(JT) nKKTK’K;=ka’.
(4.9)
As one sees the overlap kernels (4.8) are the relevant quantities for the diagonalization and their explicit expressions will be given in sects. 5.2 and 5.3. One of the interesting aspects of the projection formalism is that there exist sum rules. In the Hilbert
space spanned
by R(n)l?(d)l$) I =
the completeness
relation
reads
IJTcYMMT)( JTaMMTI ,
C
(4.10)
aJTMMT
and hence one obtains
immediately c’I~,!
=
(
(4.11)
JTcYMMT I+) ,
and with eq. (4.4) &TRT)= K; Thus the norm sum rule (NSR) JTAM, The probability
T
&:‘((cII
pLTK,I$)
(4.12)
*
is with (Ic,I $) = 1 1&
&~‘d%,K,
I* =
(4.13)
1 .
to find in I$) the state with a given J, T and (Y is given by P (“a) = A,
Similarly
&K
one obtains
an energy
(&
&l?$n!&!W,K,
sum rule (ESR)
(4.14)
I* .
involving
the mean
field energy
J%*=(~IffI(CI): 2 c JTaMMT
cg KKT
(JTm’ KKT
(JT’ n MKMTMT
ECJT”’
=
EMFA
.
(4.15)
The sums in eqs. (4.9)-(4.15) are in principle to be extended over all possible J, T, M and MT. Eqs. (4.13) and (4.15) provide an excellent check for the numerical accuracy of the calculation. A typical example is given in table 1, evaluated with g = 5.0, n = 20” and A = 1.3 (see sect. 5.4 for the definition of A). Listed are all states I JTa) with a probability p (ITa’ > 0.1% and J s G and T s $. These states exhaust the norm sum rule (4.13) to 90% and the energy sum rule (4.15) to 88%. This means roughly 10% of the wavefunctions contains states with J 25 or T ~4. In general the higher
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
742 J
or T the smaller
is the probability
amplitude.
Thus the method
leads to a natural
cutoff in the sense that the probability amplitude becomes negligible. In table 1 N yre*’ in the projected states. The larger the J
there is also listed the pion number or T the larger the pion number
4.2. INTRINSIC
QUANTITIES
For the evaluation quantities
becomes.
of the overlaps
required.
in the next subsection
The pion amplitude
for the generalized
hedgehog
intrinsic
is
t=1
&A,(k), 5fh(k) =
there are various
t=2
,
ik,,A,(k)
(4.16)
t=3
( ikA,(k), with, see eqs. (3.8), (3.12) for definition,
drr2j,(kr)@,(r). The intrinsic
number
of pions
t is defined
of isospin
N’,” = (&,I
dk TABLE
(4.17)
as
b:(k)b,(k)&t,)
(4.18)
1
For a given intrinsic solution, characterized by g, 7, A as given, the various projected states with their quantum numbers, energies and their probability amplitudes are listed J
T
(I
Energy
t
t
f ; z1 2 3 : I 1 f 4 I: I 2
+ f
1 2 1 2 1 1 2 3 1 2 1 2 3
0.938 1.599 1.669 2.069 2.110 1.099 1.692 2.161 1.866 2.490 1.455 2.254 2.822
f f 3 : I t + ; 2 + f
EWSR= 88% NEWSR = 90%
Prob. ampl.
%
12.6 1.9 2.2 0.3 0.2 35.2 6.4 0.6 2.4 0.2 19.7 2.1 0.2
NJT _ 1.01 1.48 1.64 1.66 1.54 1.23 1.52 1.60 1.95 2.39 1.98 2.48 2.89
g = 5.0 17=20” A =1.3
Only those are given with a probability amplitude than 0.1%. The NiT is the projected pion number.
of more
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
which yields after an elementary N;‘=
calculation
dktT(k)&(k)=4,rr I
Similarly
the intrinsic E’,“=(II,,l
dkk4A:(k).
(4.19)
I
kinetic
I
143
energy of the pion field is expressed
dkw,(k)b:(k)b,(k)ll7,,)=4~
Due to 0,(r) = @Jr) we have also A,(k) = A,(k), also needs the following mixed terms N”3’=$v Tr
,5”3’ Tr
=
I
as
dk k4w,(k)Af(k).
(4.20)
IV’,” = N’,Z’ and E’,” = E’,‘. One
dkk4A I(k)A,(k),
I
dk k4w,(k)A,(k)A3(k).
$
(4.21)
I
One can rewrite the kinetic
energies
dkk4w,(k)A:(k)
as =
(4.22)
For the mixed term this reads
4.3. THE
NORM
OVERLAP
In this section we derive the explicit the generalized hedgehog I$) = 1qbgh): (JT)
nK’K;KK,=
(25+ 1)(2T+
1)
(8~~)~
expressions
for the norm
dR dfi D~~K(fl)D~~K,(d)n(fi,
overlap
d)
(4.8) of
(4.24)
with n(fi, fi) =
(~,hl~(~)~(~)l&J.
(4.25)
For the spherical tensor algebra we use in the following the conventions of Brink and Satchler 3’) being identical to those of Messiah 32). The rotation operators R(0) and R(d) are products of operators acting in the quark-, pion- and sigma subspaces. Since, however, the coherent state 12) has (good) spin and isospin quantum numbers J = T = 0 its overlaps are always one. Thus one obtains with three quarks in identical states n(fl, h) = ni(fl, h)n,(.O,
f?) .
(4.26)
744
M. Fiolhnis
et al. / Generalized
hedgehog
The norm overlap of the single-quark wave function since R(R)[ai] = ai and the orbit is a 1s state:
n4(Q fi) is easy to evaluate
(4.27)
with L~,~lW~)~(~)lx,tJ g’tven in eq. (A.l) of the appendix.
For the overlap
pions
pion state of eq. (3.8)
one has to take into account
is again a coherent
that the rotated
coherent
of the
state 30):
R(fi)E(d)]n)
= N-l’* exp
i dk&(k, 1 ,=1 I
0, &b:(k)
I
(4.28)
IO)
with &(k, n, d) = ; &(d)&(R-‘(n)k) 1’=1 One obtains
the simple
.
(4.29)
expression n,(G
fi) =
(q&wm~~l~gtl) dk5T(k,
(4.30)
fl, &5,(k)
with (4.31) Using now the fact that for any function
I one obtains
f(k)
one has
dkf(k)kikj=f6,
(4.32)
the final expression
n,(~,d)=exp{(N’,“+N’,2’)m,(~,~)+N(,3’m3(~,ji)+N(,‘3’m,3(~,
d)} (4.33)
with m,(Q
4.4. THE
d),
m,(n,
d) and m,,(Q
HAMILTONIAN
In order integral
to evaluate
(2J+ h(JT) K’KkKKT =
d) given in eqs. (A.2)-(A.4)
of the appendix.
OVERLAP
the Hamilton
1)(2T+ (8~r*)* h(G
1) I
overlap
h’,Jz~,‘~~~ one has to calculate
dLi dfi D;&2)D;;,&?)h(f2,
fi) = &MW)~(fi)llClg,J.
fi) ,
the
(4.34) (4.35)
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
Following
the decomposition
of eq. (2.10) some terms of h(0,
745
d) are rather easily
obtained:
I
hqm(fl,d)=3gf,n(R,fi)
h,,(Q
d)=3gn(@fi)
drr2(u2-v*),
drr*(u*-v*)a, I
h,(R,~)=2lin(R,fi)~drr*[(~~+rn~~*]. For the evaluation
of the quark-pion
valid for the generalized
(4.36)
interaction
term one should
use the identity
hedgehog
(4.37) Using now the plane
wave expansion
(3.1) of the pion field and the fact that with
eq. (4.8) one has tfh(-k)* = &fh(k) one gets
I =
-gnt(R,
x ,=, i
I
fl)n,(Q
0)
@t(r)(xghi{
(+r7r,
dr r2w
R(n)&d))k,h>
The anticommutators are given in eq. (AS) of the appendix. the kinetic energy of the pions we need &(On, ii)
=($&hi
(4.38)
For the evaluation
of
: H,,:R(fl)&f%l+,h)
=il,gO,d) ;
,=,
Integrals of a similar sort have occurred can be written down as h,(R,fi)=n;(n,d)n,(n,
*
I
dkw.r(kMT(kMk 4 @.
already
(4.39)
in eq. (4.30) and thus the result
~)[(~',')+~',2))m,(n,~)+~(,))m~(n,~)
+EE(,'3bn,3(f2,~)]
(4.40)
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized
746
with m,, m3 and m,, given in eqs. (A.2)-(A.4) part of the analytics
is the evaluation
= n,(l2,
ti) f
hedgehog
of the appendix.
of the nonlinear
The most difficult
part of the hamiltonian
overlap:
dr {(n,,l:(n(r)n(*))‘:R(~)l?(~)ll7gh)
+(n,,l:~(r)~(r):R(R)~(~))I~~,)((+’+6f,a+8fZ,) +(T4+sf,(+3+18sf2,,~*+16~~~+5f~}. Its derivation
is rather
lengthy,
though
expression are given in ref. 43). A typical example for the hamiltonian
(4.35)
straightforward. overlap
is shown
Details
and
the
final
in fig. 5.
1
80
100
120
140
160
180
beta Fig. 5. Hamiltonian
4.5. PROJECTION
overlap
functions.
BEFORE
AND
The hamiltonian overlap are plotted.
AFTER
THE
functions
for various
sets of Euler angles
VARIATION
In the present paper we will consider four methods to obtain angular momentum and isospin projected Fock states of the chiral soliton lagrangian. They are characterized by the ansatz for the spin-flavour contents of the quark wave function, i.e. hedgehog or generalized hedgehog, and the method of varying the radial degrees of freedom. (i) Hedgehog, projection after the variation (HH-PAV): Here we assume an ordinary hedgehog structure, i.e. 77= 45” and 0, = a2 = Q3 = @. We solve first the mean field equation (3.23) and perform afterwards the projections. Thus first is evaluated. Calculations of (8+,,,,lHI1/,,,,)=0 is solved and then I$hh)=P,PTI$hh)
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
this sort have first been reported and Rosina
13). The present
(ii) Hedgehog, ordinary
projection
hedgehog
structure,
by Birse 12) and in some approximation
calculations
reproduce
before the variation however,
equations
PJP,I~,,).
modifies
variational
principle
the numbers (HH-PBV):
we perform
states, i.e. we solve the Euler-Lagrange This
741
of ref. ‘*).
Again we assume
the variation
for (&&~lI-II&~) the soliton
by Golli the
with projected = 0 with I+;;) =
equations.
Since
this
formalism for a pure hedgehog is given in detail in ref. I*) we omit it here completely, although we will present numerical results. (iii) Generalized hedgehog, projection after the variation (GH-PAV): While for the ordinary hedgehog the only degrees of freedom are the radial shapes of U, u, (T and @ the generalized hedgehog has two pion fields @, = 4pZ and Q3 and the additional parameter 7. Since a pure mean field solution as a function of n reduces always to the hedgehog, the generalization makes only sense if at least the n-degree of freedom is varied after the projection. Thus one produces several mean field solutions 1tjgh( 7)) by solving eq. (3.23) for various given n in the range 0 c n < 45”, constructs JI,!I~~(17)) and looks for the minimum of (1&!~(~)1Hl$~hT( 7)) with respect to 7. Since the projection is performed after the variation of the radial degrees of freedom this method is called GH-PAV. (iv) Generalized hedgehog, projection before the variation (GH-PBV): Basically in this method for each 17the radial shapes of U, v, a, @, = o2 and C& are determined by the variational principle (a$,‘;( n)l Hl&!hT( n)) = 0 and the minimum of (Jl~hTIHl&~) with respect to n is searched. This variational principle modifies the solitonic equations (3.23). We have derived in detail the full formalism which is rather lengthy and hence not presented in this paper. Actually there are several arguments that the unrestricted variation of all radial degrees of freedom can be replaced by a simpler, approximate one. If one compares HH-PBV and HH-PAV with each other and takes into account the volume element dr r2 then one realizes that u, z7 and (T are rather unchanged and that the radial dependence of Q(r) shows only little modification. Hence only the total strength of Q(r) is the relevant degree of freedom 12). The same feature occurs if one compares Q(r) from the hedgehog with Q,(r) = Q*(r) and Q3(r) from the generalized
hedgehog
for various
7. Again,
only
the overall strength changes. Thus we do not perform a full variation of all radial shapes for the generalized hedgehog, but introduce a parameter A by @r(r) + A@,(r) and @Jr) + A@*(r) and treat it as a variational parameter before the projection. An analogous variation of Q3 turns out to be superfluous since it lowers the total energy of the nucleon by merely 1 MeV. Thus our approximate GH-PBV method finding the minimum in the projected energy plane consists of (&l(n, A)IH[I,!J$(~, A)) with respect to 7~ and A. This energy plane is shown in figs. 6 and 7 for the case of the nucleon and the delta, respectively. The differences between the various methods can well be seen at table 2 if one evaluates for fixed values of g and m, the energies of the nucleon and delta and some relevant observable quantities, the deviation of which will be presented in
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized
748
hedgehog
1.7 1.6 1.5 1.4
\i
1.3 1.2 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.6 0.7
0
5
10
15
20 MIXING
25 ANGLE
30
35
40
45
ETA
Fig. 6. Total projected energy plane for the nucleon. The total projected energy for the nucleon displayed in form of equipotential lines in the plane spanned by the generalized hedgehog parameter and the scaling factor A.
is TJ
1.7 1.6 1.5 tx g 2 E
1.4 1.3
0.9
0.6
j
0.7 0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
MIXING ANGLE ETA Fig. 7. Total projected in form of equipotential
energy plane for the delta. The total projected lines in the plane spanned by the generalized scaling factor A.
energy for the delta is displayed hedgehog parameter n and the
M. Fiolhais
et al. / Generalized
hedgehog
149
TABLE 2 For a given quark-meson
E,(GeV) Ed(GeV EC& (?$;rn’) (r!)(W pr(n.m.) p,(n.m.) g,lgv g = 5.3163
coupling constant g the various text, are compared “)
methods,
explained
in the
HH-PAV
HH-PBV
GH-PAV
GH-PBV
0.924 1.041 0.117 1.120 0.56 -0.08 2.48 -2.08 1.72
0.871 1.023 0.152 1.120 0.53 -0.08 2.51 -2.23 1.78
0.878
0.835 0.995 0.160 1.358 0.63 -0.11 2.83 -2.50 1.72
n = 20”
1.007 0.129 1.358 0.64 -0.12 2.54 -2.24 1.70
A4 = 1.15
AN= 1.3
“) Listed are the energy of the nucleon, of the delta, the delta-nucleon splitting, the mean field energy, the squared radii of proton and neutron, the magnetic moments of proton and neutron, and the ratio of the axial vector coupling constant to the vector coupling constant, g,/gv.
sect. 6. Altogether in improving the method from HH-PAV to GH-PBV one improves noticeably the squared charge radii and gains about 100 MeV in the nucleon energy. Compared to the simple hedgehog the projected state is lowered by about 285 MeV and compared to the mean field solution with n = 20” by about 500 MeV. One realizes here already that correlation energies, i.e. the difference between projected energies and the corresponding mean field ones, play a significant role.
4.6. THE
NUMERICAL
PROCEDURE
OF THE
PROJECTION
In the previous sections the general formalism of the angular momentum and isospin projections has been presented. However, due to the fact that the generalized hedgehog I+& obeys G,I$,,) = ( J3 + T,)I4,,) = 0 several simplifications occur as will be explained now. As example we use for this the expectation value of a scalar isoscalar
operator
S. We have:
The matrix element on the r.h.s. contains 0 and fi, which reads explicitly
a six-fold
integral
over the Euler angles
da dai dy dj sin p dp sin fi d/? eiKcl+iKT~+iK’y+iK’~dJK’K(P)d=;K,(p) I X (+ghl e-iaJJ-izT3 e-iPJ,-ifir,
e-iYJS-i?TJI+,h)s(fl,
fi) ,
(4.37)
M. Fiolhais
750
et al. / Generalized
hedgehog
Since JsI(Lgh)= -TJ,I$,,) to &-& coordinates depends
and
the matrix element on the r.h.s. of eq. (4.36) is proportional by defining new 8KC,_K;. Hence one can simplify the expression
4 = LY- c?, $ = y - f and 4 = (Y+ &, 6 = y + j? Since the overlap
also on the combinations
There remains
only a four-fold
4 and Cc,the integrations integral
~(0, fi)
over 6 and 6 are trivial.
which can be evaluated
by standard
discretiz-
ation techniques. Due to the Kronecker symbols we have immediately a reduction in the number of matrix elements. For the hamiltonian one has therefore /,‘JT’ 6 K. K, .h(KI? -6 K’.-K; (4.38) K’K;KK,, K’K,pK and an analogous expression II,$,,,) the expressions simplify
for the norm overlap. In case of the pure hedgehog even further I*) and one obtains eventually a twofold
integral and always J = T. Simplifications as described above for the case of a scalar-isoscalar operator occur for operators of all tensorial properties. Thus one always can reduce the six-fold integrations over the Euler angles to four-fold ones. In practice this can be done, besides simple normalization factors, by considering the original Euler angles but setting & = 7 = 0 and performing the integrations over a, P, Y and fi. At this point we should
mention
that the most efficient
way of performing
the
projection from the pure hedgehog soliton of this model is to use the technique suggested by Golli and Rosina 13). In the end the energy and other observables can be expressed in terms of the intrinsic number of pions and the norm kernel. The latter can be written in an analytic form involving modified Bessel functions 24). In case of the generalized however.
hedgehog
the analytic
approach
is no longer
feasible,
5. Observables The angular momentum and isospin projected Fock states of the previous section can be used to evaluate baryon properties. To this end various matrix elements of appropriate currents between projected states have to be evaluated, the details of which are presented in ref. 43). One needs T(hp) ($I(p&‘K
the general
of rank A between ,)+T(*p)p;‘,K,$)=
expression projected (2J+
for the matrix
element
of a tensor
operator
states 33) $J’+l)
(_l)f+K >
J’ XC -K’ W
A
J
p
K’-p
dR Dc,_P,K (0) >I
x ($1T(hP)R(fln)lG). The generalization of this formula to two projections is trivial. to be decomposed into their components with definite tensorial matrix elements have to be evaluated.
(5.1) The currents have character and the
751
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
Electromagnetic
properties
are evaluated
the electromagnetic
by considering
current (5.2)
j~,(r)=~(r)y~Q~(r)+Ejij7;;(r)i)~~j(r)
with the charge
projection
operator
for up and down quarks
Q+$+!+
The squared
charge radius
(5.3)
is then given by
(I’)‘,: = (JTaMM,I: In a similar
way the operator
of r with the 3-vector
dr r2JEM(r):l
for the magnetic
JTd4MT).
moment
(5.4)
is given by the cross product
part of j!&,,, c(r)
=;(rxj,,(r)).
(5.5)
The matrix elements of its z-component between the Fock states In?) and Ip?), integrated over all space, yield the magnetic moments of the proton and neutron, respectively. The axial vector coupling constant g, is the matrix element of the component A;(r) of the isovector axial current AC”(r) of eq. (2.4), integrated over all space. Explicitly one is interested in g,/gv, of the isovector vector current
where gv is the corresponding
matrix element
~“(*>=f~(*)r”7~(r)+~(r)Xr3~~(r). Since for the nucleon
the vector part yields just i one obtains
R =2(nTI: At 4-momentum
(5.6)
q2 = 0
altogether
drAf(r):lnr).
the pion-nucleon-nucleon
(5.7) coupling
drzj^‘,)‘(r):lnt).
constant
is given by (5.8)
Here MN is the nucleon mass andj,(r) the pion source current. The latter is obtained from the equations of motion derived from the lagrangian, i.e. (@“a, + m2,);r =j
(5.9)
and reads (5.10)
752
Besides
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
this “source
form”
for the pion-nucleon-nucleon
coupling
constant
there
is also a “field form” I
g,,, =4~
= mt(nt]:
dr z7;3(r):]n~)
.
(5.11)
The difference between both expressions corresponds to a virial theorem associated I with the operator 0 = j drzF3(r), where P(r) is the momentum field conjugate to m(r). A simple calculation shows that i&N,
g,NN
-=--i(ntl: 2MN 2MN
drz[ps(r),
fi]:]nT),
(5.12)
where fi is the hamiltonian of the system. Apparently the expectation value of the commutator vanishes between exact eigenstates of fi. Thus the extent to which an approximate used. Since
solution satisfies gmNN =gL,, provides a test of the approximation in nature the gWNN is measured at momentum transfer q* = rni the theoretical grNN values (5.8) and (5.11) have to be corrected for the finite pion mass to be compared with experiment. Birse 12) has calculated this correction factor as grrNN(q’)
=
g,rNN(“)(l
(5.13)
-brZ,q2)
with
(ntl: l dr r’j:“‘(r):lnr)
r2,=-
&N:(o)
.
(5.14)
This author has calculated r’, explicitly and found that g,NN(mi) is 5% larger than g,,NN(O). In this paper we accept his argument and multiply all theoretical values obtained from eqs. (5.8) and (5.11) by the factor 1.05. for &NN, Another check for the quality of the approximation is given by the GoldbergerTreiman relation. If we had a fully conserved axial vector current
PA,=0 one would
obtain
for the exact eigenstates gA -=-
fr
gv
MN
of fi the Goldberger-Treiman g,NN
(5.15) relation (5.16)
which provides another necessary condition to be fulfilled for a good approximate solution. In nature, however, the axial vector current is only partially conserved (PCAC) and hence the gzL\ obtained by eq. (5.16) from the experimental value of gA/gv is by 8% smaller than the experimental grrNN. Similarly to the pion-nucleon-nucleon coupling constant we consider also the pion-nucleon-delta coupling constant g,,, and the pion-delta-delta coupling constant g,,,. For the latter one we take the expectation values of the operators in
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
eqs. (5.8) and (5.11) between sponding
the states (J = T = z, A4 = MT = 1). The gxNA, corre-
to the decay A + N + v, is obtained
operator jdrzji(r) The derivations
153
in the source
form sandwiching
between (A:;\ and IN:,,). and the final expressions of the observables
the
are given in ref. 43).
6. Results 6.1. THE
GOLDBERGER-TREIMAN
As discussed
already in sect. 6 the satisfaction
and of the virial theorem the method
RELATION
associated
of the Goldberger-Treiman
with g,NN p rovide
used. Table 3 IiStS the V&eS
for
gA/gV,
relation
a check for the quality
&NN,
and for
&NN
gA
MN
of
(6-l)
gzk=fn-
using the present methods and values from the literature in comparison. The percentage shows the violation of the Goldberger-Treiman relation and of the virial theorem.
It is defined
as &NN
-
,
g,NN
+
2
l.o8gs;% - g:NN
(6.2)
+ gyNN ’
l.OSg:;;
g:NN
where gyNN = + (g,,N + g;NN). The factor 1.08 corrects for the slight explicit violation of the chiral symmetry in nature. It is chosen such that the violation is zero when using the experimental
numbers. TABLE 3
Values for the axial vector coupling constant g,/g,, constant in the source form g,,, and field form gk,, Method ref. 14) ref. lo) ref. “) HH-PAV HH-PBV GH-PAV GH-PBV Exp.
g,lg, 1.39 1.86 1.78 1.72 1.78 1.69 1.75 1.23
the pion-nucleon-nucleon
coupling
, and the value for gzzk = Mg,/ G,f,
g?riw
gkw
25.41 21.85 18.28 23.29 16.94 23.70 17.55 13.6
2.52 15.14 13.28 14.92 12.80 16.84 17.85 13.6
Violation 14.02 19.70 18.85 17.34 17.95 17.04 17.65 12.5
(%)
173 51 59 42 56 24 6 0
The methods used are described in the text. In the methods HH-PAV, HH-PBV, GH-PAV and GH-PBV the coupling constant g is adjusted in order to obtain a proper mass of the nucleon, M = 0.938 GeV. The coherent pair approach and the papers of Birse and Banerjee and of Birse are given in refs. ‘4S’o,‘2) respectively. The percentage of the violation of the Goldberger-Treiman relation and of the virial theorem is defined in eq. (6.2).
754
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized
The numbers
hedgehog
in table 3 show that the generalization
sable in order to fulfill the Goldberger-Treiman Due to the T-degree
of freedom
relation
the violation
of two to 24% and it is furthermore
reduced
after the projection.
Thus,
from this point
is the most reliable
one. The remaining
of the hedgehog
the pion fields and the quark
6.2. OBSERVABLES
OF NUCLEON
Table 4 lists the results
reduced
to only 6% if the variation of view the suggested
6% are probably
fields is not expected
AND
and the virial theorem
is immediately
perform the variation of the radial shapes of the fields reason could be that we ignore orbital deformations They should in principle occur since QX differs from deformation effects are estimated 39) to be small this
is indispen16).
by a factor is performed
GH-PBV
method
due to the fact that we
only approximately. Another of the quark wave functions. 0, and 02. Since, however, slight inconsistency between
to be important.
DELTA
of the “best”
of the methods
in comparison with the experimental data. As mentioned already, the GH-PBV procedure
studied,
fulfills
namely
GH-PBV,
the Goldberger-Treiman
relation and the pion-nucleon virial theorem in contrast to all the other approaches. Given are the total values and for some quantities the contributions coming from the quarks and from the mesons. While resulting
the nucleon energy is adjusted, the delta energy comes out too small in about half the experimental splitting. Since in the present model the TABLE 4
Results
of the
projection
before
the variation (GH-PBV) “) Quark
using
Meson
(GeV (GeV)
(GeV)
(W (fm*) (mm.) (nm.)
0.43 0.11 1.43 -1.08
0.21 -0.21 1.32 -1.32
0.96
0.79
the
generalized
hedgehog
Total
Exp.
0.938 1.091 0.154 0.64 -0.10 2.76 -2.40 1.15 1.75 17.50 1.1
0.938 1.232 0.294 0.65 -0.12 2.19 -1.91 1.46 1.23 13.60 1.5
“) Listed are the energy of the nucleon and the delta, the squared charge radii of the proton and the neutron, the magnetic moments of the proton and the neutron, the axial vector coupling constant g,/g,, the pion-nucleon-nucleon coupling constant g,,,, and the ratio of the pion-delta-delta coupling constant g,,, to g,,,. These final results are calculated with g = 5.0, m, = 1.2 GeV, m, = 0.1396 GeV,f, = 0.093 GeV and one obtains for the nucleon n = 21.6”, A = 1.288 and for the delta 7) = 23.4”, A = 1.183.
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized Ed -EN
originates
in the nucleon, splitting
from the different
this result
is in agreement
is made by one-gluon
The squared the proton
charge magnetic
kinetic
exchange
radii of proton moment.
such that the ration feature
155
of the pions
with the general contributions,
However,
come out properly a common
energies
and neutron
actually
hedgehog
belief
that half of the
not included
are well reproduced
the neutron
magnetic
pp/pUn is not correctly
to all present
in the delta and
static models.
Models
in our theory. similarly
moment reproduced.
as
does not This is
with none or with
a weak pion cloud yield wrong absolute values but proper ratios, just as the pure MIT bag model. On the other hand models with a strong pion cloud increase the absolute
values but destroy
the ratio. One guesses the addition
of vector mesons
to
the lagrangian will improve the situation. This is also hoped in case of the axial vector coupling constant and the pion-nucleon-nucleon coupling constant which are about 40% too large compared with experiment. Table 4 shows also the contributions of the quarks and of the mesons to the observable quantities. As already pointed out by Birse ‘*) both are equally important. This differs noticeably from the coherent pair approach ‘43’5), where only g,/gv was noticeably affected by the mesons. One should note, however, that the distinction is somewhat arbitrary, since e.g. in the case of the pion-nucleon-nucleon coupling constant one has two equivalent expressions (6.8) and (6.11), one of which is without quarks at all. One cannot exclude that similar virial theorems exist for the other observables. Some properties of the delta isobar are listed in table 5. It is interesting to note that we found for the ratio p(Ait)/pLp a value of 1.98 n.m. which is very close to the value of 2 in the naive quark model. Apparently the pion cloud does not have a big influence
on this number.
TABLES
The squared radii and magnetic moments of the proton (P), the neutron (N) and various delta states (A) with third spin component M are listed
P n A++ A++ A+ $ A0 AA-
M
(r2)(fm2)
t
0.64 -0.10 1.39 1.39 0.65 0.65 -0.10 -0.10 -0.84 -0.84
t S f ; t t f t t
The parameters table 3.
of the calculation
(b4n.m.) 2.76 -2.40 5.43 1.81 2.15 0.72 -1.12 -0.37 -4.40 -1.47 are those from
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
156 6.3. TRENDS
There are some simple to the variation similar
trends
to the one shown
simplicity
(HH-PAV).
and expecation
are exposed The quadratic
values
with regard
of the nucleon
mass on g and m, is
not presented
here. For the sake of
in ref. 15) and hence
the other trends
the variation
of the energies
of g and m,. The dependence
for the pure hedgehog
with projection
charge radius (r’,) shows a decrease
after of 20%
if one changes g from 4 to 6. With increasing coupling constant the pion field increases and together with it the pion pressure, which reduces the size of the system. The dependence of (T*)~ on m, is rather weak. If one changes m, from 0.6 GeV to 1.4 GeV the (r2)p decreases by only 5% supporting the present way of choosing a fixed sigma mass of 1.2 GeV for the bulk of the calculations. The pp is basically independent on g, it reduces its value by less than 10% if m, varies from 0.4 to 1.4. The absolute value of pu, behaves similarly. It is interesting to investigate g,/gv and glrNN a bit more in detail. As one can see at table 2 the g,/gv is only little modified if one introduces the generalized hedgehog and performs the variations after the projections. Since in the end the Goldberger-Treiman relation is fulfilled the g,/gv value is the most reliable one of all observables. Hence its dependence on g and rn_ tells something about the lagrangian rather than about the method to solve it. It is important to note that the value of the axial vector coupling constant is nearly independent on g and m,, and with no choice of these parameters the value of g,/gv can be made smaller than 1.65. If one assumes that sea quarks and centre-of-mass corrections do not change the above numbers, this is then an indication that the lagrangian has to be modified, possibly
by the introduction
and Banerjee 6.4. EXCITED
as suggested
already
by Broniowski
19). STATES
Fig. 8 shows the spectrum same isospin. The states
of vector bosons
are obtained
of excited from
the
baryonic
states grouped
diagonalization
(5.7)
into bands
where
of the
the fields
are
approximately optimized to the nucleon by means of the parameters 7 and A yielding g = 5.0, 17= 20.0” and A = 1.3. From all resulting states those with a percentage larger than 1% are selected and compared with the lowest experimental states of the same quantum numbers. The agreement between experiment and theory is not very good. The T = 3 states have a percentage of 20% and 2% in the state 1(Cl&, respectively (see table 1 for details), however in nature these states have not been seen yet. Also the order of the T = 1 states is not correctly reproduced. The energies of the other states are fairly well described. In the range of the Roper resonance we find also a corresponding state with the nucleon quantum numbers. Since in our approach concepts like “breathing” do not enter, this result is very interesting. Altogether, however, the excited spectrum needs further investigation. They have
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
T=1/2
(J")
T=3/2
751
(J-)
T=5/2
(J-)
i 2.5 I
2.0-
1/2+
5,2+
___---/I' I' 3/2+ -&______,_3/2+ .'
_*-m+ __** 3/2+--'
5/2+
1/2+
1/2+-._
-._,
1.5-
--1/2+
-s/2
,-3/2+ __e* 3/2+-'-
l.O-
________1/2+
1/2+-
Theor. Fig. 8. Excited
baryon
Exp. spectrum.
Theor.
The excited baryonic states below given isospin.
Exp. 2.5 GeV are shown
then to consider also the width of the states, their decay properties, have to be performed for each state individually. 7. Comparison
Besides the projection (CQM)
considerations been adapted involves
of
and the variations
with the collective quantization method
theory there exists also the collective
in order to quantize
in groups
collective
degrees
of freedom.
quantization
The method
method
is based on
of Bohr and Mottelson in connection with rotating nuclei and has to solitonic models by Adkins, Nappi and Witten 2’). The method
the use of collective
coordinates,
which parametrize
the collective
motion,
as e.g. Euler angles in case of rotations. These collective coordinates are allowed to become time dependent and one looks for stationary solutions to the EulerLagrange equations in the collectively moving frame (cranking). Having found these solutions one derives mean field expressions for the collective momenta which depend only on the collective coordinates chosen. This then gives rise to moments of inertia. The mean field expressions for the collective momenta are essentially classical in nature. The system is, however, quantized by demanding the proper commutation rules between the momenta and coordinates. Assuming adiabaticity, i.e. a decoupling between collective and intrinsic degrees of freedom, the hamiltonian can be integrated over the intrinsic coordinates and the remainder is the quantized collective hamiltonian whose eigenfunctions have to be evaluated. If one considers
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
758
only rotations
and uses Euler
wavefunctions
are the conventional
the resulting
spectrum
angles
has always
as collective Wigner
coordinates
D-matrices.
J = T and, as shown
then the collective
In case of the hedgehog in refs. 2’,40), the form
E (J,=EMFA
Other observables collective momenta of the system. It is interesting
(7.1)
can also be expressed in terms of collective coordinates and such that one obtains in the end a complete “collective image” to contrast
the simple
J( J+ 1) law of eq. (7.1) with the outcome
of the projection projected numbers quantized states In the projection which does not the mean field rotational and
theory. First of all, no J( Jf 1) pattern is encountered in the as to be seen in table 1. Second, the energies of the semiclassically E (J) of eq . (7 . 1) are always higher than the mean field energy E MFA. theory this cannot happen since one has the sum rule eq. (4.15) exist in the CQM. The lowering of the nucleon state compared to energy in the projection theory corresponds to subtracting the isorotational correlation energy. This correlation energy is about
200-300 MeV as one can see from table 1. Compared and delta this is a rather large number and hence
to the masses of the nucleon correlation energies of these
collective modes cannot be ignored. Actually the appearance of the correlation energy and also of the simple J( J + 1) law can easily be understood as a limiting case of the projection formalism. Consider a simplified angular momentum projection procedure applied to an axial state I+). In the limit of narrow overlaps h( /3) and n(p) the total energy simplifies after a lengthy
calculation
4’*42,45)to an expression
involving
the J( J + 1) law:
E’J)#‘A+&(/+Q_(/:)
20 The last term on the right-hand overlap
limit.
Comparison
side is the rotational
20. correlation
energy in the narrow
of eqs. (7.1) and (7.2) shows that in the semiclassical
collective quantization method the correlation energy is ignored and, in order to obtain the J( J + 1) law, narrow overlaps are assumed. Indeed ref. 42) shows explicitly for the rotational case that under those assumptions cranking is an approximation to projection. It is interesting to note, that for the present model the assumption of narrow overlaps is not justified. One can see this in fig. 5 where the relevant part of the overlap functions h(0, d) is displayed. Experience shows that the overlaps have to be very much narrower in order to justify a J( J + 1) law and hence the projected results of e.g. table 1 do not show this pattern. In addition, as mentioned already, one is not allowed to neglect the correlation energies. Thus one must conclude that a collective quantization method in the sense of Adkins, Nappi and Witten *‘) is not justified for the linear chiral soliton model.
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
Actually
Cohen and Broniowski
using the same lagrangian
comparison
from ref. 40), in comparison degrees
performed
of freedom
explicit calculations
and the same parameters
Hence a direct numerical Broniowski
4”) performed is possible.
as done in the present
paper. taken
first the mean field calculation in the generalization
with the CQM
Table 6 lists their numbers,
with ours using the GH-PBV
provided
759
method.
Since Cohen
and
and then the quantization of the hedgehog
the
are not utilized
in the CQM. The biggest difference in numbers occurs in the delta-nucleon splitting and in the isovector quadratic charge radius which both are in CQM by a factor of 2 larger than in the projection. The other expectation values are affected by about 10% except g,/g, and Pi=, which are lowered from their projection value by 25% due to the semiclassical CQM are not justified
assumptions. However, since the approximations made in and since in addition the virial theorem associated to the
pion-nucleon-nucleon
coupling
constant
is not checked
by Cohen
and Broniowski,
this seemingly better agreement with experiment and the better reproduction of the Goldberger-Treiman relation are of no importance. The masses of the nucleon and delta are about 250 MeV larger in the CQM compared to projection. Cohen and Broniowski corrected this by subtracting the correlation energy of the quarks AEo = 0.126 GeV yielding then the numbers in brackets. From the point of view of a projection theory it is certainly required to correct the semiclassical energies in a way like this. However, one should note that in the collective quantization methods this correction is ad hoc and, furthermore, the equally important contribution of the pions to the correlation energy is missing.
TABLE 6 Comparison
between
projection
GH-PBV g = 5.37
(MeV)
Ed-& EN- E&A
(MeV)
V)T=o (r%=,
Vm*) (fm*)
(MeV)
835 160 -285
and classical
CQM
quantization
methods
“)
ref. 40)
Skyrme ref. 2’)
Skyrme ref. 34)
1183
938
1425
(993) 253
294 73.5
286 71.5
Expt.
938 294
(-1;:)
Pr=1
(nm.) (n.m.)
gA/gv f,
(MeV)
cLT=O
0.52 0.74 0.33 5.33 1.72 93
0.49 1.23 0.38 4.00 1.42 93
0.47 1.07 0.73 3.21 0.61 65
0.45 4.41 1.23 93
0.52 0.77 0.88 4.70 1.23 93
“) Listed are the nucleon and delta masses, E, and Ed respectively, in comparison with the mean field hedgehog energy EKF,,. The squared isoscalar and isovector charge radii are given and also the isoscalar and isovector part of the magnetic moments. The parameters in the present GH-PBV calculation and the one of ref. 40) are both g = 5.37 and m, = 1.2 GeV. In the Skyrme calculation of ref. 2’) the E, and Ed were fitted, in the case of ref. 34) the values of g,/g, and f, have been fitted.
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
760
An approach In contrast degrees
which has received
to the present
of freedom
much attention
theory the Skyrme model
but only effective boson
a pion and a sigma meson. The stable solitons number
one are identified
the skyrmions
are subjected
with baryons.
is the Skyrme model *“).
does not include
fields having
explicit
the quantum
Adkins,
quantization
quark
numbers
of the model with topological
Following
to the semiclassical
recently
of
winding
Nappi
and Witten “)
procedure
which results
of course in eq. (7.1). The moment of inertia 0 is adjusted to the experimental delta-nucleon splitting yielding a value of (20))’ = 93.3 MeV. Hence the nucleon mass, E$/,“, is about 70 MeV larger than the mean field hedgehog mass. By now there are basically two ways to solve the skyrmion model. One, suggested by Adkins, Nappi and Witten *I), consists in fitting the mass of the delta and of the nucleon
and yields
rather
bad values
for g,/gv,
and the f,
experimental value. The other, suggested by Jackson and value of fn and fits g,/gv; however, then the mass of the out by far too large. These results are summarized in table 6 and compared calculations. It seems to be that the skyrmion cannot get and g,/gv procedure
must deviate
from its
Rho 34), uses the proper nucleon and delta come with the outcome of our simultaneously energies
and frr right. The reason lies probably in the semiclassical of the skyrmion which ignores the correlation energies.
quantization
8. Summary, discussion and outlook Assuming
spherical
symmetry
the linear
chiral
soliton
model,
involving
quark
fields and elementary pion and sigma fields, has been solved in order to obtain a description of static nucleon and delta properties. To this end a full quantum trial state of the quark-meson system has been constructed by using coherent states for the bosons and a product of single-particle states for the quarks. The good angular momentum and isospin quantum numbers have been restored by projection techniques. It has been shown that the ordinary hedgehog structure has to be generalized in order that the projected solutions fulfill the Goldberger-Treiman relation and a virial theorem associated to the pion-nucleon-nucleon coupling constant g,,, . The generalization
is simple and consists
on the quark level in the spin-flavour
function
luL> cos n -Id?) sin n and on the pion level in the isospin components (x@,(r), y@*(r), z@,(r)) with Q,(R) = QZ(r). Whereas the pure mean field soliton results always in the hedgehog (77 = 45”) the projected soliton requires q ^- 20” and noticeable deviations of 03(r) from Q,(r) = Q2( r). This reduces then the violation of the Goldberger-Treiman relation and the virial theorem from 50% to 6%. Since both relations must be fulfilled for the exact solution of the lagrangian the extent to which they are fulfilled by an approximate solution tells something about the quality of the approximation. It seems to be that projection techniques applied to generalized hedgehog Fock states provide the proper means to solve quantum field theoretical lagrangians of the considered kind. The projection methods, well known in nuclear
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
many-body methods
physics,
are therefore
in field theories
not too complicated,
an attractive
in particular,
lagrangian
mass is fitted by adjustment
nucleon-delta
splitting
coordinate
assumptions.
used are of mixed quality.
of the quark-meson
is about half the experimental
it leaves some room for colour-magnetic
to collective
since they are fully quantum-mechanical,
and do not rely on semiclassical
The actual results for the present nucleon
alternative
761
interactions
coupling
While the
constant
g, the
value. This is reasonable
since
which are generally
believed
to cause half of the splitting. The quadratic charge radii of proton and neutron come out rather well similar as the magnetic moment of the proton. The magnetic moment of the neutron is too small compared to experiment and so is the absolute value of pL,/pLI1. The latter feature of them reproduces both magnetic
seems to be common to all present models, none moments simultaneously. The axial vector coup-
ling constant g,/gv and, consistently, the g,,, come out by 40% too large. No parameter set within reasonable limits of g and rnrr and using the experimental value for f, was found which gave a lower value for these two quantities. This seems to indicate a general weakness of the lagrangian which might be overcome by the inclusion of vector mesons. Steps in this direction have already been done by Broniowski and Banerjee I’); however, their projection techniques need improvement. The nucleon expectation values are made to roughly equal parts from the quarks and the mesons. This corresponds to the number of pions in the cloud, increasing with increasing J and T, of IV,, = 0.8-2 for the low-lying baryon spectrum. This value of IV, and the fact that the number of colours IV, equals three causes rather broad norm- and Hamilton-overlaps n( 0, fi) and h(Q d), a feature which invalidates semiclassical approximations in the quantization of rotational and isospin degrees of freedom. Since these assumptions are made in the quantization skyrmion and since in addition the correlation energies, being important projection skyrmion
formalism, are neglected, model either the energies
groups of observables The present method
of the in the
we find this a reason for the fact that in the or g, and fr are reproduced but never both
simultaneously. allows also to evaluate
other baryonic
states than the nucleon
and the delta and in particular, due to the generalization of the hedgehog, states with J # T. Their energies are not in very good agreement with the experimental low-lying baryon spectrum. Generally states with J or T equal 2 come out too high which may be a consequence of the missing coupling to the continuum. States with J = T = 2 are found in the theory with a noticeable probability amplitude but they are not seen in nature. There are various assumptions made in the solution of the present lagrangian whose effects need to be discussed. There is first the effect of the polarization of the Dirac sea, which is ignored completely in this work. For the size of our solitons, R = 0.6-0.7 fm, one can infer from the calculations of Ripka and Kahana 35) that the polarization of the sea quarks does not dominate over the valence contribution,
M. Fiolhnis et al. / Generalized hedgehog
762
at least as far as the energy and the baryon is concerned.
It is not known,
more affected
or not. Second,
mass corrections investigations
to the solution of Liibeck
however,
number
whether
no attempts
density
as e.g. g,/gv
have been made, to calculate
by e.g. linear
momentum
et al. 36) show the correlation
of the same order of magnitude
of the mean field solution
other observables
as for the rotational
projection energies
and isospin
are
centre-of-
techniques.
As
for this mode are modes.
Thus one
expects some change of the numbers if this effect is taken into account. Third, the coherent states used are built up from the field quanta of the noninteracting pion basis. This is a somehow arbitrary choice which does not affect the classical fields, but the overlaps
n(0,
d)
and h(Q
fi).
It is not known
how far the use of boson
operators resulting e.g. from a one-loop calculation or, even simpler, the pion mass in w,(k) will affect our present results.
the change
of
In conclusion, some progress has been made to solve the chiral soliton model while fulfilling the Goldberger-Treiman relation and an associated virial theorem. Besides being of practical relevance this must also be seen under the aspect, how far conceptually clear microscopic many-body methods, well established in nuclear physics, can be applied to a relativistic quantum field theoretical system. Although it is evident that many challenging problems remain in the application of projection techniques combined with coherent states and mean field solutions, the success of the present calculations justifies continuing efforts in both the conceptual and technical aspects of the theory. It is hoped that the remaining problems will be tractable, so that eventually we will have an effective relativistic quantum field theoretical quark-meson theory of low energy nucleon and baryon statics and dynamics. It seems to be that this necessarily requires the inclusion of e.g. vector bosom. The authors
are indebted
to M. Harvey and G. Ripka for many useful discussions.
The work has been supported nologie, Bonn, by the JNICT,
by the Bundesministerium fiir Forschung und TechLisboa, and by the NATO Grant GR85/0217.
Appendix OVERLAP
KERNELS
For the following we need the matrix elements of the rotational matrix Rii(fi), which rotates a vector like Vi = cj Rii(0) 6. They are given in eq. (C.45) of ref. 32). The matrix elements (~~,,lR(fl)l?(h)(~~J are often needed. They can be evaluated as
M. Fiolhais et al. / Generalized hedgehog
763
+sint(a--)sin$(G--q)] +i(l-2cos*
~)cos~/3
cosfp[cosi(a+-y)sin:(cT++)
-sin+(a+r)cosj(G+Y)]. The coefficients
in the exponent
m,(G m,,(fi,
of the pion overlap
n,(L!, d) are
a =&,um,,u4, fi)=f
One needs the anticommutators (X.&V,,
(A.1)
I!I ,=I
[R,(~ii)R,j(~)+Rj,(~ii)Rj,(R)l.
(A.3) (A-4)
in eq. (4.38)
W)fi(d)Ilx,~J
= (Xphl{a, 71, W-‘)fiU-‘)llx,J = (xe,km,
Wn)~U%lxgJ
=-sinfPsintp[cost(a-r)cost(~-~)+sint((~--)sint(~-_)] -2sin~cos~co~~/3cos~~[cosf(cz+~)cos~(&+j) +sin+(cu+r)sint(G+f)], (x~,$(+sQ, which is explicitly
W)&@i))lxgd = -2(x,,lR(.n-‘)~(~-‘)IX,,),
(A.9
64.6)
given in eq. (A.l).
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