• Open Access

Quark gap equation with non-Abelian Ball-Chiu vertex

A. C. Aguilar, J. C. Cardona, M. N. Ferreira, and J. Papavassiliou
Phys. Rev. D 98, 014002 – Published 2 July 2018

Abstract

The full quark-gluon vertex is a crucial ingredient for the dynamical generation of a constituent quark mass from the standard quark gap equation, and its nontransverse part may be determined exactly from the nonlinear Slavnov-Taylor identity that it satisfies. The resulting expression involves not only the quark propagator, but also the ghost dressing function and the quark-ghost kernel, and constitutes the non-abelian extension of the so-called “Ball-Chiu vertex,” known from QED. In the present work we carry out a detailed study of the impact of this vertex on the gap equation and the quark masses generated from it, putting particular emphasis on the contributions directly related with the ghost sector of the theory, and especially the quark-ghost kernel. In particular, we set up and solve the coupled system of six equations that determine the four form factors of the latter kernel and the two typical Dirac structures composing the quark propagator. Due to the incomplete implementation of the multiplicative renormalizability at the level of the gap equation, the correct anomalous dimension of the quark mass is recovered through the inclusion of a certain function, whose ultraviolet behavior is fixed, but its infrared completion is unknown; three particular Ansätze for this function are considered, and their effect on the quark mass and the pion decay constant is explored. The main results of this study indicate that the numerical impact of the quark-ghost kernel is considerable; the transition from a tree-level kernel to the one computed here leads to a 20% increase in the value of the quark mass at the origin. Particularly interesting is the contribution of the fourth Ball-Chiu form factor, which, contrary to the Abelian case, is nonvanishing, and accounts for 10% of the total constituent quark mass.

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  • Received 16 April 2018

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.98.014002

Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI. Funded by SCOAP3.

Published by the American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Particles & Fields

Authors & Affiliations

A. C. Aguilar1, J. C. Cardona1, M. N. Ferreira1, and J. Papavassiliou2

  • 1University of Campinas—UNICAMP, Institute of Physics “Gleb Wataghin”, 13083-859 Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil
  • 2Department of Theoretical Physics and IFIC, University of Valencia and CSIC, E-46100 Valencia, Spain

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Vol. 98, Iss. 1 — 1 July 2018

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