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Chern–Simons theory

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Chern-Simons theory is a 3-dimensional topological quantum field theory of Schwarz type which computes knot and three-manifold invariants. It was introduced by Edward Witten in an attempt to interpret the Jones polynomial in terms of a three dimensional gauge theory. It is named so because its action is nothing but the Chern-Simons 3-form.

A particular Chern-Simons theory is specified by a choice of Lie group G known as the gauge group of the theory and also a number referred to as the level of the theory, which is a constant that multiplies the action. The action is gauge dependent, however the partition function of the quantum theory is well-defined when the level is an integer and the gauge field strength vanishes on all boundaries of the 3-dimensional spacetime.

Relations with other theories

Topological string theories

In the context of string theory, a U(N) Chern-Simons theory on an oriented Lagrangian 3-submanifold M of a 6-manifold N arises as the string field theory of open strings ending on a D-brane wrapping M in the A-model topological string on N. The B-Model topological open string field theory on the spacefilling worldvolume of a stack of D5-branes is a 6-dimensional variant of Chern-Simons theory known as holomorphic Chern-Simons theory.

WZW and matrix models

Chern-Simons theories are related to many other field theories. For example, if one considers a Chern-Simons theory with gauge group G on a manifold with boundary then all of the 3-dimensional propagating degrees of freedom may be gauged away, leaving a 2-dimensional conformal field theory known as a G Wess-Zumino-Witten model on the boundary. In addition the U(N) and SO(N) Chern-Simons theories at large N is well approximated by matrix models.

Chern-Simons terms in other theories

The Chern-Simons term can also be added to models which aren't topological quantum field theories. In 3D, this gives rise to a massive photon if this term is added to the Yang-Mills action. This term can be induced by integrating over a massive charged Dirac field. It also appears for example in the quantum Hall effect. Ten and eleven dimensional generalizations of Chern-Simons terms appear in the actions of all ten and eleven dimensional supergravity theories.

See also

References

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