Nonlocal Lagrangian: Difference between revisions
imported>David Eppstein Undid revision 1260729341 by JulioISalazarG (talk) failed verification: source contains neither "nonlocal Lagrangian" nor "nonlocal action" (it only speaks of nonlocal theories) so cannot speak to the claim that something derived from a nonlocal Lagrangian is called a nonlocal action |
(No difference)
|
Latest revision as of 06:24, 10 December 2024
Template:Short description Template:Refimprove In field theory, a nonlocal Lagrangian is a Lagrangian, a type of functional containing terms that are nonlocal in the fields , i.e. not polynomials or functions of the fields or their derivatives evaluated at a single point in the space of dynamical parameters (e.g. space-time). Examples of such nonlocal Lagrangians might be:
Actions obtained from nonlocal Lagrangians are called nonlocal actions. The actions appearing in the fundamental theories of physics, such as the Standard Model, are local actions; nonlocal actions play a part in theories that attempt to go beyond the Standard Model and also in some effective field theories. Nonlocalization of a local action is also an essential aspect of some regularization procedures. Noncommutative quantum field theory also gives rise to nonlocal actions.
References
Template:Reflist Template:Math-physics-stub Template:Quantum-stub