Table of Contents
Fetching ...

On the $\uptheta$-vacua and CP violation

Archil Kobakhidze

Abstract

Recent claims have suggested the absence of CP violation in theories with a $θ$-vacuum structure, particularly in quantum chromodynamics. We highlight several key points, from a perspective that is not widely discussed in the literature, which clarify why such conclusions are incorrect. In particular, an open boundary in a finite-volume theory must be accompanied by boundary degrees of freedom, the edge modes, in order to preserve large gauge invariance and faithfully capture the topological features of the theory. In the infinite-volume limit, these edge states become non-dynamical, leaving the standard $\uptheta$-vacuum structure intact, irrespective of whether this limit is taken before or after summing over topological sectors. Consequently, the $\uptheta$-vacuum structure does give rise to observable CP violation once the theory is consistently quantised.

On the $\uptheta$-vacua and CP violation

Abstract

Recent claims have suggested the absence of CP violation in theories with a -vacuum structure, particularly in quantum chromodynamics. We highlight several key points, from a perspective that is not widely discussed in the literature, which clarify why such conclusions are incorrect. In particular, an open boundary in a finite-volume theory must be accompanied by boundary degrees of freedom, the edge modes, in order to preserve large gauge invariance and faithfully capture the topological features of the theory. In the infinite-volume limit, these edge states become non-dynamical, leaving the standard -vacuum structure intact, irrespective of whether this limit is taken before or after summing over topological sectors. Consequently, the -vacuum structure does give rise to observable CP violation once the theory is consistently quantised.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 6 sections, 21 equations.