| 1 | There can be circumstances for which energy is
not the criterion used to define the effective theory, and for
which is not
real. The resulting failure of unitarity in the effective theory
reflects the possibility in these theories of having states in the
effective theory converting into states that have been removed in
its definition. |
|
| 2 | We return below to a discussion of how effective Lagrangians can be defined using dimensional regularization. | |
| 3 | Examples where is not bounded
from below can arise, such as for charged particles in a
sufficiently strong background electric field [134]. In such situations the runaway
descent of the system to arbitrarily low energies is interpreted as
being due to continual particle pair production by the background
field. |
|
| 4 | A Killing vector field satisfies the condition
, which is the coordinate-invariant expression of
the existence of a time-translation invariance of the background
metric. The carets indicate that the derivatives are defined, and
the indices are lowered by the background metric . |
|
| 5 | For example, this could happen for a charged
particle in a decreasing magnetic field if the effective theory is
set up so that the dividing energy is not time dependent. Then Landau
levels continuously enter the low-energy theory as the magnetic
field strength wanes. |
|
| 6 | These authors have slightly different spins on the more philosophical question of whether trans-Planckian physics is likely to be found to be non-adiabatic. | |
| 7 | In the inflationary context we take ‘adiabatic vacuum’ to mean the Bunch-Davies vacuum [26]. See, however, [45, 46, 17, 65, 66, 77, 78, 39, 40] for arguments against the use of non-standard vacua in de Sitter space. | |
| 8 | The point of the non-relativistic
power-counting of the previous section is to show that the third,
large, -independent dimensionless quantity does not appear in the interaction
energy. |
|
| 9 | Notice that the curvature-squared terms can no longer be eliminated by performing field redefinitions once classical sources are included. Instead they can only be converted into the direct source-source interactions in which we are interested. | |
| 10 | The necessity for renormalizing and in addition to
Newton’s constant at one loop reflects the fact that general
relativity is not renormalizable. Still higher-curvature terms
would be required to absorb the divergences at two loops and
beyond. |