Journal of High Energy Physics (Nov 2021)

Chern-Weil global symmetries and how quantum gravity avoids them

  • Ben Heidenreich,
  • Jacob McNamara,
  • Miguel Montero,
  • Matthew Reece,
  • Tom Rudelius,
  • Irene Valenzuela

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/JHEP11(2021)053
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2021, no. 11
pp. 1 – 76

Abstract

Read online

Abstract We draw attention to a class of generalized global symmetries, which we call “Chern-Weil global symmetries,” that arise ubiquitously in gauge theories. The Noether currents of these Chern-Weil global symmetries are given by wedge products of gauge field strengths, such as F 2 ∧ H 3 and tr( F 2 2 $$ {F}_2^2 $$ ), and their conservation follows from Bianchi identities. As a result, they are not easy to break. However, it is widely believed that exact global symmetries are not allowed in a consistent theory of quantum gravity. As a result, any Chern-Weil global symmetry in a low-energy effective field theory must be either broken or gauged when the theory is coupled to gravity. In this paper, we explore the processes by which Chern-Weil symmetries may be broken or gauged in effective field theory and string theory. We will see that many familiar phenomena in string theory, such as axions, Chern-Simons terms, worldvolume degrees of freedom, and branes ending on or dissolving in other branes, can be interpreted as consequences of the absence of Chern-Weil symmetries in quantum gravity, suggesting that they might be general features of quantum gravity. We further discuss implications of breaking and gauging Chern-Weil symmetries for particle phenomenology and for boundary CFTs of AdS bulk theories. Chern-Weil global symmetries thus offer a unified framework for understanding many familiar aspects of quantum field theory and quantum gravity.

Keywords