In lattice field theory, space or spacetime is discretised onto a lattice.

In physics, lattice field theory is the study of lattice models of quantum field theory, that is, of field theory on a space or spacetime that has been discretised onto a lattice.

Details

Although most lattice field theories are not exactly solvable, they are of tremendous appeal because they can be studied by simulation on a computer, often using Markov chain Monte Carlo methods. One hopes that, by performing simulations on larger and larger lattices, while making the lattice spacing smaller and smaller, one will be able to recover the behavior of the continuum theory as the continuum limit is approached.

Just as in all lattice models, numerical simulation gives access to field configurations that are not accessible to perturbation theory, such as solitons. Likewise, non-trivial vacuum states can be discovered and probed.

The method is particularly appealing for the quantization of a gauge theory through the Wilson action. Most quantization methods keep Poincaré invariance manifest but sacrifice manifest gauge symmetry by requiring gauge fixing. Only after renormalization can gauge invariance be recovered. Lattice field theory differs from these in that it keeps manifest gauge invariance, but sacrifices manifest Poincaré invariance—recovering it only after renormalization. The articles on lattice gauge theory and lattice QCD explore these issues in greater detail.

Further reading

  • Creutz, M., Quarks, gluons and lattices, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, (1985). ISBN 978-0521315357 (renewed version: (2023) ISBN 978-1009290395)
  • DeGrand, T., DeTar, C., Lattice Methods for Quantum Chromodynamics, World Scientific, Singapore, (2006). ISBN 978-9812567277
  • Gattringer, C., Lang, C. B., Quantum Chromodynamics on the Lattice, Springer, (2010). ISBN 978-3642018497
  • Knechtli, F., Günther, M., Peardon, M., Lattice Quantum Chromodynamics: Practical Essentials, Springer, (2016). ISBN 978-9402409970
  • Lin, H., Meyer, H.B., Lattice QCD for Nuclear Physics, Springer, (2014). ISBN 978-3319080215
  • Makeenko, Y., Methods of contemporary gauge theory, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, (2002). ISBN 0-521-80911-8.
  • Montvay, I., Münster, G., Quantum Fields on a Lattice, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, (1997). ISBN 978-0521599177
  • Rothe, H., Lattice Gauge Theories, An Introduction, World Scientific, Singapore, (2005). ISBN 978-9814365857
  • Smit, J., Introduction to Quantum Fields on a Lattice, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, (2002). ISBN 978-0521890519
  • FermiQCD – A standard library of algorithms for lattice QCD


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