Tu banner alternativo

F-term

_ In today's world, F-term plays a fundamental role in our society. Its importance covers a wide range of aspects, from the personal sphere to the professional sphere, including the social and cultural sphere. Increasingly, F-term has become a topic of interest and debate in various circles, as its influence extends to many areas of our lives. In this article, we will thoroughly explore the impact and relevance of F-term, analyzing its different facets and its connection with aspects as diverse as technology, politics, economics, psychology and culture. Through this exploration, we will be able to better understand the importance and influence that F-term has in our world today.

Tu banner alternativo

In theoretical physics, one often analyzes theories with supersymmetry in which F-terms[1] play an important role. In four dimensions, the minimal N=1 supersymmetry may be written using a superspace. This superspace involves four extra fermionic coordinates , transforming as a two-component spinor and its conjugate.

Every superfield—i.e. a field that depends on all coordinates of the superspace—may be expanded with respect to the new fermionic coordinates. There exists a special kind of superfields, the so-called chiral superfields, that only depend on the variables but not their conjugates. The last term in the corresponding expansion, namely , is called the F-term. Applying an infinitesimal supersymmetry transformation to a chiral superfield results in yet another chiral superfield whose F-term, in particular, changes by a total derivative. This is significant because then is invariant under SUSY transformations as long as boundary terms vanish. Thus F-terms may be used in constructing supersymmetric actions.

Manifestly-supersymmetric Lagrangians may also be written as integrals over the whole superspace. Some special terms, such as the superpotential, may be written as integrals over s only. They are also referred to as F-terms, much like the terms in the ordinary potential that arise from these terms of the supersymmetric Lagrangian.

See also

References

  1. ^ Shadchin, Sergey (2007). "On F-term contribution to effective action". Journal of High Energy Physics (8). Cornell University: 052. arXiv:hep-th/0611278. Bibcode:2007JHEP...08..052S. doi:10.1088/1126-6708/2007/08/052.