Abstract

Makeenko and Migdal (Phys Lett B 88(1):135–137, 1979) gave heuristic identities involving the expectation of the product of two Wilson loop functionals associated to splitting a single loop at a self-intersection point. Kazakov and Kostov (Nucl Phys B 176(1):199–215, 1980) reformulated the Makeenko–Migdal equations in the plane case into a form which made rigorous sense. Nevertheless, the first rigorous proof of these equations (and their generalizations) was not given until the fundamental paper of Levy (2017). Subsequently Driver, Kemp, and Hall Commun. Math. Phys. 351(2), 741–774 (2017) gave a simplified proof of Levy’s result and then with Driver, Gabriel, Kemp, and Hall Commun. Math. Phys. 352(3), 967–978 (2017) we showed that these simplified proofs extend to the Yang–Mills measure over arbitrary compact surfaces. All of the proofs to date are elementary but tricky exercises in finite dimensional integration by parts. The goal of this article is to give a rigorous functional integral proof of the Makeenko–Migdal equations guided by the original heuristic machinery invented by Makeenko and Migdal. Although this stochastic proof is technically more difficult, it is conceptually clearer and explains “why” the Makeenko–Migdal equations are true. It is hoped that this paper will also serve as an introduction to some of the problems involved in making sense of quantizing Yang–Mill’s fields.

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