Abstract

The holomorphic Coulomb gas formalism, as developed by Feigin-Fuchs, Dotsenko-Fateev and Felder, is a set of rules for computing minimal model observables using free field techniques. We attempt to derive and clarify these rules using standard techniques of quantum field theory. We begin with a careful examination of the timelike linear dilaton. Although the background charge of the model breaks the scalar field’s continuous shift symmetry, the exponential of the action remains invariant under a discrete shift because the background charge is imaginary. Gauging this symmetry makes the dilaton compact and introduces winding modes into the spectrum. One of these winding operators corresponds to the anti-holomorphic completion of the BRST current first introduced by Felder, and the full left/right cohomology of this BRST charge isolates the irreducible representations of the Virasoro algebra within the degenerate Fock space of the linear dilaton. The “supertrace” in the BRST complex reproduces the minimal model partition function and exhibits delicate cancellations between states with both momentum and winding. The model at the radius R=sqrt{pp^{prime }} has two marginal operators corresponding to the Dotsenko-Fateev “screening charges”. Deforming by them, we obtain a model that might be called a “BRST quotiented compact timelike Liouville theory”. The Hamiltonian of the zero-mode quantum mechanics of this model is not Hermitian, but it is PT-symmetric and exactly solvable. Its eigenfunctions have support on an infinite number of plane waves, suggesting an infinite reduction in the number of independent states in the full quantum field theory. Applying conformal perturbation theory to the exponential interactions reproduces the Coulomb gas calculations of minimal model correlation functions. In contrast to spacelike Liouville, these “resonance correlators” are finite because the zero mode is compact. We comment on subtleties regarding the reflection operator identification, as well as naive violations of truncation in correlators with multiple reflection operators inserted. This work is part of an attempt to understand the relationship between the JT model of two dimen- sional gravity and the worldsheet description of the (2, p) minimal string as suggested by Seiberg and Stanford.

Highlights

  • The minimal models of two dimensional conformal field theory are among the most studied and best understood of all quantum field theories [1,2,3]

  • Gauging this symmetry makes the dilaton compact and introduces winding modes into the spectrum. One of these winding operators corresponds to the anti-holomorphic completion of the BRST current first introduced by Felder, and the full left/right cohomology of this BRST charge isolates the irreducible representations of the Virasoro algebra within the degenerate Fock space of the linear dilaton

  • We provide a brief summary of the derivation of the minimal model fusion rules within the BRST quotiented compact timelike Liouville description

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Summary

Introduction

The minimal models of two dimensional conformal field theory are among the most studied and best understood of all quantum field theories [1,2,3]. In the language of this paper, Feigin and Fuchs investigated the Hilbert space of the timelike linear dilaton, but they did not study its marginal deformations since they were concerned with kinematics rather than dynamics These mathematical developments first made contact with the minimal models through the work of Dotsenko and Fateev [33,34,35,36], who invented a seemingly ad-hoc prescription to compute observables in the minimal models using free field correlation functions. Combining Thorn’s explicit expressions for the Fock space singular vectors [21,22,23,24,25,26] with the structure of the Feigin-Fuchs bosonic resolution [32], Felder constructed a series of nilpotent BRST operators from multiple nested line integrals of the Dotsenko-Fateev screening operators The cohomology of these charges in the “minimal model Fock spaces” Fr,s yields the corresponding irreducible representation of the Virasoro algebra. Along the way we clarify some subtle points regarding the truncation of the OPE and the “reflection identification” of operators with the same scaling dimension but different Up1q charge

Minimal models
Structure of reducible Verma modules
Review of the Coulomb gas formalism
Dotsenko and Fateev’s construction and the screening charges
Felder’s BRST construction
Felder’s BRST complex: the general case
Lagrangian formulation: kinematics
States and local operators
Marginal deformations
The reflection identification
BRST currents
Full BRST complex
Torus partition function
Lagrangian formulation: dynamics
Converting surface integrals into the Dotsenko-Fateev line integrals
Reflection amplitudes
Zero-mode quantum mechanics
Three-point functions and truncation of the OPE
Summary of fusion rules and truncation
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