Abstract

We develop tools for performing effective field theory (EFT) calculations in a manifestly gauge-covariant fashion. We clarify how functional methods account for one-loop diagrams resulting from the exchange of both heavy and light fields, as some confusion has recently arisen in the literature. To efficiently evaluate functional traces containing these “mixed” one-loop terms, we develop a new covariant derivative expansion (CDE) technique that is capable of evaluating a much wider class of traces than previous methods. The technique is detailed in an appendix, so that it can be read independently from the rest of this work. We review the well-known matching procedure to one-loop order with functional methods. What we add to this story is showing how to isolate one-loop terms coming from diagrams involving only heavy propagators from diagrams with mixed heavy and light propagators. This is done using a non-local effective action, which physically connects to the notion of “integrating out” heavy fields. Lastly, we show how to use a CDE to do running analyses in EFTs, i.e. to obtain the anomalous dimension matrix. We demonstrate the methodologies by several explicit example calculations.

Highlights

  • The purpose of this paper primarily concerns the process of matching an ultraviolet (UV) theory onto an effective field theory (EFT)

  • We develop tools for performing effective field theory (EFT) calculations in a manifestly gauge-covariant fashion

  • We clarify how functional methods account for oneloop diagrams resulting from the exchange of both heavy and light fields, as some confusion has recently arisen in the literature

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Summary

Introduction

The purpose of this paper primarily concerns the process of matching an ultraviolet (UV) theory onto an effective field theory (EFT). We review the proper matching procedure and present techniques for computing the Wilson coefficients up to one-loop level in a gauge-covariant fashion with functional methods, i.e. using a covariant derivative expansion (CDE). We show how to use CDE to do running analyses in an EFT, namely to compute the anomalous dimension matrix of the Wilson coefficients

Review of matching to one-loop order
Outline and summary of results
Matching by functional methods
Equivalence between functional methods and Feynman diagrams
Functional methods to one-loop order
Utility of functional methods compared to Feynman diagrams
What is a “covariant derivative expansion”?
Integrating out the heavy field Φ
Resolved matching results
Trace evaluation
Demonstrating example: a toy scalar model
Example: the Standard Model with a heavy electroweak triplet scalar
Full example for matching
Computing the 1LPI effective actions
Tree-level
One-loop in the UV theory
One-loop in the EFT
Matching
RG running by functional methods
Toy scalar model
Yukawa model
Electroweak triplet scalar model
Summary of results
A Functional trace evaluation with a CDE
Variations on a theme
Trace evaluation example 1

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