Matching A with F in long-range QFTs
Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 03:25 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
In long-range multiscalar theories the renormalization group flow obeys a gradient structure up to third loop order.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
In the long-range multiscalar φ^4 theory the renormalization group flow satisfies the gradient structure ∂_I A = G_IJ β^J up to the third loop order in the coupling. A and G_IJ match to the leading nontrivial order with the sphere free-energy F̃ and Zamolodchikov's metric C_IJ of the corresponding conformal theory in the examples of the long-range vector O(N) and hypercubic H_N models. This provides a perturbative proof of the F̃-theorem at the leading nontrivial order.
What carries the argument
The gradient flow equation ∂_I A = G_IJ β^J with A a scalar function and G_IJ a positive definite metric on coupling space, which is matched to the CFT quantities F̃ and C_IJ.
If this is right
- The A function decreases monotonically along the RG flow in these nonunitary models.
- A perturbative version of the F̃-theorem is established at leading order for the O(N) and H_N models.
- The gradient structure holds at least through three loops in the coupling.
- Matching between RG and CFT quantities is possible at the first nontrivial order.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If the gradient structure persists beyond third order it would suggest an all-order A-theorem for these long-range theories.
- Similar gradient flows might exist in other nonunitary or long-range models where conformal invariance holds at fixed points.
- Explicit computations at fourth loop order could test whether the matching to F̃ continues to hold.
- The result connects the irreversibility of RG flow to CFT data even without unitarity.
Load-bearing premise
The long-range multiscalar φ^4 theory remains conformally invariant at its fixed points even though it is non-unitary.
What would settle it
A fourth-order perturbative calculation in which the gradient equation fails to hold or the matching of A to F̃ breaks down would show that the result does not extend beyond third order.
read the original abstract
Unitarity is often a crucial ingredient in establishing theorems -- such as the $A$-theorem -- on the irreversibility of the renormalization group flow. The strongest thesis of this type of theorems would be that there exists a scalar function $A$ and a positive definite metric $G_{IJ}$ in the space of couplings such that the renormalization group flow satisfies a gradient equation, $\partial_I A= G_{IJ}\beta^J$, in which case $A$ is locally monotonic along the flow. In this paper we consider the long-range multiscalar $\phi^4$ theory, which is a nonunitary model that is believed to be conformally invariant at fixed points, and show that its renormalization group flow satisfies the gradient structure up to the third loop order in the coupling. We also show that $A$ and $G_{IJ}$ can be matched to the leading nontrivial order with the sphere free-energy $\tilde{F}$ and Zamolodchikov's metric $C_{IJ}$ of the corresponding conformal theory concentrating on the examples of the long-range vector $O(N)$ and hypercubic $H_N$ models. Our results imply a perturbative proof of the $\tilde{F}$-theorem at the leading nontrivial order. We conclude the paper discussing briefly whether this result should hold to the next orders in perturbation theory.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript examines the long-range multiscalar φ^4 theory in a non-unitary setting believed to possess conformal invariance at its fixed points. It establishes that the renormalization group beta functions satisfy a gradient flow equation ∂_I A = G_IJ β^J up to third order in perturbation theory. Furthermore, it demonstrates a matching between the RG function A and metric G_IJ with the sphere free energy F̃ and Zamolodchikov metric C_IJ at the leading nontrivial order for the O(N) vector and hypercubic H_N models, thereby providing a perturbative proof of the F̃-theorem at that order.
Significance. Should the central claims hold, this work contributes to the understanding of RG irreversibility in non-unitary quantum field theories by verifying a gradient structure perturbatively. The explicit matching to CFT quantities in specific models offers concrete evidence for the F̃-theorem in long-range theories, which may inform broader studies of conformal invariance and monotonicity in RG flows beyond unitary cases. The focus on third-loop calculations and leading-order matching provides a solid foundation for further investigations into higher orders.
major comments (2)
- Introduction: The conformal invariance of the fixed points, required to equate the RG quantities A and G_IJ with the CFT quantities F̃ and C_IJ, is assumed based on prior literature rather than explicitly verified within the perturbative framework of this paper (e.g., via computation of the trace anomaly or stress-tensor conservation). This assumption is load-bearing for the matching claim.
- Section 3: While the gradient structure is claimed up to three loops, the explicit three-loop beta-function expressions and the verification of ∂_I A = G_IJ β^J are not presented in detail in the main text; they appear to be relegated to appendices, which hinders direct assessment of the cancellations involved in establishing the gradient flow.
minor comments (2)
- Notation throughout: The distinction between A and F̃, and G_IJ and C_IJ, should be clarified more explicitly in the abstract and introduction to avoid potential confusion for readers unfamiliar with the long-range model.
- Discussion section: The brief discussion on whether the result holds to higher orders could be expanded with a specific conjecture or outline of potential obstructions at four loops.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading of the manuscript and for the constructive comments. We address each major comment below, indicating the revisions we intend to make.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: Introduction: The conformal invariance of the fixed points, required to equate the RG quantities A and G_IJ with the CFT quantities F̃ and C_IJ, is assumed based on prior literature rather than explicitly verified within the perturbative framework of this paper (e.g., via computation of the trace anomaly or stress-tensor conservation). This assumption is load-bearing for the matching claim.
Authors: We agree that conformal invariance of the fixed points is an assumption required for the identification of the RG functions A and G_IJ with the CFT quantities F̃ and C_IJ. In the revised manuscript we will add an explicit statement in the introduction clarifying that conformal invariance is assumed on the basis of prior literature on long-range models, with appropriate references. A direct perturbative check of conformal invariance (for instance via the trace anomaly or stress-tensor conservation) lies outside the scope of the present work; our results remain consistent with the assumed conformal fixed points and provide a perturbative test of the F̃-theorem under that assumption. revision: yes
-
Referee: Section 3: While the gradient structure is claimed up to three loops, the explicit three-loop beta-function expressions and the verification of ∂_I A = G_IJ β^J are not presented in detail in the main text; they appear to be relegated to appendices, which hinders direct assessment of the cancellations involved in establishing the gradient flow.
Authors: We acknowledge that the placement of the three-loop expressions and the explicit verification of the gradient-flow relation in the appendices makes it harder to follow the cancellations. In the revised version we will move the three-loop beta-function expressions for the O(N) and H_N models into Section 3, together with a concise summary of the key cancellation steps that establish ∂_I A = G_IJ β^J. The full algebraic details will remain in the appendices for completeness. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; perturbative RG gradient and CFT matching are independent calculations
full rationale
The paper computes the beta functions of the long-range multiscalar model and verifies the gradient-flow relation ∂_I A = G_IJ β^J explicitly up to three loops as an internal perturbative result. Separately, it evaluates the sphere free energy F̃ and Zamolodchikov metric C_IJ in the conformal theory at the fixed points and shows numerical matching at leading nontrivial order. The conformal invariance of the fixed points is stated as a prior belief rather than derived inside the calculation, but the matching itself is not obtained by re-labeling or fitting one quantity to the other; both sides are computed from distinct expansions. No self-definitional reduction, fitted-input prediction, or load-bearing self-citation chain appears in the derivation chain.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The long-range multiscalar φ^4 theory is conformally invariant at its fixed points despite being non-unitary.
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel echoes?
echoesECHOES: this paper passage has the same mathematical shape or conceptual pattern as the Recognition theorem, but is not a direct formal dependency.
its renormalization group flow satisfies the gradient structure up to the third loop order in the coupling... ∂_I A = G_IJ β^J
-
IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/BranchSelection.leanbranch_selection echoes?
echoesECHOES: this paper passage has the same mathematical shape or conceptual pattern as the Recognition theorem, but is not a direct formal dependency.
A and G_IJ can be matched to the leading nontrivial order with the sphere free-energy F̃ and Zamolodchikov's metric C_IJ
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
Irreversibility of the Flux of the Renormalization Group in a 2D Field Theory,
A. B. Zamolodchikov, “Irreversibility of the Flux of the Renormalization Group in a 2D Field Theory,” JETP Lett.43(1986), 730-732
1986
-
[2]
C theorem and spectral representation,
A. Cappelli, D. Friedan and J. I. Latorre, “C theorem and spectral representation,” Nucl. Phys. B352(1991), 616-670
1991
-
[3]
The c and a-theorems and the Local Renormalisation Group
G. M. Shore, “The c and a-theorems and the Local Renormalisation Group,” Springer, 2017, ISBN 978-3-319-53999-7, 978-3-319-54000-9 [arXiv:1601.06662 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2017
-
[4]
Weyl consistency conditions and a local renormalization group equation for general renormalizable field theories,
H. Osborn, “Weyl consistency conditions and a local renormalization group equation for general renormalizable field theories,” Nucl. Phys. B363(1991), 486-526
1991
-
[5]
A c-theorem for the entanglement entropy
H. Casini and M. Huerta, “A c-theorem for the entanglement entropy,” J. Phys. A40(2007), 7031-7036 [arXiv:cond-mat/0610375 [cond-mat]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2007
-
[6]
F-Theorem without Supersymmetry
I. R. Klebanov, S. S. Pufu and B. R. Safdi, “F-Theorem without Supersymmetry,” JHEP10 (2011), 038 [arXiv:1105.4598 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2011
-
[7]
On the RG running of the entanglement entropy of a circle
H. Casini and M. Huerta, “On the RG running of the entanglement entropy of a circle,” Phys. Rev. D85(2012), 125016 [arXiv:1202.5650 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2012
-
[8]
Is There a c Theorem in Four-Dimensions?,
J. L. Cardy, “Is There a c Theorem in Four-Dimensions?,” Phys. Lett. B215(1988), 749-752
1988
-
[9]
Derivation of a Four-dimensionalcTheorem,
H. Osborn, “Derivation of a Four-dimensionalcTheorem,” Phys. Lett. B222(1989), 97-102
1989
-
[10]
Analogs for thecTheorem for Four-dimensional Renormalizable Field Theories,
I. Jack and H. Osborn, “Analogs for thecTheorem for Four-dimensional Renormalizable Field Theories,” Nucl. Phys. B343(1990), 647-688 – 26 –
1990
-
[11]
On Renormalization Group Flows in Four Dimensions
Z. Komargodski and A. Schwimmer, “On Renormalization Group Flows in Four Dimensions,” JHEP12(2011), 099 [arXiv:1107.3987 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2011
-
[12]
The Constraints of Conformal Symmetry on RG Flows
Z. Komargodski, “The Constraints of Conformal Symmetry on RG Flows,” JHEP07(2012), 069 [arXiv:1112.4538 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2012
-
[13]
The $a$-theorem and the Asymptotics of 4D Quantum Field Theory
M. A. Luty, J. Polchinski and R. Rattazzi, “Thea-theorem and the Asymptotics of 4D Quantum Field Theory,” JHEP01(2013), 152 d[arXiv:1204.5221 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2013
-
[14]
A Constraint on Defect and Boundary Renormalization Group Flows
K. Jensen and A. O’Bannon, “Constraint on Defect and Boundary Renormalization Group Flows,” Phys. Rev. Lett.116(2016) no.9, 091601 [arXiv:1509.02160 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2016
-
[15]
Towards a $C$-theorem in defect CFT
N. Kobayashi, T. Nishioka, Y. Sato and K. Watanabe, “Towards aC-theorem in defect CFT,” JHEP01(2019), 039 [arXiv:1810.06995 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2019
-
[16]
Irreversibility in quantum field theories with boundaries
H. Casini, I. Salazar Landea and G. Torroba, “Irreversibility in quantum field theories with boundaries,” JHEP04(2019), 166 [arXiv:1812.08183 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2019
-
[17]
Revisiting thek-theorem with the ANEC,
N. Nakamura, Y. Nakayama and U. Nguyen, “Revisiting thek-theorem with the ANEC,” [arXiv:2511.17072 [hep-th]]
-
[18]
On renormalization group flows and the a-theorem in 6d
H. Elvang, D. Z. Freedman, L. Y. Hung, M. Kiermaier, R. C. Myers and S. Theisen, “On renormalization group flows and the a-theorem in 6d,” JHEP10(2012), 011 [arXiv:1205.3994 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2012
-
[19]
A challenge to the $a$-theorem in six dimensions
B. Grinstein, D. Stone, A. Stergiou and M. Zhong, “Challenge to theaTheorem in Six Dimensions,” Phys. Rev. Lett.113(2014) no.23, 231602 [arXiv:1406.3626 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2014
-
[20]
Anomalies, Renormalization Group Flows, and the a-Theorem in Six-Dimensional (1,0) Theories
C. Cordova, T. T. Dumitrescu and K. Intriligator, “Anomalies, renormalization group flows, and the a-theorem in six-dimensional (1, 0) theories,” JHEP10(2016), 080 [arXiv:1506.03807 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2016
-
[21]
Constraints on Perturbative RG Flows in Six Dimensions
A. Stergiou, D. Stone and L. G. Vitale, “Constraints on Perturbative RG Flows in Six Dimensions,” JHEP08(2016), 010 [arXiv:1604.01782 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2016
-
[22]
Irreversibility of the renormalization group flow in non-unitary quantum field theory
O. A. Castro-Alvaredo, B. Doyon and F. Ravanini, “Irreversibility of the renormalization group flow in non-unitary quantum field theory,” J. Phys. A50(2017) no.42, 424002 [arXiv:1706.01871 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2017
-
[23]
$\mathcal{PT}$-symmetric Field Theories at Finite Temperature
O. Diatlyk, A. Katsevich and F. K. Popov, “PT-symmetric Field Theories at Finite Temperature,” [arXiv:2604.08459 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv
-
[24]
Unitarity violation at the Wilson-Fisher fixed point in 4-epsilon dimensions
M. Hogervorst, S. Rychkov and B. C. van Rees, “Unitarity violation at the Wilson-Fisher fixed point in 4-ϵdimensions,” Phys. Rev. D93(2016) no.12, 125025 [arXiv:1512.00013 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2016
-
[25]
Conformal Invariance in the Long-Range Ising Model
M. F. Paulos, S. Rychkov, B. C. van Rees and B. Zan, “Conformal Invariance in the Long-Range Ising Model,” Nucl. Phys. B902(2016), 246-291 [arXiv:1509.00008 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2016
-
[26]
Interpolating between $a$ and $F$
S. Giombi and I. R. Klebanov, “Interpolating betweenaandF,” JHEP03(2015), 117 [arXiv:1409.1937 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2015
-
[27]
Generalized $F$-Theorem and the $\epsilon$ Expansion
L. Fei, S. Giombi, I. R. Klebanov and G. Tarnopolsky, “GeneralizedF-Theorem and theϵ Expansion,” JHEP12(2015), 155 [arXiv:1507.01960 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2015
-
[28]
Conformal QED$_d$, $F$-Theorem and the $\epsilon$ Expansion
S. Giombi, I. R. Klebanov and G. Tarnopolsky, “Conformal QED d,F-Theorem and theϵ Expansion,” J. Phys. A49(2016) no.13, 135403 [arXiv:1508.06354 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2016
-
[29]
Critical Exponents for Long-Range Interactions,
M. E. Fisher, S. k. Ma and B. G. Nickel, “Critical Exponents for Long-Range Interactions,” Phys. Rev. Lett.29(1972), 917-920 – 27 –
1972
-
[30]
Relations between short-range and long-range Ising models,
M. C. Angelini, G. Parisi and F. Ricci-Tersenghi, “Relations between short-range and long-range Ising models,” Phys. Rev. E89(2014) no.6, 062120
2014
-
[31]
The crossover region between long-range and short-range interactions for the critical exponents
E. Brezin, G. Parisi and F. Ricci-Tersenghi, “The Crossover Region Between Long-Range and Short-Range Interactions for the Critical Exponents,” J. Statist. Phys.157(2014) no.4-5, 855-868 [arXiv:1407.3358 [cond-mat.stat-mech]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2014
-
[32]
Long-range critical exponents near the short-range crossover
C. Behan, L. Rastelli, S. Rychkov and B. Zan, “Long-range critical exponents near the short-range crossover,” Phys. Rev. Lett.118(2017) no.24, 241601 [arXiv:1703.03430 [cond-mat.stat-mech]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2017
-
[33]
A scaling theory for the long-range to short-range crossover and an infrared duality
C. Behan, L. Rastelli, S. Rychkov and B. Zan, “A scaling theory for the long-range to short-range crossover and an infrared duality,” J. Phys. A50(2017) no.35, 354002 [arXiv:1703.05325 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2017
-
[34]
Fixed Points Structure & Effective Fractional Dimension for O(N) Models with Long-Range Interactions
N. Defenu, A. Trombettoni and A. Codello, “Fixed-point structure and effective fractional dimensionality for O(N) models with long-range interactions,” Phys. Rev. E92(2015) no.5, 052113 [arXiv:1409.8322 [cond-mat.stat-mech]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2015
-
[35]
Long-range vector models at large N,
N. Chai, M. Goykhman and R. Sinha, “Long-range vector models at large N,” JHEP09 (2021), 194 [arXiv:2107.08052 [hep-th]]
-
[36]
Analytic and numerical bootstrap for the long-range Ising model,
C. Behan, E. Lauria, M. Nocchi and P. van Vliet, “Analytic and numerical bootstrap for the long-range Ising model,” JHEP03(2024), 136 [arXiv:2311.02742 [hep-th]]
-
[37]
One-Dimensional Ising Model with 1/r1.99 Interaction,
D. Benedetti, E. Lauria, D. Maz´ aˇ c and P. van Vliet, “One-Dimensional Ising Model with 1/r1.99 Interaction,” Phys. Rev. Lett.134(2025) no.20, 201602 [arXiv:2412.12243 [hep-th]]
-
[38]
The sphere free energy of the vector models to order 1/N,
L. Fraser-Taliente, “The sphere free energy of the vector models to order 1/N,” [arXiv:2507.16896 [hep-th]]
-
[39]
Long range, large charge, large N,
S. Giombi, E. Helfenberger and H. Khanchandani, “Long range, large charge, large N,” JHEP01, 166 (2023) [arXiv:2205.00500 [hep-th]]
-
[40]
Long-range multi-scalar models at three loops,
D. Benedetti, R. Gurau, S. Harribey and K. Suzuki, “Long-range multi-scalar models at three loops,” J. Phys. A53(2020) no.44, 445008 [erratum: J. Phys. A58(2025), 129401] [arXiv:2007.04603 [hep-th]]
-
[41]
O(N) models with boundary interactions and their long range generalizations,
S. Giombi and H. Khanchandani, “O(N) models with boundary interactions and their long range generalizations,” JHEP08(2020) no.08, 010 [arXiv:1912.08169 [hep-th]]
-
[42]
C. Behan, D. Benedetti, F. Eustachon and E. Lauria, “Long-range minimal models,” JHEP 02(2026), 001 [arXiv:2509.26372 [hep-th]]
-
[43]
Constraints on RG Flow for Four Dimensional Quantum Field Theories
I. Jack and H. Osborn, “Constraints on RG Flow for Four Dimensional Quantum Field Theories,” Nucl. Phys. B883(2014), 425-500 [arXiv:1312.0428 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2014
-
[44]
Gradient-flow equations for general Quantum Field Theories,
C. W. Poole, “Gradient-flow equations for general Quantum Field Theories,”
-
[45]
Consequences of Weyl Consistency Conditions
B. Grinstein, A. Stergiou and D. Stone, “Consequences of Weyl Consistency Conditions,” JHEP11(2013), 195 [arXiv:1308.1096 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2013
-
[46]
Consistency of local renormalization group in d=3
Y. Nakayama, “Consistency of local renormalization group in d=3,” Nucl. Phys. B879 (2014), 37-64 [arXiv:1307.8048 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2014
-
[47]
The a-function for gauge theories
I. Jack and C. Poole, “The a-function for gauge theories,” JHEP01(2015), 138 [arXiv:1411.1301 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2015
-
[48]
Constraints on 3- and 4-loopβ-functions in a general four-dimensional Quantum Field Theory,
C. Poole and A. E. Thomsen, “Constraints on 3- and 4-loopβ-functions in a general four-dimensional Quantum Field Theory,” JHEP09(2019), 055 [arXiv:1906.04625 [hep-th]]. – 28 –
-
[49]
Gradient Flow and the Renormalization Group,
D. J. Wallace and R. K. P. Zia, “Gradient Flow and the Renormalization Group,” Phys. Lett. A48(1974), 325
1974
-
[50]
The a-function in six dimensions
J. A. Gracey, I. Jack and C. Poole, “The a-function in six dimensions,” JHEP01(2016), 174 [arXiv:1507.02174 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2016
-
[51]
Gradient properties ofφ3 in d=6-ϵ,
L. Benfatto and O. Zanusso, “Gradient properties ofφ3 in d=6-ϵ,” Phys. Rev. D112(2025) no.10, 105009 [arXiv:2507.20761 [hep-th]]
-
[52]
Gradient RG Flow in Scalar-Fermion QFTs,
W. H. Pannell, W. P. Ronayne and A. Stergiou, “Gradient RG Flow in Scalar-Fermion QFTs,” [arXiv:2511.01971 [hep-th]]
-
[53]
Gradient properties of perturbative multiscalar RG flows to six loops,
W. H. Pannell and A. Stergiou, “Gradient properties of perturbative multiscalar RG flows to six loops,” Phys. Lett. B853(2024), 138701 [arXiv:2402.17817 [hep-th]]
-
[54]
Gradient flows and the curvature of theory space,
W. H. Pannell and A. Stergiou, “Gradient flows and the curvature of theory space,” JHEP 09(2025), 117 [arXiv:2502.06940 [hep-th]]
-
[55]
Critical exponents in 3.99 dimensions,
K. G. Wilson and M. E. Fisher, “Critical exponents in 3.99 dimensions,” Phys. Rev. Lett.28 (1972), 240-243
1972
-
[56]
The Renormalization group and the epsilon expansion,
K. G. Wilson and J. B. Kogut, “The Renormalization group and the epsilon expansion,” Phys. Rept.12(1974), 75-199
1974
-
[57]
Sphere free energy of scalar field theories with cubic interactions,
S. Giombi, E. Himwich, A. Katsevich, I. Klebanov and Z. Sun, “Sphere free energy of scalar field theories with cubic interactions,” JHEP12(2025), 133 [arXiv:2412.14086 [hep-th]]
-
[58]
L. Fraser-Taliente, “Local CFTs extremiseF,” [arXiv:2604.15420 [hep-th]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv
-
[59]
Dynamical theory of groups and fields,
B. S. DeWitt, “Dynamical theory of groups and fields,” Conf. Proc. C630701(1964), 585-820 1964,
1964
-
[60]
On ambiguities and divergences in perturbative renormalization group functions,
F. Herren and A. E. Thomsen, “On ambiguities and divergences in perturbative renormalization group functions,” JHEP06, 116 (2021) [arXiv:2104.07037 [hep-th]]
-
[61]
Analytic tools for Feynman integrals,
V. A. Smirnov, “Analytic tools for Feynman integrals,” Springer Tracts Mod. Phys.250 (2012), 1-296
2012
-
[62]
Mellin-Barnes Integrals: A Primer on Particle Physics Applications,
I. Dubovyk, J. Gluza and G. Somogyi, “Mellin-Barnes Integrals: A Primer on Particle Physics Applications,” Lect. Notes Phys.1008(2022), pp. [arXiv:2211.13733 [hep-ph]]
-
[63]
Automatized analytic continuation of Mellin-Barnes integrals
M. Czakon, “Automatized analytic continuation of Mellin-Barnes integrals,” Comput. Phys. Commun.175(2006), 559-571 [arXiv:hep-ph/0511200 [hep-ph]]
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2006
-
[64]
Kosower,barnesroutines.mathttps://mbtools.hepforge.org/
D. Kosower,barnesroutines.mathttps://mbtools.hepforge.org/. – 29 –
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.