In
particle and
condensed matter physics, '
Goldstone bosons' (also known as '
Nambu-Goldstone bosons') are
bosons that appear in models with
spontaneously broken symmetry. The Goldstone bosons correspond to the broken symmetry generators -- they can be thought of as the excitations of the field in the symmetric "directions" -- and are massless if the spontaneously broken symmetry is not also broken explicitly. If the symmetry is not exact, i.e., if it is explicitly broken as well as spontaneously broken, then the Goldstone bosons are not massless, though they typically remain light; these are called '
pseudo-Goldstone bosons' or 'pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone bosons' (abbreviated ''PNGBs'').
Goldstone's theorem
'Goldstone's theorem' states that whenever a continuous
symmetry is
spontaneously broken, new massless (or light, if the symmetry was not exact)
scalar particles appear in the spectrum of possible excitation. It was first formulated by
Jeffrey Goldstone. There is one scalar particle - called a Goldstone boson - for each generator of the symmetry that is broken, i.e., that does not preserve the
ground state.
There is a slight loophole in the theorem. If you read the theorem carefully, it only states that there exist non-
vacuum states with arbitrarily small energies. Take for example a chiral
N=1 super
QCD model with a nonzero
squark VEV which is
conformal in the
IR. The chiral symmetry is a
global symmetry which is (partially) spontaneously broken. Some of the "Goldstone bosons" associated with this SSB are charged under the unbroken gauge group and hence, these
composite bosons have a continuous
mass spectrum with arbitrarily small masses but yet there is no Goldstone boson with exactly zero mass. In other words, the Goldstone bosons are
infraparticles.
In theories with
gauge symmetry, the Goldstone bosons are "eaten" by the
gauge bosons. The latter become massive and their new,
longitudinal polarization is provided by the Goldstone boson.
A simple example
We have a
complex scalar field φ (
phi), with the constraint that 'φ
★ φ=k
2'. One way to get a constraint of that sort is by including a
potential
:
and taking the limit as λ goes to infinity. The field can be redefined to give a real
scalar field (i.e., a spin-zero particle) θ without any constraint by using
:
where θ is the Goldstone boson (actually kθ is) with the
Lagrangian density given by:
:
Note that the constant term m
2k
2 has no physical significance and the other term is simply the kinetic term for a massless scalar. In general the Goldstone boson is always massless, and parametrises the curve of possible vacuum states.
Nonrelativistic theories
A version of Goldstone's theorem also applies to
nonrelativistic theories (and also relativistic theories with spontaneously broken
Lorentz symmetry). It basically states that for each spontaneously broken global symmetry, there corresponds a
quasiparticle with no
energy gap (the nonrelativistic version of the
mass gap). However, two different spontaneously broken generators may give rise to the same Goldstone boson. For example, in a
superfluid, both the
U(1) particle number symmetry and
Galilean symmetry are spontaneously broken. However, the
phonon is the Goldstone boson for both.
In fact, in general, the phonon is the Goldstone boson for spontaneously broken
Galilean/Lorentz symmetry.
Goldstone fermions
Spontaneously broken global fermionic symmetries, which occur in some
supersymmetric models, lead to Goldstone
fermions, or ''
Goldstinos''. The bosonic superpartners of the Goldstinos, called ''
sgoldstinos'', also appear.
Goldstone bosons in nature
★ In
fluids, the
phonon is longitudinal and it is the Goldstone boson of the spontaneously broken Galilean symmetry. In
solids, the situation is more complicated; the Goldstone bosons are the longitudinal and transverse phonons and they happen to be the Goldstone bosons of spontaneously broken Galilean, translational and rotational symmetry with no simple one-to-one correspondence between the Goldstone modes and the broken symmetries.
★ In
magnets, the original rotational symmetry (present in the absence of an external magnetic field) is spontaneously broken such that the magnetization points into a specific direction. The Goldstone bosons then are the
magnons, i.e. spin waves in which the local magnetization direction oscillates.
★ The
pions are the
pseudo-Goldstone bosons that result from the spontaneous breaking of the chiral flavor symmetry of QCD caused by quark condensation. The symmetry is also explicitly broken by the masses of the quarks, so that the pions are not massless.
★ The longitudinal polarization components of the
W and Z bosons correspond to the Goldstone bosons of the spontaneously broken electroweak symmetry. Because the symmetry is gauged, the Goldstone bosons are "eaten" by the gauge bosons corresponding to the broken generators; this gives the gauge bosons a mass and the associated necessary third polarization degree of freedom. This is achieved in the Standard Model through the
Higgs mechanism.
See also
★
Pseudo-Goldstone boson
★
Majoron
★
Higgs mechanism
★
Higgs boson
★
Mermin-Wagner theorem