Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/48647
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dc.contributor.authorMIR, Faizal-
dc.contributor.authorShabir, Arshid-
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-27T13:40:04Z-
dc.date.available2026-02-27T13:40:04Z-
dc.date.issued2026-
dc.date.submitted2026-02-24T14:56:40Z-
dc.identifier.citationInternational journal of geometric methods in modern physics, (Art N° 2650113)-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1942/48647-
dc.description.abstractWe show that a measure of clarity can be brought to the nonperturbative Yang-Mills problem if one holds fast to two principles: reflection positivity and gauge invariance. On the lattice, we construct a renormalization procedure that respects these principles exactly at each step. The method is elementary in its components: a transverse representative chosen within the fundamental modular region, a smooth horizon projector from the covariant Laplacian that softens long-range fluctuations, and a block transformation whose locality does not fade with scale. Out of these pieces arises a framework that is both mathematically precise and physically faithful. From this construction emerge three enduring results. First, the polymer expansion remains convergent under repeated renormalization, with bounds independent of the number of steps. Second, the fall-off of correlations, which embodies the presence of a mass gap, persists uniformly across scales with a constant rate m(& lowast;) > 0. Third, the spectral gaps of successive transfer operators obey an inequality that prevents them from collapsing, so that a strictly positive lower bound endures in the continuum limit. Thus, we obtain a step-scaling mechanism that conveys spectral information from the strong-coupling domain into the scaling window without loss. The bridge between Euclidean clustering and Hamiltonian gaps is kept intact, and the way is opened to the continuum reconstruction of Yang-Mills theory with a nonzero mass threshold.-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisherWORLD SCIENTIFIC PUBL CO PTE LTD-
dc.subject.otherLattice gauge theory; SU(N) Yang-Mills; reflection positivity;-
dc.subject.otherconstructive renormalization group; mass gap; transfer matrix;-
dc.subject.otherpolymer/cluster expansion; finite-range decomposition-
dc.titleReflection-positive renormalization and the persistence of the mass gap in lattice SU ( N ) Yang–Mills: Part (2)-
dc.typeJournal Contribution-
local.format.pages91-
local.bibliographicCitation.jcatA1-
dc.description.notesShabir, A (corresponding author), Canadian Quantum Res Ctr, 460 Doyle Ave 106, Kelowna, BC V1Y 0C2, Canada.-
dc.description.notesmirfaizalmir@gmail.com; aslone186@gmail.com-
local.publisher.place5 TOH TUCK LINK, SINGAPORE 596224, SINGAPORE-
local.type.refereedRefereed-
local.type.specifiedArticle-
local.bibliographicCitation.statusEarly view-
local.bibliographicCitation.artnr2650113-
dc.identifier.doi10.1142/S0219887826501136-
dc.identifier.isi001682127100001-
local.provider.typewosris-
local.description.affiliation[Faizal, Mir] Univ British Columbia Okanagan, Irving K Barber Sch Arts & Sci, Kelowna, BC V1V 1V7, Canada.-
local.description.affiliation[Faizal, Mir; Shabir, Arshid] Canadian Quantum Res Ctr, 460 Doyle Ave 106, Kelowna, BC V1Y 0C2, Canada.-
local.description.affiliation[Faizal, Mir] Univ Durham, Dept Math Sci, Stockton Rd, Durham DH1 3LE, England.-
local.description.affiliation[Faizal, Mir] Hasselt Univ, Computat Math Grp, B-3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium.-
local.uhasselt.internationalyes-
item.fulltextNo Fulltext-
item.contributorMIR, Faizal-
item.contributorShabir, Arshid-
item.fullcitationMIR, Faizal & Shabir, Arshid (2026) Reflection-positive renormalization and the persistence of the mass gap in lattice SU ( N ) Yang–Mills: Part (2). In: International journal of geometric methods in modern physics, (Art N° 2650113).-
item.accessRightsClosed Access-
crisitem.journal.issn0219-8878-
crisitem.journal.eissn1793-6977-
Appears in Collections:Research publications
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