English

DeWitt-Schwinger Renormalization and Vacuum Polarization in d Dimensions

General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology 2009-09-21 v2

Abstract

Calculation of the vacuum polarization, <ϕ2(x)><\phi^2(x)>, and expectation value of the stress tensor, <Tμν(x)><T_{\mu\nu}(x)>, has seen a recent resurgence, notably for black hole spacetimes. To date, most calculations of this type have been done only in four dimensions. Extending these calculations to dd dimensions includes dd-dimensional renormalization. Typically, the renormalizing terms are found from Christensen's covariant point splitting method for the DeWitt-Schwinger expansion. However, some manipulation is required to put the correct terms into a form that is compatible with problems of the vacuum polarization type. Here, after a review of the current state of affairs for <ϕ2(x)><\phi^2(x)> and <Tμν(x)><T_{\mu\nu}(x)> calculations and a thorough introduction to the method of calculating <ϕ2(x)><\phi^2(x)>, a compact expression for the DeWitt-Schwinger renormalization terms suitable for use in even-dimensional spacetimes is derived. This formula should be useful for calculations of <ϕ2(x)><\phi^2(x)> and <Tμν(x)><T_{\mu\nu}(x)> in even dimensions, and the renormalization terms are shown explicitly for four and six dimensions. Furthermore, use of the finite terms of the DeWitt-Schwinger expansion as an approximation to <ϕ2(x)><\phi^2(x)> for certain spacetimes is discussed, with application to four and five dimensions.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0811.3962,
  title  = {DeWitt-Schwinger Renormalization and Vacuum Polarization in d Dimensions},
  author = {Robert T. Thompson and José P. S. Lemos},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0811.3962},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

21 pages, 2 tables, 3 figures. References added, rewritten to clarify some points, corrections performed, our claim in the first version that there is an error in Anderson's calculations is incorrect

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:44:52.166Z