To properly define Wilson loops in gauge theory requires considering the
fiber bundle formulation of gauge theories. Here for each point in the d-dimensional
spacetime M there is a copy of the gauge group G forming what's known as a fiber of the
fiber bundle. These fiber bundles are called
principal bundles. Locally the resulting space looks like \mathbb R^d \times G although globally it can have some twisted structure depending on how different fibers are glued together. The issue that Wilson lines resolve is how to compare points on fibers at two different spacetime points. This is analogous to parallel transport in
general relativity which compares
tangent vectors that live in the
tangent spaces at different points. For principal bundles there is a natural way to compare different fiber points through the introduction of a
connection, which is equivalent to introducing a gauge field. This is because a connection is a way to separate out the tangent space of the principal bundle into two subspaces known as the
vertical and horizontal subspaces. The former consists of all vectors pointing along the fiber G while the latter consists of vectors that are perpendicular to the fiber. This allows for the comparison of fiber values at different spacetime points by connecting them with curves in the principal bundle whose tangent vectors always live in the horizontal subspace, so the curve is always perpendicular to any given fiber. If the starting fiber is at coordinate x_i with a starting point of the identity g_i=e, then to see how this changes when moving to another spacetime coordinate x_f, one needs to consider some spacetime curve \gamma:[0,1]\rightarrow M between x_i and x_f. The corresponding curve in the principal bundle, known as the
horizontal lift of \gamma(t), is the curve \tilde \gamma(t) such that \tilde \gamma(0) = g_i and that its tangent vectors always lie in the horizontal subspace. The fiber bundle formulation of gauge theory reveals that the
Lie-algebra valued gauge field A_\mu(x) = A^a_\mu(x)T^a is equivalent to the connection that defines the horizontal subspace, so this leads to a
differential equation for the horizontal lift : i\frac{dg(t)}{dt} = A_\mu(x)\frac{dx^\mu}{dt} g(t). This has a unique formal solution called the
Wilson line between the two points : g_f(t_f) = W[x_i, x_f] = \mathcal P\exp\bigg( i \int_{x_i}^{x_f}A_\mu \, dx^\mu \bigg), where \mathcal P is the
path-ordering operator, which is unnecessary for
abelian theories. The horizontal lift starting at some initial fiber point other than the identity merely requires multiplication by the initial element of the original horizontal lift. More generally, it holds that if \tilde \gamma'(0) = \tilde \gamma(0)g then \tilde \gamma'(t) = \tilde \gamma(t)g for all t\geq0. Under a
local gauge transformation g(x) the Wilson line transforms as : W[x_i, x_f] \rightarrow g(x_f) W[x_i, x_f] g^{-1}(x_i). This gauge transformation property is often used to directly introduce the Wilson line in the presence of matter fields \phi(x) transforming in the
fundamental representation of the gauge group, where the Wilson line is an operator that makes the combination \phi(x_i)^\dagger W[x_i,x_f]\phi(x_f) gauge invariant. It allows for the comparison of the matter field at different points in a gauge invariant way. Alternatively, the Wilson lines can also be introduced by adding an infinitely heavy
test particle charged under the gauge group. Its charge forms a quantized internal
Hilbert space, which can be integrated out, yielding the Wilson line as the world-line of the test particle. This works in quantum field theory whether or not there actually is any matter content in the theory. However, the
swampland conjecture known as the completeness conjecture claims that in a consistent theory of
quantum gravity, every Wilson line and 't Hooft line of a particular charge consistent with the
Dirac quantization condition must have a corresponding particle of that charge be present in the theory. Decoupling these particles by taking the infinite mass limit no longer works since this would form
black holes. The
trace of closed Wilson lines is a gauge invariant quantity known as the
Wilson loop Mathematically the term within the trace is known as the
holonomy, which describes a
mapping of the fiber into itself upon horizontal lift along a closed loop. The set of all holonomies itself forms a
group, which for principal bundles must be a
subgroup of the gauge group. Wilson loops satisfy the reconstruction property where knowing the set of Wilson loops for all possible loops allows for the reconstruction of all gauge invariant information about the gauge connection. Formally the set of all Wilson loops forms an
overcomplete basis of solutions to the Gauss' law constraint. The set of all Wilson lines is in
one-to-one correspondence with the
representations of the gauge group. This can be reformulated in terms of Lie algebra language using the
weight lattice of the gauge group \Lambda_w. In this case the types of Wilson loops are in one-to-one correspondence with \Lambda_w/W where W is the
Weyl group.
Hilbert space operators An alternative view of Wilson loops is to consider them as operators acting on the Hilbert space of states in
Minkowski signature. ==Order operator==