The classical Yang–Mills action on a
principal bundle with structure group
G, base
M,
connection A, and
curvature (Yang–Mills field tensor)
F is S_{YM} = \int_M \left|F\right|^2 d\mathrm{vol}_M, where d\mathrm{vol}_M is the
volume form on M. If the inner product on \mathfrak{g}, the
Lie algebra of G in which F takes values, is given by the
Killing form on \mathfrak{g}, then this may be denoted as \int_M \mathrm{Tr}(F \wedge *F), since F \wedge *F = \langle F, F \rangle d\mathrm{vol}_M. For example, in the case of the
gauge group U(1),
F will be the electromagnetic field
tensor. From the
principle of stationary action, the Yang–Mills equations follow. They are \mathrm{d}F = 0, \quad \mathrm{d}{*F} = 0. The first of these is an identity, because d
F = d2
A = 0, but the second is a second-order
partial differential equation for the connection
A, and if the Minkowski current vector does not vanish, the zero on the rhs. of the second equation is replaced by \mathbf J. But notice how similar these equations are; they differ by a
Hodge star. Thus a solution to the simpler first order (non-linear) equation {*F} = \pm F\, is automatically also a solution of the Yang–Mills equation. This simplification occurs on 4 manifolds with :s=1 so that *^2=+1 on 2-forms. Such solutions usually exist, although their precise character depends on the dimension and topology of the base space M, the principal bundle P, and the gauge group G. In nonabelian Yang–Mills theories, DF=0 and D*F=0 where D is the
exterior covariant derivative. Furthermore, the
Bianchi identity DF=dF+A\wedge F-F\wedge A=d(dA+A\wedge A)+A\wedge (dA+A\wedge A)-(dA + A\wedge A)\wedge A=0 is satisfied. In
quantum field theory, an
instanton is a
topologically nontrivial field configuration in four-dimensional
Euclidean space (considered as the
Wick rotation of
Minkowski spacetime). Specifically, it refers to a
Yang–Mills gauge field A which approaches
pure gauge at
spatial infinity. This means the field strength \mathbf{F}=d\mathbf{A}+\mathbf{A}\wedge\mathbf{A} vanishes at infinity. The name
instanton derives from the fact that these fields are localized in space and (Euclidean) time – in other words, at a specific instant. The case of instantons on the
two-dimensional space may be easier to visualise because it admits the simplest case of the gauge
group, namely U(1), that is an
abelian group. In this case the field
A can be visualised as simply a
vector field. An instanton is a configuration where, for example, the arrows point away from a central point (i.e., a "hedgehog" state). In Euclidean
four dimensions, \mathbb{R}^4, abelian instantons are impossible. The field configuration of an instanton is very different from that of the
vacuum. Because of this instantons cannot be studied by using
Feynman diagrams, which only include
perturbative effects. Instantons are fundamentally
non-perturbative. The Yang–Mills energy is given by \frac{1}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^4} \operatorname{Tr}[*\mathbf{F}\wedge \mathbf{F}] where ∗ is the
Hodge dual. If we insist that the solutions to the Yang–Mills equations have finite
energy, then the
curvature of the solution at infinity (taken as a
limit) has to be zero. This means that the
Chern–Simons invariant can be defined at the 3-space boundary. This is equivalent, via
Stokes' theorem, to taking the
integral \int_{\mathbb{R}^4}\operatorname{Tr}[\mathbf{F}\wedge\mathbf{F}]. This is a homotopy invariant and it tells us which
homotopy class the instanton belongs to. Since the integral of a nonnegative
integrand is always nonnegative, 0\leq\frac{1}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^4}\operatorname{Tr}[(*\mathbf{F}+e^{-i\theta}\mathbf{F})\wedge(\mathbf{F}+e^{i\theta}*\mathbf{F})] =\int_{\mathbb{R}^4}\operatorname{Tr}[*\mathbf{F}\wedge\mathbf{F}+\cos\theta \mathbf{F}\wedge\mathbf{F}] for all real θ. So, this means \frac{1}{2}\int_{\mathbb{R}^4}\operatorname{Tr}[*\mathbf{F}\wedge\mathbf{F}]\geq\frac{1}{2}\left|\int_{\mathbb{R}^4}\operatorname{Tr}[\mathbf{F}\wedge\mathbf{F}]\right|. If this bound is saturated, then the solution is a
BPS state. For such states, either ∗
F =
F or ∗
F = −
F depending on the sign of the
homotopy invariant. In the Standard Model instantons are expected to be present both in the
electroweak sector and the chromodynamic sector, however, their existence has not yet been experimentally confirmed. Instanton effects are important in understanding the formation of condensates in the vacuum of
quantum chromodynamics (QCD) and in explaining the mass of the so-called 'eta-prime particle', a
Goldstone-boson which has acquired mass through the
axial current anomaly of QCD. Note that there is sometimes also a corresponding
soliton in a theory with one additional space dimension. Recent research on
instantons links them to topics such as
D-branes and
Black holes and, of course, the vacuum structure of QCD. For example, in oriented
string theories, a Dp brane is a gauge theory instanton in the world volume (
p + 5)-dimensional
U(
N) gauge theory on a stack of
N D(
p + 4)-branes. == Various numbers of dimensions ==