Next Article in Journal
Smart Architectural Framework for Symmetrical Data Offloading in IoT
Next Article in Special Issue
Introduction to Renormalization Theory and Chiral Gauge Theories in Dimensional Regularization with Non-Anticommuting γ5
Previous Article in Journal
Description of (Hyper-)Fragments in Hadron-Induced Reactions
Previous Article in Special Issue
Multifarious Roles of Hidden Chiral-Scale Symmetry: “Quenching” gA in Nuclei
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Review

Dichotomy of Baryons as Quantum Hall Droplets and Skyrmions: Topological Structure of Dense Matter

1
School of Fundamental Physics and Mathematical Sciences, Hangzhou Institute for Advanced Study, UCAS, Hangzhou 310024, China
2
International Center for Theoretical Physics Asia-Pacific (ICTP-AP) (Beijing/Hangzhou), University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China
3
Institut de Physique Théorique, Université Paris-Saclay, CNRS, CEA, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Symmetry 2021, 13(10), 1888; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym13101888
Submission received: 1 August 2021 / Revised: 10 September 2021 / Accepted: 27 September 2021 / Published: 7 October 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Chiral Symmetry in Physics)

Abstract

:
We review a new development on the possible direct connection between the topological structure of the N f = 1 baryon as a FQH droplet and that of the N f 2 baryons (such as nucleons and hyperons) as skyrmions. This development suggests a possible “domain-wall (DW)” structure of compressed baryonic matter at high density expected to be found in the core of massive compact stars. Our theoretical framework is anchored on an effective nuclear effective field theory that incorporates two symmetries either hidden in the vacuum in QCD or emergent from strong nuclear correlations. It presents a basically different, hitherto undiscovered structure of nuclear matter at low as well as high densities. Hidden “genuine dilaton (GD)” symmetry and hidden local symmetry (HLS) gauge-equivalent at low density to nonlinear sigma model capturing chiral symmetry, put together in nuclear effective field theory, are seen to play an increasingly important role in providing hadron–quark duality in baryonic matter. It is argued that the FQH droplets could actually figure essentially in the properties of the vector mesons endowed with HLS near chiral restoration. This strongly motivates incorporating both symmetries in formulating “first-principles” approaches to nuclear dynamics encompassing from the nuclear matter density to the highest density stable in the Universe.

1. Introduction

In this review note, we recount what we have carried out in the past few years to uncover a totally novel structure, not found in the literature, of dense nuclear matter relevant to massive compact stars. Our approach is anchored on two symmetries hidden in dilute hadronic systems, i.e., chiral symmetry and scale symmetry, that could play a crucial role as density increases high. In the accompanying article written by one of us (MR), how the very symmetries involved in dense compact-star matter also manifest at nuclear matter density in one of the outstanding problems in nuclear physics for more than four decades, namely, the “quenching” of the axial-vector coupling constant g A in nuclear Gamow–Teller transitions.
The structure of highly dense matter found in massive compact stars is a totally uncharted domain. Unlike at high temperature, at high density it can be accessed neither by lattice QCD nor by terrestrial experiments. While, as comprehensively reviewed recently [1,2], finite nuclei as well as infinite nuclear matter can be fairly accurately accessed by nuclear effective field theories, pionless or pionful, referred to herein as “standard nuclear effective field theory ( S n EFT)” anchored on relevant symmetries and invariances along the line of Weinberg’s Folk Theorem [3], S n EFTs, as befits their premise, are expected to break down at some high density (and low temperature) relevant to, say, the interior of massive stars.
In S n EFT, the power counting in density is O ( k F q ) where k F is the Fermi momentum and increasing density involves going to higher q. For the “normal” nuclear matter with density n 0 0.16 fm 3 , the expansion is required to go up to q 5 [2]. The breakdown must occur as k F goes beyond the nuclear matter density, say, at n ( 2 4 ) n 0 . On the other hand, if one organizes effective field theories in renormalization-group (RG) approach built on Fermi surface, the power counting in k F comes out to be O ( ( 1 / N ¯ ) κ ) where N ¯ = k F / ( Λ ˜ k F ) with Λ ˜ being the cutoff on top of the Fermi sea measured relative to the center of the Fermi sphere. The expansion in κ 0 leads to Fermi-liquid fixed-point theory [4,5]. The equilibrium nuclear matter is given at the Fermi-liquid fixed point with N ¯ . Approaching Fermi-liquid theory starting from S n EFT for nuclear (or neutron) matter valid up to roughly n 0 has been formulated [2,6]. It has also been formulated using the V l o w k RG approach applicable to both finite nuclei and infinite matter, taking into account 1 / N ¯ corrections [7].
Given that the k F expansion must inevitably break down—and hence S n EFT becomes no longer valid—at some high density above n 0 , a potentially promising and justifiable approach is to go over to the Fermi-liquid structure starting from the normal nuclear matter density at which the Fermi-liquid structure is fairly well established to hold. Our strategy is to build a model, that we shall refer to as “GnEFT,” that while capturing fully what S n EFT successfully does up to n 0 , can be extrapolated up beyond the density at which S n EFT is presumed to break down. Such an approach extensively developed in [8] is anchored on a Lagrangian that incorporates, in addition to the pions and nucleons, the lowest-lying vector mesons ρ and ω and the scalar meson χ standing for f 0 ( 500 ) . We treat the vector mesons V = ( ρ , ω ) as “dynamically generated” fields possessing hidden local symmetry (HLS) [9]—equivalently “composite gauge fields” [10]—and the scalar χ as a “genuine dilaton (GD)” [11], a (pseudo-)Nambu–Goldstone (NG) boson of hidden scale symmetry [12]. We cannot say whether these symmetries are intrinsic in QCD. If they are intrinsic then they must be hidden in the vacuum since they are not visible. What must happen in our systems in nuclear medium is that they become “unhidden” by strong nuclear correlations as nuclear matter is highly compressed. Or they can emerge from highly correlated hadronic interactions such as those in condensed matter physics. One of our basic assumptions is that the HLS is consistent with the Suzuki theorem [10], and the scale symmetry with genuine dilaton has an infrared (IR) fixed point with both the chiral and scale symmetries realized in the NG mode [11] at some high density. How these symmetries, invisible in free space, could appear in dense medium has been the subject of the past efforts [8] in nuclear astrophysics and motivates us to go beyond what has been explored so far. We approach this issue by analyzing the structure of cold dense baryonic matter with density n > ( 2 3 ) n 0 in terms of a “baryon-quark duality” n QCD. It should be noted that the emphasis, as is to be clarified, is on “duality,” not on “continuity”, discussed in connection with confinement–deconfinement issue.
In this paper, we find that the combined hidden scale symmetry (HSS) and HLS, suitably formulated so as to access high density compact-star matter [8], not necessarily intrinsic in QCD but interpreted as “emergent” from strong nuclear correlations, reveals a dichotomy in the structure of baryons treated in terms of topology in the large N c approximation and discuss how it could affect the equation of state (EoS) at high density relevant to the cores of massive compact stars. The merit of this work is that it exploits in strongly interacting baryonic matter a certain ubiquitous topological structure of highly correlated fermions, similar to electrons in condensed matter, thereby bringing in a possible paradigm change in nuclear dynamics.

2. The Problem: Dichotomy

Consider the baryons made up of the quarks with nearly zero current quark masses. We will be dealing primarily with two flavors, u(p) and d(own). However, for the role of scale symmetry, it is essential to think in terms of three flavors [11] as we will explain below. For three flavors, all octet baryons B ( α ) , α = 1 , . . . , 8 , can be obtained as solitons, i.e., skyrmions [13], from the octet mesons. This has to do with the homotopy group π 3 ( S U ( 3 ) ) Z and is justified in QCD at the large N c limit. However there has been one annoying puzzle in this matter: There is no skyrmion associated with the singlet meson η . This is because π 3 ( U ( 1 ) ) = 0 . The resolution to this conundrum was suggested in 2018 by Komargodski [14]: The baryon for η , while not a skyrmion soliton, turns out to be also a topological object at the large N c limit but more appropriately a fractional quantum Hall (FQH) droplet, somewhat similar to a pancake (or perhaps pita [15,16]).
One way of seeing how this FQH droplet comes about in QCD, the approach we adopt in this paper, is in terms of the “Cheshire Cat phenomenon” (CCP) formulated a long time ago [17].
In the CCP, the trade-in of topology for hadron–quark continuity for low energy/long wavelength nuclear processes involving the u quark and d quark is via the “infinite hotel mechanism” where N c quarks disappear into the vacuum, with the baryon charges taken up by the triplet pions, i.e., skyrmions. The N f = 1 quarks, on the other hand, forbidden to fall into the infinite hotel and become skyrmions, go instead into a 2-dimensional quantum Hall (QH) droplet described by Chern–Simons (CS) theory. In [18], this was described as the anomaly cancelation, known as the “anomaly inflow” from the bulk of a system to its boundary [19]. Here, what is involved is that the quarks propagating in one direction flow to one higher dimension making a sheet in ( x , y ) with the anomaly caused by the “confinement” boundary condition, with the resulting system given by abelian CS theory for the FQH droplet. One can think of this as a topological object of η with a topology different from that of the skyrmions of π ’s. We denote this baryon B ( 0 ) .
There is another way of interpreting the CCP construction of the fractional quantum Hall droplet that could be more appropriate for resolving the “dichotomy problem” mentioned below. That is to formulate it in terms of a domain-wall (DW) structure. Consider the confinement wall at x 3 = 0 . The vacua at x 3 > 0 and x 3 < 0 are clearly different. Then, the confinement wall makes the DW at x 3 = 0 . As an example, think of the region x 3 < 0 as the region in which quarks are confined in the sense of the MIT bag. Then, calculating the spectral asymmetry in the limit of the thin wall with the chiral bag boundary condition set at x 3 = 0 , one reproduces the same baryon charge obtained in the anomaly-inflow mechanism [20].
One important consequence of this observation is that the QH droplet has the spin J = N c / 2 , namely 3/2 for N c = 3 , corresponding to the baryon resonance ( 3 / 2 , 3 / 2 ) . The mass of the B ( 0 ) in the large N c limit is of course O ( N c ) but it can also receive O ( N c 0 ) contribution [14]. In the skyrmion system, there is also a baryon of the same quantum numbers ( 3 / 2 , 3 / 2 ) but there is no correction coming at O ( N c 0 ) that distinguishes spin-1/2 and spin-3/2. There is the Casimir contribution to the skyrmion mass that comes at O ( N c 0 ) but that is common to the skyrmions of both spins 1/2 and 3/2. The first correction to the skyrmion mass in the large N c limit comes at O ( 1 / N c ) arising from the rotational quantization. This presents a “dichotomy problem” (dubbed DP for short).
One can see this dichotomy if one applies the same argument made for the CCP for the QH droplet for B ( 0 ) to N f = 2 systems, namely, the nucleon. Instead of dropping into the “infinite hotel” in the CC mechanism for the N f = 2 skyrmion when the bag is shrunk to zero [17,21], there seems to be nothing that would prevent the quarks from undergoing the anomaly inflow into fractional quantum Hall droplets making the CS theory nonabelian [18]. Why not form a sheet-structured matter arranged, say, in the lasagne arrays seen at high density in crystal lattice simulations of compact-star matter (to be mentioned below)?
The pertinent question then is: What dictates the N f = 2 quarks to (A) drop in the -hotel skyrmions or (B) instead to flow to nonabelian FQH droplets? Or could it be (A) and (B) in some combination? This sharpens and generalizes the dichotomy problem raised above. A solution to this dichotomy problem has recently been addressed by Karasik [15] in terms of a “generalized” current that unifies the N f = 1 baryon, QH droplet, and the N 2 baryon, skyrmion. Here, we explore whether and how one can go from one to the other for the N f = 2 systems in terms of the EoS for dense baryonic matter. We do this by “dialing” baryon density. The hope is that this will unravel the putative hadron–quark duality possibly involved in the physics of massive compact stars. The strategy here is to extract the conceptual insights gained in the phenomenological development discussed in [8] for the physics of massive compact stars, the only system currently available in nature for high density n n 0 at low temperature and translate them into a scheme that could address, at least qualitatively, the dichotomy problem.

3. GnEFT Lagrangian

We begin by writing the effective Lagrangian involved, in as simple a form as possible, which allows us to capture the basic idea developed. The details look rather involved, but the basic idea is in fact quite simple. We will first deal with the mesonic sector with baryons generated as solitons and later explicitly incorporate baryons. In developing the basic idea, we will frequently switch back and forth between the former description and the latter.

3.1. Scale-Invariant Hidden Local Symmetric (sHLS) Lagrangian

To address the dichotomy problem (DP) in highly compressed baryonic matter, we incorporate the η field, η U A ( 1 ) , in addition to the pseudo-scalar NG bosons π S U ( 2 ) and the vectors ρ μ S U ( 2 ) and ω U ( 1 ) . The reason for this, as we will argue, is that although η is massive compared with the mesons we will take into account, it goes massless in the limit that N c and plays a crucial role for bringing in Chern–Simons topological field theory structure in (possibly) dense baryonic systems. In the modern development, it is being suggested that the role of η in the guise of fractional quantum Hall “pancake” for the flavor singlet baryon B ( 0 ) plays an indispensable role for QCD phase structure at high density. We will comment on this matter later although it is not well understood at present.
The Crewther’s GD approach to scale symmetry [11] adopted in this paper—which will turn out to play a crucial role in our theory—necessitates the kaons on par with the dilaton. For our purpose, however, we can ignore the strange quark—given the presence of the η meson—and focus on the two light flavors. For a reason that will become clear later, unless otherwise specified, the ρ and ω fields will be treated in U ( 2 ) -nonsymmetric way. In the Seiberg-type dual approach to HLS, the ω meson is not pure U ( 1 ) of U ( N f ) that contains ρ but a mixture of U ( 1 ) s. This feature will appear later in Section 5 where baryonic matter with η present is treated.
We write the chiral field U as (Unless otherwise noted, we shall use the convention of [22])
U = ξ 2 = e i η e i τ a π a / f
and the HLS fields as
V μ ρ = 1 2 g ρ ρ μ a τ a , V μ ω = 1 2 g ω ω μ .
Expressed in terms of the Maurer-Cartan 1-forms
α ^ , μ = 1 2 i D μ ξ · ξ ± D μ ξ · ξ
where D μ ξ = ( μ i V μ ρ i V μ ω ) ξ , the HLS Lagrangian we are concerned with is of the same form as the HLS Lagrangian for three flavors [22] with the parity-anomalous homogeneous Wess–Zumino (hWZ) Lagrangian composed of three terms (in the absence of external fields). For the S U ( 2 ) × U ( 1 ) case we are dealing with, there is no 2-dimensional Wess-Zumino (WZ) term.
To implement scale symmetry à la GD [11], we are to use as explained below the conformal compensator field χ = f χ e χ / f χ which has both mass dimension and scale dimension 1. The structure of the Lagrangian that we use in this discussion was noted previously in our reviews [8] and we shall note it again here with η incorporated. In order to justify its extension in the density domain where FQH droplets could play a role, an additional ingredient to what figures in [8] is needed. It will be given below.
The scale-symmetrized Lagrangian that we denote as sHLS is of the form
L s H L S = f 2 Φ 2 Tr α ^ μ α ^ μ + f σ ρ 2 Φ 2 Tr α ^ μ α ^ μ + f 0 2 Φ 2 Tr α ^ μ Tr α ^ μ + L h W Z 1 2 g ρ 2 Tr ( V μ ν V μ ν ) 1 2 g 0 2 Tr ( V μ ν ) Tr ( V μ ν ) + 1 2 μ χ μ χ + V ( χ )
where L h W Z is the hWZ term that conserves parity and charge conjugation but violates intrinsic parity, Φ is defined as
Φ = χ / f χ
and V χ is the dilaton potential, the explicit form of which is not needed for our purpose. V μ ν is the usual field tensor
V μ ν = μ V ν ν V μ i [ V μ , V ν ]
with V μ = V ρ μ + V ω μ . In (4)
f 0 2 = f σ ω 2 f σ ρ 2 2 , 1 g 0 2 = 1 2 1 g ω 2 1 g ρ 2 ,
where f σ V figures in the mass formula m V 2 = f σ V 2 g V 2 . The U ( 2 ) symmetry is recovered at the classical level by setting g ω = g ρ and f 0 = 1 / g 0 = 0 in (4). The hWZ Lagrangian that will be found to unify the N f = 1 and N f 2 baryons consists of four terms with an external potential J μ ext included:
L h W Z = N c 16 π 2 i = 1 4 c i L i .
We have not written down the explicit expressions here because they are not very illuminating and are not needed for what follows (see [22] for the detailed forms.) They are constructed of the Maurer–Cartan 1-forms with the covariant derivatives in the vector field V μ plus the J μ ext which is either U ( 1 ) baryonic potential or EM potential.
We should make two remarks on the Lagrangian (4) that need to be kept in mind in what follows. First, it is O ( p 2 ) in power counting [22] except for the hWZ term which while O ( p 4 ) is indispensable for unifying FQH droplets and skyrmions [15]. Second, it is made scale-invariant by the conformal compensator (CC) except for the dilaton potential V ( χ ) which could contain scale-symmetry explicit breaking, e.g., quark mass terms. The hWZ terms are scale-invariant, so are free of the CC fields. The rationale for this strategy for scale symmetry which resorts to what is known as “quantum scale invariance” [23] is explained below.

3.2. “Genuine Dilaton” Scenario (GDS)

In accordance with the GD scheme [11] with the IR fixed point specified above, even if explicit symmetry breaking is ignored, scale symmetry can be spontaneously broken by dilaton condensate generating masses to the hadrons. The scheme follows roughly the line of ideas based on “hidden quantum scale invariance” [23]. The underlying reason is that sHLS that we are exploiting is connected with strong–weak dualities à la Seiberg, typically associated with supersymmetric gauge theories [24,25,26,27]. This connection allows us to exploit the possible duality of HLS to the gluons that will figure in the problem. In addition, the applicability of duality in non-supersymmetric case as ours is made feasible if scale symmetry is broken by the dilaton in terms of the conformal compensator [26]. Thus, the theory at the tree level contains renormalization with the regularizer that brings scale elevated to a field, the CC field χ .
From the point of view of our bottom-up approach, it is important to note that the HLS we are dealing with is dynamically generated [9]. This means that the coefficients c i s in the hWZ term that play a key role in the unification of solitonic description of both N f = 1 and N f 2 baryons are constants that cannot be fixed by the theory. For low density, therefore, they are to be determined by experiments. They could be fixed by holographic QCD, but there are no known holographic QCD models that possess possible “orange” [15]—not to mention ultraviolet—completion that would allow for approaching the density above n 0 . However, as we will see later, in approaching QH droplet baryons bottom-up in density, the coefficients will be “quantized” by topology [15,16]. This takes place because there can be a phase transition from a Higgs mode to a topological phase in which the HLS fields are supposed to be (Seiberg-)dual to the gluons of QCD [24].

Unhiding Hidden Scale Symmetry in Nuclei

Underlying the idea of duality in hadronic matter is that scale symmetry is hidden. The VeV of the dilaton χ breaks scale-symmetry spontaneously in nuclear medium and slides with the density of the matter. This spontaneous scale-symmetry breaking in nuclear medium via the dilaton condensate dependent on density can have a highly subtle impact on certain nuclear properties. One of the celebrated cases highlighting the possible restoration of scale symmetry by nuclear renormalization is the g A quenching in nuclear Gamow–Teller transitions [28,29]. It has been shown that the hidden scale invariance emerges precociously in nuclear medium via strong nuclear correlations to lead to an effective g A , say g A ss 1 , approaching what is referred to as “dilaton limit fixed point.” The Lagrangian as given in (4) is in the leading order in scale-chiral expansion [12,30]. In the sector where η plays no role—or a negligible role—and the dilaton field is ignored, the HLS Lagrangian is gauge-equivalent to nonlinear sigma model; therefore, one can do a systematic chiral-perturbation calculation similar to the standard χ PT [22]. The treatment of many-body systems resorted to in [28] is in Landau Femi-liquid fixed point theory (FLFP) with the Lagrangian (10) (given below) that figures in [8] amounts to doing nuclear higher-loop renormalization calculations in Wilsonian-RG approach on Fermi surface and what leads to g A eff 1 aptly captures the restoring of scale symmetry hidden at the tree level to pseudo-conformal symmetry at the quantum level.
Now, going to high density beyond the normal nuclear matter, an important issue of the EoS of massive compact stars is the role of the dilaton and indispensably the scale symmetry in QCD. The story of scale symmetry in gauge theories has a long history dating from 1960s and it remains still a highly controversial issue in particle physics going beyond the Standard Model (BSM). Here, we will confine ourselves to QCD for N f 3 for which we adhere to the notion that f 0 ( 500 ) is a “genuine” dilaton being associated with hidden scale symmetry [11,12]. The distinctively characteristic feature of the “genuine dilaton” scenario (GDS for short) is the presence of the IR fixed point signaling the scale invariance at which both scale and chiral symmetries are in the NG mode admitting massive particles, such as nucleons, vector mesons etc. It may be that this notion of the GDS is not widely accepted in the particle physics community working on BSM [31]. It seems, however, consistent with the notion of hidden quantum scale invariance [23]. In our approach to dense matter, it turns out, as recalled below, that the GDS is consistent with the general structure of scale symmetry that manifests as an emerging symmetry from nuclear correlations at what we call “dialton-limit fixed point (DLFP)” in dense matter.

4. Baryonic Matter without η

We first consider baryonic matter where U A ( 1 ) anomaly does not figure. In (4), we set η equal to zero or properly integrated out given its massiveness in nature. The property of dense matter described by the theory, GnEFT, is analyzed in some detail in [8]. How to address many-nucleon systems directly from the Lagrangian that contains meson fields only, that is in the class of skyrmion approach, has not been worked out in a way suitable for dense matter physics. Therefore, a direct exploitation of the Lagrangian (4) treated entirely in terms of skyrmions is not feasible at present for studying the properties of dense baryonic matter. However, an astute way is to map what are established to be “robust” topological properties of skyrmions obtained with (4) to a density functional-type theory—referred frequently to as “DFT” in nuclear physics circles—by introducing explicitly baryon fields, and suitably coupling them, to (4). The strategy is to capture as fully as feasible non-perturbative properties associated with the topological structure involved. One possible way of how this can be achieved is discussed in detail in [8]. Here, we summarize what one finds in the mean-field approximation of GnEFT which corresponds to Landau fixed-point theory. Going beyond the approximation can be formulated in what is known as “ V l o w k ” RG approach and applied to compact stars in [8].

4.1. Dilaton Limit Fixed Point (DLFP)

To exploit the mapping of topological inputs of the sHLS Lagrangian into a mean-field approximation with GnEFT, we add the nucleon coupling to the sHLS fields implementing both HLS and scale symmetry as
L N = N ¯ ( i D Φ m N ) N + g A N ¯ α ^ γ 5 N + N ¯ g V ρ α ^ + g V 0 Tr [ α ^ ] N + ,
with the covariant derivative D μ = μ i V μ ρ i V μ ω and dimensionless parameters g A , g V ρ and g V 0 1 2 ( g V ω g V ρ ) . The ellipsis stands for higher derivative terms that will not be taken into account in what follows. The Lagrangian concerned that we shall refer to as b s HLS is
L b s H L S = L s H L S + L N .
With the explicit presence of the baryon field, the role of the hWZ terms is relegated to the baryon-field coupling to the vector and scalar fields that takes over the ω repulsion in dense baryonic matter.
We consider what happens when the density goes up and approaches the DLFP first considered by Beane and van Kolck [32] and apply it to the model we are considering in [8]. To do this we assume that approaching the DLFP at high density amounts to going toward the IR fixed point à la CT [11,12] described above where both chiral symmetry and scale symmetry are realized in the NG mode with the dilaton mass and pion mass going to zero in the chiral limit.
Starting from the vacuum where chiral symmetry is realized nonlinearly, as density increases, one would like to arrive, at some point near n 0 , at the linear realization of chiral symmetry, say, in the form of the Gell–Mann–Lévy (linear) sigma model [33] which qualitatively captures nuclear dynamics as the Walecka mean-field model does. This means transforming the nonlinear structure of sHLS that is the habitat of the skyrmion structure to a form more adapted to dense matter, namely, the half-skyrmion structure developed for the EoS of massive compact stars in [8]. This feature of transformation is encoded in the hidden scale symmetry as pointed out by Yamawaki [34]. This point will be further elaborated on in Section 7.
To see how the b s HLS Lagrangian behaves as density is increased, we follow Beane and van Kolck [32] and transform b s HLS to a linear basis, Σ = f π f χ U χ σ + i τ · π . We interpret taking the limit S Tr ( Σ Σ ) 0 as approaching the DLFP. Now how to take the dilaton limit requires a special interpretation. In mapping the key information of topological structure of baryonic matter to GnEFT as explained in [8], it is essential to interpret the limiting S 0 in the same sense as in going from the skyrmion phase to the half-skyrmion phase at a density above that of normal nuclear matter. In going from skyrmions to half-skyrmions in skyrmion crystal simulation, the quark condensate q ¯ q is found to globally go to zero at a density denoted n 1 / 2 > n 0 . To give an idea, n 1 / 2 in massive compact stars comes in [8] at 3 n 0 . The condensate, however, is non-zero locally, thereby supporting a chiral density wave in skyrmion crystal [35]. This seems to be the case in general as observed in various models [36]. As a consequence, the pion decay constant is non-zero, hence the state is in the NG mode. The same is true for the dilaton condensate with inhomogeneity in consistency with the GDS. This feature resembles the “pseudogap” structure in condensed matter physics, as there the issue is subtle and highly controversial (see [37] for a comprehensive discussion on this matter). In what follows, we interpret the limiting S 0 in this sense. The order parameters for the symmetries involved in medium up to the possible IR fixed point of [11] are more complicated, involving higher dimensional field operators [38]. Approaching the DLFP, the quantities involved will be denoted by asterisk ∗ as χ * f π * and χ * f χ * with f π * f χ * 0 . The matter in the half-skyrmion phase going toward the DLFP then has a resemblance to the pseudo-gap phase with fractional skyrmions present in SYK superconductivity [39].
One finds that in the limit S 0 , there develop singularities in the thermodynamic potential. Imposing that there be no singular terms in that limit gives what we identify as DLFP “constraints” [8]
f π f χ 0 , g A g V ρ 1 .
Furthermore, since the ρ -meson coupling to the nucleon is given by
g ρ N N = g ρ ( g V ρ 1 ) ,
one sees that the ρ meson decouples—independently of the “vector manifestation (VM)” with g ρ 0 [22]—from the nucleons as the DLFP is approached. On the other hand, the ω -NN coupling g ω N N = g ω ( g V ω 1 ) remains nonzero for g ω 0 because g V ω 1 0 in the DLFP limit. This has been verified at one-loop order in the renormalization-group equation. In fact, the EoS at high density relevant to massive compact stars requires this for the stability of the matter. It is well known that there is a delicate balance between the dilaton condensate which enters in the dilaton mass m χ * and the ω -NN coupling g ω N N . In fact this balance is the well-known story of the roles of the scalar attraction and vector repulsion in nuclear physics at normal nuclear matter density. It becomes more acute at higher densities.
The broad phase structure involved is depicted in Figure 1. Apart from the nuclear matter equilibrium density n 0 and the topology change density n 1 / 2 , other densities are not precisely pinned down. What is given in the review [8] does not represent precise values, hence Figure 1 should be taken at best schematic.

4.2. Interplay between g ω N N and χ *

The nucleon in-medium mass is connected to the ω -nucleon coupling by the equations of motion for χ and ω and the in-medium property of the χ condensate, χ * , or more appropriately the in-medium dilaton decay constant f χ * which controls the in-medium mass of the dilaton, hence the nucleon mass, at high density. This means that up to the DLFP, the effective nucleon mass will remain constant proportional to the dilaton condensate χ * . This is seen in Figure 2. This χ * comes out to be equal to the scale-chiral invariant mass of the nucleon m 0 that figures in the parity-doubling model for the nucleon [40]. This then suggests that m 0 can show up, signaling the presence at a higher density of the DLFP through strong nuclear correlations even if it is not explicit in the QCD Lagrangian.
We claim that this is in accord with the GDS (“genuine dilaton” scenario) with the nucleon mass remaining massive together with the non-zero dilaton decay constant.
The remarkable interplay between the dilaton condensate χ * and the ω -NN coupling has an important impact on the EoS for density n n 1 / 2 at which χ * flattens in density (The flattening to a density-independent constant of χ * / f χ at n 1 / 2 arising from an intricate interplay between g ω N N and χ * in Figure 2 is related to that of q ¯ q * / f π in a skyrmion-crystal simulation of HLS [41]. It is not obvious how to correctly implement the dilaton field in the crystal simulation, so the relation between the dilaton and quark condensates does not seem to come out correctly on skyrmion crystals. However, in the genuine dilaton scenario incorporated in GnEFT, we believe they should be tightly related—as we argued—as density approaches the IR fixed point density.). As noted above, the induced density dependence for the ρ -NN coupling ( g V ρ 1 ) drops rapidly such that the ρ decouples from nucleons at the DLFP whereas ( g V ω 1 ) remains non-zero. How this impacts on nuclear tensor forces and consequently on the symmetry energy E s y m deserves to be investigated in nuclear structure. Furthermore, the vector manifestation leads to the gauge coupling g ρ 0 [22] whereas that for ω coupling g ω drops only slightly. The delicate balance between the attraction due to the scalar (dilaton) exchange and the repulsion due to the ω exchange plays a crucial role for the EoS for n n 1 / 2 of massive neutron stars [8].

4.3. The Trace Anomaly and Pseudo-Conformal Symmetry

A striking consequence of the interplay between the g ω N N coupling and the condensate χ * at n n 1 / 2 in the GnEFT framework, not shared by other models in the literature, is the precocious emergence of hidden scale symmetry in nuclear interactions. The details are involved but the phenomenon can be clearly seen in the mean-field approximation with the b s HLS Lagrangian (10).
The vacuum expectation value of the trace of the energy-momentum tensor θ μ μ is given by
θ μ μ = 4 V ( χ ) χ V ( χ ) χ χ = χ * +
where the ellipsis stands for chiral symmetry breaking (quark mass) terms. Now, if one ignores the quark mass terms, then given that the χ * which should be identified with the dilaton decay constant is independent of density as illustrated in Figure 2, we have
θ μ μ ( n ) n = ϵ ( n ) n 1 3 v s 2 / c 2 = 0 .
One expects that ϵ ( n ) n 0 and hence, within the range of density where (14) holds, say, ( 3 7 ) n 0 , we arrive at what is commonly associated with the “conformal sound speed”
v s 2 / c 2 = 1 / 3 .
Since, however, the trace of the energy-momentum tensor is not zero at the density involved which is far from asymptotic, it should be more appropriately called “pseudo-conformal” velocity.
This prediction made in the mean field for a neutron star of mass M 2 M has been confirmed—modulo of course quark-mass terms—in going beyond the mean-field approximation using the V l o w k RG approach [8]. Needless to say, the quark mass terms could affect this result, bringing in possible deviation from (15), but it seems reasonable to assume that the corrections cannot be significant.

5. Baryonic Matter with η

To date, baryonic matter without the η degree of freedom is treated as density increases toward the DLFP. The baryons involved there are skyrmions for N f = 2 . It has been assumed that the U A ( 1 ) anomaly plays no role at high density for compact-star physics.
However, there are at least three reasons why the η degree of freedom cannot be ignored in nuclear dynamics. First, it is known that the U A ( 1 ) anomaly plays a crucial role for the color-charge conservation in the CCP [42] and consequently for the flavor-singlet axial-vector coupling constant of the proton g A 0 1 [43]. Second, the η , though massive at low density, may become lighter and become relevant at high density. Third, it has been suggested that the FQH droplet structure of N f = 1 baryon [14] can be unified in scale-symmetric HLS theory with the skyrmion structure of N f 2 baryons [15]. The third, while giving a possible solution to the dichotomy problem raised in Section 2, could influence the EoS at high density.
We now discuss how to approach quantum Hall droplets from skyrmions.

5.1. From sHLS to the η Ring

In following Karasik’s arguments [15,16], we take the sHLS Lagrangian (4) and focus on the terms that involve the η field in that Lagrangian. In doing this manipulation, the role of the conformal compensator present to provide (Seiberg-)duality plays the crucial role in contrast to what was conducted in [15,16] where the the role of dilaton effects is performing double trace, which is ignored. With the baryons generated as solitons in sHLS, the parameters of the Lagrangian contain the “intrinsic density dependence” (IDD) inherited from QCD at the matching between EFT and QCD. First we ask what one should “dial” in the parameters of GnEFT—in the spirit of the strategy used—to access compact stars so that the system approaches the η sheet. Next, we ask whether high baryon density supplied by gravity makes the η ring “visible”.
Suppose we increase density beyond n 1 / 2 . Recalling from what we have learned in the mean-field result with (10) (with the nucleon explicitly included), it seems reasonable to assume the ρ decouples first at some density above n 1 / 2 before reaching the DLFP. Since the gauge coupling g ρ goes to zero in approaching the vector manifestation fixed point n V M (say, n 25 n 0 ) [8]), the mass m ρ f π g ρ goes to zero independently of whether or not f π goes to zero and the ρ decouples from the pions. The Lagrangian L s H L S (4) will then reduce to what was noted by Karasik [15,16]
L s H L S = 1 2 ( μ χ ) 2 + V ( χ ) + 1 2 Φ * 2 ( μ η ) 2 1 4 ( ω μ ν ) 2 + 1 2 m ω 2 Φ * 2 ω μ ω μ c 3 N c 8 π 2 ϵ μ ν α β ω μ ν ω α β η + ,
where we have written f = f η and f σ ρ 2 = a f π 2 and Φ * f χ * / f χ f π * / f π with the ∗ standing for density dependence in baryonic matter. In this operation, we assumed that the limit S 0 is equivalent to having, as in the crystal simulation, both the dilaton and chiral condensates—space averaged globally—go to zero while they locally support density waves with their decay constants remaining nonzero. As density increases further beyond the DLFP, the condensate will vanish locally, hence Φ * 0 and the kinetic energy term of η field, ill defined due to singularity, is killed and the ω mass m ω χ goes to zero. Indeed, it is explicitly shown in [41] in the crystal approach that at a density n n 1 / 2 the phase becomes homogeneous—without density waves—so that f π f χ χ = 0 . We interpreted this phase as deconfined since both chiral and scale symmetries are restored. Note that the density involved must be considerably higher than the core density of massive stars. We will be left with the massless χ and ω fields and the ω η coupling coming from L 3 in the hWZ term, (8).
It is here that our approach to scale symmetry à la GD [11,23] brings the role of the sliding dilaton condensate at high density into contact via the Seiberg-type duality with the η ring structure.
The last term of (16) can be written as
L C S η = c 3 N c 4 π J μ ν α ω μ ν ω α .
with the topological U ( 1 ) 2-form symmetry current
J μ ν α = 1 2 π ϵ μ ν α β β η .
Now, a pertinent observation is that the charged objects under these symmetries are metamorphosed to infinitely extended sheets that interpolate from η = 0 on one side to η = 2 π on the other [14,15], involving a sheet η = π . The current is conserved because η in the space of η configuration is a circle and π 1 ( S 1 ) = Z . The Lagrangian (17) corresponds to the CS field identified with the ω field coupling to the baryon charge. The CS field is a topologically non-trivial gauge field and hence gauge invariance requires that the c 3 be quantized c 3 = 1 . This argument holds if we assume that the matter is in the topological phase where HLS is Seiberg-dual to QCD [24]. Karasik identifies the hWZ term with constrained coefficients as “hidden WZ” term in contrast to the “homogenous WZ term” [22] relevant at lower density. Note that going from “homogeneous hWZ” to “hidden hWZ” by density would require the unhiding of hidden scale invariance [11,23]. Now, going beyond the DLFP as the system is brought toward the putative density at which χ 0 and q ¯ q 0 , f π f χ 0 and m χ 0 , m ω 0 etc., one is left with a quantum Hall baryon with B = 1 and J = N c / 2 [14]. This essentially rephrases Karasik’s argument in terms of the GnEFT to arrive at the N f = 1 baryon from the N f = 2 baryons.
In what is described above, we have assumed that the ρ field decouples first before reaching the DLFP as indicated in Section 4.1. This is what seems to take place in compact-star matter studied in [8]. Instead of U ( 1 ) CS field theory, however, one can generalize the discussion to nonabelian CS field theory from the sHLS Lagrangian (4). The Lagrangian (17) is modified to [24] (This matter will be discussed elsewhere. We merely note that this Lagrangian figures as the boundary term in the chiral bag model to account for the color anomaly in the chiral bag model [42]. It illustrates that η could enter non-trivially in baryon structure in the background of the η singular ring invisible at low density (and low temperature) far away from the chiral restoration regime that will be addressed later.).
L C S η = c 3 N c 4 π J μ ν α Tr V μ ν V α + 2 3 V μ V ν V α
where V μ = 1 2 ( τ · ρ μ + ω μ ) , assuming U ( 2 ) symmetry, is restored at the high density concerned. We now identify the source of the baryon number as B = ( N c / N f ) Tr V and differentiating the action L C S η with respect to B, we obtain the baryon density
ρ B = c 3 1 4 π 2 ϵ i j k Tr ( i V j ) k η + .
With the configuration η = 0 at x 3 = and η = 2 π at x 3 = , the baryon number is obtained by integrating over x 3 . That requires again
c 3 = 1 .
This exposes the η ring in the N f = 2 setting. This observation is relevant to the possible decay of the η ring to a pionic sheet described in the next subsection.
Above, we have seen that in some density regime, one arrives at a CS theory coupled to a baryon-charge one object that could be identified with the η ring. This is achieved, we suggest, by what amounts to going beyond the DLFP in the GnEFT Lagrangian. To do this more realistically, it may be necessary to include higher-lying vectors and scalars as in holographic models [24]. This is beyond our scheme so we will not go into the matter further. What is interesting is to view the process in terms of the N f = 2 skyrmion given by the sHLS Lagrangian, namely, how the hedgehog ansatz ( For the S U ( 2 ) flavor chiral field U = e i τ · π / f , which in [15] is written as U = σ + i τ · π , the hedgehog ansatz is U = e i θ ( r ) τ · r ^ . θ ( r ) is sometimes called chiral angle.) in the background of the η field is “deformed” as density goes up. It seems plausible, as suggested in [15], that high density first impacts on the EoS such that
π 1 = π 2 = 0 , V μ 1 = V μ 2 = 0 , V μ 3 = ω μ
and then distorts the hedgehog configuration to
( σ + i π 3 ) / σ 2 + π 3 2 = e i η .
This suggests that while at low density η in U = e i η e i τ · π / f present in the η ring plays no significant role, except perhaps, giving an O ( N c 0 ) correction to the N mass difference which could not be significant, the η ring becomes important as density increases.

5.2. Going from the η Ring to the Pionic Sheet

We consider the density regime where the ρ mesons are decoupled from the nucleons and the η ring is unstable, and so decays to skyrmions. Noting that the η ring, i.e., L C S η , is embedded in the full hWZ term, we should look at the hWZ term (8). Following [15], we write (in the unitary gauge ξ R = ξ L = ξ )
L h W Z = N c 24 π 2 ϵ μ ν ρ σ g ω ω μ × Tr [ 3 8 κ 1 2 ν ξ ξ ρ ξ ξ σ ξ ξ + 1 2 κ 2 3 i V ν ( ρ ξ σ ξ ρ ξ σ ξ ) + 1 2 κ 3 3 i ν V ρ ( σ ξ ξ σ ξ ξ ) ]
where only the terms contributing to the N f = 2 completion of the topological term L C S η are retained. The coefficients κ i s can be identified with c i s of the hWZ term (8)
κ 1 = c 1 c 2 , κ 2 = c 1 + c 2 , κ 3 = c 3 .
Under gauge transformation ω μ ω μ 1 g ω μ λ , one has
δ S = N c 12 π 2 ϵ μ ν ρ σ μ λ Tr 3 8 κ 1 ν ξ ξ ρ ξ ξ σ ξ ξ + i N c 8 π 2 ϵ μ ν ρ σ μ λ ν Tr 1 2 κ 2 V ρ ( σ ξ ξ σ ξ ξ ) .
Then the gauge invariance yields the constraints
d ϕ 1 2 κ 2 ω ϕ + V ϕ 3 + 3 8 κ 1 4 π 1 ϕ π 2 = c o n s t .
So that, on the world-sheet for the N f = 1 baryon, one has [15]
1 2 κ 2 d ϕ ( ω ϕ + V ϕ 3 ) = 2 π , π 1 , 2 = 0 .
Thus, the η is “seen”. Note that the mixing of two U ( 1 ) s ( ω ϕ + V ϕ ) in this formula (and also the equality V 3 = ω in (22)) follows from the assumed duality of HLS [27].
Now, suppose the η sheet structure, a background buried in the system of N f = 2 skyrmions, is unstable and could subsequently decay into skyrmions in a different sheet structure containing the isovector degrees of freedom
ω ϕ + V ϕ 3 = 0 , 3 8 κ 1 d ϕ π 1 ϕ π 2 = π 2 .
The question is: What is the structure of the matter encoded in the condition 3 8 κ 1 d ϕ π 1 ϕ π 2 = π / 2 to which the η decays? Could this be a sort of droplets that can be described in a topological field theory, involving isovector degrees of freedom, e.g., the π ± , the ρ vectors etc. as in the form of a nonabelian CS Lagrangian that seems to arise in the Cheshire Cat for N f = 2 baryons? We have no answer to this question. Clearly, isovector mesons must figure. This has to do with the quantization of other coefficients than the one giving the η ring.

6. Ubiquitous Sheet Structure of Baryonic Matter

While it is not clear how the background of the η ring, perhaps insignificant in the dynamics of strongly interacting many-nucleon matter at low density, affects the process of going toward the DLFP—and beyond—to “expose” the η ring structure, we first inquire how the QH droplets structure could manifest in the sheet structure of dense matter as seen in the EoS of massive compact stars described with fair success in [8].

6.1. Crystal Skyrmions

We return to the skyrmion crystal simulation on which the GnEFT for massive compact stars is anchored [8]. As detailed there, the topological structure of the skyrmions simulated on crystal is translated into the parameters of the GnEFT Lagrangian, which is then treated in an RG-approach to many-nucleon interactions. The key role played in this procedure is the topological feature encoded in the skyrmion structure of hidden scale symmetry and local symmetry of sHLS. Notable there are the cusp in the symmetry energy of dense matter due to the “heavy” degrees of freedom, the parity doubling in the baryon spectra, and a “pseudo-gap” structure of the half-skyrmion phase. These properties encapsulated in the RG-approach with GnEFT led to the prediction of possible precocious emergence of scale symmetry in massive-star matter with the pseudo-conformal sound velocity of star v p c s 2 / c 2 1 / 3 at a density n 3 n 0 .
Let us explore what this skyrmion crystal structure suggests for a possible sheet structure of dense matter.
It is observed in molecular dynamics simulation of nuclear matter expected in neutron-star crust and core-collapse supernova at a density a packing fraction of 5 / 16 of nuclear saturation density n 0 2 × 10 14 g/cm 3 that a system of “sheets” of lasagne, among a variety of complex shapes of so-called “nuclear pasta”, could be formed and play a significant role in the EoS in low-density regime of compact star matter [44]. Involved here are standard nuclear interactions between neutrons and protons in addition to electromagnetic interactions.
At higher densities, say, at densities ( 2 7 ) n 0 , it is seen in skyrmion crystal simulations that a stack of lasagne sheets [45] or of tubes or spaghettis [46] is energetically favored over the homogenous structure. Involved here are fractionalized skyrmions, 1/2-baryon-charged for the former and 1 / q -charged for the latter with q odd integer. Those fractionalized skyrmions can be considered “dual” to (constituent) quarks in the sense of baryon-quark duality in QCD. There is an indication that the sheet structure of the stack of lasagnes could give a consistent density profile of even finite nuclei [45]. In fact, there seems little doubt that an inhomogeneity is favored in dense matter at non-asymptotic densities [35,36]. Thus, it could be considered robust.
The two phenomena at low and high densities involve basically different aspects of strong interactions, but there is a tantalizing hint that something universal is in action in both cases. We are tempted to consider that topology is involved there. This is particularly plausible at high density given that the “pasta” structure, be that lasagne or tubes (or spaghetti), is found to be strikingly robust. To date, the analysis has been made with an ansatz for the pion field, i.e., the Atiyah–Manton ansatz for the lasagne sheet and a special ansatz allowing analytical treatment for the tubes. The robustness must have to do with the fact that what is crucially involved is the topology and it is the pion field that carries the topology. What is striking is the resulting structure does not seem to depend on the presence of other massive degrees of freedom such as the vector mesons or scalar [41,47]. There, adding an infinite number of higher derivative terms to the Skyrme Lagrangian is found not to modify the ansatz for the tubes. It is, therefore, highly likely that the same structure would arise from the presence of the hidden scale-local degrees of freedom manifested in different forms of sHLS.

6.2. Density Functional Theory (DFT)

Our sHLS Lagrangian could contain the unified descriptions of both N f = 1 droplet— η ring—and N f = 2 skyrmions in an EoS, but we have not been able to capture both in a unified way. That is, how the infinite-hotel and the FQH structures combine in the EoS, and whether and how the latter structure figures in compact-star physics.
A significant recent development, relevant conceptually to this matter, is the work treating the fractional quantum Hall phenomenon in the Kohn’s functional density approach à la Kohn–Sham [48]. The key ingredient in this approach is the weakly interacting composite fermions (CF) formed as bound states of electrons and (even number of) quantum vortices. Treated in Kohn–Sham density functional theory, one arrives at the FQH state that captures certain strongly correlated electron interactions. The merit of this approach is that it maps the Kohn–Sham density functional, a microscopic description, to the CS Lagrangian, a coarse-grained macroscopic description, for the fractional quantum Hall effect.
Now, the possible relevance of this development to our problem is as follows. First, Kohn–Sham theory more or less underlies practically all nuclear EFTs employed with success in nuclear physics, as for instance, energy density functional approaches to nuclear structure. Second, our GnEFT approach belongs to this class of density-functional theories in the strong-interaction regime. Third, the successful working of the GnEFT model backed by robust topology and implemented with intrinsic density dependence inherited from QCD could very well be attributed to the power of the (Kohn–Sham-type) density functional in baryonic matter at high density n 3 n 0 . These three observations combined suggest that we approach the dichotomy problem in a way related to what was performed for FQHE.
The first indication that GnEFT anchored on the topology change could be capturing the weak CF structure of [48] in FQHE is seen in the nearly non-interacting quasiparticle behavior in the chiral field configuration U in the half-skyrmion phase (see Figure 8 in [8]). This feature may be understood as follows. Due to hidden U ( 1 ) gauge symmetry in the hedgehog configuration, the half-skyrmion carries a magnetic monopole associated with the dual ω [49,50]. The energy of the “bare” monopole in the half-skyrmion diverges when separated, but the divergence is tamed by interactions in the skyrmion as a bound state of two half-skyrmions where the divergence is absent. In a way analogous to what happens in the Kohn–Sham theory of FQHE [48], there could intervene the gauge interactions between the skyrmions pierced by a pair of monopoles in sHLS—as composite fermions—possibly induced by the Berry phases due to the magnetic vortices. Thus, it is possible that the topological structure of the FQH is buried in the bound half-skyrmion structure at high density. A possible avenue to the problem is to formulate the EoS in terms of a stack of ordered coupled sheets of CS droplets. We hope to elucidate this in future work.

6.3. Hadron—Quark Continuity a.k.a. Duality

In the dilaton limit where the constraints (11) set in, there are NG excitations and the nucleon mass is O ( m 0 ) with m 0 y m N , y ( 0.6 0.9 ) . In compact stars treated in [8], the core of the massive stars with M 2 M has density ( 6 7 ) n 0 . A natural question one raises is whether the core of the star contains “deconfined” quarks either co-existing with or without baryons. In the framework of [8], the constituents of the core are fractional-baryon-charged quasiparticles. They are neither baryons nor quarks. The fractional-charged phase arises without order-parameter change and hence considered evolving continuously from baryonic phase with a certain topology change. In certain models having domain walls, those fractional-charged objects can be “deconfined” on the domain wall [51]. If the sheets in the skyrmion matter discussed above are domain walls, then it is possible that the fractional-charged objects are “deconfined” on the sheets in the sense discussed in [51].
There are two significant issues raised here.
One is the possible observation of an evidence for “quarks” in the core of massive neutron stars [52]. Very recently, combining the astrophysical observations and theoretical ab initio calculations, Annal et al. concluded that inside the maximally massive stars there could very well be a quark core consisting of “deconfined quarks” [52]. Their analysis is based on the observation that in the core of the massive stars, the sound velocity approaches the conformal limit v s / c 1 / 3 and the polytropic index takes the value γ < 1.75 , 1.75 being the value close to the minimal one obtained in the hadronic model. It has been found [53] that in the pseudo-conformal structure of our GnEFT, the sound velocity becomes nearly conformal v p c s / c 1 / 3 and the γ goes near 1 at n 3 n 0 . Thus, at least at the maximum density relevant for 2 M stars, what could be interpreted as “deconfined quarks” can be more appropriately fractionally charged quasipartlcles. Are these “deconfined” objects on domain walls as in [51] or confined two half-skyrmions as mentioned in Section 6.1?
The other is what is referred to as “baryon-quark continuity” in [8] in the domain of density relevant to compact-star phenomenology. This is not in the domain of density relevant to the color-flavor locking which is to take place at asymptotic density [54]. It seems more appropriate to say that the gauge degrees of freedom we are dealing with should be considered as “dual” to the gluons in QCD [24].

6.4. Hadron—Quark Continuity or Deconfinement

It has recently been argued that the hadron–quark continuity in the sense of [54] is ruled out on the basis of the existence of a nonlocal order parameter involving a (color-)vortex holonomy [55]. However, such a “theorem”, perhaps holding at asymptotic density, could very well be irrelevant even at the maximum possible density observable in nature, whatever the maximum mass of the star stable against gravitational collapse might be. The argument of [55] cannot rule out the baryon-quark duality argument given in [8] and in this paper which is far below asymptotic density. The presence of the scale-chiral-invariant nucleon mass m 0 testifies for this assertion.

6.5. Emergence of Hidden Scale Symmetry in Nuclear Matter

The hadron–quark duality for which the hidden scale symmetry—together with the HLS—figures crucially in our discussion of resolving the dichotomy, we argue, leaves a trail of other observables where its effect has impacts on. One prominent case is the long-standing mystery described above of the “quenched” axial-vector coupling constant g A in nuclear medium reviewed in the note that accompanies this note [29].
We recall as the density approaches the DLFP density, the constraints (11) require that the effective g A 1 . Surprisingly, as has been recently shown [28], the effective g A ss in Gamow–Teller transitions (most accurately measurable in doubly-magic nuclei)—which is denoted as g A Landau in [28]—is predicted to be “quenched” in the presence of emerging scale invariance from g A = 1.27 in free space to g A ss 1 at a much lower density, say, in finite nuclei.
Now, here is an intriguing possibility. While the precocious onset of the conformal sound speed v s 2 / c 2 = 1 / 3 in massive stars at density n 3 n 0 is a signal for an emergence of an albeit approximate scale symmetry, there has been, to date, no evident indication of the pseudo-conformal structure at low density n 3 n 0 . As suggested in [56], it is an appealing possibility that g A eff 1 in nuclei (modulo possible, as yet unknown, β corrections) and g A = 1 at the DLFP is the continuity of the “emergent” scale symmetry reflecting hidden quantum scale invariance between low and high densities.
Regardless of whether the hidden nature of scale symmetry is appropriate for the “genuine dilaton” of Crewther [11] or quantum scale invariance [23] or the dilaton in the conformal window [31], scale symmetry is intrinsically hidden. This point has been clearly illustrated in Yamawaki’s argument [34]. Yamawaki starts with the S U ( 2 ) L × S U ( 2 ) R linear sigma model with two parameters which corresponds to the Standard Model Higgs Lagrangian, makes a series of field re-parameterizations and writes the SM Higgs model in two terms, a scale invariant term and a potential term which breaks scale symmetry which depends on one dimensionless parameter λ . By dialing λ , he obtains the nonlinear sigma model with the scale symmetry breaking shoved into the NG boson field kinetic energy term, and by dialing λ 0 he obtains scale-invariant theory going toward the conformal window. This suggests that one can think of what is happening in baryonic matter as dialing the parameter λ in terms of nuclear dynamics. For compact-star physics, it is the density that does the dialing.

7. Comments and Further Remarks

The principal proposition of this article is that the effective low-energy Lagrangian sHLS that incorporates hidden scale and local symmetries containing, in addition to the (octet) pions, the η degree of freedom could contain both N f = 1 baryons and N f = 2 baryons through hidden scale and local symmetries dual to the gluons in agreement with Karasik. What is highly non-trivial is that the GnEFT with η included in the chiral field U could contain both the topological structure of quantum Hall baryons and that of skyrmion baryons. How to write the ansatz for the former as one does for the latter is unclear, but it should be feasible to do so and would allow one to see how the former comes into the latter to resolve the dichotomy problem.
We are uncovering an interesting role that could be played by the scale symmetry with its dilaton and the hidden local symmetry with the vector mesons dual to the gluons in “unifying” the two different topological sheet structures. The analysis made in the GnEFT framework based on sHLS indicates that in the density regime relevant to massive compact stars, the chiral condensate and dilaton condensate go proportional to each other in the NG mode. In going beyond the regime of massive compact stars, we find the DLFP approaching, if not coinciding with, the IR fixed point with f π = f χ . How and where the density regime for the IR fixed point is approached cannot at present be fixed.
It should be re-stressed that the scale symmetry involved in dense matter is basically different from the presently favored scenario invoking the “conformal window” in the domain of BSM with N f 8 typically characterized by the ratio [31] F π 2 / F d 2 0.1 . This is in stark contrast with f π 2 / f χ 2 1 which seems to be encoded in the pseudo-conformal structure in dense nuclear systems. Another notable observation is that zeroing-in on the deep IR regime associated with the η singularity involved in the domain-wall topological structure of baryons as argued in [15,16] uncovers the ω (a.k.a. Chern–Simons) mass going to zero as the fermion (“quark”) mass m . This contrasts with how the η ring structure could be “exposed” in dense nuclear processes at high density as the ω mass is to go to zero with the dilaton mass m χ χ going to zero. This could be explainable in terms of a (Seiberg-type) duality between the gluons (in the topological phase) and the HLS mesons (in the Higgs phase). See a related discussion in [24]. In the former, the vector dominance is found to play a crucial role for the N f = 1 baryon structure [16] whereas in the latter, the VD—unless a high tower of vector mesons is taken into account [57]—famously fails to work for the N f = 2 (i.e., nucleon) EM form factors. How to correlate or reconcile these two processes appears highly challenging.
Finally, there is an intriguing, so far un-explored, role that the η singular ring (a.k.a. FQH droplet) could play in the properties of HLS mesons near chiral restoration. This could be particularly relevant to dilepton production in relativistic heavy-ion collisions in search of dropping vector meson mass in extreme conditions, in particular at high temperature T c 150 MeV near chiral restoration. What our work suggested is that near the chiral transition where the dialton decay constant goes to zero, there would be exposed FQH droplets. Kitano and Matsudo have argued [58], based on their analysis of vector mesons on domain wall and on what is conjectured in [24], that when the chiral phase transition is approached, the FQH pancake configurations are absolutely essential for the description of the behavior of the vector mesons near the phase transition. To date, the theoretical analyses on the vector mesons in the dilepton experiments did not take into account, in addition to the what was argued in a similar vein in [59], the possibly crucial role of the FQH pancakes; therefore, the failure of the dilepton experiments to see the dropping-mass effect could not be concluded as “ruling out” the vector manifestation fixed point as was performed in the heavy-ion community [60].
In contrast, given that the density of the core of massive neutron stars is predicted to be far below the putative chiral restoration density, the phase with the FQH-pancakes with conformal invariance may not have a direct impact on the EoS for neutron stars. Nevertheless, it may not be ignorable in that at densities much lower than that relevant to the FQH pancake configurations it could have an “un-nuclear matter” structure in the star properties—such as “unnuclei” [61] along the notion of “unparticles” [62], a possible example being the pseudo-conformal sound speed predicted in the G n EFT approach [8].

Author Contributions

All authors contributed equally to the review. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The work of YLM was supported in part by the National Science Foundation of China (NSFC) under Grant No. 11875147 and 11475071.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Hammer, H.-W.; König, S.; van Kolck, U. Nuclear effective field theory: Status and perspectives. Rev. Mod. Phys. 2020, 92, 025004. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Holt, J.W.; Rho, M.; Weise, W. Chiral symmetry and effective field theories for hadronic, nuclear and stellar matter. Phys. Rept. 2016, 621, 2. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  3. Weinberg, S. What is quantum field theory, and what did we think it is? arXiv 1997, arXiv:hep-th/9702027. [Google Scholar]
  4. Shankar, R. Renormalization group approach to interacting fermions. Rev. Mod. Phys. 1994, 66, 129. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  5. Polchinski, J. Effective field theory and the Fermi surface. arXiv 1992, arXiv:hep-th/9210046. [Google Scholar]
  6. Holt, J.W.; Kaiser, N.; Weise, W. Chiral Fermi liquid approach to neutron matter. Phys. Rev. C 2013, 87, 014338. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  7. Holt, J.W.; Brown, G.E.; Holt, J.D.; Kuo, T.T.S. Nuclear matter with Brown-Rho-scaled Fermi liquid interactions. Nucl. Phys. A 2007, 785, 322. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  8. Ma, Y.L.; Rho, M. Towards the hadron-quark continuity via a topology change in compact stars. Prog. Part. Nucl. Phys. 2020, 113, 103791. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Bando, M.; Kugo, T.; Uehara, S.; Yamawaki, K.; Yanagida, T. Is ρ meson a dynamical gauge boson of hidden local symmetry? Phys. Rev. Lett. 1985, 54, 1215. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Suzuki, M. Inevitable emergence of composite gauge bosons. Phys. Rev. D 2017, 96, 065010. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  11. Crewther, R.J. Genuine dilatons in gauge theories. Universe 2020, 6, 96. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Crewther, R.J.; Tunstall, L.C. ΔI = 1/2 rule for kaon decays derived from QCD infrared fixed point. Phys. Rev. D 2015, 91, 034016. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  13. Skyrme, T.H.R. A unified field theory of mesons and baryons. Nucl. Phys. 1962, 315, 556. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Komargodski, Z. Baryons as quantum Hall droplets. arXiv 2018, arXiv:1812.09253. [Google Scholar]
  15. Karasik, A. Skyrmions, quantum Hall droplets, and one current to rule them all. SciPost Phys. 2020, 9, 8. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Karasik, A. Vector dominance, one flavored baryons, and QCD domain walls from the “hidden” Wess-Zumino term. SciPost Phys. 2021, 10, 138. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Nadkarni, S.; Nielsen, H.B.; Zahed, I. Bosonization relations as bag boundary conditions. Nucl. Phys. B 1985, 253, 308. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Ma, Y.L.; Nowak, M.A.; Rho, M.; Zahed, I. Baryon as a quantum Hall droplet and the hadron-quark duality. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2019, 123, 172301. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  19. Callan, C.G., Jr.; Harvey, J.A. Anomalies and fermion zero modes on strings and domain Walls. Nucl. Phys. B 1985, 250, 427. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Ma, Y.L.; Rho, M. Mapping topology to nuclear dilaton-HLS effective field theory for dense baryonic matter. arXiv 2021, arXiv:2103.01860. [Google Scholar]
  21. Goldstone, J.; Jaffe, R.L. The baryon number in chiral bag models. Phys. Rev. Lett. 1983, 51, 1518. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  22. Harada, M.; Yamawaki, K. Hidden local symmetry at loop: A New perspective of composite gauge boson and chiral phase transition. Phys. Rep. 2003, 381, 1–233. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  23. Shaposhnikov, M.; Zenhausern, D. Quantum scale invariance, cosmological constant and hierarchy problem. Phys. Lett. B 2009, 671, 162–166. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  24. Kan, N.; Kitano, R.; Yankielowicz, S.; Yokokura, R. From 3d dualities to hadron physics. Phys. Rev. D 2020, 102, 125034. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Komargodski, Z. Vector mesons and an interpretation of Seiberg duality. J. High Energy Phys. 2011, 2011, 1–21. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  26. Abel, S.; Barnard, J. Seiberg duality versus hidden local symmetry. J. High Energy Phys. 2012, 2012, 1–42. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  27. Kitano, R.; Nakamura, M.; Yokoi, N. Making confining strings out of mesons. Phys. Rev. D 2012, 86, 014510. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  28. Ma, Y.L.; Rho, M. Quenched gA in nuclei and emergent scale symmetry in baryonic matter. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2020, 125, 142501. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Rho, M. Multifarious roles of hidden chiral-scale symmetry: “Quenching” gA in nuclei. Symmetry 2021, 13, 1388. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Li, Y.L.; Ma, Y.L.; Rho, M. Chiral-scale effective theory including a dilatonic meson. Phys. Rev. D 2017, 95, 114011. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  31. Appelquist, T.; Ingoldby, J.; Piai, M. Nearly conformal composite Higgs model. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2021, 126, 191804. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  32. Beane, S.R.; van Kolck, U. The dilated chiral quark model. Phys. Lett. B 1994, 328, 137. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  33. Gell-Mann, M.; Lévy, M. The axial vector current in beta decay. Nuovo Cim. 1960, 16, 705. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Yamawaki, K. Hidden local symmetry and beyond. Int. J. Mod. Phys. E 2017, 26, 1740032. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  35. Harada, M.; Lee, H.K.; Ma, Y.L.; Rho, M. Inhomogeneous quark condensate in compressed Skyrmion matter. Phys. Rev. D 2015, 91, 096011. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  36. Buballa, M.; Carignano, S. Inhomogeneous chiral symmetry breaking in dense neutron-star matter. Eur. Phys. J. A 2016, 52, 57. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  37. Mueller, E.J. Pseudogaps in strongly interacting Fermi gases. Rep. Prog. Phys. 2017, 80, 104401. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  38. Harada, M.; Sasaki, C.; Takemoto, S. Enhancement of quark number susceptibility with an alternative pattern of chiral symmetry breaking in dense matter. Phys. Rev. D 2010, 81, 016009. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  39. Wang, H.; Chudnovskiy, A.L.; Gorsky, A.; Kamenev, A. SYK superconductivity: Quantum Kuramoto and generalized Richardson models. Phys. Rev. Res. 2020, 2, 033025. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  40. Sasaki, C.; Lee, H.K.; Paeng, W.G.; Rho, M. Conformal anomaly and the vector coupling in dense matter. Phys. Rev. D 2011, 84, 034011. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  41. Ma, Y.L.; Harada, M.; Lee, H.K.; Oh, Y.; Park, B.Y.; Rho, M. Dense baryonic matter in the hidden local symmetry approach: Half-skyrmions and nucleon mass. Phys. Rev. D 2013, 88, 014016. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  42. Nielsen, H.B.; Rho, M.; Wirzba, A.; Zahed, I. Color anomaly in a hybrid bag model. Phys. Lett. B 1991, 269, 389. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  43. Lee, H.J.; Min, D.P.; Park, B.Y.; Rho, M.; Vento, V. The proton spin in the chiral bag model: Casimir contribution and Cheshire cat principle. Nucl. Phys. A 1999, 657, 75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  44. Berry, D.K.; Caplan, M.E.; Horowitz, C.J.; Huber, G.; Schneider, A.S. ’Parking-garage’ structures in nuclear astrophysics and cellular biophysics. Phys. Rev. C 2016, 94, 055801. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  45. Park, B.Y.; Paeng, W.G.; Vento, V. The Inhomogeneous phase of dense skyrmion matter. Nucl. Phys. A 2019, 989, 231. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  46. Canfora, F. Ordered arrays of baryonic tubes in the Skyrme model in (3 + 1) dimensions at finite density. Eur. Phys. C 2018, 78, 929. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  47. Canfora, F.; Lagos, M.; Vera, A. Crystals of superconducting baryonic tubes in the low energy limit of QCD at finite density. Eur. Phys. J. C 2020, 80, 697. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  48. Hu, Y.; Jain, J.K. Kohn-Sham theory of the fractional quantum Hall effect. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2019, 123, 176802. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  49. Zhang, P.; Kimm, K.; Zou, L.; Cho, Y.M. Re-interpretation of Skyrme theory: New topological structures. arXiv 2017, arXiv:1704.05975. [Google Scholar]
  50. Gudnason, S.B.; Nitta, M. Fractional skyrmions and their molecules. Phys. Rev. D 2015, 91, 085040. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  51. Sulejmanpasic, T.; Shao, H.; Sandvik, A.; Unsal, M. Confinement in the bulk, deconfinement on the wall: Infrared equivalence between compactified QCD and quantum magnets. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2017, 119, 091601. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  52. Annala, E.; Gorda, T.; Kurkela, A.; Nättilä, J.; Vuorinen, A. Evidence for quark-matter cores in massive neutron stars. Nat. Phys. 2020, 16, 907–910. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  53. Ma, Y.L.; Rho, M. The sound speed and core of massive compact stars: A manifestation of hadron-quark duality. arXiv 2021, arXiv:2104.13822. [Google Scholar]
  54. Schäfer, T.; Wilczek, F. Continuity of quark and hadron matter. Phys. Rev. Lett. 1999, 82, 3956. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  55. Cherman, A.; Jacobson, T.; Sen, S.; Yaffe, L.G. Higgs-confinement phase transitions with fundamental representation matter. arXiv 2020, arXiv:2007.08539. [Google Scholar]
  56. Rho, M.; Ma, Y.L. Manifestation of hidden symmetries in baryonic matter: From finite nuclei to neutron stars. Mod. Phys. Lett. A 2021, 36, 2130012. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  57. Hong, D.K.; Rho, M.; Yee, H.U.; Yi, P. Dynamics of baryons from string theory and vector dominance. J. High Energy Phys. 2007, 2007, 063. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  58. Kitano, R.; Matsudo, R. Vector mesons on the wall. J. High Energy Phys. 2021, 2021, 1–27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  59. Brown, G.E.; Harada, M.; Holt, J.W.; Rho, M.; Sasaki, C. Hidden local field theory and dileptons in relativistic heavy ion collisions. Prog. Theor. Phys. 2009, 121, 1209–1236. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  60. Braun-Munzinger, P.; Koch, V.; Schäfer, T.; Stachel, J. Properties of hot and dense matter from relativistic heavy ion collisions. Phys. Rep. 2016, 621, 76–126. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  61. Schäfer, T.; Baym, G. From nuclear to unnuclear physics. arXiv 2021, arXiv:2109.06924. [Google Scholar]
  62. Georgi, H. Unparticle physics. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2007, 98, 221601. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
Figure 1. The proposed schematic phase structure for density regimes: n 0 stands for equilibrium nuclear matter density, n 1 / 2 for onset density of half-skyrmions, n DLFP for dilaton limit fixed point, n IRFP for IR fixed point and n VM for vector manifestation fixed point.
Figure 1. The proposed schematic phase structure for density regimes: n 0 stands for equilibrium nuclear matter density, n 1 / 2 for onset density of half-skyrmions, n DLFP for dilaton limit fixed point, n IRFP for IR fixed point and n VM for vector manifestation fixed point.
Symmetry 13 01888 g001
Figure 2. The ratio χ * / χ 0 where χ * f χ * as a function of density n for varying “induced density dependence” (DD i n d u c e d )—distinct from IDD (intrinsic density dependence) inherited from QCD—of g V ω * which is parameterized as g V ω * 1 = ( g V ω 1 ) ( 1 + y n n 0 ) 1 . The density at which the ratio χ * / χ 0 becomes constant is not given by the theory but comes out to be 3 n 0 in compact-star phenomenology. This density can be identified with n 1 / 2 , the density at which skyrmion matter transitions to half-skyrmion matter.
Figure 2. The ratio χ * / χ 0 where χ * f χ * as a function of density n for varying “induced density dependence” (DD i n d u c e d )—distinct from IDD (intrinsic density dependence) inherited from QCD—of g V ω * which is parameterized as g V ω * 1 = ( g V ω 1 ) ( 1 + y n n 0 ) 1 . The density at which the ratio χ * / χ 0 becomes constant is not given by the theory but comes out to be 3 n 0 in compact-star phenomenology. This density can be identified with n 1 / 2 , the density at which skyrmion matter transitions to half-skyrmion matter.
Symmetry 13 01888 g002
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Ma, Y.-L.; Rho, M. Dichotomy of Baryons as Quantum Hall Droplets and Skyrmions: Topological Structure of Dense Matter. Symmetry 2021, 13, 1888. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym13101888

AMA Style

Ma Y-L, Rho M. Dichotomy of Baryons as Quantum Hall Droplets and Skyrmions: Topological Structure of Dense Matter. Symmetry. 2021; 13(10):1888. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym13101888

Chicago/Turabian Style

Ma, Yong-Liang, and Mannque Rho. 2021. "Dichotomy of Baryons as Quantum Hall Droplets and Skyrmions: Topological Structure of Dense Matter" Symmetry 13, no. 10: 1888. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym13101888

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop