Abstract
The phrase "Yang-Mills" can be used (1) to refer to the specific theory proposed by Yang and Mills in 1954; or (2) as shorthand for any non-Abelian gauge theory. The 1954 version, physically speaking, had a famous show-stopping defect in the form of what might be called the "Pauli snag," or the requirement that, in the Lagrangian for non-Abelian gauge theory the mass term for the gauge field has to be zero. How, then, was it possible for (1) to turn into (2)? What unfolding sequence of events made this transition possible, and what does this evolution say about the nature of theories in physics? The transition between (1) and (2) illustrates what historians and philosophers a century from now might still find instructive and stimulating about the development of Yang-Mills theory.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 1630007 |
| Journal | Modern Physics Letters A |
| Volume | 31 |
| Issue number | 7 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Mar 7 2016 |
Keywords
- history of science
- philosophy of science
- Yang-Mills
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