Mixed anomaly

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In theoretical physics, a mixed anomaly is an example of an anomaly: it is an effect of quantum mechanics ā€” usually a one-loop diagram ā€” that implies that the classically valid general covariance and gauge symmetry of a theory of general relativity combined with gauge fields and fermionic fields cannot be preserved simultaneously in the quantum theory.

The adjective "mixed" usually refers to a mixture of a gravitational anomaly and gauge anomaly.

The anomaly usually appears as a Feynman diagram with a chiral fermion running in the loop (a polygon) with nāˆ’k external gravitons and k external gauge bosons attached to the loop where n = 1 + D / 2 where D is the spacetime dimension. Anomalies occur only in even spacetime dimensions. For example, the anomalies in the usual 4 spacetime dimensions arise from triangle Feynman diagrams.

Image:Triangle_diagram.PNG

General covariance and gauge symmetries are very important symmetries for the consistency of the whole theory, and therefore all gravitational, gauge, and mixed anomalies must cancel out.