Unitarity Bounds
A conformal field theory is not just a representation of the conformal algebra. It is, in a unitary theory, a representation on a Hilbert space with a positive inner product. That positivity is surprisingly powerful. It says that many apparently legal conformal multiplets are forbidden. The resulting constraints are called unitarity bounds.
The most important bounds for this course are, for ,
| operator type | bound | what happens at saturation |
|---|---|---|
| identity | isolated vacuum representation | |
| scalar primary, non-identity | free equation | |
| spinor primary | free Dirac equation | |
| symmetric traceless spin- primary, | conservation | |
| conserved current | global symmetry current | |
| stress tensor | spacetime symmetry current |
These are not optional details. They are part of what makes CFT a rigid subject. In the bootstrap, they define the allowed spectrum. In AdS/CFT, they decide which boundary operators can correspond to physical bulk particles, which bulk fields must be gauge fields, and which proposed spectra are impossible.
The radial-quantization setup
Section titled “The radial-quantization setup”We work in Euclidean signature and use radial quantization. A local primary operator creates a state
The dilatation generator is the Hamiltonian on the cylinder , so
A primary state is annihilated by special conformal generators:
Descendants are obtained by acting with momenta:
Since , a level- descendant has cylinder energy . Radial conjugation gives
so descendant norms can be computed algebraically from the conformal commutators. For norm computations it is convenient to use the convention
This is the same conformal algebra as before, with the factors of absorbed into the Hermitian radial-quantization convention.
The central principle is simple:
The hard work is that every conformal primary generates infinitely many descendants. The norm matrix at each level must be positive semidefinite. The first few levels already give the familiar unitarity bounds.
Reflection positivity and the meaning of norm
Section titled “Reflection positivity and the meaning of norm”For a scalar primary with two-point function
radial quantization defines
Unitarity requires for a nonzero operator. This fixes the sign convention of the two-point function. But positivity of the primary norm is only the beginning. Positivity must also hold for
A proposed primary can have a positive two-point function and still be illegal because one of its descendants has negative norm.
This is the clean representation-theoretic origin of the bounds.
Scalar primary: why
Section titled “Scalar primary: why Δ≥(d−2)/2\Delta\geq (d-2)/2Δ≥(d−2)/2”Let be a scalar primary normalized by
At level one,
Because and is a scalar, this becomes
Therefore level-one positivity only gives
This is weaker than the true scalar bound. The stronger condition appears at level two. The dangerous scalar descendant is
A short commutator calculation gives
Then
For a non-identity scalar primary, , so positivity requires
When the bound is saturated, the descendant is null:
In position space this says
Thus the scalar saturating the bound behaves like a free massless scalar field. This is an important lesson: in CFT, an equation of motion is not merely a Lagrangian statement. It is also a representation-theoretic shortening condition.
The identity operator is a special isolated case. It has , but it does not violate unitarity because
The identity creates the vacuum, not an ordinary scalar conformal multiplet.
Spin- symmetric traceless primary
Section titled “Spin-ℓ\ellℓ symmetric traceless primary”Now take a primary in the symmetric traceless representation of :
It is useful to package the indices with a null polarization vector satisfying :
At level one, the descendant decomposes into irreducible representations. Schematically,
The most important component is the divergence descendant,
Its norm is proportional to
The first factor is positive in any physically relevant conformal multiplet. Hence the sign is controlled by the second factor, and unitarity gives
At saturation,
or in position space,
So a spin- primary saturating the unitarity bound is a conserved current.
For , the bound is
Saturation gives
so is a conserved global-symmetry current.
For , the bound is
Saturation gives
so is the stress tensor.
This is why in any unitary CFT in the stress tensor has exactly
This value is not a perturbative accident. It is forced by conservation and unitarity.
Spinor bound
Section titled “Spinor bound”For a spinor primary , the dangerous level-one descendant is the gamma-trace
Its norm is proportional to
Therefore
At saturation,
or in position space,
Again, saturation gives a free field equation.
Shortening, null descendants, and equations of motion
Section titled “Shortening, null descendants, and equations of motion”The phrase short multiplet means that some descendant has zero norm and must be quotiented out of the Hilbert space. In a unitary theory, a zero-norm state is orthogonal to all physical states, so it should be removed. This produces a smaller irreducible representation.
There are three basic possibilities:
| value of | representation type | physical interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| above the bound | long multiplet | generic interacting operator |
| exactly at the bound | shortened multiplet | null descendant, conservation law, or free equation |
| below the bound | nonunitary | negative-norm descendant |
For a scalar,
For a spin- symmetric traceless tensor with ,
The first is a free equation. The second is a conservation equation.
This distinction matters. A conserved current can exist in a strongly interacting CFT. A scalar saturating the unitarity bound is much more restrictive: it is a free scalar operator. In an interacting CFT, scalar primaries are usually strictly above the scalar bound.
Why conserved currents have protected dimensions
Section titled “Why conserved currents have protected dimensions”The dimension of a conserved current can also be understood without the full representation theory. Suppose is a conserved current. The charge
is dimensionless. The measure on a sphere has dimension , so must have scaling dimension
Similarly, the stress tensor appears in the conserved momentum and conformal charges. Equivalently, it couples to the metric through
Since the action is dimensionless and the metric is dimensionless, the stress tensor has
These dimensions are protected because conservation is protected. A current cannot continuously acquire an anomalous dimension unless conservation is lost.
This is a sharp diagnostic in CFT data. If a spin-one operator has , it is a conserved current and signals a global symmetry. If a spin-two operator has , it is a stress tensor. If there is more than one independent spin-two conserved current in a local unitary CFT, the theory typically factorizes into decoupled sectors.
The two-dimensional caveat
Section titled “The two-dimensional caveat”The table above is designed for . Two dimensions are special.
In , the global conformal algebra is enhanced to two copies of the Virasoro algebra. Local operators are labeled by left and right conformal weights,
Global conformal unitarity implies, roughly,
for non-vacuum unitary representations. Virasoro unitarity imposes further conditions involving the central charge and the highest weights. Those constraints are much stronger than the finite-dimensional bounds and are the reason minimal models are exactly classifiable.
For this course, the practical rule is:
The physical idea is the same in both cases: positivity of descendant norms restricts the spectrum.
Interpretation for the conformal bootstrap
Section titled “Interpretation for the conformal bootstrap”The conformal bootstrap treats CFT data as an algebraic object:
subject to crossing symmetry and unitarity. Unitarity enters in two ways.
First, the spectrum must obey the unitarity bounds. For example, in a unitary CFT, a scalar primary must satisfy
unless it is the identity. A spin-one primary must satisfy
with equality only for a conserved current. A spin-two primary must satisfy
with equality only for the stress tensor.
Second, squared OPE coefficients in identical-scalar four-point functions must be nonnegative:
The bounds tell the bootstrap algorithm where conformal blocks are allowed to appear. Conservation laws tell it when a conformal block must be replaced by a shortened block.
AdS/CFT checkpoint
Section titled “AdS/CFT checkpoint”In global AdS, the isometry group is , the same group as the conformal group of the boundary CFT. A CFT primary corresponds to a lowest-energy AdS state, and the scaling dimension is the global AdS energy:
Descendants correspond to acting with AdS raising operators. A CFT unitarity bound is therefore also a constraint on the allowed lowest-weight representations of the AdS isometry group.
For scalar operators, the bulk mass and boundary scaling dimension are related by
The CFT scalar unitarity bound
is crucial for understanding the allowed quantizations of scalars near the Breitenlohner-Freedman window. In particular, for
alternative quantization is unitary only if
which means
For spinning operators, the interpretation is even more vivid:
Above the bound, the bulk field is massive. At the bound, a null descendant appears on the CFT side, and a gauge redundancy appears on the AdS side.
This is one of the cleanest examples of the AdS/CFT dictionary already being visible inside CFT representation theory.
Examples
Section titled “Examples”Free scalar
Section titled “Free scalar”A free massless scalar in dimensions has
It saturates the scalar unitarity bound. The null descendant is
The existence of this null descendant is what removes negative-norm states that would otherwise appear at level two.
Conserved current
Section titled “Conserved current”A global symmetry current has
In AdS/CFT, this is the boundary signal of a bulk gauge field. A CFT global symmetry becomes a gauge symmetry in the bulk.
Stress tensor
Section titled “Stress tensor”The stress tensor has
in a CFT, up to anomalies and contact terms on curved backgrounds. In AdS/CFT, this is the boundary signal of dynamical gravity in the bulk.
Higher-spin currents
Section titled “Higher-spin currents”A symmetric traceless current with spin and dimension
is a conserved higher-spin current. In an interacting unitary CFT with a unique stress tensor and , exact higher-spin currents are extremely restrictive; in familiar cases they signal free or highly constrained theories. In AdS language, they correspond to massless higher-spin gauge fields.
Common pitfalls
Section titled “Common pitfalls”Pitfall 1: confusing engineering dimension with scaling dimension
Section titled “Pitfall 1: confusing engineering dimension with scaling dimension”The unitarity bounds constrain the exact CFT scaling dimension , not the engineering dimension assigned in a classical Lagrangian. At an interacting fixed point,
where is an anomalous dimension. The bound applies to the full .
Pitfall 2: treating null descendants as ordinary zeroes
Section titled “Pitfall 2: treating null descendants as ordinary zeroes”A null descendant is not just a state whose norm accidentally vanishes. In a unitary representation, it must be removed from the physical Hilbert space. In position space, this removal appears as a differential equation or conservation law.
Pitfall 3: forgetting the identity exception
Section titled “Pitfall 3: forgetting the identity exception”The scalar bound
is for nontrivial scalar primaries. The identity operator has and is allowed because it creates the vacuum representation, not an ordinary scalar multiplet.
Pitfall 4: applying the table directly to 2D Virasoro CFT
Section titled “Pitfall 4: applying the d≥3d\geq3d≥3 table directly to 2D Virasoro CFT”Two-dimensional CFT has extra local conformal symmetry. The right language there is Virasoro representation theory, with weights and central charge .
Exercises
Section titled “Exercises”Exercise 1: level-one scalar descendant
Section titled “Exercise 1: level-one scalar descendant”Let be a scalar primary with . Use
to compute .
Solution
By radial conjugation, , so
Since ,
Using the commutator,
The primary is a scalar, so , and . Therefore
Level-one positivity gives .
Exercise 2: scalar unitarity bound from the level-two descendant
Section titled “Exercise 2: scalar unitarity bound from the level-two descendant”Assume the commutator identity
for a scalar primary. Use Exercise 1 to show that positivity of gives the scalar unitarity bound for non-identity scalar primaries.
Solution
We compute
Using the given identity,
Therefore
For a non-identity scalar primary, . Positivity requires
or
At equality, is null, which gives .
Exercise 3: dimension of a conserved current
Section titled “Exercise 3: dimension of a conserved current”Use dimensional analysis of the charge
to show that a conserved current has .
Solution
The charge is dimensionless: it generates an internal symmetry and does not scale under dilatations. The surface element on has scaling dimension in position-space units, while has scaling dimension . The total scaling dimension of the integrand is therefore
For to be dimensionless, this must vanish:
Thus
This agrees with the spin-one unitarity bound at saturation.
Exercise 4: stress tensor and the spin-two bound
Section titled “Exercise 4: stress tensor and the spin-two bound”The stress tensor is a symmetric traceless spin-two primary in a CFT. Use the spin- unitarity bound to determine its dimension. What does saturation mean?
Solution
For a symmetric traceless spin- primary with ,
For the stress tensor, , so
The stress tensor is conserved,
so it saturates the bound:
Saturation means that the divergence descendant is null and is quotiented out of the physical Hilbert space.
Exercise 5: scalar bulk mass and the CFT unitarity bound
Section titled “Exercise 5: scalar bulk mass and the CFT unitarity bound”For a scalar field in ,
Let
Show that the CFT scalar unitarity bound for gives .
Solution
The scalar unitarity bound is
For the alternative root,
Requiring to obey the CFT bound gives
Subtracting from both sides gives
so
Reality of gives , equivalent to the Breitenlohner-Freedman condition. Thus alternative quantization is compatible with scalar unitarity only in the window
Takeaway
Section titled “Takeaway”Unitarity bounds are positivity constraints on conformal multiplets. They say:
Saturating a bound is not generic. It means the multiplet shortens. The null descendant becomes a field equation or conservation law. In AdS/CFT language, this is the boundary shadow of masslessness, gauge invariance, and the distinction between physical and unphysical bulk polarizations.