Fermi Interaction Caused by Intermediary Chiral Boson

Abstract
The Fermi interaction is interpreted as a nonlocal interaction resulting from a double Yukawa-type interaction in which the intervening boson has a definite chirality. The theory is quantizable and renormalizable, and in the "local" limit, the results agree with the usual (VA) theory of the direct Fermi interaction. The general framework of the theory not only gives a basis for the existence of parity-nonconserving interactions, but also determines the allowed forms of such interactions. The nonlocal effect of the intervening boson propagator tends to give an improved agreement with experiments.

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