Quantum field theory: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Theoretical framework}} |
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{{Quantum field theory}} |
{{Quantum field theory}} |
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'''Quantum field theory (QFT)''' is a theoretical framework for constructing [[quantum mechanics|quantum mechanical]] models of |
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In [[theoretical physics]], '''quantum field theory''' ('''QFT''') is a theoretical framework that combines [[classical field theory]], [[special relativity]], and [[quantum mechanics]].<ref name="peskin">{{cite book |last1=Peskin |first1=M. |author-link=Michael Peskin |last2=Schroeder |first2=D. |
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systems classically described by |
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|year=1995 |
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[[field (physics)|fields]] (having an infinite number of degrees of freedom) or of [[Many-body problem|many-body systems]] |
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|title=An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory |
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(having a finite number of degrees of freedom). It is widely used in [[particle physics]] and [[condensed matter physics]]. Most theories in modern particle physics, including the [[Standard Model]] of elementary particles and their interactions, are formulated as [[Special relativity|relativistic]] quantum field theories. In condensed matter physics, quantum field theories are used in many circumstances, especially those where the number of particles is allowed to fluctuate—for example, in the [[BCS theory]] of [[superconductivity]]. |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i35LALN0GosC |
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|publisher=Westview Press |
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|isbn=978-0-201-50397-5 }}</ref>{{rp|xi}} QFT is used in [[particle physics]] to construct [[physical model]]s of [[subatomic particle]]s and in [[condensed matter physics]] to construct models of [[quasiparticle]]s. The current [[standard model of particle physics]] is based on quantum field theory. |
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==History== |
==History== |
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{{Main|History of quantum field theory}} |
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Quantum field theory emerged from the work of generations of theoretical physicists spanning much of the 20th century. Its development began in the 1920s with the description of interactions between [[light]] and [[electrons]], culminating in the first quantum field theory—[[quantum electrodynamics]]. A major theoretical obstacle soon followed with the appearance and persistence of various infinities in perturbative calculations, a problem only resolved in the 1950s with the invention of the [[renormalization]] procedure. A second major barrier came with QFT's apparent inability to describe the [[weak interaction|weak]] and [[strong interaction]]s, to the point where some theorists called for the abandonment of the field theoretic approach. The development of [[gauge theory]] and the completion of the [[Standard Model]] in the 1970s led to a renaissance of quantum field theory. |
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===Theoretical background=== |
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{{main|History of quantum field theory}} |
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[[File:Magnet0873.png|thumb|200px|[[Magnetic field lines]] visualized using [[iron filings]]. When a piece of paper is sprinkled with iron filings and placed above a bar magnet, the filings align according to the direction of the magnetic field, forming arcs allowing viewers to clearly see the poles of the magnet and to see the magnetic field generated.]] |
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Quantum field theory results from the combination of [[classical field theory]], [[quantum mechanics]], and [[special relativity]].<ref name="peskin"/>{{rp|xi}} A brief overview of these theoretical precursors follows. |
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Quantum field theory originated in the 1920s from the problem of creating a [[quantum mechanics|quantum mechanical theory]] of the [[electromagnetic field]]. In 1926, [[Max Born]], [[Pascual Jordan]], and [[Werner Heisenberg]] constructed such a theory by expressing the field's internal [[Degrees of freedom (physics and chemistry)|degrees of freedom]] as an infinite set of [[harmonic oscillator]]s and by employing the usual procedure for quantizing those oscillators ([[canonical quantization]]). This theory assumed that no electric charges or currents were present and today would be called a [[free field theory]]. The first reasonably complete theory of [[quantum electrodynamics]], which included both the electromagnetic field and electrically charged matter (specifically, [[electron]]s) as quantum mechanical objects, was created by [[Paul Dirac]] in 1927. This quantum field theory could be used to model important processes such as the emission of a [[photon]] by an electron dropping into a [[quantum state]] of lower energy, a process in which the ''number of particles changes'' — one atom in the initial state becomes an atom plus a [[photon]] in the final state. It is now understood that the ability to describe such processes is one of the most important features of quantum field theory. |
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The earliest successful classical field theory is one that emerged from [[Newton's law of universal gravitation]], despite the complete absence of the concept of fields from his 1687 treatise ''[[Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica]]''. The force of gravity as described by Isaac Newton is an "[[action at a distance]]"—its effects on faraway objects are instantaneous, no matter the distance. In an exchange of letters with [[Richard Bentley]], however, Newton stated that "it is inconceivable that inanimate brute matter should, without the mediation of something else which is not material, operate upon and affect other matter without mutual contact".<ref name=Hobson/>{{rp|4}} It was not until the 18th century that mathematical physicists discovered a convenient description of gravity based on fields—a numerical quantity (a [[vector (mathematics and physics)|vector]] in the case of [[gravitational field]]) assigned to every point in space indicating the action of gravity on any particle at that point. However, this was considered merely a mathematical trick.<ref name="weinberg">{{cite journal |last=Weinberg |first=Steven |author-link=Steven Weinberg |date=1977 |title=The Search for Unity: Notes for a History of Quantum Field Theory |journal=Daedalus |volume=106 |issue=4 |pages=17–35 |jstor=20024506 }}</ref>{{rp|18}} |
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It was evident from the beginning that a proper quantum treatment of the electromagnetic field had to somehow incorporate [[Albert Einstein|Einstein's]] [[theory of relativity|relativity]] theory, which had after all grown out of the study of [[classical electromagnetism]]. This need to ''put together relativity and quantum mechanics'' was the second major motivation in the development of quantum field theory. [[Pascual Jordan]] and [[Wolfgang Pauli]] showed in 1928 that quantum fields could be made to behave in the way predicted by [[special relativity]] during [[Covariance and contravariance of vectors|coordinate transformations]] (specifically, they showed that the field [[commutator]]s were [[Lorentz invariant]]), and in 1933 [[Niels Bohr]] and [[Leon Rosenfeld]] showed that this result could be interpreted as a limitation on the ability to measure fields at [[space-like]] separations, exactly as required by relativity. A further boost for quantum field theory came with the discovery of the [[Dirac equation]], a single-particle equation obeying both relativity and quantum mechanics, when it was shown that several of its undesirable properties (such as negative-energy states) could be eliminated by reformulating the Dirac equation as a quantum field theory. This work was performed by [[Wendell Furry]], [[Robert Oppenheimer]], [[Vladimir Fock]], and others. |
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Fields began to take on an existence of their own with the development of [[electromagnetism]] in the 19th century. [[Michael Faraday]] coined the English term "field" in 1845. He introduced fields as properties of space (even when it is devoid of matter) having physical effects. He argued against "action at a distance", and proposed that interactions between objects occur via space-filling "lines of force". This description of fields remains to this day.<ref name=Hobson>{{cite journal |
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The third thread in the development of quantum field theory was the need to ''handle the statistics of many-particle systems'' consistently and with ease. In 1927, Jordan tried to extend the canonical quantization of fields to the many-body wavefunctions of [[identical particles]], a procedure that is sometimes called [[second quantization]]. In 1928, Jordan and [[Eugene Wigner]] found that the quantum field describing electrons, or other [[fermion]]s, had to be expanded using anti-commuting creation and annihilation operators due to the [[Pauli exclusion principle]]. This thread of development was incorporated into [[many-body theory]], and strongly influenced [[condensed matter physics]] and [[nuclear physics]]. |
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| last =Hobson |
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| first =Art |
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| title =There are no particles, there are only fields |
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| journal =[[American Journal of Physics]] |
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| volume =81 |
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| issue =211 |
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| pages =211–223 |
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| year =2013 |
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| doi =10.1119/1.4789885 |
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| arxiv =1204.4616 |
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| bibcode =2013AmJPh..81..211H |
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| s2cid =18254182 |
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}}</ref><ref name="Heilbron2003">{{Cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/oxfordcompaniont0000unse_s7n3 |title=The Oxford companion to the history of modern science |date=2003 |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |isbn=978-0-19-511229-0 |editor-last=Heilbron |editor-first=J. L. |editor-link=John L. Heilbron |location=Oxford ; New York}}</ref>{{rp|301}}<ref name="Thomson1893">{{Cite book |last1=Thomson |first1=Joseph John |author-link1=Joseph John Thomson |url=https://archive.org/details/notesonrecentres00thom |title=Notes on recent researches in electricity and magnetism, intended as a sequel to Professor Clerk-Maxwell's 'Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism' |last2=Maxwell |first2=James Clerk |publisher=[[Clarendon Press]] |year=1893}}</ref>{{rp|2}} |
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The theory of [[classical electromagnetism]] was completed in 1864 with [[Maxwell's equation]]s, which described the relationship between the [[electric field]], the [[magnetic field]], [[electric current]], and [[electric charge]]. Maxwell's equations implied the existence of [[electromagnetic waves]], a phenomenon whereby electric and magnetic fields propagate from one spatial point to another at a finite speed, which turns out to be the [[speed of light]]. Action-at-a-distance was thus conclusively refuted.<ref name=Hobson/>{{rp|19}} |
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Despite its early successes, quantum field theory was plagued by several serious theoretical difficulties. Many seemingly-innocuous physical quantities, such as the energy shift of electron states due to the presence of the electromagnetic field, gave infinity — a nonsensical result — when computed using quantum field theory. This "divergence problem" was solved during the 1940s by [[Bethe]], [[Sin-Itiro Tomonaga|Tomonaga]], [[Julian Schwinger|Schwinger]], [[Richard Feynman|Feynman]], and [[Freeman Dyson|Dyson]], through the procedure known as [[renormalization]]. This phase of development culminated with the construction of the modern theory of [[quantum electrodynamics]] (QED). Beginning in the 1950s with the work of [[Chen Ning Yang|Yang]] and [[Robert Mills (physicist)|Mills]], QED was generalized to a class of quantum field theories known as [[gauge theory|gauge theories]]. The 1960s and 1970s saw the formulation of a gauge theory now known as the [[Standard Model]] of [[particle physics]], which describes all known elementary particles and the interactions between them. The weak interaction part of the standard model was formulated by [[Sheldon Glashow]], with the [[Higgs mechanism]] added by [[Steven Weinberg]] and [[Abdus Salam]]. The theory was shown to be consistent by [[Gerardus 't Hooft]] and [[Martinus Veltman]]. |
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Despite the enormous success of classical electromagnetism, it was unable to account for the discrete lines in [[emission spectrum|atomic spectra]], nor for the distribution of [[blackbody radiation]] in different wavelengths.<ref name="weisskopf">{{cite journal |last=Weisskopf |first=Victor |author-link=Victor Weisskopf |date=November 1981 |title=The development of field theory in the last 50 years |journal=[[Physics Today]] |volume=34 |issue=11 |pages=69–85 |doi=10.1063/1.2914365 |bibcode=1981PhT....34k..69W }}</ref> [[Max Planck]]'s study of blackbody radiation marked the beginning of quantum mechanics. He treated atoms, which absorb and emit [[electromagnetic radiation]], as tiny [[oscillator]]s with the crucial property that their energies can only take on a series of discrete, rather than continuous, values. These are known as [[quantum harmonic oscillator]]s. This process of restricting energies to discrete values is called quantization.<ref name="Heisenberg1999">{{Cite book |last=Heisenberg |first=Werner |author-link=Werner Heisenberg |url=https://archive.org/details/physics-and-philosophy-the-revolution-in-modern-scirnce-werner-heisenberg-f.-s.-c.-northrop |title=Physics and philosophy: the revolution in modern science |publisher=[[Prometheus Books]] |year=1999 |isbn=978-1-57392-694-2 |series=Great minds series |location=Amherst, N.Y}}</ref>{{rp|Ch.2}} Building on this idea, [[Albert Einstein]] proposed in 1905 an explanation for the [[photoelectric effect]], that light is composed of individual packets of energy called [[photon]]s (the quanta of light). This implied that the electromagnetic radiation, while being waves in the classical electromagnetic field, also exists in the form of particles.<ref name="weisskopf" /> |
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Also during the 1970s, parallel developments in the study of [[phase transitions]] in [[condensed matter physics]] led [[Leo Kadanoff]], [[Michael Fisher]] and [[Kenneth Wilson]] (extending work of [[Ernst Stueckelberg]], [[Andre Peterman]], [[Murray Gell-Mann]] and [[Francis Low]]) to a set of ideas and methods known as the [[renormalization group]]. By providing a better physical understanding of the renormalization procedure invented in the 1940s, the renormalization group sparked what has been called the "grand synthesis" of theoretical physics, uniting the quantum field theoretical techniques used in particle physics and condensed matter physics into a single theoretical framework. |
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In 1913, [[Niels Bohr]] introduced the [[Bohr model]] of atomic structure, wherein [[electrons]] within atoms can only take on a series of discrete, rather than continuous, energies. This is another example of quantization. The Bohr model successfully explained the discrete nature of atomic spectral lines. In 1924, [[Louis de Broglie]] proposed the hypothesis of [[wave–particle duality]], that microscopic particles exhibit both wave-like and particle-like properties under different circumstances.<ref name="weisskopf" /> Uniting these scattered ideas, a coherent discipline, [[quantum mechanics]], was formulated between 1925 and 1926, with important contributions from [[Max Planck]], [[Louis de Broglie]], [[Werner Heisenberg]], [[Max Born]], [[Erwin Schrödinger]], [[Paul Dirac]], and [[Wolfgang Pauli]].{{r|weinberg|page1=22–23}} |
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The study of quantum field theory is alive and flourishing, as are applications of this method to many physical problems. It remains one of the most vital areas of [[theoretical physics]] today, providing a common language to many branches of [[physics]]. |
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In the same year as his paper on the photoelectric effect, Einstein published his theory of [[special relativity]], built on Maxwell's electromagnetism. New rules, called [[Lorentz transformations]], were given for the way time and space coordinates of an event change under changes in the observer's velocity, and the distinction between time and space was blurred.{{r|weinberg|page1=19}} It was proposed that all physical laws must be the same for observers at different velocities, i.e. that physical laws be invariant under Lorentz transformations. |
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== Principles of quantum field theory == |
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=== Classical fields and quantum fields === |
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Two difficulties remained. Observationally, the [[Schrödinger equation]] underlying quantum mechanics could explain the [[stimulated emission]] of radiation from atoms, where an electron emits a new photon under the action of an external electromagnetic field, but it was unable to explain [[spontaneous emission]], where an electron spontaneously decreases in energy and emits a photon even without the action of an external electromagnetic field. Theoretically, the Schrödinger equation could not describe photons and was inconsistent with the principles of special relativity—it treats time as an ordinary number while promoting spatial coordinates to [[linear operator]]s.<ref name="weisskopf" /> |
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[[Quantum mechanics]], in its most general formulation, is a theory of abstract [[operator]]s (observables) acting on an abstract state space ([[Hilbert space]]), where the observables represent physically-observable quantities and the state space represents the possible states of the system under study. Furthermore, each observable [[correspondence principle|corresponds]], in a technical sense, to the classical idea of a [[Degrees of freedom (physics and chemistry)|degree of freedom]]. For instance, the fundamental observables associated with the motion of a single quantum mechanical particle are the position and momentum operators <math>\hat{x}</math> and <math>\hat{p}</math>. Ordinary quantum mechanics deals with systems such as this, which possess a small set of degrees of freedom. |
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===Quantum electrodynamics=== |
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(It is important to note, at this point, that this article does not use the word "[[particle]]" in the context of [[wave–particle duality]]. In quantum field theory, "particle" is a generic term for any discrete quantum mechanical entity, such as an electron, which can behave like [[particle|classical particles]] or [[wave|classical waves]] under different experimental conditions.) |
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Quantum field theory naturally began with the study of electromagnetic interactions, as the electromagnetic field was the only known classical field as of the 1920s.{{r|shifman|page1=1}} |
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Through the works of Born, Heisenberg, and [[Pascual Jordan]] in 1925–1926, a quantum theory of the free electromagnetic field (one with no interactions with matter) was developed via [[canonical quantization]] by treating the electromagnetic field as a set of [[quantum harmonic oscillator]]s.{{r|shifman|page1=1}} With the exclusion of interactions, however, such a theory was yet incapable of making quantitative predictions about the real world.{{r|weinberg|page1=22}} |
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A '''quantum field''' is a quantum mechanical system containing a large, and possibly [[infinity|infinite]], number of degrees of freedom. This is not as exotic a situation as one might think. A [[Field (physics)|classical field]] contains a set of degrees of freedom at each point of space; for instance, the classical [[electromagnetic field]] defines two [[vector (spatial)|vector]]s — the [[electric field]] and the [[magnetic field]] — that can in principle take on distinct values for each position <math>r</math>. When the field ''as a whole'' is considered as a quantum mechanical system, its observables form an infinite (in fact [[uncountable set|uncountable]]) set, because <math>r</math> is continuous. |
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In his seminal 1927 paper ''The quantum theory of the emission and absorption of radiation'', Dirac coined the term [[quantum electrodynamics]] (QED), a theory that adds upon the terms describing the free electromagnetic field an additional interaction term between electric [[current density]] and the [[electromagnetic four-potential|electromagnetic vector potential]]. Using first-order [[perturbation theory (quantum mechanics)|perturbation theory]], he successfully explained the phenomenon of spontaneous emission. According to the [[uncertainty principle]] in quantum mechanics, quantum harmonic oscillators cannot remain stationary, but they have a non-zero minimum energy and must always be oscillating, even in the lowest energy state (the [[ground state]]). Therefore, even in a perfect [[vacuum]], there remains an oscillating electromagnetic field having [[zero-point energy]]. It is this [[quantum fluctuation]] of electromagnetic fields in the vacuum that "stimulates" the spontaneous emission of radiation by electrons in atoms. Dirac's theory was hugely successful in explaining both the emission and absorption of radiation by atoms; by applying second-order perturbation theory, it was able to account for the [[scattering]] of photons, [[resonance fluorescence]] and non-relativistic [[Compton scattering]]. Nonetheless, the application of higher-order perturbation theory was plagued with problematic infinities in calculations.<ref name="weisskopf" />{{rp|71}} |
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Furthermore, the degrees of freedom in a quantum field are arranged in "repeated" sets. For example, the degrees of freedom in an electromagnetic field can be grouped according to the position <math>r</math>, with exactly two vectors for each <math>r</math>. Note that <math>r</math> is an ordinary number that "indexes" the observables; it is not to be confused with the position operator <math>\hat{x}</math> encountered in ordinary quantum mechanics, which is an observable. (Thus, ordinary quantum mechanics is sometimes referred to as "zero-dimensional quantum field theory", because it contains only a single set of observables.) It is also important to note that there is nothing special about <math>r</math> because, as it turns out, there is generally more than one way of indexing the degrees of freedom in the field. |
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In 1928, Dirac wrote down a [[wave equation]] that described relativistic electrons: the [[Dirac equation]]. It had the following important consequences: the [[Spin (physics)|spin]] of an electron is 1/2; the electron [[g-factor (physics)|''g''-factor]] is 2; it led to the correct Sommerfeld formula for the [[fine structure]] of the [[hydrogen atom]]; and it could be used to derive the [[Klein–Nishina formula]] for relativistic Compton scattering. Although the results were fruitful, the theory also apparently implied the existence of negative energy states, which would cause atoms to be unstable, since they could always decay to lower energy states by the emission of radiation.<ref name="weisskopf" />{{rp|71–72}} |
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In the following sections, we will show how these ideas can be used to construct a quantum mechanical theory with the desired properties. We will begin by discussing single-particle quantum mechanics and the associated theory of many-particle quantum mechanics. Then, by finding a way to index the degrees of freedom in the many-particle problem, we will construct a quantum field and study its implications. |
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The prevailing view at the time was that the world was composed of two very different ingredients: material particles (such as electrons) and [[Field (physics)#Quantum fields|quantum fields]] (such as photons). Material particles were considered to be eternal, with their physical state described by the probabilities of finding each particle in any given region of space or range of velocities. On the other hand, photons were considered merely the [[excited state]]s of the underlying quantized electromagnetic field, and could be freely created or destroyed. It was between 1928 and 1930 that Jordan, [[Eugene Wigner]], Heisenberg, Pauli, and [[Enrico Fermi]] discovered that material particles could also be seen as excited states of quantum fields. Just as photons are excited states of the quantized electromagnetic field, so each type of particle had its corresponding quantum field: an electron field, a proton field, etc. Given enough energy, it would now be possible to create material particles. Building on this idea, Fermi proposed in 1932 an explanation for [[beta decay]] known as [[Fermi's interaction]]. [[Atomic nucleus|Atomic nuclei]] do not contain electrons ''per se'', but in the process of decay, an electron is created out of the surrounding electron field, analogous to the photon created from the surrounding electromagnetic field in the radiative decay of an excited atom.{{r|weinberg|page1=22–23}} |
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=== Single-particle and many-particle quantum mechanics === |
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It was realized in 1929 by Dirac and others that negative energy states implied by the Dirac equation could be removed by assuming the existence of particles with the same mass as electrons but opposite electric charge. This not only ensured the stability of atoms, but it was also the first proposal of the existence of [[antimatter]]. Indeed, the evidence for [[positron]]s was discovered in 1932 by [[Carl David Anderson]] in [[cosmic ray]]s. With enough energy, such as by absorbing a photon, an electron-positron pair could be created, a process called [[pair production]]; the reverse process, annihilation, could also occur with the emission of a photon. This showed that particle numbers need not be fixed during an interaction. Historically, however, positrons were at first thought of as "holes" in an infinite electron sea, rather than a new kind of particle, and this theory was referred to as the [[Dirac hole theory]].<ref name="weisskopf" />{{rp|72}}{{r|weinberg|page1=23}} QFT naturally incorporated antiparticles in its formalism.{{r|weinberg|page1=24}} |
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In ordinary quantum mechanics, the time-dependent [[Schrödinger equation]] describing the time evolution of the quantum state of a single non-relativistic particle is |
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===Infinities and renormalization=== |
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:<math> \left[ \frac{|\mathbf{p}|^2}{2m} + V(\mathbf{r}) \right] |
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[[Robert Oppenheimer]] showed in 1930 that higher-order perturbative calculations in QED always resulted in infinite quantities, such as the electron [[self-energy]] and the vacuum zero-point energy of the electron and photon fields,<ref name="weisskopf" /> suggesting that the computational methods at the time could not properly deal with interactions involving photons with extremely high momenta.{{r|weinberg|page1=25}} It was not until 20 years later that a systematic approach to remove such infinities was developed. |
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|\psi(t)\rang = i \hbar \frac{\partial}{\partial t} |\psi(t)\rang,</math> |
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A series of papers was published between 1934 and 1938 by [[Ernst Stueckelberg]] that established a relativistically invariant formulation of QFT. In 1947, Stueckelberg also independently developed a complete renormalization procedure. Such achievements were not understood and recognized by the theoretical community.<ref name="weisskopf" /> |
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where <math>m</math> is the particle's |
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[[mass]], <math>V</math> is the applied [[potential]], and <math>|\psi\rang</math> denotes the [[quantum state]] (we are using [[bra-ket notation]]). |
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Faced with these infinities, [[John Archibald Wheeler]] and Heisenberg proposed, in 1937 and 1943 respectively, to supplant the problematic QFT with the so-called [[S-matrix theory]]. Since the specific details of microscopic interactions are inaccessible to observations, the theory should only attempt to describe the relationships between a small number of [[observable]]s (''e.g.'' the energy of an atom) in an interaction, rather than be concerned with the microscopic minutiae of the interaction. In 1945, [[Richard Feynman]] and Wheeler daringly suggested abandoning QFT altogether and proposed [[action-at-a-distance]] as the mechanism of particle interactions.{{r|weinberg|page1=26}} |
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We wish to consider how this problem generalizes to <math>N</math> particles. There are two motivations for studying the many-particle problem. The first is a straightforward need in [[condensed matter physics]], where typically the number of particles is on the order of [[Avogadro's number]] (6.0221415 x 10<sup>23</sup>). The second motivation for the many-particle problem arises from [[particle physics]] and the desire to incorporate the effects of [[special relativity]]. If one attempts to include the relativistic [[rest energy]] into the above equation, the result is either the [[Klein-Gordon equation]] or the [[Dirac equation]]. However, these equations have many unsatisfactory qualities; for instance, they possess energy [[eigenvalues]] which extend to –∞, so that there seems to be no easy definition of a [[ground state]]. It turns out that such inconsistencies arise from neglecting the possibility of dynamically creating or destroying particles, which is a crucial aspect of relativity. [[Albert Einstein|Einstein's]] famous [[E=mc^2|mass-energy relation]] predicts that sufficiently massive particles can decay into several lighter particles, and sufficiently energetic particles can combine to form massive particles. For example, an electron and a [[positron]] can annihilate each other to create [[photon]]s. Thus, a consistent relativistic quantum theory must be formulated as a many-particle theory. |
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In 1947, [[Willis Lamb]] and [[Robert Retherford]] measured the minute difference in the <sup>2</sup>''S''<sub>1/2</sub> and <sup>2</sup>''P''<sub>1/2</sub> energy levels of the hydrogen atom, also called the [[Lamb shift]]. By ignoring the contribution of photons whose energy exceeds the electron mass, [[Hans Bethe]] successfully estimated the numerical value of the Lamb shift.<ref name="weisskopf" />{{r|weinberg|page1=28}} Subsequently, [[Norman Myles Kroll]], Lamb, [[James Bruce French]], and [[Victor Weisskopf]] again confirmed this value using an approach in which infinities cancelled other infinities to result in finite quantities. However, this method was clumsy and unreliable and could not be generalized to other calculations.<ref name="weisskopf" /> |
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Furthermore, we will assume that the <math>N</math> particles are [[identical particles|indistinguishable]]. As described in the article on [[identical particles]], this implies that the state of the entire system must be either symmetric ([[boson]]s) or antisymmetric ([[fermion]]s) when the coordinates of its constituent particles are exchanged. These multi-particle states are rather complicated to write. For example, the general quantum state of a system of <math>N</math> bosons is written as |
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The breakthrough eventually came around 1950 when a more robust method for eliminating infinities was developed by [[Julian Schwinger]], [[Richard Feynman]], [[Freeman Dyson]], and [[Shinichiro Tomonaga]]. The main idea is to replace the calculated values of mass and charge, infinite though they may be, by their finite measured values. This systematic computational procedure is known as [[renormalization]] and can be applied to arbitrary order in perturbation theory.<ref name="weisskopf" /> As Tomonaga said in his Nobel lecture:<blockquote>Since those parts of the modified mass and charge due to field reactions [become infinite], it is impossible to calculate them by the theory. However, the mass and charge observed in experiments are not the original mass and charge but the mass and charge as modified by field reactions, and they are finite. On the other hand, the mass and charge appearing in the theory are… the values modified by field reactions. Since this is so, and particularly since the theory is unable to calculate the modified mass and charge, we may adopt the procedure of substituting experimental values for them phenomenologically... This procedure is called the renormalization of mass and charge… After long, laborious calculations, less skillful than Schwinger's, we obtained a result... which was in agreement with [the] Americans'.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Tomonaga |first1=Shinichiro |title=Development of Quantum Electrodynamics |url=https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/physics/1965/tomonaga/lecture/ |journal=Science|year=1966 |volume=154 |issue=3751 |pages=864–868 |doi=10.1126/science.154.3751.864 |pmid=17744604 |bibcode=1966Sci...154..864T }}</ref></blockquote> |
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:<math> |\phi_1 \cdots \phi_N \rang = \sqrt{\frac{\prod_j N_j!}{N!}} \sum_{p\in S_N} |\phi_{p(1)}\rang \cdots |\phi_{p(N)} \rang,</math> |
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By applying the renormalization procedure, calculations were finally made to explain the electron's [[anomalous magnetic moment]] (the deviation of the electron [[g-factor (physics)|''g''-factor]] from 2) and [[vacuum polarization]]. These results agreed with experimental measurements to a remarkable degree, thus marking the end of a "war against infinities".<ref name="weisskopf" /> |
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where <math>|\phi_i\rang</math> are the single-particle states, <math>N_j</math> is the number of particles occupying state <math>j</math>, and the sum is taken over all possible [[permutation]]s <math>p</math> acting on <math>N</math> elements. In general, this is a sum of <math>N!</math> (<math>N</math> [[factorial]]) distinct terms, which quickly becomes unmanageable as <math>N</math> increases. The way to simplify this problem is to turn it into a quantum field theory. |
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At the same time, Feynman introduced the [[path integral formulation]] of quantum mechanics and [[Feynman diagrams]].{{r|shifman|page1=2}} The latter can be used to visually and intuitively organize and to help compute terms in the perturbative expansion. Each diagram can be interpreted as paths of particles in an interaction, with each vertex and line having a corresponding mathematical expression, and the product of these expressions gives the [[scattering amplitude]] of the interaction represented by the diagram.{{r|peskin|page1=5}} |
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=== Second quantization === |
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It was with the invention of the renormalization procedure and Feynman diagrams that QFT finally arose as a complete theoretical framework.{{r|shifman|page1=2}} |
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{{main|Second quantization}} |
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===Non-renormalizability=== |
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In this section, we will describe a method for constructing a quantum field theory called '''[[second quantization]]'''. This basically involves choosing a way to index the quantum mechanical degrees of freedom in the space of multiple identical-particle states. It is based on the [[Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics)|Hamiltonian]] formulation of quantum mechanics; several other approaches exist, such as the [[Feynman path integral]]<ref> |
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Given the tremendous success of QED, many theorists believed, in the few years after 1949, that QFT could soon provide an understanding of all microscopic phenomena, not only the interactions between photons, electrons, and positrons. Contrary to this optimism, QFT entered yet another period of depression that lasted for almost two decades.{{r|weinberg|page1=30}} |
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Abraham Pais, ''Inward Bound: Of Matter and Forces in the Physical World'' ISBN 0198519974. Pais recounts how his astonishment at the rapidity with which [[Feynman]] could calculate using his method. Feynman's method is now part of the standard methods for physicists. |
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</ref>, which uses a [[Lagrangian]] formulation. For an overview, see the article on [[quantization (physics)|quantization]]. |
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The first obstacle was the limited applicability of the renormalization procedure. In perturbative calculations in QED, all infinite quantities could be eliminated by redefining a small (finite) number of physical quantities (namely the mass and charge of the electron). Dyson proved in 1949 that this is only possible for a small class of theories called "renormalizable theories", of which QED is an example. However, most theories, including the [[Fermi's interaction|Fermi theory]] of the [[weak interaction]], are "non-renormalizable". Any perturbative calculation in these theories beyond the first order would result in infinities that could not be removed by redefining a finite number of physical quantities.{{r|weinberg|page1=30}} |
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==== Second quantization of bosons ==== |
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The second major problem stemmed from the limited validity of the Feynman diagram method, which is based on a series expansion in perturbation theory. In order for the series to converge and low-order calculations to be a good approximation, the [[coupling constant]], in which the series is expanded, must be a sufficiently small number. The coupling constant in QED is the [[fine-structure constant]] {{math|''α'' ≈ 1/137}}, which is small enough that only the simplest, lowest order, Feynman diagrams need to be considered in realistic calculations. In contrast, the coupling constant in the [[strong interaction]] is roughly of the order of one, making complicated, higher order, Feynman diagrams just as important as simple ones. There was thus no way of deriving reliable quantitative predictions for the strong interaction using perturbative QFT methods.{{r|weinberg|page1=31}} |
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For simplicity, we will first discuss second quantization for [[boson]]s, which form perfectly symmetric quantum states. Let us denote the mutually orthogonal single-particle states by <math>|\phi_1\rang, |\phi_2\rang, |\phi_3\rang,</math> and so on. For example, the 3-particle state with one particle in state <math>|\phi_1\rang</math> and two in state<math>|\phi_2\rang</math> is |
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With these difficulties looming, many theorists began to turn away from QFT. Some focused on [[symmetry (physics)|symmetry]] principles and [[conservation law]]s, while others picked up the old S-matrix theory of Wheeler and Heisenberg. QFT was used heuristically as guiding principles, but not as a basis for quantitative calculations.{{r|weinberg|page1=31}} |
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:<math> \frac{1}{\sqrt{3}} \left[ |\phi_1\rang |\phi_2\rang |
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|\phi_2\rang + |\phi_2\rang |\phi_1\rang |\phi_2\rang + |\phi_2\rang |
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|\phi_2\rang |\phi_1\rang \right]. </math> |
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=== Source theory === |
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The first step in second quantization is to express such quantum states in terms of '''occupation numbers''', by listing the number of particles occupying each of the single-particle states <math>|\phi_1\rang, |\phi_2\rang, </math> etc. This is simply another way of labelling the states. For instance, the above 3-particle state is denoted as |
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Schwinger, however, took a different route. For more than a decade he and his students had been nearly the only exponents of field theory,<ref name=MiltonMehra/>{{rp|p=454}} but in 1951<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Schwinger |first=Julian |date=July 1951 |title=On the Green's functions of quantized fields. I |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |language=en |volume=37 |issue=7 |pages=452–455 |doi=10.1073/pnas.37.7.452 |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=1063400 |pmid=16578383 |doi-access=free |bibcode=1951PNAS...37..452S }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Schwinger |first=Julian |date=July 1951 |title=On the Green's functions of quantized fields. II |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |language=en |volume=37 |issue=7 |pages=455–459 |doi=10.1073/pnas.37.7.455 |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=1063401 |pmid=16578384 |doi-access=free |bibcode=1951PNAS...37..455S }}</ref> he found a way around the problem of the infinities with a new method using ''external sources'' as currents coupled to gauge fields.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Schweber |first=Silvan S. |date=2005-05-31 |title=The sources of Schwinger's Green's functions |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |language=en |volume=102 |issue=22 |pages=7783–7788 |doi=10.1073/pnas.0405167101 |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=1142349 |pmid=15930139 |doi-access=free }}</ref> Motivated by the former findings, Schwinger kept pursuing this approach in order to "quantumly" generalize the [[Lagrangian mechanics#Lagrange multipliers and constraints|classical process]] of coupling external forces to the configuration space parameters known as Lagrange multipliers. He summarized his [[Source field|source theory]] in 1966<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Schwinger |first1=Julian |title=Particles and Sources |journal=Phys Rev |date=1966 |volume=152 |issue=4 |page=1219|doi=10.1103/PhysRev.152.1219 |bibcode=1966PhRv..152.1219S }}</ref> then expanded the theory's applications to quantum electrodynamics in his three volume-set titled: ''Particles, Sources, and Fields.''<ref name="Perseus Books" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Schwinger |first=Julian |title=Particles, sources, and fields. 2 |date=1998 |publisher=Advanced Book Program, Perseus Books |isbn=978-0-7382-0054-5 |edition=1. print |location=Reading, Mass}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Schwinger |first=Julian |title=Particles, sources, and fields. 3 |date=1998 |publisher=Advanced Book Program, Perseus Books |isbn=978-0-7382-0055-2 |edition=1. print |location=Reading, Mass}}</ref> Developments in pion physics, in which the new viewpoint was most successfully applied, convinced him of the great advantages of mathematical simplicity and conceptual clarity that its use bestowed.<ref name="Perseus Books">{{cite book |last1=Schwinger |first1=Julian |title=Particles, Sources and Fields vol. 1 |date=1998 |publisher=Perseus Books |location=Reading, MA |isbn=0-7382-0053-0 |page=xi}}</ref> |
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In source theory there are no divergences, and no renormalization. It may be regarded as the calculational tool of field theory, but it is more general.<ref>{{cite book |editor=C.R. Hagen |display-editors=etal |title=Proc of the 1967 Int. Conference on Particles and Fields |date=1967 |publisher=Interscience |location=NY |page=128}}</ref> Using source theory, Schwinger was able to calculate the anomalous magnetic moment of the electron, which he had done in 1947, but this time with no ‘distracting remarks’ about infinite quantities.<ref name=MiltonMehra/>{{rp|p=467}} |
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:<math> |1, 2, 0, 0, 0, \cdots \rangle.</math> |
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Schwinger also applied source theory to his QFT theory of gravity, and was able to reproduce all four of Einstein's classic results: gravitational red shift, deflection and slowing of light by gravity, and the perihelion precession of Mercury.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Schwinger |first1=Julian |title=Particles, Sources and Fields vol. 1 |date=1998 |publisher=Perseus Bookks |location=Reading, MA |pages=82–85}}</ref> The neglect of source theory by the physics community was a major disappointment for Schwinger:<blockquote>The lack of appreciation of these facts by others was depressing, but understandable. -J. Schwinger<ref name="Perseus Books"/></blockquote>See "[[Julian Schwinger#Career|the shoes incident]]" between J. Schwinger and [[Steven Weinberg|S. Weinberg]].<ref name=MiltonMehra>{{Cite book |last1=Milton |first1=K. A. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9SmZSN8F164C |title=Climbing the Mountain: The Scientific Biography of Julian Schwinger |last2=Mehra |first2=Jagdish |date=2000 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-850658-4 |edition=Repr |location=Oxford |language=en}}</ref> |
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The next step is to expand the <math>N</math>-particle state space to include the state spaces for all possible values of <math>N</math>. This extended state space, known as a [[Fock space]], is composed of the state space of a system with no particles (the so-called [[vacuum state]]), plus the state space of a 1-particle system, plus the state space of a 2-particle system, and so forth. It is easy to see that there is a one-to-one correspondence between the occupation number representation and valid boson states in the Fock space. |
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===Standard model=== |
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At this point, the quantum mechanical system has become a quantum field in the sense we described above. The field's elementary degrees of freedom are the occupation numbers, and each occupation number is indexed by a number <math>j\cdots</math>, indicating which of the single-particle states <math>|\phi_1\rang, |\phi_2\rang, \cdots|\phi_j\rang\cdots</math> it refers to. |
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[[File:Standard Model of Elementary Particles.svg|thumb|300px|[[Elementary particles]] of the [[Standard Model]]: six types of [[quark]]s, six types of [[lepton]]s, four types of [[gauge boson]]s that carry [[fundamental interaction]]s, as well as the [[Higgs boson]], which endow elementary particles with mass.]] |
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In 1954, [[Yang Chen-Ning]] and [[Robert Mills (physicist)|Robert Mills]] generalized the [[gauge theory|local symmetry]] of QED, leading to [[Yang–Mills theory|non-Abelian gauge theories]] (also known as Yang–Mills theories), which are based on more complicated local [[symmetry group]]s.<ref name="thooft">{{Cite book |last='t Hooft |first=Gerard |author-link=Gerard 't Hooft |arxiv=1503.05007 |chapter=The Evolution of Quantum Field Theory |title=The Standard Theory of Particle Physics |volume=26 |pages=1–27 |date=2015-03-17 |bibcode=2016stpp.conf....1T |doi=10.1142/9789814733519_0001 |series=Advanced Series on Directions in High Energy Physics |isbn=978-981-4733-50-2 |s2cid=119198452 }}</ref>{{rp|5}} In QED, (electrically) charged particles interact via the exchange of photons, while in non-Abelian gauge theory, particles carrying a new type of "[[charge (physics)|charge]]" interact via the exchange of massless [[gauge boson]]s. Unlike photons, these gauge bosons themselves carry charge.{{r|weinberg|page1=32}}<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Yang |first1=C. N. |last2=Mills |first2=R. L. |author-link1=Chen-Ning Yang |author-link2=Robert Mills (physicist) |date=1954-10-01 |title=Conservation of Isotopic Spin and Isotopic Gauge Invariance |journal=[[Physical Review]] |volume=96 |issue=1 |pages=191–195 |doi=10.1103/PhysRev.96.191 |bibcode=1954PhRv...96..191Y |doi-access=free }}</ref> |
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[[Sheldon Glashow]] developed a non-Abelian gauge theory that unified the electromagnetic and weak interactions in 1960. In 1964, [[Abdus Salam]] and [[John Clive Ward]] arrived at the same theory through a different path. This theory, nevertheless, was non-renormalizable.<ref name="coleman">{{cite journal |last=Coleman |first=Sidney |author-link=Sidney Coleman |date=1979-12-14 |title=The 1979 Nobel Prize in Physics |journal=[[Science (journal)|Science]] |volume=206 |issue=4424 |pages=1290–1292 |jstor=1749117 |bibcode=1979Sci...206.1290C |doi=10.1126/science.206.4424.1290 |pmid=17799637 }}</ref> |
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The properties of this quantum field can be explored by defining [[creation and annihilation operators]], which add and subtract particles. They are analogous to "ladder operators" in the [[quantum harmonic oscillator]] problem, which added and subtracted energy quanta. However, these operators literally create and annihilate particles of a given quantum state. The bosonic annihilation operator <math>a_2</math> and creation operator <math>a_2^\dagger</math> have the following effects: |
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[[Peter Higgs]], [[Robert Brout]], [[François Englert]], [[Gerald Guralnik]], [[C. R. Hagen|Carl Hagen]], and [[T. W. B. Kibble|Tom Kibble]] proposed in their famous [[1964 PRL symmetry breaking papers|''Physical Review Letters'' papers]] that the gauge symmetry in Yang–Mills theories could be broken by a mechanism called [[spontaneous symmetry breaking]], through which originally massless gauge bosons could acquire mass.{{r|thooft|page1=5–6}} |
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:<math> a_2 | N_1, N_2, N_3, \cdots \rangle = \sqrt{N_2} \mid N_1, (N_2 - 1), N_3, \cdots \rangle,</math> |
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:<math> a_2^\dagger | N_1, N_2, N_3, \cdots \rangle = \sqrt{N_2 + 1} \mid N_1, (N_2 + 1), N_3, \cdots \rangle.</math> |
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By combining the earlier theory of Glashow, Salam, and Ward with the idea of spontaneous symmetry breaking, [[Steven Weinberg]] wrote down in 1967 a theory describing [[electroweak interaction]]s between all [[lepton]]s and the effects of the [[Higgs boson]]. His theory was at first mostly ignored,<ref name="coleman" />{{r|thooft|page1=6}} until it was brought back to light in 1971 by [[Gerard 't Hooft]]'s proof that non-Abelian gauge theories are renormalizable. The electroweak theory of Weinberg and Salam was extended from leptons to [[quark]]s in 1970 by Glashow, [[John Iliopoulos]], and [[Luciano Maiani]], marking its completion.<ref name="coleman" /> |
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It can be shown that these are operators in the usual quantum mechanical sense, i.e. [[linear operator]]s acting on the Fock space. Furthermore, they are indeed [[Hermitian adjoint|Hermitian conjugates]], which justifies the way we have written them. They can be shown to obey the [[commutator|commutation relation]] |
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[[Harald Fritzsch]], [[Murray Gell-Mann]], and [[Heinrich Leutwyler]] discovered in 1971 that certain phenomena involving the [[strong interaction]] could also be explained by non-Abelian gauge theory. [[Quantum chromodynamics]] (QCD) was born. In 1973, [[David Gross]], [[Frank Wilczek]], and [[Hugh David Politzer]] showed that non-Abelian gauge theories are "[[asymptotic freedom|asymptotically free]]", meaning that under renormalization, the coupling constant of the strong interaction decreases as the interaction energy increases. (Similar discoveries had been made numerous times previously, but they had been largely ignored.) {{r|thooft|page1=11}} Therefore, at least in high-energy interactions, the coupling constant in QCD becomes sufficiently small to warrant a perturbative series expansion, making quantitative predictions for the strong interaction possible.{{r|weinberg|page1=32}} |
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:<math> |
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\left[a_i , a_j \right] = 0 \quad,\quad |
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\left[a_i^\dagger , a_j^\dagger \right] = 0 \quad,\quad |
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\left[a_i , a_j^\dagger \right] = \delta_{ij}, |
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</math> |
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These theoretical breakthroughs brought about a renaissance in QFT. The full theory, which includes the electroweak theory and chromodynamics, is referred to today as the [[Standard Model]] of elementary particles.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.britannica.com/science/Standard-Model |title=Standard model |last=Sutton |first=Christine |author-link=Christine Sutton |website=britannica.com |publisher=[[Encyclopædia Britannica]] |access-date=2018-08-14}}</ref> The Standard Model successfully describes all [[fundamental interaction]]s except [[gravity]], and its many predictions have been met with remarkable experimental confirmation in subsequent decades.{{r|shifman|page1=3}} The [[Higgs boson]], central to the mechanism of spontaneous symmetry breaking, was finally detected in 2012 at [[CERN]], marking the complete verification of the existence of all constituents of the Standard Model.<ref>{{cite arXiv |last=Kibble |first=Tom W. B. |author-link=Tom Kibble |eprint=1412.4094 |title=The Standard Model of Particle Physics |class=physics.hist-ph |date=2014-12-12 }}</ref> |
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where <math>\delta</math> stands for the [[Kronecker delta]]. These are precisely the relations obeyed by the ladder operators for an infinite set of independent [[quantum harmonic oscillator]]s, one for each single-particle state. Adding or removing bosons from each state is therefore analogous to exciting or de-exciting a quantum of energy in a harmonic oscillator. |
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===Other developments=== |
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The [[Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics)|Hamiltonian]] of the quantum field (which, through the [[Schrödinger equation]], determines its dynamics) can be written in terms of creation and annihilation operators. For instance, the Hamiltonian of a field of free (non-interacting) bosons is |
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The 1970s saw the development of non-perturbative methods in non-Abelian gauge theories. The [['t Hooft–Polyakov monopole]] was discovered theoretically by 't Hooft and [[Alexander Markovich Polyakov|Alexander Polyakov]], [[flux tube]]s by [[Holger Bech Nielsen]] and [[Poul Olesen]], and [[instanton]]s by Polyakov and coauthors. These objects are inaccessible through perturbation theory.{{r|shifman|page1=4}} |
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[[Supersymmetry]] also appeared in the same period. The first supersymmetric QFT in four dimensions was built by [[Yuri Golfand]] and [[Evgeny Likhtman]] in 1970, but their result failed to garner widespread interest due to the [[Iron Curtain]]. Supersymmetry only took off in the theoretical community after the work of [[Julius Wess]] and [[Bruno Zumino]] in 1973.{{r|shifman|page1=7}} |
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:<math>H = \sum_k E_k \, a^\dagger_k \,a_k,</math> |
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Among the four fundamental interactions, gravity remains the only one that lacks a consistent QFT description. Various attempts at a theory of [[quantum gravity]] led to the development of [[string theory]],{{r|shifman|page1=6}} itself a type of two-dimensional QFT with [[conformal symmetry]].<ref name="polchinski1" /> [[Joël Scherk]] and [[John Henry Schwarz|John Schwarz]] first proposed in 1974 that string theory could be ''the'' quantum theory of gravity.<ref>{{cite arXiv |last=Schwarz |first=John H. |author-link=John Henry Schwarz |eprint=1201.0981 |title=The Early History of String Theory and Supersymmetry |class=physics.hist-ph |date=2012-01-04 }}</ref> |
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where <math>E_k</math> is the energy of the <math>k</math>-th single-particle energy eigenstate. Note that |
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===Condensed-matter-physics=== |
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:<math>a_k^\dagger\,a_k|\cdots, N_k, \cdots \rangle=N_k| \cdots, N_k, \cdots \rangle</math>. |
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Although quantum field theory arose from the study of interactions between elementary particles, it has been successfully applied to other physical systems, particularly to [[many-body system]]s in [[condensed matter physics]]. |
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Historically, the Higgs mechanism of spontaneous symmetry breaking was a result of [[Yoichiro Nambu]]'s application of [[superconductor]] theory to elementary particles, while the concept of renormalization came out of the study of second-order [[phase transition]]s in matter.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://science.energy.gov/~/media/hep/pdf/Reports/HEP-BES_Roundtable_Report.pdf |title=Common Problems in Condensed Matter and High Energy Physics |date=2015-02-02 |website=science.energy.gov |publisher=Office of Science, [[U.S. Department of Energy]] |access-date=2018-07-18}}</ref> |
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==== Second quantization of fermions ==== |
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Soon after the introduction of photons, Einstein performed the quantization procedure on vibrations in a crystal, leading to the first [[quasiparticle]]—[[phonon]]s. Lev Landau claimed that low-energy excitations in many condensed matter systems could be described in terms of interactions between a set of quasiparticles. The Feynman diagram method of QFT was naturally well suited to the analysis of various phenomena in condensed matter systems.<ref name="wilczek">{{Cite journal |last=Wilczek |first=Frank |author-link=Frank Wilczek |arxiv=1604.05669 |title=Particle Physics and Condensed Matter: The Saga Continues |journal=Physica Scripta |volume=2016 |issue=T168 |pages=014003 |date=2016-04-19 |bibcode=2016PhST..168a4003W |doi=10.1088/0031-8949/T168/1/014003 |s2cid=118439678 }}</ref> |
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It turns out that a different definition of creation and annihilation must be used for describing [[fermion]]s. According to the [[Pauli exclusion principle]], fermions cannot share quantum states, so their occupation numbers <math>N_i</math> can only take on the value 0 or 1. The fermionic annihilation operators <math>c</math> and creation operators <math>c^\dagger</math> are defined by |
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Gauge theory is used to describe the quantization of [[magnetic flux]] in superconductors, the [[resistivity]] in the [[quantum Hall effect]], as well as the relation between frequency and voltage in the AC [[Josephson effect]].<ref name="wilczek" /> |
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:<math> c_j | N_1, N_2, \cdots, N_j = 0, \cdots \rangle = 0 </math> |
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:<math> c_j | N_1, N_2, \cdots, N_j = 1, \cdots \rangle = (-1)^{(N_1 + \cdots + N_{j-1})} | N_1, N_2, \cdots, N_j = 0, \cdots \rangle </math> |
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:<math> c_j^\dagger | N_1, N_2, \cdots, N_j = 0, \cdots \rangle = (-1)^{(N_1 + \cdots + N_{j-1})} | N_1, N_2, \cdots, N_j = 1, \cdots \rangle </math> |
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:<math> c_j^\dagger | N_1, N_2, \cdots, N_j = 1, \cdots \rangle = 0 </math> |
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==Principles== |
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These obey an [[anticommutator|anticommutation relation]]: |
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For simplicity, [[natural units]] are used in the following sections, in which the [[reduced Planck constant]] {{math|''ħ''}} and the [[speed of light]] {{math|''c''}} are both set to one. |
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===Classical fields=== |
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:<math> |
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{{See also|Classical field theory}} |
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\left\{c_i , c_j \right\} = 0 \quad,\quad |
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\left\{c_i^\dagger , c_j^\dagger \right\} = 0 \quad,\quad |
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\left\{c_i , c_j^\dagger \right\} = \delta_{ij} |
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</math> |
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A classical [[field (physics)|field]] is a [[function (mathematics)|function]] of spatial and time coordinates.<ref name="tong1">{{harvnb|Tong|2015|loc=Chapter 1}}</ref> Examples include the [[gravitational field]] in [[Newtonian gravity]] {{math|'''g'''('''x''', ''t'')}} and the [[electric field]] {{math|'''E'''('''x''', ''t'')}} and [[magnetic field]] {{math|'''B'''('''x''', ''t'')}} in [[classical electromagnetism]]. A classical field can be thought of as a numerical quantity assigned to every point in space that changes in time. Hence, it has infinitely many [[degrees of freedom (mechanics)|degrees of freedom]].<ref name="tong1" /><ref>In fact, its number of degrees of freedom is uncountable, because the vector space dimension of the space of continuous (differentiable, real analytic) functions on even a finite dimensional Euclidean space is uncountable. On the other hand, subspaces (of these function spaces) that one typically considers, such as Hilbert spaces (e.g. the space of square integrable real valued functions) or separable Banach spaces (e.g. the space of continuous real-valued functions on a compact interval, with the uniform convergence norm), have denumerable (i. e. countably infinite) dimension in the category of Banach spaces (though still their Euclidean vector space dimension is uncountable), so in these restricted contexts, the number of degrees of freedom (interpreted now as the vector space dimension of a dense subspace rather than the vector space dimension of the function space of interest itself) is denumerable.</ref> |
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One may notice from this that applying a fermionic creation operator twice gives zero, so it is impossible for the particles to share single-particle states, in accordance with the exclusion principle. |
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Many phenomena exhibiting quantum mechanical properties cannot be explained by classical fields alone. Phenomena such as the [[photoelectric effect]] are best explained by discrete particles ([[photon]]s), rather than a spatially continuous field. The goal of quantum field theory is to describe various quantum mechanical phenomena using a modified concept of fields. |
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==== Field operators ==== |
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[[Canonical quantization]] and [[path integral formulation|path integral]]s are two common formulations of QFT.<ref name="zee">{{cite book |last=Zee |first=A. |date=2010 |title=Quantum Field Theory in a Nutshell |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780691140346 |url-access=registration |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0-691-01019-9 |author-link=Anthony Zee }}</ref>{{rp|61}} To motivate the fundamentals of QFT, an overview of classical field theory follows. |
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We have previously mentioned that there can be more than one way of indexing the degrees of freedom in a quantum field. Second quantization indexes the field by enumerating the single-particle quantum states. However, as we have discussed, it is more natural to think about a "field", such as the electromagnetic field, as a set of degrees of freedom indexed by position. |
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The simplest classical field is a real [[scalar field]] — a [[real number]] at every point in space that changes in time. It is denoted as {{math|''ϕ''('''x''', ''t'')}}, where {{math|'''x'''}} is the position vector, and {{math|''t''}} is the time. Suppose the [[Lagrangian (field theory)|Lagrangian]] of the field, <math>L</math>, is |
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To this end, we can define ''field operators'' that create or destroy a particle at a particular point in space. In particle physics, these operators turn out to be more convenient to work with, because they make it easier to formulate theories that satisfy the demands of relativity. |
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:<math>L = \int d^3x\,\mathcal{L} = \int d^3x\,\left[\frac 12 \dot\phi^2 - \frac 12 (\nabla\phi)^2 - \frac 12 m^2\phi^2\right],</math> |
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where <math>\mathcal{L}</math> is the Lagrangian density, <math>\dot\phi</math> is the time-derivative of the field, {{math|∇}} is the gradient operator, and {{math|''m''}} is a real parameter (the "mass" of the field). Applying the [[Euler–Lagrange equation]] on the Lagrangian:{{r|peskin|page1=16}} |
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:<math>\frac{\partial}{\partial t} \left[\frac{\partial\mathcal{L}}{\partial(\partial\phi/\partial t)}\right] + \sum_{i=1}^3 \frac{\partial}{\partial x^i} \left[\frac{\partial\mathcal{L}}{\partial(\partial\phi/\partial x^i)}\right] - \frac{\partial\mathcal{L}}{\partial\phi} = 0,</math> |
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we obtain the [[equations of motion]] for the field, which describe the way it varies in time and space: |
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:<math>\left(\frac{\partial^2}{\partial t^2} - \nabla^2 + m^2\right)\phi = 0.</math> |
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This is known as the [[Klein–Gordon equation]].{{r|peskin|page1=17}} |
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The Klein–Gordon equation is a [[wave equation]], so its solutions can be expressed as a sum of [[normal mode]]s (obtained via [[Fourier transform]]) as follows: |
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Single-particle states are usually enumerated in terms of their [[momentum|momenta]] (as in the [[particle in a box]] problem.) We can construct field operators by applying the [[Fourier transform]] to the creation and annihilation operators for these states. For example, the bosonic field annihilation operator <math>\phi(\mathbf{r})</math> is |
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:<math>\phi(\mathbf{x}, t) = \int \frac{d^3p}{(2\pi)^3} \frac{1}{\sqrt{2\omega_{\mathbf{p}}}}\left(a_{\mathbf{p}} e^{-i\omega_{\mathbf{p}}t + i\mathbf{p}\cdot\mathbf{x}} + a_{\mathbf{p}}^* e^{i\omega_{\mathbf{p}}t - i\mathbf{p}\cdot\mathbf{x}}\right),</math> |
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where {{math|''a''}} is a [[complex number]] (normalized by convention), {{math|*}} denotes [[complex conjugation]], and {{math|''ω''<sub>'''p'''</sub>}} is the frequency of the normal mode: |
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:<math>\omega_{\mathbf{p}} = \sqrt{|\mathbf{p}|^2 + m^2}.</math> |
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Thus each normal mode corresponding to a single {{math|'''p'''}} can be seen as a classical [[harmonic oscillator]] with frequency {{math|''ω''<sub>'''p'''</sub>}}.{{r|peskin|page1=21,26}} |
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===Canonical quantization=== |
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:<math>\phi(\mathbf{r}) \ \stackrel{\mathrm{def}}{=}\ \sum_{j} e^{i\mathbf{k}_j\cdot \mathbf{r}} a_{j} </math> |
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{{Main|Canonical quantization}} |
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The quantization procedure for the above classical field to a quantum operator field is analogous to the promotion of a classical harmonic oscillator to a [[quantum harmonic oscillator]]. |
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The bosonic field operators obey the commutation relation |
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The displacement of a classical harmonic oscillator is described by |
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:<math> |
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:<math>x(t) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2\omega}} a e^{-i\omega t} + \frac{1}{\sqrt{2\omega}} a^* e^{i\omega t},</math> |
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\left[\phi(\mathbf{r}) , \phi(\mathbf{r'}) \right] = 0 \quad,\quad |
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where {{math|''a''}} is a complex number (normalized by convention), and {{math|''ω''}} is the oscillator's frequency. Note that {{math|''x''}} is the displacement of a particle in simple harmonic motion from the equilibrium position, not to be confused with the spatial label {{math|'''x'''}} of a quantum field. |
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\left[\phi^\dagger(\mathbf{r}) , \phi^\dagger(\mathbf{r'}) \right] = 0 \quad,\quad |
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\left[\phi(\mathbf{r}) , \phi^\dagger(\mathbf{r'}) \right] = \delta^3(\mathbf{r} - \mathbf{r'}) |
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</math> |
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For a quantum harmonic oscillator, {{math|''x''(''t'')}} is promoted to a [[linear operator]] <math>\hat x(t)</math>: |
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where <math>\delta(x)</math> stands for the [[Dirac delta function]]. As before, the fermionic relations are the same, with the commutators replaced by anticommutators. |
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:<math>\hat x(t) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2\omega}} \hat a e^{-i\omega t} + \frac{1}{\sqrt{2\omega}} \hat a^\dagger e^{i\omega t}.</math> |
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Complex numbers {{math|''a''}} and {{math|''a''<sup>*</sup>}} are replaced by the [[annihilation operator]] <math>\hat a</math> and the [[creation operator]] <math>\hat a^\dagger</math>, respectively, where {{math|†}} denotes [[Hermitian conjugation]]. The [[commutation relation]] between the two is |
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:<math>\left[\hat a, \hat a^\dagger\right] = 1.</math> |
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The [[Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics)|Hamiltonian]] of the simple harmonic oscillator can be written as |
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:<math>\hat H = \hbar\omega \hat{a}^\dagger \hat{a} +\frac{1}{2}\hbar\omega.</math> |
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The [[vacuum state]] <math>|0\rang</math>, which is the lowest energy state, is defined by |
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:<math>\hat a|0\rang = 0</math> |
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and has energy <math>\frac12\hbar\omega.</math> |
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One can easily check that <math>[\hat H, \hat{a}^\dagger]=\hbar\omega\hat{a}^\dagger,</math> which implies that <math>\hat{a}^\dagger</math> increases the energy of the simple harmonic oscillator by <math>\hbar\omega</math>. For example, the state <math>\hat{a}^\dagger|0\rang</math> is an eigenstate of energy <math>3\hbar\omega/2</math>. |
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Any energy eigenstate state of a single harmonic oscillator can be obtained from <math>|0\rang</math> by successively applying the creation operator <math>\hat a^\dagger</math>:{{r|peskin|page1=20}} and any state of the system can be expressed as a linear combination of the states |
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:<math>|n\rang \propto \left(\hat a^\dagger\right)^n|0\rang.</math> |
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A similar procedure can be applied to the real scalar field {{math|''ϕ''}}, by promoting it to a quantum field operator <math>\hat\phi</math>, while the annihilation operator <math>\hat a_{\mathbf{p}}</math>, the creation operator <math>\hat a_{\mathbf{p}}^\dagger</math> and the angular frequency <math>\omega_\mathbf {p}</math>are now for a particular {{math|'''p'''}}: |
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It should be emphasized that the field operator is ''not'' the same thing as a single-particle wavefunction. The former is an operator acting on the Fock space, and the latter is just a scalar field. However, they are closely related, and are indeed commonly denoted with the same symbol. If we have a Hamiltonian with a space representation, say |
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:<math>\hat \phi(\mathbf{x}, t) = \int \frac{d^3p}{(2\pi)^3} \frac{1}{\sqrt{2\omega_{\mathbf{p}}}}\left(\hat a_{\mathbf{p}} e^{-i\omega_{\mathbf{p}}t + i\mathbf{p}\cdot\mathbf{x}} + \hat a_{\mathbf{p}}^\dagger e^{i\omega_{\mathbf{p}}t - i\mathbf{p}\cdot\mathbf{x}}\right).</math> |
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Their commutation relations are:{{r|peskin|page1=21}} |
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:<math>\left[\hat a_{\mathbf p}, \hat a_{\mathbf q}^\dagger\right] = (2\pi)^3\delta(\mathbf{p} - \mathbf{q}),\quad \left[\hat a_{\mathbf p}, \hat a_{\mathbf q}\right] = \left[\hat a_{\mathbf p}^\dagger, \hat a_{\mathbf q}^\dagger\right] = 0,</math> |
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where {{math|''δ''}} is the [[Dirac delta function]]. The vacuum state <math>|0\rang</math> is defined by |
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:<math>\hat a_{\mathbf p}|0\rang = 0,\quad \text{for all }\mathbf p.</math> |
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Any quantum state of the field can be obtained from <math>|0\rang</math> by successively applying creation operators <math>\hat a_{\mathbf{p}}^\dagger</math> (or by a linear combination of such states), e.g. {{r|peskin|page1=22}} |
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:<math>\left(\hat a_{\mathbf{p}_3}^\dagger\right)^3 \hat a_{\mathbf{p}_2}^\dagger \left(\hat a_{\mathbf{p}_1}^\dagger\right)^2 |0\rang.</math> |
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While the state space of a single quantum harmonic oscillator contains all the discrete energy states of one oscillating particle, the state space of a quantum field contains the discrete energy levels of an arbitrary number of particles. The latter space is known as a [[Fock space]], which can account for the fact that particle numbers are not fixed in relativistic quantum systems.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Fock |first1=V. |author-link=Vladimir Fock |date=1932-03-10 |title=Konfigurationsraum und zweite Quantelung |journal=Zeitschrift für Physik |volume=75 |issue=9–10 |pages=622–647 |doi=10.1007/BF01344458 |language=de |bibcode=1932ZPhy...75..622F |s2cid=186238995 }}</ref> The process of quantizing an arbitrary number of particles instead of a single particle is often also called [[second quantization]].{{r|peskin|page1=19}} |
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:<math>H = - \frac{\hbar^2}{2m} \sum_i \nabla_i^2 + \sum_{i < j} U(|\mathbf{r}_i - \mathbf{r}_j|) </math> |
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The foregoing procedure is a direct application of non-relativistic quantum mechanics and can be used to quantize (complex) scalar fields, [[Dirac field]]s,{{r|peskin|page1=52}} [[vector field]]s (''e.g.'' the electromagnetic field), and even [[string theory|strings]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Becker |first1=Katrin |last2=Becker |first2=Melanie|author-link2=Melanie Becker |last3=Schwarz |first3=John H. |date=2007 |title=String Theory and M-Theory |url=https://archive.org/details/stringtheorymthe00beck_649 |url-access=limited |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=[https://archive.org/details/stringtheorymthe00beck_649/page/n53 36] |isbn=978-0-521-86069-7 |author-link3=John Henry Schwarz }}</ref> However, creation and annihilation operators are only well defined in the simplest theories that contain no interactions (so-called free theory). In the case of the real scalar field, the existence of these operators was a consequence of the decomposition of solutions of the classical equations of motion into a sum of normal modes. To perform calculations on any realistic interacting theory, [[perturbation theory (quantum mechanics)|perturbation theory]] would be necessary. |
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where the indices <math>i</math> and <math>j</math> run over all particles, then the field theory Hamiltonian is |
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The Lagrangian of any quantum field in nature would contain interaction terms in addition to the free theory terms. For example, a [[quartic interaction]] term could be introduced to the Lagrangian of the real scalar field:{{r|peskin|page1=77}} |
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:<math>H = - \frac{\hbar^2}{2m} \int d^3\!r \; \phi^\dagger(\mathbf{r}) \nabla^2 \phi(\mathbf{r}) + \int\!d^3\!r \int\!d^3\!r' \; \phi(\mathbf{r})^\dagger \phi(\mathbf{r}')^\dagger U(|\mathbf{r} - \mathbf{r}'|) \phi(\mathbf{r'}) \phi(\mathbf{r}) </math> |
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:<math>\mathcal{L} = \frac 12 (\partial_\mu\phi)\left(\partial^\mu\phi\right) - \frac 12 m^2\phi^2 - \frac{\lambda}{4!}\phi^4,</math> |
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where {{math|''μ''}} is a spacetime index, <math>\partial_0 = \partial/\partial t,\ \partial_1 = \partial/\partial x^1</math>, etc. The summation over the index {{math|''μ''}} has been omitted following the [[Einstein notation]]. If the parameter {{math|''λ''}} is sufficiently small, then the interacting theory described by the above Lagrangian can be considered as a small perturbation from the free theory. |
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===Path integrals=== |
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This looks remarkably like an expression for the expectation value of the energy, with <math>\phi</math> playing the role of the wavefunction. This relationship between the field operators and wavefunctions makes it very easy to formulate field theories starting from space-projected Hamiltonians. |
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{{Main|Path integral formulation}} |
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The [[path integral formulation]] of QFT is concerned with the direct computation of the [[scattering amplitude]] of a certain interaction process, rather than the establishment of operators and state spaces. To calculate the [[probability amplitude]] for a system to evolve from some initial state <math>|\phi_I\rang</math> at time {{math|''t'' {{=}} 0}} to some final state <math>|\phi_F\rang</math> at {{math|''t'' {{=}} ''T''}}, the total time {{math|''T''}} is divided into {{math|''N''}} small intervals. The overall amplitude is the product of the amplitude of evolution within each interval, integrated over all intermediate states. Let {{math|''H''}} be the [[Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics)|Hamiltonian]] (''i.e.'' [[time evolution operator|generator of time evolution]]), then{{r|zee|page1=10}} |
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=== Implications of quantum field theory === |
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:<math>\lang \phi_F|e^{-iHT}|\phi_I\rang = \int d\phi_1\int d\phi_2\cdots\int d\phi_{N-1}\,\lang \phi_F|e^{-iHT/N}|\phi_{N-1}\rang\cdots\lang \phi_2|e^{-iHT/N}|\phi_1\rang\lang \phi_1|e^{-iHT/N}|\phi_I\rang.</math> |
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==== Unification of fields and particles ==== |
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Taking the limit {{math|''N'' → ∞}}, the above product of integrals becomes the Feynman path integral:{{r|peskin|zee|page1=282|page2=12}} |
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:<math>\lang \phi_F|e^{-iHT}|\phi_I\rang = \int \mathcal{D}\phi(t)\,\exp\left\{i\int_0^T dt\,L\right\},</math> |
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where {{math|''L''}} is the Lagrangian involving {{math|''ϕ''}} and its derivatives with respect to spatial and time coordinates, obtained from the Hamiltonian {{math|''H''}} via [[Legendre transformation]]. The initial and final conditions of the path integral are respectively |
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:<math>\phi(0) = \phi_I,\quad \phi(T) = \phi_F.</math> |
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In other words, the overall amplitude is the sum over the amplitude of every possible path between the initial and final states, where the amplitude of a path is given by the exponential in the integrand. |
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===Two-point correlation function=== |
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The "second quantization" procedure that we have outlined in the previous section takes a set of single-particle quantum states as a starting point. Sometimes, it is impossible to define such single-particle states, and one must proceed directly to quantum field theory. For example, a quantum theory of the [[electromagnetic field]] ''must'' be a quantum field theory, because it is impossible (for various reasons) to define a [[wavefunction]] for a single [[photon]]. In such situations, the quantum field theory can be constructed by examining the mechanical properties of the classical field and guessing the [[correspondence principle|corresponding]] quantum theory. The quantum field theories obtained in this way have the same properties as those obtained using second quantization, such as well-defined creation and annihilation operators obeying commutation or anticommutation relations. |
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{{Main|Correlation function (quantum field theory)}} |
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In calculations, one often encounters expression like<math display="block">\lang 0|T\{\phi(x)\phi(y)\}|0\rang |
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Quantum field theory thus provides a unified framework for describing "field-like" objects (such as the electromagnetic field, whose excitations are photons) and "particle-like" objects (such as electrons, which are treated as excitations of an underlying electron field). |
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\quad \text{or} \quad |
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\lang \Omega |T\{\phi(x)\phi(y)\}|\Omega \rang</math>in the free or interacting theory, respectively. Here, <math>x</math> and <math>y</math> are position [[four-vector]]s, <math>T</math> is the [[time ordering]] operator that shuffles its operands so the time-components <math>x^0</math> and <math>y^0</math> increase from right to left, and <math>|\Omega\rang</math> is the ground state (vacuum state) of the interacting theory, different from the free ground state <math>| 0 \rang</math>. This expression represents the probability amplitude for the field to propagate from {{math|''y''}} to {{math|''x''}}, and goes by multiple names, like the two-point [[propagator]], two-point [[correlation function (quantum field theory)|correlation function]], two-point [[Green's function]] or two-point function for short.{{r|peskin|page1=82}} |
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The free two-point function, also known as the [[Feynman propagator]], can be found for the real scalar field by either canonical quantization or path integrals to be{{r|peskin|zee|page1=31,288|page2=23}} |
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==== Physical meaning of particle indistinguishability ==== |
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:<math>\lang 0|T\{\phi(x)\phi(y)\} |0\rang \equiv D_F(x-y) = \lim_{\epsilon\to 0} \int\frac{d^4p}{(2\pi)^4} \frac{i}{p_\mu p^\mu - m^2 + i\epsilon} e^{-ip_\mu (x^\mu - y^\mu)}.</math> |
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In an interacting theory, where the Lagrangian or Hamiltonian contains terms <math>L_I(t)</math> or <math>H_I(t)</math> that describe interactions, the two-point function is more difficult to define. However, through both the canonical quantization formulation and the path integral formulation, it is possible to express it through an infinite perturbation series of the ''free'' two-point function. |
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In canonical quantization, the two-point correlation function can be written as:{{r|peskin|page1=87}} |
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The second quantization procedure relies crucially on the particles being [[identical particles|identical]]. We would not have been able to construct a quantum field theory from a distinguishable many-particle system, because there would have been no way of separating and indexing the degrees of freedom. |
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:<math>\lang\Omega|T\{\phi(x)\phi(y)\}|\Omega\rang = \lim_{T\to\infty(1-i\epsilon)} \frac{\left\lang 0\left|T\left\{\phi_I(x)\phi_I(y)\exp\left[-i\int_{-T}^T dt\, H_I(t)\right]\right\}\right|0\right\rang}{\left\lang 0\left|T\left\{\exp\left[-i\int_{-T}^T dt\, H_I(t)\right]\right\}\right|0\right\rang},</math> |
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where {{math|''ε''}} is an [[infinitesimal]] number and {{math|''ϕ<sub>I</sub>''}} is the field operator under the free theory. Here, the [[Exponential function|exponential]] should be understood as its [[power series]] expansion. For example, in <math>\phi^4</math>-theory, the interacting term of the Hamiltonian is <math display="inline">H_I(t) = \int d^3 x\,\frac{\lambda}{4!}\phi_I(x)^4</math>,{{r|peskin|page1=84}} and the expansion of the two-point correlator in terms of <math>\lambda</math> becomes<math display="block">\lang\Omega|T\{\phi(x)\phi(y)\}|\Omega\rang = |
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\frac{ |
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\displaystyle \sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{(-i \lambda)^n}{(4 !)^n n !} \int d^4 z_1 \cdots \int d^4 z_n \lang 0|T\{\phi_I(x)\phi_I(y)\phi_I(z_1)^4\cdots\phi_I(z_n)^4\}|0\rang}{ |
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\displaystyle \sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{(-i \lambda)^n}{(4 !)^n n !} \int d^4 z_1 \cdots \int d^4 z_n \lang 0|T\{ \phi_I(z_1)^4\cdots\phi_I(z_n)^4\}|0\rang |
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}.</math>This perturbation expansion expresses the interacting two-point function in terms of quantities <math>\lang 0 | \cdots | 0 \rang</math> that are evaluated in the ''free'' theory. |
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In the path integral formulation, the two-point correlation function can be written{{r|peskin|page1=284}} |
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Many physicists prefer to take the converse interpretation, which is that ''quantum field theory explains what identical particles are''. In ordinary quantum mechanics, there is not much theoretical motivation for using symmetric (bosonic) or antisymmetric (fermionic) states, and the need for such states is simply regarded as an empirical fact. From the point of view of quantum field theory, particles are identical [[if and only if]] they are excitations of the same underlying quantum field. Thus, the question "why are all electrons identical?" arises from mistakenly regarding individual electrons as fundamental objects, when in fact it is only the electron field that is fundamental. |
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:<math>\lang\Omega|T\{\phi(x)\phi(y)\}|\Omega\rang = \lim_{T\to\infty(1-i\epsilon)} \frac{\int\mathcal{D}\phi\,\phi(x)\phi(y)\exp\left[i\int_{-T}^T d^4z\,\mathcal{L}\right]}{\int\mathcal{D}\phi\,\exp\left[i\int_{-T}^T d^4z\,\mathcal{L}\right]},</math> |
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where <math>\mathcal{L}</math> is the Lagrangian density. As in the previous paragraph, the exponential can be expanded as a series in {{math|''λ''}}, reducing the interacting two-point function to quantities in the free theory. |
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[[Wick's theorem]] further reduce any {{math|''n''}}-point correlation function in the free theory to a sum of products of two-point correlation functions. For example, |
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==== Particle conservation and non-conservation ==== |
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:<math>\begin{align} |
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\lang 0|T\{\phi(x_1)\phi(x_2)\phi(x_3)\phi(x_4)\}|0\rang &= \lang 0|T\{\phi(x_1)\phi(x_2)\}|0\rang \lang 0|T\{\phi(x_3)\phi(x_4)\}|0\rang\\ |
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&+ \lang 0|T\{\phi(x_1)\phi(x_3)\}|0\rang \lang 0|T\{\phi(x_2)\phi(x_4)\}|0\rang\\ |
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&+ \lang 0|T\{\phi(x_1)\phi(x_4)\}|0\rang \lang 0|T\{\phi(x_2)\phi(x_3)\}|0\rang. |
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\end{align}</math> |
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Since interacting correlation functions can be expressed in terms of free correlation functions, only the latter need to be evaluated in order to calculate all physical quantities in the (perturbative) interacting theory.{{r|peskin|page1=90}} This makes the Feynman propagator one of the most important quantities in quantum field theory. |
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===Feynman diagram=== |
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During second quantization, we started with a Hamiltonian and state space describing a fixed number of particles (<math>N</math>), and ended with a Hamiltonian and state space for an arbitrary number of particles. Of course, in many common situations <math>N</math> is an important and perfectly well-defined quantity, e.g. if we are describing a gas of [[particle in a box|atoms sealed in a box]]. From the point of view of quantum field theory, such situations are described by quantum states that are eigenstates of the [[particle number operator|number operator]] <math>\hat{N}</math>, which measures the total number of particles present. As with any quantum mechanical observable, <math>\hat{N}</math> is conserved if it commutes with the Hamiltonian. In that case, the quantum state is trapped in the <math>N</math>-particle [[Euclidean subspace|subspace]] of the total Fock space, and the situation could equally well be described by ordinary <math>N</math>-particle quantum mechanics. |
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{{Main|Feynman diagram}} |
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Correlation functions in the interacting theory can be written as a perturbation series. Each term in the series is a product of Feynman propagators in the free theory and can be represented visually by a [[Feynman diagram]]. For example, the {{math|''λ''<sup>1</sup>}} term in the two-point correlation function in the {{math|''ϕ''<sup>4</sup>}} theory is |
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For example, we can see that the free-boson Hamiltonian described above conserves particle number. Whenever the Hamiltonian operates on a state, each particle destroyed by an annihilation operator <math>a_k</math> is immediately put back by the creation operator <math>a_k^\dagger</math>. |
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:<math>\frac{-i\lambda}{4!}\int d^4z\,\lang 0|T\{\phi(x)\phi(y)\phi(z)\phi(z)\phi(z)\phi(z)\}|0\rang.</math> |
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After applying Wick's theorem, one of the terms is |
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:<math>12\cdot \frac{-i\lambda}{4!}\int d^4z\, D_F(x-z)D_F(y-z)D_F(z-z).</math> |
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This term can instead be obtained from the Feynman diagram |
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:[[File:Phi-4 one-loop.svg|200px]]. |
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On the other hand, it is possible, and indeed common, to encounter quantum states that are ''not'' eigenstates of <math>\hat{N}</math>, which do not have well-defined particle numbers. Such states are difficult or impossible to handle using ordinary quantum mechanics, but they can be easily described in quantum field theory as [[quantum superposition]]s of states having different values of <math>N</math>. For example, suppose we have a bosonic field whose particles can be created or destroyed by interactions with a fermionic field. The Hamiltonian of the combined system would be given by the Hamiltonians of the free boson and free fermion fields, plus a "potential energy" term such as |
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The diagram consists of |
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:<math>H_I = \sum_{k,q} V_q (a_q + a_{-q}^\dagger) c_{k+q}^\dagger c_k</math>, |
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* ''external vertices'' connected with one edge and represented by dots (here labeled <math>x</math> and <math>y</math>). |
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where <math>a_k^\dagger</math> and <math>a_k</math> denotes the bosonic creation and annihilation operators, <math>c_k^\dagger</math> and <math>c_k</math> denotes the fermionic creation and annihilation operators, and <math>V_q</math> is a parameter that describes the strength of the interaction. This "interaction term" describes processes in which a fermion in state <math>k</math> either absorbs or emits a boson, thereby being kicked into a different eigenstate <math>k+q</math>. (In fact, this type of Hamiltonian is used to describe interaction between [[conduction electron]]s and [[phonon]]s in [[metal]]s. The interaction between electrons and [[photon]]s is treated in a similar way, but is a little more complicated because the role of [[spin (physics)|spin]] must be taken into account.) One thing to notice here is that even if we start out with a fixed number of bosons, we will typically end up with a superposition of states with different numbers of bosons at later times. The number of fermions, however, is conserved in this case. |
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* ''internal vertices'' connected with four edges and represented by dots (here labeled <math>z</math>). |
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* ''edges'' connecting the vertices and represented by lines. |
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Every vertex corresponds to a single <math>\phi</math> field factor at the corresponding point in spacetime, while the edges correspond to the propagators between the spacetime points. The term in the perturbation series corresponding to the diagram is obtained by writing down the expression that follows from the so-called Feynman rules: |
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In [[condensed matter physics]], states with ill-defined particle numbers are particularly important for describing the various [[superfluid]]s. Many of the defining characteristics of a superfluid arise from the notion that its quantum state is a superposition of states with different particle numbers. |
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# For every internal vertex <math>z_i</math>, write down a factor <math display="inline">-i \lambda \int d^4 z_i</math>. |
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=== Axiomatic approaches === |
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# For every edge that connects two vertices <math>z_i</math> and <math>z_j</math>, write down a factor <math>D_F(z_i-z_j)</math>. |
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# Divide by the symmetry factor of the diagram. |
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With the symmetry factor <math>2</math>, following these rules yields exactly the expression above. By Fourier transforming the propagator, the Feynman rules can be reformulated from position space into momentum space.{{r|peskin|page1=91–94}} |
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The preceding description of quantum field theory follows the spirit in which most [[physicist]]s approach the subject. However, it is not [[rigour|mathematically rigorous]]. Over the past several decades, there have been many attempts to put quantum field theory on a firm mathematical footing by formulating a set of [[axiom]]s for it. These attempts fall into two broad classes. |
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In order to compute the {{math|''n''}}-point correlation function to the {{math|''k''}}-th order, list all valid Feynman diagrams with {{math|''n''}} external points and {{math|''k''}} or fewer vertices, and then use Feynman rules to obtain the expression for each term. To be precise, |
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The first class of axioms, first proposed during the 1950s, include the [[Wightman axioms|Wightman]], [[Osterwalder-Schrader theorem|Osterwalder-Schrader]], and [[Haag-Kastler]] systems. They attempted to formalize the physicists' notion of an "operator-valued field" within the context of [[functional analysis]], and enjoyed limited success. It was possible to prove that any quantum field theory satisfying these axioms satisfied certain general theorems, such as the [[spin-statistics theorem]] and the [[CPT symmetry|CPT theorem]]. Unfortunately, it proved extraordinarily difficult to show that any realistic field theory, including the [[Standard Model]], satisfied these axioms. Most of the theories that could be treated with these analytic axioms were physically trivial, being restricted to low-dimensions and lacking interesting dynamics. The construction of theories satisfying one of these sets of axioms falls in the field of [[constructive quantum field theory]]. Important work was done in this area in the 1970s by Segal, Glimm, Jaffe and others. |
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:<math>\lang\Omega|T\{\phi(x_1)\cdots\phi(x_n)\}|\Omega\rang</math> |
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is equal to the sum of (expressions corresponding to) all connected diagrams with {{math|''n''}} external points. (Connected diagrams are those in which every vertex is connected to an external point through lines. Components that are totally disconnected from external lines are sometimes called "vacuum bubbles".) In the {{math|''ϕ''<sup>4</sup>}} interaction theory discussed above, every vertex must have four legs.{{r|peskin|page1=98}} |
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In realistic applications, the scattering amplitude of a certain interaction or the [[decay rate]] of a particle can be computed from the [[S-matrix]], which itself can be found using the Feynman diagram method.{{r|peskin|page1=102–115}} |
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During the 1980s, a second set of axioms based on [[geometry|geometric]] ideas was proposed. This line of investigation, which restricts its attention to a particular class of quantum field theories known as [[topological quantum field theory|topological quantum field theories]], is associated most closely with [[Michael Atiyah]] and [[Graeme Segal]], and was notably expanded upon by [[Edward Witten]], [[Richard Borcherds]], and [[Maxim Kontsevich]]. However, most physically-relevant quantum field theories, such as the [[Standard Model]], are not topological quantum field theories; the quantum field theory of the [[Quantum Hall effect|fractional quantum Hall effect]] is a notable exception. The main impact of axiomatic topological quantum field theory has been on mathematics, with important applications in [[representation theory]], [[algebraic topology]], and [[differential geometry]]. |
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Feynman diagrams devoid of "loops" are called tree-level diagrams, which describe the lowest-order interaction processes; those containing {{math|''n''}} loops are referred to as {{math|''n''}}-loop diagrams, which describe higher-order contributions, or radiative corrections, to the interaction.{{r|zee|page1=44}} Lines whose end points are vertices can be thought of as the propagation of [[virtual particle]]s.{{r|peskin|page1=31}} |
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Finding the proper axioms for quantum field theory is still an open and difficult problem in mathematics. One of the [[Millennium Prize Problems]]—proving the existence of a [[Yang-Mills existence and mass gap|mass gap in Yang-Mills theory]]—is linked to this issue. |
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===Renormalization=== |
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== Phenomena associated with quantum field theory == |
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{{Main|Renormalization}} |
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Feynman rules can be used to directly evaluate tree-level diagrams. However, naïve computation of loop diagrams such as the one shown above will result in divergent momentum integrals, which seems to imply that almost all terms in the perturbative expansion are infinite. The [[renormalisation]] procedure is a systematic process for removing such infinities. |
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In the previous part of the article, we described the most general properties of quantum field theories. Some of the quantum field theories studied in various fields of theoretical physics possess additional special properties, such as renormalizability, gauge symmetry, and supersymmetry. These are described in the following sections. |
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Parameters appearing in the Lagrangian, such as the mass {{math|''m''}} and the coupling constant {{math|''λ''}}, have no physical meaning — {{math|''m''}}, {{math|''λ''}}, and the field strength {{math|''ϕ''}} are not experimentally measurable quantities and are referred to here as the bare mass, bare coupling constant, and bare field, respectively. The physical mass and coupling constant are measured in some interaction process and are generally different from the bare quantities. While computing physical quantities from this interaction process, one may limit the domain of divergent momentum integrals to be below some momentum cut-off {{math|Λ}}, obtain expressions for the physical quantities, and then take the limit {{math|Λ → ∞}}. This is an example of [[regularization (physics)|regularization]], a class of methods to treat divergences in QFT, with {{math|Λ}} being the regulator. |
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=== Renormalization === |
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The approach illustrated above is called bare perturbation theory, as calculations involve only the bare quantities such as mass and coupling constant. A different approach, called renormalized perturbation theory, is to use physically meaningful quantities from the very beginning. In the case of {{math|''ϕ''<sup>4</sup>}} theory, the field strength is first redefined: |
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{{main|Renormalization}} |
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:<math>\phi = Z^{1/2}\phi_r,</math> |
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where {{math|''ϕ''}} is the bare field, {{math|''ϕ<sub>r</sub>''}} is the renormalized field, and {{math|''Z''}} is a constant to be determined. The Lagrangian density becomes: |
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:<math>\mathcal{L} = \frac 12 (\partial_\mu\phi_r)(\partial^\mu\phi_r) - \frac 12 m_r^2\phi_r^2 - \frac{\lambda_r}{4!}\phi_r^4 + \frac 12 \delta_Z (\partial_\mu\phi_r)(\partial^\mu\phi_r) - \frac 12 \delta_m\phi_r^2 - \frac{\delta_\lambda}{4!}\phi_r^4,</math> |
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where {{math|''m<sub>r</sub>''}} and {{math|''λ<sub>r</sub>''}} are the experimentally measurable, renormalized, mass and coupling constant, respectively, and |
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:<math>\delta_Z = Z-1,\quad \delta_m = m^2Z - m_r^2,\quad \delta_\lambda = \lambda Z^2 - \lambda_r</math> |
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are constants to be determined. The first three terms are the {{math|''ϕ''<sup>4</sup>}} Lagrangian density written in terms of the renormalized quantities, while the latter three terms are referred to as "counterterms". As the Lagrangian now contains more terms, so the Feynman diagrams should include additional elements, each with their own Feynman rules. The procedure is outlined as follows. First select a regularization scheme (such as the cut-off regularization introduced above or [[dimensional regularization]]); call the regulator {{math|Λ}}. Compute Feynman diagrams, in which divergent terms will depend on {{math|Λ}}. Then, define {{math|''δ<sub>Z</sub>''}}, {{math|''δ<sub>m</sub>''}}, and {{math|''δ<sub>λ</sub>''}} such that Feynman diagrams for the counterterms will exactly cancel the divergent terms in the normal Feynman diagrams when the limit {{math|Λ → ∞}} is taken. In this way, meaningful finite quantities are obtained.{{r|peskin|page1=323–326}} |
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<!--"Is it true?" The renormalization procedure will lead to the same quantitative result and physical prediction irrespective of the regularization scheme chosen. -->It is only possible to eliminate all infinities to obtain a finite result in renormalizable theories, whereas in non-renormalizable theories infinities cannot be removed by the redefinition of a small number of parameters. The [[Standard Model]] of elementary particles is a renormalizable QFT,{{r|peskin|page1=719–727}} while [[quantum gravity]] is non-renormalizable.{{r|peskin|zee|page1=798|page2=421}} |
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Early in the history of quantum field theory, it was found that many |
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seemingly innocuous calculations, such as the [[perturbation theory (quantum mechanics)|perturbative]] shift in the energy of an electron due to the presence of the electromagnetic field, give infinite results. The reason is that the perturbation theory for the shift in an energy involves a sum over all other energy levels, and there are infinitely many levels at short distances which each give a finite contribution. |
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====Renormalization group==== |
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Many of these problems are related to failures in [[classical electrodynamics]] that were identified but unsolved in the 19th century, and they basically stem from the fact that many of the supposedly "intrinsic" properties of an electron are tied to the electromagnetic field which it carries around with it. The energy carried by a single electron—its [[self energy]]—is not simply the bare value, but also includes the energy contained in its electromagnetic field, its attendant cloud of photons. The energy in a field of a spherical source diverges in both classical and quantum mechanics, but as discovered by [[Victor Weisskopf|Weisskopf]], in quantum mechanics the divergence is much milder, going only as the logarithm of the radius of the sphere. |
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{{Main|Renormalization group}} |
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The [[renormalization group]], developed by [[Kenneth G. Wilson|Kenneth Wilson]], is a mathematical apparatus used to study the changes in physical parameters (coefficients in the Lagrangian) as the system is viewed at different scales.{{r|peskin|page1=393}} The way in which each parameter changes with scale is described by its [[beta function (physics)|''β'' function]].{{r|peskin|page1=417}} Correlation functions, which underlie quantitative physical predictions, change with scale according to the [[Callan–Symanzik equation]].{{r|peskin|page1=410–411}} |
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The solution to the problem, presciently suggested by [[Ernst Stueckelberg|Stueckelberg]], independently by [[Hans Bethe|Bethe]] after the crucial experiment by [[Willis Lamb|Lamb]], implemented at one loop by [[Julian Schwinger|Schwinger]], and systematically extended to all loops by [[Richard Feynman|Feynman]] and [[Freeman Dyson|Dyson]], with converging work by [[Sin-Itiro Tomonaga|Tomonaga]] in isolated postwar Japan, is called [[renormalization]]. The technique of renormalization recognizes that the problem is essentially purely mathematical, that extremely short distances are at fault. In order to define a theory on a continuum, first place a [[cutoff]] on the fields, by postulating that quanta cannot have energies above some extremely high value. This has the effect of replacing continuous space by a structure where very short wavelengths do not exist, as on a lattice. Lattices break rotational symmetry, and one of the crucial contributions made by Feynman, Pauli and Villars, and modernized by [[Gerardus 't Hooft|'t Hooft]] and [[Martinus Veltman|Veltman]], is a symmetry preserving cutoff for perturbation theory. There is no known symmetrical cutoff outside of perturbation theory, so for rigorous or numerical work people often use an actual lattice. |
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As an example, the coupling constant in QED, namely the [[elementary charge]] {{math|''e''}}, has the following ''β'' function: |
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On a lattice, every quantity is finite but depends on the spacing. When taking the limit of zero spacing, we make sure that the physically-observable quantities like the observed electron mass stay fixed, which means that the constants in the Lagrangian defining the theory depend on the spacing. Hopefully, by allowing the constants to vary with the lattice spacing, all the results at long distances become insensitive to the lattice, defining a continuum limit. |
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:<math>\beta(e) \equiv \frac{1}{\Lambda}\frac{de}{d\Lambda} = \frac{e^3}{12\pi^2} + O\mathord\left(e^5\right),</math> |
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where {{math|Λ}} is the energy scale under which the measurement of {{math|''e''}} is performed. This [[differential equation]] implies that the observed elementary charge increases as the scale increases.<ref>{{cite arXiv |last=Fujita |first=Takehisa |eprint=hep-th/0606101 |title=Physics of Renormalization Group Equation in QED |date=2008-02-01 }}</ref> The renormalized coupling constant, which changes with the energy scale, is also called the running coupling constant.{{r|peskin|page1=420}} |
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The coupling constant {{math|''g''}} in [[quantum chromodynamics]], a non-Abelian gauge theory based on the symmetry group {{math|[[special unitary group|SU(3)]]}}, has the following ''β'' function: |
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The renormalization procedure only works for a certain class of quantum field theories, called '''renormalizable quantum field theories'''. A theory is '''perturbatively renormalizable''' when the constants in the Lagrangian only diverge at worst as logarithms of the lattice spacing for very short spacings. The continuum limit is then well defined in perturbation theory, and even if it is not fully well defined non-perturbatively, the problems only show up at distance scales which are exponentially small in the inverse coupling for weak couplings. The [[Standard Model]] of [[particle physics]] is perturbatively renormalizable, and so are its component theories ([[quantum electrodynamics]]/[[electroweak interaction|electroweak theory]] and [[quantum chromodynamics]]). Of the three components, quantum electrodynamics is believed to not have a continuum limit, while the [[asymptotic freedom|asymptotically free]] SU(2) and SU(3) weak hypercharge and strong color interactions are nonperturbatively well defined. |
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:<math>\beta(g) \equiv \frac{1}{\Lambda}\frac{dg}{d\Lambda} = \frac{g^3}{16\pi^2}\left(-11 + \frac 23 N_f\right) + O\mathord\left(g^5\right),</math> |
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where {{math|''N<sub>f</sub>''}} is the number of [[quark]] [[flavour (particle physics)|flavours]]. In the case where {{math|''N<sub>f</sub>'' ≤ 16}} (the Standard Model has {{math|''N<sub>f</sub>'' {{=}} 6}}), the coupling constant {{math|''g''}} decreases as the energy scale increases. Hence, while the strong interaction is strong at low energies, it becomes very weak in high-energy interactions, a phenomenon known as [[asymptotic freedom]].{{r|peskin|page1=531}} |
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[[Conformal field theories]] (CFTs) are special QFTs that admit [[conformal symmetry]]. They are insensitive to changes in the scale, as all their coupling constants have vanishing ''β'' function. (The converse is not true, however — the vanishing of all ''β'' functions does not imply conformal symmetry of the theory.)<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Aharony |first1=Ofer |last2=Gur-Ari |first2=Guy |last3=Klinghoffer |first3=Nizan |arxiv=1501.06664 |title=The Holographic Dictionary for Beta Functions of Multi-trace Coupling Constants |journal=Journal of High Energy Physics |volume=2015 |issue=5 |pages=31 |date=2015-05-19 |bibcode=2015JHEP...05..031A |doi=10.1007/JHEP05(2015)031 |s2cid=115167208 }}</ref> Examples include [[string theory]]<ref name="polchinski1">{{cite book |last=Polchinski |first=Joseph |date=2005 |title=String Theory |volume=1 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-67227-6 |author-link=Joseph Polchinski }}</ref> and [[N = 4 supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory|{{math|''N'' {{=}} 4}} supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory]].<ref>{{cite arXiv |last=Kovacs |first=Stefano |eprint=hep-th/9908171 |title={{math|''N'' {{=}} 4}} supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory and the AdS/SCFT correspondence |date=1999-08-26 }}</ref> |
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The [[renormalization group]] describes how renormalizable theories emerge as the long distance low-energy [[effective field theory]] for any given high-energy theory. Because of this, renormalizable theories are insensitive to the precise nature of the underlying high-energy short-distance phenomena. This is a blessing because it allows physicists to formulate low energy theories without knowing the details of high energy phenomenon. It is also a curse, because once a renormalizable theory like the standard model is found to work, it gives very few clues to higher energy processes. The only way high energy processes can be seen in the standard model is when they allow otherwise forbidden events, or if they predict quantitative relations between the coupling constants. |
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According to Wilson's picture, every QFT is fundamentally accompanied by its energy cut-off {{math|Λ}}, ''i.e.'' that the theory is no longer valid at energies higher than {{math|Λ}}, and all degrees of freedom above the scale {{math|Λ}} are to be omitted. For example, the cut-off could be the inverse of the atomic spacing in a condensed matter system, and in elementary particle physics it could be associated with the fundamental "graininess" of spacetime caused by quantum fluctuations in gravity. The cut-off scale of theories of particle interactions lies far beyond current experiments. Even if the theory were very complicated at that scale, as long as its couplings are sufficiently weak, it must be described at low energies by a renormalizable [[effective field theory]].{{r|peskin|page1=402–403}} The difference between renormalizable and non-renormalizable theories is that the former are insensitive to details at high energies, whereas the latter do depend on them.{{r|shifman|page1=2}} According to this view, non-renormalizable theories are to be seen as low-energy effective theories of a more fundamental theory. The failure to remove the cut-off {{math|Λ}} from calculations in such a theory merely indicates that new physical phenomena appear at scales above {{math|Λ}}, where a new theory is necessary.{{r|zee|page1=156}} |
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=== Gauge freedom === |
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===Other theories=== |
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A [[gauge theory]] is a theory that admits a [[Symmetry in physics|symmetry]] with a local parameter. For example, in every [[quantum mechanics|quantum]] theory the global [[Phase (waves)|phase]] of the [[wave function]] is arbitrary and does not represent something physical. Consequently, the theory is invariant under a global change of phases (adding a constant to the phase of all wave functions, everywhere); this is a [[global symmetry]]. In [[quantum electrodynamics]], the theory is also invariant under a ''local'' change of phase, that is - one may shift the phase of all [[wave function]]s so that the shift may be different at every point in [[space-time]]. This is a [[local symmetry]]. However, in order for a well-defined [[derivative]] operator to exist, one must introduce a new [[field (physics)|field]], the [[gauge field]], which also transforms in order for the local change of variables (the phase in our example) not to affect the derivative. In [[quantum electrodynamics]] this [[gauge field]] is the [[electromagnetic field]]. The change of local gauge of variables is termed [[gauge transformation]]. |
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The quantization and renormalization procedures outlined in the preceding sections are performed for the free theory and [[quartic interaction|{{math|''ϕ''<sup>4</sup>}} theory]] of the real scalar field. A similar process can be done for other types of fields, including the [[complex numbers|complex]] scalar field, the [[vector field]], and the [[Dirac field]], as well as other types of interaction terms, including the electromagnetic interaction and the [[Yukawa interaction]]. |
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As an example, [[quantum electrodynamics]] contains a Dirac field {{math|''ψ''}} representing the [[electron]] field and a vector field {{math|''A<sup>μ</sup>''}} representing the electromagnetic field ([[photon]] field). (Despite its name, the quantum electromagnetic "field" actually corresponds to the classical [[electromagnetic four-potential]], rather than the classical electric and magnetic fields.) The full QED Lagrangian density is: |
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In quantum field theory the excitations of fields represent [[Elementary particle|particles]]. The particle associated with excitations of the [[gauge field]] is the [[gauge boson]], which is the [[photon]] in the case of [[quantum electrodynamics]]. |
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:<math>\mathcal{L} = \bar\psi\left(i\gamma^\mu\partial_\mu - m\right)\psi - \frac 14 F_{\mu\nu}F^{\mu\nu} - e\bar\psi\gamma^\mu\psi A_\mu,</math> |
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where {{math|''γ<sup>μ</sup>''}} are [[Dirac matrices]], <math>\bar\psi = \psi^\dagger\gamma^0</math>, and <math>F_{\mu\nu} = \partial_\mu A_\nu - \partial_\nu A_\mu</math> is the [[electromagnetic field strength]]. The parameters in this theory are the (bare) electron mass {{math|''m''}} and the (bare) [[elementary charge]] {{math|''e''}}. The first and second terms in the Lagrangian density correspond to the free Dirac field and free vector fields, respectively. The last term describes the interaction between the electron and photon fields, which is treated as a perturbation from the free theories.{{r|peskin|page1=78}} |
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[[File:Electron-positron-annihilation.svg|thumb]] |
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The [[Degrees of freedom (physics and chemistry)|degrees of freedom]] in quantum field theory are local fluctuations of the fields. The existence of a [[gauge symmetry]] reduces the number of degrees of freedom, simply because some fluctuations of the fields can be transformed to zero by [[gauge transformation]]s, so they are equivalent to having no fluctuations at all, and they therefore have no physical meaning. Such fluctuations are usually called "non-physical degrees of freedom" or ''gauge artifacts''; usually some of them have a negative [[norm (mathematics)|norm]], making them inadequate for a consistent theory. Therefore, if a classical field theory has a gauge symmetry, then its quantized version (i.e. the corresponding quantum field theory) will have this symmetry as well. In other words, a gauge symmetry cannot have a quantum [[Anomaly (physics)|anomaly]]. If a gauge symmetry is [[Gauge anomaly|anomalous]] (i.e. not kept in the quantum theory) then the theory is non-consistent: for example, in [[quantum electrodynamics]], had there been a [[gauge anomaly]], this would require the appearance of [[photon]]s with [[Longitudinal wave|longitudinal]] [[polarization]] and [[polarization]] in the time direction, the latter having a negative [[norm (mathematics)|norm]], rendering the theory inconsistent; another possibility would be for these photons to appear only in intermediate processes but not in the final products of any interaction, making the theory non [[unitarity|unitary]] and again inconsistent (see [[optical theorem]]). |
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Shown above is an example of a tree-level Feynman diagram in QED. It describes an electron and a positron annihilating, creating an [[off-shell]] photon, and then decaying into a new pair of electron and positron. Time runs from left to right. Arrows pointing forward in time represent the propagation of electrons, while those pointing backward in time represent the propagation of positrons. A wavy line represents the propagation of a photon. Each vertex in QED Feynman diagrams must have an incoming and an outgoing fermion (positron/electron) leg as well as a photon leg. |
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In general, the [[gauge transformation]]s of a theory consist several different transformations, which may not be [[commutative]]. These transformations are together described by a mathematical object known as a [[gauge group]]. [[Infinitesimal]] [[gauge transformation]]s are the [[gauge group]] [[Generator (mathematics)|generators]]. Therefore the number of [[gauge boson]]s is the group [[Dimension (vector space)|dimension]] (i.e. number of generators forming a [[Basis (linear algebra)|basis]]). |
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====Gauge symmetry==== |
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All the [[fundamental interaction]]s in nature are described by [[Gauge theory|gauge theories]]. These are: |
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{{Main|Gauge theory}} |
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* [[Quantum electrodynamics]], whose [[gauge transformation]] is a local change of phase, so that the [[gauge group]] is [[U(1)]]. The [[gauge boson]] is the [[photon]]. |
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* [[Quantum chromodynamics]], whose [[gauge group]] is [[SU(3)]]. The [[gauge boson]]s are eight [[gluon]]s. |
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* The [[Weak interaction|electroweak Theory]], whose [[gauge group]] is <math>U(1)\times SU(2)</math> (a [[direct product]] of [[U(1)]] and [[SU(2)]]). |
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* [[Gravity]], whose classical theory is [[general relativity]], admits the equivalence principle which is a form of gauge symmetry. |
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If the following transformation to the fields is performed at every spacetime point {{math|''x''}} (a local transformation), then the QED Lagrangian remains unchanged, or invariant: |
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=== Supersymmetry === |
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:<math>\psi(x) \to e^{i\alpha(x)}\psi(x),\quad A_\mu(x) \to A_\mu(x) + ie^{-1} e^{-i\alpha(x)}\partial_\mu e^{i\alpha(x)},</math> |
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where {{math|''α''(''x'')}} is any function of spacetime coordinates. If a theory's Lagrangian (or more precisely the [[action (physics)|action]]) is invariant under a certain local transformation, then the transformation is referred to as a [[gauge symmetry]] of the theory.{{r|peskin|page1=482–483}} Gauge symmetries form a [[group (mathematics)|group]] at every spacetime point. In the case of QED, the successive application of two different local symmetry transformations <math>e^{i\alpha(x)}</math> and <math>e^{i\alpha'(x)}</math> is yet another symmetry transformation <math>e^{i[\alpha(x)+\alpha'(x)]}</math>. For any {{math|''α''(''x'')}}, <math>e^{i\alpha(x)}</math> is an element of the {{math|[[U(1)]]}} group, thus QED is said to have {{math|U(1)}} gauge symmetry.{{r|peskin|page1=496}} The photon field {{math|''A<sub>μ</sub>''}} may be referred to as the {{math|U(1)}} [[gauge boson]]. |
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{{math|U(1)}} is an [[Abelian group]], meaning that the result is the same regardless of the order in which its elements are applied. QFTs can also be built on [[non-Abelian group]]s, giving rise to [[Yang–Mills theory|non-Abelian gauge theories]] (also known as Yang–Mills theories).{{r|peskin|page1=489}} [[Quantum chromodynamics]], which describes the strong interaction, is a non-Abelian gauge theory with an {{math|[[special unitary group|SU(3)]]}} gauge symmetry. It contains three Dirac fields {{math|''ψ<sup>i</sup>'', ''i'' {{=}} 1,2,3}} representing [[quark]] fields as well as eight vector fields {{math|''A<sup>a,μ</sup>'', ''a'' {{=}} 1,...,8}} representing [[gluon]] fields, which are the {{math|SU(3)}} gauge bosons.{{r|peskin|page1=547}} The QCD Lagrangian density is:{{r|peskin|page1=490–491}} |
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[[Supersymmetry]] assumes that every fundamental [[fermion]] has a superpartner that is a [[boson]] and vice versa. It was introduced in order to solve the so-called [[Hierarchy Problem]], that is, to explain why particles not protected by any symmetry (like the [[Higgs boson]]) do not receive radiative corrections to its mass driving it to the larger scales (GUT, Planck...). It was soon realized that supersymmetry has other interesting properties: its gauged version is an extension of general relativity ([[Supergravity]]), and it is a key ingredient for the consistency of [[string theory]]. |
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:<math>\mathcal{L} = i\bar\psi^i \gamma^\mu (D_\mu)^{ij} \psi^j - \frac 14 F_{\mu\nu}^aF^{a,\mu\nu} - m\bar\psi^i \psi^i,</math> |
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where {{math|''D<sub>μ</sub>''}} is the gauge [[covariant derivative]]: |
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:<math>D_\mu = \partial_\mu - igA_\mu^a t^a,</math> |
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where {{math|''g''}} is the coupling constant, {{math|''t<sup>a</sup>''}} are the eight [[Lie algebra|generators]] of {{math|SU(3)}} in the [[fundamental representation]] ({{math|3×3}} matrices), |
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:<math>F_{\mu\nu}^a = \partial_\mu A_\nu^a - \partial_\nu A_\mu^a + gf^{abc}A_\mu^b A_\nu^c,</math> |
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and {{math|''f<sup>abc</sup>''}} are the [[structure constants]] of {{math|SU(3)}}. Repeated indices {{math|''i'',''j'',''a''}} are implicitly summed over following Einstein notation. This Lagrangian is invariant under the transformation: |
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:<math>\psi^i(x) \to U^{ij}(x)\psi^j(x),\quad A_\mu^a(x) t^a \to U(x)\left[A_\mu^a(x) t^a + ig^{-1} \partial_\mu\right]U^\dagger(x),</math> |
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where {{math|''U''(''x'')}} is an element of {{math|SU(3)}} at every spacetime point {{math|''x''}}: |
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:<math>U(x) = e^{i\alpha(x)^a t^a}.</math> |
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The preceding discussion of symmetries is on the level of the Lagrangian. In other words, these are "classical" symmetries. After quantization, some theories will no longer exhibit their classical symmetries, a phenomenon called [[anomaly (physics)|anomaly]]. For instance, in the path integral formulation, despite the invariance of the Lagrangian density <math>\mathcal{L}[\phi,\partial_\mu\phi]</math> under a certain local transformation of the fields, the [[measure (mathematics)|measure]] <math display="inline">\int\mathcal D\phi</math> of the path integral may change.{{r|zee|page1=243}} For a theory describing nature to be consistent, it must not contain any anomaly in its gauge symmetry. The Standard Model of elementary particles is a gauge theory based on the group {{math|SU(3) × SU(2) × U(1)}}, in which all anomalies exactly cancel.{{r|peskin|page1=705–707}} |
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The way supersymmetry protects the hierarchies is the following: since for every particle there is a superpartner with the same mass, any loop in a radiative correction is cancelled by the loop corresponding to its superpartner, rendering the theory UV finite. |
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The theoretical foundation of [[general relativity]], the [[equivalence principle]], can also be understood as a form of gauge symmetry, making general relativity a gauge theory based on the [[Lorentz group]].<ref>Veltman, M. J. G. (1976). ''Methods in Field Theory, Proceedings of the Les Houches Summer School, Les Houches, France, 1975''.</ref> |
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Since no superpartners have yet been observed, if supersymmetry exists it must be broken (through a so-called soft term, which breaks supersymmetry without ruining its helpful features). The simplest models of this breaking require that the energy of the superpartners not be too high; in these cases, supersymmetry is expected to be observed by experiments at the [[Large Hadron Collider]]. |
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[[Noether's theorem]] states that every continuous symmetry, ''i.e.'' the parameter in the symmetry transformation being continuous rather than discrete, leads to a corresponding [[conservation law]].{{r|peskin|zee|page1=17–18|page2=73}} For example, the {{math|U(1)}} symmetry of QED implies [[charge conservation]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Brading |first1=Katherine A.|author1-link=Katherine Brading |date=March 2002 |title=Which symmetry? Noether, Weyl, and conservation of electric charge |journal=Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics |volume=33 |issue=1 |pages=3–22 |doi=10.1016/S1355-2198(01)00033-8 |bibcode=2002SHPMP..33....3B |citeseerx=10.1.1.569.106 }}</ref> |
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== See also == |
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{{multicol}} |
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* [[List of quantum field theories]] |
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* [[Feynman path integral]] |
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* [[Quantum chromodynamics]] |
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* [[Quantum electrodynamics]] |
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* [[Quantum flavordynamics]] |
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* [[Quantum geometrodynamics]] |
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* [[Quantum magnetodynamics]] |
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* [[Schwinger-Dyson equation]] |
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{{multicol-break}} |
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* [[Relationship between string theory and quantum field theory]] |
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* [[Abraham-Lorentz force]] |
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* [[Photon polarization]] |
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* [[Theoretical and experimental justification for the Schrödinger equation]] |
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* [[Invariance mechanics]] |
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*[[Green–Kubo relations]] |
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*[[Green's function (many-body theory)]] |
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{{multicol-end}} |
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Gauge-transformations do not relate distinct quantum states. Rather, it relates two equivalent mathematical descriptions of the same quantum state. As an example, the photon field {{math|''A<sup>μ</sup>''}}, being a [[four-vector]], has four apparent degrees of freedom, but the actual state of a photon is described by its two degrees of freedom corresponding to the [[photon polarization|polarization]]. The remaining two degrees of freedom are said to be "redundant" — apparently different ways of writing {{math|''A<sup>μ</sup>''}} can be related to each other by a gauge transformation and in fact describe the same state of the photon field. In this sense, gauge invariance is not a "real" symmetry, but a reflection of the "redundancy" of the chosen mathematical description.{{r|zee|page1=168}} |
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==Notes== |
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{{reflist}} |
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To account for the gauge redundancy in the path integral formulation, one must perform the so-called [[Faddeev–Popov ghost|Faddeev–Popov]] [[gauge fixing]] procedure. In non-Abelian gauge theories, such a procedure introduces new fields called "ghosts". Particles corresponding to the ghost fields are called ghost particles, which cannot be detected externally.{{r|peskin|page1=512–515}} A more rigorous generalization of the Faddeev–Popov procedure is given by [[BRST quantization]].{{r|peskin|page1=517}} |
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== Suggested reading == |
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* Wilczek, Frank ; ''Quantum Field Theory'', Review of Modern Physics 71 (1999) S85-S95. Review article written by a master of Q.C.D., [http://nobelprize.org/physics/laureates/2004/wilczek-autobio.html ''Nobel laureate 2003'']. Full text available at : [http://fr.arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/9803075 ''hep-th/9803075''] |
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====Spontaneous symmetry-breaking==== |
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* Ryder, Lewis H. ; ''Quantum Field Theory '' (Cambridge University Press, 1985), [ISBN 0-521-33859-X]. Introduction to relativistic Q.F.T. for particle physics. |
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{{Main|Spontaneous symmetry breaking}} |
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[[Spontaneous symmetry breaking]] is a mechanism whereby the symmetry of the Lagrangian is violated by the system described by it.{{r|peskin|page1=347}} |
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* Zee, Anthony ; ''Quantum Field Theory in a Nutshell'', Princeton University Press (2003) [ISBN 0-691-01019-6]. |
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* Peskin, M and Schroeder, D. ;''An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory'' (Westview Press, 1995) [ISBN 0-201-50397-2] |
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To illustrate the mechanism, consider a linear [[sigma model]] containing {{math|''N''}} real scalar fields, described by the Lagrangian density: |
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* Weinberg, Steven ; ''The Quantum Theory of Fields'' (3 volumes) Cambridge University Press (1995). A monumental treatise on Q.F.T. written by a leading expert, [http://nobelprize.org/physics/laureates/1979/weinberg-lecture.html ''Nobel laureate 1979'']. |
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:<math>\mathcal{L} = \frac 12 \left(\partial_\mu\phi^i\right)\left(\partial^\mu\phi^i\right) + \frac 12 \mu^2 \phi^i\phi^i - \frac{\lambda}{4} \left(\phi^i\phi^i\right)^2,</math> |
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where {{math|''μ''}} and {{math|''λ''}} are real parameters. The theory admits an {{math|[[orthogonal group|O(''N'')]]}} global symmetry: |
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:<math>\phi^i \to R^{ij}\phi^j,\quad R\in\mathrm{O}(N).</math> |
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The lowest energy state (ground state or vacuum state) of the classical theory is any uniform field {{math|''ϕ''<sub>0</sub>}} satisfying |
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:<math>\phi_0^i \phi_0^i = \frac{\mu^2}{\lambda}.</math> |
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Without loss of generality, let the ground state be in the {{math|''N''}}-th direction: |
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:<math>\phi_0^i = \left(0,\cdots,0,\frac{\mu}{\sqrt{\lambda}}\right).</math> |
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The original {{math|''N''}} fields can be rewritten as: |
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:<math>\phi^i(x) = \left(\pi^1(x),\cdots,\pi^{N-1}(x),\frac{\mu}{\sqrt{\lambda}} + \sigma(x)\right),</math> |
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and the original Lagrangian density as: |
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:<math>\mathcal{L} = \frac 12 \left(\partial_\mu\pi^k\right)\left(\partial^\mu\pi^k\right) + \frac 12 \left(\partial_\mu\sigma\right)\left(\partial^\mu\sigma\right) - \frac 12 \left(2\mu^2\right)\sigma^2 - \sqrt{\lambda}\mu\sigma^3 - \sqrt{\lambda}\mu\pi^k\pi^k\sigma - \frac{\lambda}{2} \pi^k\pi^k\sigma^2 - \frac{\lambda}{4}\left(\pi^k\pi^k\right)^2,</math> |
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where {{math|''k'' {{=}} 1, ..., ''N'' − 1}}. The original {{math|O(''N'')}} global symmetry is no longer manifest, leaving only the [[subgroup]] {{math|O(''N'' − 1)}}. The larger symmetry before spontaneous symmetry breaking is said to be "hidden" or spontaneously broken.{{r|peskin|page1=349–350}} |
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[[Goldstone's theorem]] states that under spontaneous symmetry breaking, every broken continuous global symmetry leads to a massless field called the Goldstone boson. In the above example, {{math|O(''N'')}} has {{math|''N''(''N'' − 1)/2}} continuous symmetries (the dimension of its [[Lie algebra]]), while {{math|O(''N'' − 1)}} has {{math|(''N'' − 1)(''N'' − 2)/2}}. The number of broken symmetries is their difference, {{math|''N'' − 1}}, which corresponds to the {{math|''N'' − 1}} massless fields {{math|''π<sup>k</sup>''}}.{{r|peskin|page1=351}} |
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* Loudon, Rodney ; ''The Quantum Theory of Light'' (Oxford University Press, 1983), [ISBN 0-19-851155-8] |
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On the other hand, when a gauge (as opposed to global) symmetry is spontaneously broken, the resulting Goldstone boson is "eaten" by the corresponding gauge boson by becoming an additional degree of freedom for the gauge boson. The Goldstone boson equivalence theorem states that at high energy, the amplitude for emission or absorption of a longitudinally polarized massive gauge boson becomes equal to the amplitude for emission or absorption of the Goldstone boson that was eaten by the gauge boson.{{r|peskin|page1=743–744}} |
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*{{cite book | author=Greiner, Walter and Müller, Berndt | title=Gauge Theory of Weak Interactions | publisher=Springer | year=2000 | id=ISBN 3-540-67672-4}} |
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In the QFT of [[ferromagnetism]], spontaneous symmetry breaking can explain the alignment of [[magnetic dipole]]s at low temperatures.{{r|zee|page1=199}} In the Standard Model of elementary particles, the [[W and Z bosons]], which would otherwise be massless as a result of gauge symmetry, acquire mass through spontaneous symmetry breaking of the [[Higgs boson]], a process called the [[Higgs mechanism]].{{r|peskin|page1=690}} |
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*[[Paul Frampton| Paul H. Frampton ]], ''Gauge Field Theories'', Frontiers in Physics, Addison-Wesley (1986), Second Edition, Wiley (2000). |
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====Supersymmetry==== |
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*{{cite book | author=Gordon L. Kane | title=Modern Elementary Particle Physics | publisher=Perseus Books | year=1987 | id=ISBN 0-201-11749-5}} |
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{{Main|Supersymmetry}} |
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All experimentally known symmetries in nature relate [[boson]]s to bosons and [[fermion]]s to fermions. Theorists have hypothesized the existence of a type of symmetry, called [[supersymmetry]], that relates bosons and fermions.{{r|peskin|zee|page1=795|page2=443}} |
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*[[Hagen Kleinert|Kleinert, Hagen]], ''Multivalued Fields in in Condensed Matter, Electrodynamics, and Gravitation'', [http://www.worldscibooks.com/physics/6742.html World Scientific (Singapore, 2008)] (also available [http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/re.html#B9 online]) |
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The Standard Model obeys [[Poincaré group|Poincaré symmetry]], whose generators are the spacetime [[translation (geometry)|translations]] {{math|''P<sup>μ</sup>''}} and the [[Lorentz transformations]] {{math|''J<sub>μν</sub>''}}.<ref name="WeinbergQFT">{{cite book |last=Weinberg |first=Steven |date=1995 |title=The Quantum Theory of Fields |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-55001-7 |author-link=Steven Weinberg |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/quantumtheoryoff00stev }}</ref>{{rp|58–60}} In addition to these generators, supersymmetry in (3+1)-dimensions includes additional generators {{math|''Q<sub>α</sub>''}}, called [[supercharge]]s, which themselves transform as [[Weyl fermion]]s.{{r|peskin|zee|page1=795|page2=444}} The symmetry group generated by all these generators is known as the [[super-Poincaré group]]. In general there can be more than one set of supersymmetry generators, {{math|''Q<sub>α</sub><sup>I</sup>'', ''I'' {{=}} 1, ..., ''N''}}, which generate the corresponding {{math|''N'' {{=}} 1}} supersymmetry, {{math|''N'' {{=}} 2}} supersymmetry, and so on.{{r|peskin|zee|page1=795|page2=450}} Supersymmetry can also be constructed in other dimensions,<ref>{{cite arXiv |last1=de Wit |first1=Bernard |last2=Louis |first2=Jan |eprint=hep-th/9801132 |title=Supersymmetry and Dualities in various dimensions |date=1998-02-18 }}</ref> most notably in (1+1) dimensions for its application in [[superstring theory]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Polchinski |first=Joseph |date=2005 |title=String Theory |volume=2 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-67228-3 |author-link=Joseph Polchinski }}</ref> |
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The Lagrangian of a supersymmetric theory must be invariant under the action of the super-Poincaré group.{{r|zee|page1=448}} Examples of such theories include: [[Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model]] (MSSM), [[N {{=}} 4 supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory|{{math|''N'' {{=}} 4}} supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory]],{{r|zee|page1=450}} and superstring theory. In a supersymmetric theory, every fermion has a bosonic [[superpartner]] and vice versa.{{r|zee|page1=444}} |
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If supersymmetry is promoted to a local symmetry, then the resultant gauge theory is an extension of general relativity called [[supergravity]].<ref name="NathArnowitt">{{cite journal | last1 = Nath | first1 = P. | last2 = Arnowitt | first2 = R. | year = 1975 | title = Generalized Super-Gauge Symmetry as a New Framework for Unified Gauge Theories | journal = Physics Letters B | volume = 56 | issue = 2| page = 177 | doi=10.1016/0370-2693(75)90297-x| bibcode = 1975PhLB...56..177N }}</ref> |
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Supersymmetry is a potential solution to many current problems in physics. For example, the [[hierarchy problem]] of the Standard Model—why the mass of the Higgs boson is not radiatively corrected (under renormalization) to a very high scale such as the [[Grand Unified Theory|grand unified scale]] or the [[Planck mass|Planck scale]]—can be resolved by relating the [[Higgs field]] and its super-partner, the [[Higgsino]]. Radiative corrections due to Higgs boson loops in Feynman diagrams are cancelled by corresponding Higgsino loops. Supersymmetry also offers answers to the grand unification of all gauge coupling constants in the Standard Model as well as the nature of [[dark matter]].{{r|peskin|page1=796–797}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Munoz |first=Carlos |arxiv=1701.05259 |title=Models of Supersymmetry for Dark Matter |journal=EPJ Web of Conferences |volume=136 |pages=01002 |date=2017-01-18 |bibcode=2017EPJWC.13601002M |doi=10.1051/epjconf/201713601002 |s2cid=55199323 }}</ref> |
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Nevertheless, experiments have yet to provide evidence for the existence of supersymmetric particles. If supersymmetry were a true symmetry of nature, then it must be a broken symmetry, and the energy of symmetry breaking must be higher than those achievable by present-day experiments.{{r|peskin|zee|page1=797|page2=443}} |
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====Other spacetimes==== |
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The {{math|''ϕ''<sup>4</sup>}} theory, QED, QCD, as well as the whole Standard Model all assume a (3+1)-dimensional [[Minkowski space]] (3 spatial and 1 time dimensions) as the background on which the quantum fields are defined. However, QFT ''a priori'' imposes no restriction on the number of dimensions nor the geometry of spacetime. |
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In [[condensed matter physics]], QFT is used to describe [[two-dimensional electron gas|(2+1)-dimensional electron gases]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Morandi |first1=G. |last2=Sodano |first2=P. |last3=Tagliacozzo |first3=A. |last4=Tognetti |first4=V. |date=2000 |title=Field Theories for Low-Dimensional Condensed Matter Systems |url=https://www.springer.com/us/book/9783540671770 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-3-662-04273-1 }}</ref> In [[high-energy physics]], [[string theory]] is a type of (1+1)-dimensional QFT,{{r|zee|page1=452}}<ref name="polchinski1" /> while [[Kaluza–Klein theory]] uses gravity in [[extra dimensions]] to produce gauge theories in lower dimensions.{{r|zee|page1=428–429}} |
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In Minkowski space, the flat [[metric tensor (general relativity)|metric]] {{math|''η<sub>μν</sub>''}} is used to [[raising and lowering indices|raise and lower]] spacetime indices in the Lagrangian, ''e.g.'' |
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:<math>A_\mu A^\mu = \eta_{\mu\nu} A^\mu A^\nu,\quad \partial_\mu\phi \partial^\mu\phi = \eta^{\mu\nu}\partial_\mu\phi \partial_\nu\phi,</math> |
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where {{math|''η<sup>μν</sup>''}} is the inverse of {{math|''η<sub>μν</sub>''}} satisfying {{math|''η<sup>μρ</sup>η<sub>ρν</sub>'' {{=}} ''δ<sup>μ</sup><sub>ν</sub>''}}. |
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For [[quantum field theory in curved spacetime|QFTs in curved spacetime]] on the other hand, a general metric (such as the [[Schwarzschild metric]] describing a [[black hole]]) is used: |
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:<math>A_\mu A^\mu = g_{\mu\nu} A^\mu A^\nu,\quad \partial_\mu\phi \partial^\mu\phi = g^{\mu\nu}\partial_\mu\phi \partial_\nu\phi,</math> |
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where {{math|''g<sup>μν</sup>''}} is the inverse of {{math|''g<sub>μν</sub>''}}. |
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For a real scalar field, the Lagrangian density in a general spacetime background is |
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:<math>\mathcal{L} = \sqrt{|g|}\left(\frac 12 g^{\mu\nu} \nabla_\mu\phi \nabla_\nu\phi - \frac 12 m^2\phi^2\right),</math> |
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where {{math|''g'' {{=}} det(''g<sub>μν</sub>'')}}, and {{math|∇<sub>''μ''</sub>}} denotes the [[covariant derivative]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Parker |first1=Leonard E. |last2=Toms |first2=David J. |date=2009 |title=Quantum Field Theory in Curved Spacetime |url=https://archive.org/details/quantumfieldtheo00park |url-access=limited |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=[https://archive.org/details/quantumfieldtheo00park/page/n58 43] |isbn=978-0-521-87787-9 }}</ref> The Lagrangian of a QFT, hence its calculational results and physical predictions, depends on the geometry of the spacetime background. |
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====Topological quantum field theory==== |
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{{Main|Topological quantum field theory}} |
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The correlation functions and physical predictions of a QFT depend on the spacetime metric {{math|''g<sub>μν</sub>''}}. For a special class of QFTs called [[topological quantum field theories]] (TQFTs), all correlation functions are independent of continuous changes in the spacetime metric.<ref>{{cite arXiv |last1=Ivancevic |first1=Vladimir G. |last2=Ivancevic |first2=Tijana T. |eprint=0810.0344v5 |title=Undergraduate Lecture Notes in Topological Quantum Field Theory |class=math-th |date=2008-12-11 }}</ref>{{rp|36}} QFTs in curved spacetime generally change according to the ''geometry'' (local structure) of the spacetime background, while TQFTs are invariant under spacetime [[diffeomorphism]]s but are sensitive to the ''[[topology]]'' (global structure) of spacetime. This means that all calculational results of TQFTs are [[topological invariant]]s of the underlying spacetime. [[Chern–Simons theory]] is an example of TQFT and has been used to construct models of quantum gravity.<ref>{{cite book |last=Carlip |first=Steven |author-link=Steve Carlip |date=1998 |title=Quantum Gravity in 2+1 Dimensions |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/quantum-gravity-in-21-dimensions/D2F727B6822014270F423D82501E674A |publisher=Cambridge University Press |pages=27–29 |isbn=9780511564192 |doi=10.1017/CBO9780511564192 |arxiv=2312.12596 }}</ref> Applications of TQFT include the [[fractional quantum Hall effect]] and [[topological quantum computer]]s.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Carqueville |first1=Nils |last2=Runkel |first2=Ingo |arxiv=1705.05734 |title=Introductory lectures on topological quantum field theory |journal=Banach Center Publications |year=2018 |volume=114 |pages=9–47 |doi=10.4064/bc114-1 |s2cid=119166976 }}</ref>{{rp|1–5}} The world line trajectory of fractionalized particles (known as [[anyons]]) can form a link configuration in the spacetime,<ref>{{Cite journal |author-link=Edward Witten |first=Edward |last=Witten |title=Quantum Field Theory and the Jones Polynomial |journal=[[Communications in Mathematical Physics]] |volume=121 |issue=3 |pages=351–399 |year=1989 |mr=0990772 |bibcode = 1989CMaPh.121..351W |doi = 10.1007/BF01217730 |s2cid=14951363 |url=http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.cmp/1104178138 }}</ref> which relates the braiding statistics of anyons in physics to the |
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link invariants in mathematics. Topological quantum field theories (TQFTs) applicable to the frontier research of topological quantum matters include Chern-Simons-Witten gauge theories in 2+1 spacetime dimensions, other new exotic TQFTs in 3+1 spacetime dimensions and beyond.<ref>{{Cite journal |first1=Pavel|last1=Putrov |first2=Juven |last2=Wang | first3=Shing-Tung | last3=Yau |title=Braiding Statistics and Link Invariants of Bosonic/Fermionic Topological Quantum Matter in 2+1 and 3+1 dimensions |journal=[[Annals of Physics]] |volume=384 |issue=C |pages=254–287 |year=2017|doi =10.1016/j.aop.2017.06.019|arxiv=1612.09298 |bibcode=2017AnPhy.384..254P |s2cid=119578849 }}</ref> |
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===Perturbative and non-perturbative methods=== |
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Using [[perturbation theory (quantum mechanics)|perturbation theory]], the total effect of a small interaction term can be approximated order by order by a series expansion in the number of [[virtual particle]]s participating in the interaction. Every term in the expansion may be understood as one possible way for (physical) particles to interact with each other via virtual particles, expressed visually using a [[Feynman diagram]]. The [[electromagnetic force]] between two electrons in QED is represented (to first order in perturbation theory) by the propagation of a virtual photon. In a similar manner, the [[W and Z bosons]] carry the weak interaction, while [[gluon]]s carry the strong interaction. The interpretation of an interaction as a sum of intermediate states involving the exchange of various virtual particles only makes sense in the framework of perturbation theory. In contrast, non-perturbative methods in QFT treat the interacting Lagrangian as a whole without any series expansion. Instead of particles that carry interactions, these methods have spawned such concepts as [['t Hooft–Polyakov monopole]], [[domain wall]], [[flux tube]], and [[instanton]].<ref name="shifman">{{cite book |last=Shifman |first=M. |author-link=Mikhail Shifman |date=2012 |title=Advanced Topics in Quantum Field Theory |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-19084-8 }}</ref> Examples of QFTs that are completely solvable non-perturbatively include [[Minimal model (physics)|minimal models]] of [[conformal field theory]]<ref>{{cite book |last1=Di Francesco |first1=Philippe |last2=Mathieu |first2=Pierre |last3=Sénéchal |first3=David |date=1997 |title=Conformal Field Theory |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-4612-7475-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5u7jBwAAQBAJ }}</ref> and the [[Thirring model]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Thirring |first=W. |author-link=Walter Thirring |year=1958 |title=A Soluble Relativistic Field Theory? |journal=[[Annals of Physics]] |volume=3 |issue=1|pages=91–112 |bibcode=1958AnPhy...3...91T |doi=10.1016/0003-4916(58)90015-0}}</ref> |
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==Mathematical rigor== |
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In spite of its overwhelming success in particle physics and condensed matter physics, QFT itself lacks a formal mathematical foundation. For example, according to [[Haag's theorem]], there does not exist a well-defined [[interaction picture]] for QFT, which implies that [[perturbation theory (quantum mechanics)|perturbation theory]] of QFT, which underlies the entire [[Feynman diagram]] method, is fundamentally ill-defined.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Haag |first=Rudolf |author-link=Rudolf Haag |date=1955 |title=On Quantum Field Theories |url=http://cdsweb.cern.ch/record/212242/files/p1.pdf |journal=Dan Mat Fys Medd |volume=29 |issue=12 }}</ref> |
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However, ''perturbative'' quantum field theory, which only requires that quantities be computable as a formal power series without any convergence requirements, can be given a rigorous mathematical treatment. In particular, [[Kevin Costello]]'s monograph ''Renormalization and Effective Field Theory''<ref name=costello>Kevin Costello, ''Renormalization and Effective Field Theory'', Mathematical Surveys and Monographs Volume 170, American Mathematical Society, 2011, {{ISBN|978-0-8218-5288-0}}</ref> provides a rigorous formulation of perturbative renormalization that combines both the effective-field theory approaches of [[Leo Kadanoff|Kadanoff]], [[Kenneth G. Wilson|Wilson]], and [[Joseph Polchinski|Polchinski]], together with the [[Batalin-Vilkovisky]] approach to quantizing gauge theories. Furthermore, perturbative path-integral methods, typically understood as formal computational methods inspired from finite-dimensional integration theory,<ref name=ren>Gerald B. Folland, ''Quantum Field Theory: A Tourist Guide for Mathematicians'', Mathematical Surveys and Monographs Volume 149, American Mathematical Society, 2008, {{ISBN|0821847058}} | chapter=8</ref> can be given a sound mathematical interpretation from their finite-dimensional analogues.<ref name="nguyen">{{Cite journal |last=Nguyen |first=Timothy |arxiv=1505.04809 |title=The perturbative approach to path integrals: A succinct mathematical treatment |journal=J. Math. Phys.|volume=57|year=2016 |issue=9 |page=092301 |doi=10.1063/1.4962800|bibcode=2016JMP....57i2301N |s2cid=54813572 }}</ref> |
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Since the 1950s,<ref name="buchholz">{{Cite book |last=Buchholz |first=Detlev |chapter=Current Trends in Axiomatic Quantum Field Theory |author-link=Detlev Buchholz |arxiv=hep-th/9811233 |title=Quantum Field Theory |series=Lecture Notes in Physics |volume=558 |pages=43–64 |year=2000 |doi=10.1007/3-540-44482-3_4 |bibcode=2000LNP...558...43B |isbn=978-3-540-67972-1 |s2cid=5052535 }}</ref> theoretical physicists and mathematicians have attempted to organize all QFTs into a set of [[axiom]]s, in order to establish the existence of concrete models of relativistic QFT in a mathematically rigorous way and to study their properties. This line of study is called [[constructive quantum field theory]], a subfield of [[mathematical physics]],<ref name="summers">{{cite arXiv |last=Summers |first=Stephen J. |eprint=1203.3991v2 |title=A Perspective on Constructive Quantum Field Theory |class=math-ph |date=2016-03-31 }}</ref>{{rp|2}} which has led to such results as [[CPT theorem]], [[spin–statistics theorem]], and [[Goldstone's theorem]],<ref name="buchholz" /> and also to mathematically rigorous constructions of many interacting QFTs in two and three spacetime dimensions, e.g. two-dimensional scalar field theories with arbitrary polynomial interactions,<ref name="Simon">{{cite book|last=Simon|first=Barry|title=The P(phi)_2 Euclidean (quantum) field theory|publisher=Princeton University Press|year=1974|isbn=0-691-08144-1|publication-place=Princeton, New Jersey|page=|oclc=905864308}}</ref> the three-dimensional scalar field theories with a quartic interaction, etc.<ref name="Glimm1987">{{cite book|last1=Glimm|first1=James|title=Quantum Physics : a Functional Integral Point of View|last2=Jaffe|first2=Arthur|publisher=Springer New York|year=1987|isbn=978-1-4612-4728-9|publication-place=New York, NY|page=|oclc=852790676}}</ref> |
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Compared to ordinary QFT, [[topological quantum field theory]] and [[conformal field theory]] are better supported mathematically — both can be classified in the framework of [[representation (mathematics)|representation]]s of [[cobordism]]s.<ref>{{cite arXiv |last1=Sati |first1=Hisham |last2=Schreiber |first2=Urs |author-link2=Urs Schreiber |eprint=1109.0955v2 |title=Survey of mathematical foundations of QFT and perturbative string theory |class=math-ph |date=2012-01-06 }}</ref> |
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[[Algebraic quantum field theory]] is another approach to the axiomatization of QFT, in which the fundamental objects are local operators and the algebraic relations between them. Axiomatic systems following this approach include [[Wightman axioms]] and [[Haag–Kastler axioms]].{{r|summers|page1=2–3}} One way to construct theories satisfying Wightman axioms is to use [[Osterwalder–Schrader axioms]], which give the necessary and sufficient conditions for a real time theory to be obtained from an [[imaginary time]] theory by [[analytic continuation]] ([[Wick rotation]]).{{r|summers|page1=10}} |
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[[Yang–Mills existence and mass gap]], one of the [[Millennium Prize Problems]], concerns the well-defined existence of [[Yang–Mills theory|Yang–Mills theories]] as set out by the above axioms. The full problem statement is as follows.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.claymath.org/sites/default/files/yangmills.pdf |title=Quantum Yang–Mills Theory |last1=Jaffe |first1=Arthur |last2=Witten |first2=Edward |author-link1=Arthur Jaffe |author-link2=Edward Witten |publisher=[[Clay Mathematics Institute]] |access-date=2018-07-18 |archive-date=2015-03-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150330003812/http://www.claymath.org/sites/default/files/yangmills.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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{{Blockquote| |
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Prove that for any [[compact space|compact]] [[simple group|simple]] [[gauge group]] {{math|''G''}}, a non-trivial quantum Yang–Mills theory exists on <math>\mathbb{R}^4</math> and has a [[mass gap]] {{math|Δ > 0}}. Existence includes establishing axiomatic properties at least as strong as those cited in {{Harvtxt|Streater|Wightman|1964}}, {{Harvtxt|Osterwalder|Schrader|1973}} and {{Harvtxt|Osterwalder|Schrader|1975}}. |
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}} |
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==See also== |
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{{Portal|Mathematics|Physics}} |
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{{cols|colwidth=21em}} |
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* [[Abraham–Lorentz force]] |
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* [[AdS/CFT correspondence]] |
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* [[Axiomatic quantum field theory]] |
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* [[Introduction to quantum mechanics]] |
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* [[Common integrals in quantum field theory]] |
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* [[Conformal field theory]] |
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* [[Constructive quantum field theory]] |
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* [[Dirac's equation]] |
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* [[Form factor (quantum field theory)]] |
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* [[Feynman diagram]] |
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* [[Green–Kubo relations]] |
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* [[Green's function (many-body theory)]] |
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* [[Group field theory]] |
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* [[Lattice field theory]] |
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* [[List of quantum field theories]] |
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* [[Local quantum field theory]] |
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* [[MHV amplitudes|Maximally helicity violating amplitudes]] |
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* [[Noncommutative quantum field theory]] |
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* [[Quantization (physics)|Quantization]] of a [[Field (physics)|field]] |
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* [[Quantum electrodynamics]] |
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* [[Quantum field theory in curved spacetime]] |
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* [[Quantum chromodynamics]] |
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* [[Quantum flavordynamics]] |
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* [[Quantum hadrodynamics]] |
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* [[Quantum hydrodynamics]] |
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* [[Quantum triviality]] |
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* [[Relation between Schrödinger's equation and the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics]] |
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* [[Relationship between string theory and quantum field theory]] |
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* [[Schwinger–Dyson equation]] |
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* [[Static forces and virtual-particle exchange]] |
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* [[Symmetry in quantum mechanics]] |
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* [[Topological quantum field theory]] |
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* [[Ward–Takahashi identity]] |
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* [[Wheeler–Feynman absorber theory]] |
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* [[Wigner's classification]] |
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* [[Wigner's theorem]] |
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{{colend}} |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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;Bibliography |
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*{{cite book |last1=Streater |first1=R. |last2=Wightman |first2=A. |title=PCT, Spin and Statistics and all That|url=https://archive.org/details/pctspinstatistic0000stre |url-access=registration |publisher=W. A. Benjamin|year= 1964}} |
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*{{cite journal |last1=Osterwalder |first1=K. |last2=Schrader |first2=R. |title=Axioms for Euclidean Green's functions |journal=[[Communications in Mathematical Physics]] |volume=31 |issue=2 |pages=83–112 |year=1973|doi=10.1007/BF01645738 |bibcode = 1973CMaPh..31...83O |s2cid=189829853 |url=http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.cmp/1103858969 }} |
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*{{cite journal |last1=Osterwalder |first1=K. |last2=Schrader |first2=R. |title=Axioms for Euclidean Green's functions II |journal=[[Communications in Mathematical Physics]] |volume=42 |issue=3 |pages=281–305 |year=1975|doi=10.1007/BF01608978 |bibcode = 1975CMaPh..42..281O |s2cid=119389461 |url=http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.cmp/1103899050 }} |
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==Further reading== |
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; General readers |
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* {{cite book| |
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last1=Pais|first1=A.|author-link1=Abraham Pais |
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|title=Inward Bound: Of Matter and Forces in the Physical World |
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|edition=reprint |
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|year=1994 |
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|orig-year=1986 |
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|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |
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|location=Oxford, New York, Toronto |
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* {{cite book |
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* {{cite book |last=Ynduráin |first=F.J. |author-link=Francisco José Ynduráin |
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|year=1996 |
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|title=Relativistic Quantum Mechanics and Introduction to Field Theory |
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* {{cite book |last1=Peskin |first1=M. |author-link=Michael Peskin |last2=Schroeder |first2=D. |
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* Heitler, W. (1953). ''The Quantum Theory of Radiation.'' Dover Publications, Inc. [[Special:BookSources/0486645584|ISBN 0-486-64558-4]]. |
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* Umezawa, H. (1956) ''Quantum Field Theory.'' North Holland Puplishing. |
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* Barton, G. (1963). ''Introduction to Advanced Field Theory.'' Intescience Publishers. |
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|year=1995 |
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|isbn=978-0521550017 |
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|url=https://archive.org/details/quantumtheoryoff00stev |
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}} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*{{Commons category-inline}} |
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* Siegel, Warren ; [http://insti.physics.sunysb.edu/%7Esiegel/errata.html ''Fields''] (also available from [[arXiv:hep-th/9912205]]) |
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{{sister project|project=Wikiversity |
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* 't Hooft, Gerard ; ''The Conceptual Basis of Quantum Field Theory'', Handbook of the Philosophy of Science, Elsevier (to be published). Review article written by a master of gauge theories, [http://nobelprize.org/physics/laureates/1999/thooft-autobio.html''Nobel laureate 1999'']. Full text available in [http://www.phys.uu.nl/~thooft/lectures/basisqft.pdf''pdf'']. |
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|text=[[v:Quantum mechanics/Quantum field theory on a violin string|One-dimensional quantum field theory on Wikiversity]]}} |
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* Srednicki, Mark ; [http://gabriel.physics.ucsb.edu/~mark/qft.html ''Quantum Field Theory''] |
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* {{springer|title=Quantum field theory|id=p/q076300}} |
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* Kuhlmann, Meinard ; [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/quantum-field-theory/ ''Quantum Field Theory''], Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |
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* ''[[Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]]'': "[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/quantum-field-theory/ Quantum Field Theory]", by Meinard Kuhlmann. |
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* Quantum field theory textbooks: [http://motls.blogspot.com/2006/01/qft-didactics.html a list with links to amazon.com] |
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* Siegel, Warren, 2005. ''[http://insti.physics.sunysb.edu/%7Esiegel/errata.html Fields.]'' {{arxiv|hep-th/9912205}}. |
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* [http://quantumfieldtheory.info Pedagogic Aids to Quantum Field Theory] |
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* [http://www.nat.vu.nl/~mulders/QFT-0.pdf Quantum Field Theory] by P. J. Mulders |
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Latest revision as of 17:11, 31 December 2024
Quantum field theory |
---|
History |
In theoretical physics, quantum field theory (QFT) is a theoretical framework that combines classical field theory, special relativity, and quantum mechanics.[1]: xi QFT is used in particle physics to construct physical models of subatomic particles and in condensed matter physics to construct models of quasiparticles. The current standard model of particle physics is based on quantum field theory.
History
[edit]Quantum field theory emerged from the work of generations of theoretical physicists spanning much of the 20th century. Its development began in the 1920s with the description of interactions between light and electrons, culminating in the first quantum field theory—quantum electrodynamics. A major theoretical obstacle soon followed with the appearance and persistence of various infinities in perturbative calculations, a problem only resolved in the 1950s with the invention of the renormalization procedure. A second major barrier came with QFT's apparent inability to describe the weak and strong interactions, to the point where some theorists called for the abandonment of the field theoretic approach. The development of gauge theory and the completion of the Standard Model in the 1970s led to a renaissance of quantum field theory.
Theoretical background
[edit]Quantum field theory results from the combination of classical field theory, quantum mechanics, and special relativity.[1]: xi A brief overview of these theoretical precursors follows.
The earliest successful classical field theory is one that emerged from Newton's law of universal gravitation, despite the complete absence of the concept of fields from his 1687 treatise Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica. The force of gravity as described by Isaac Newton is an "action at a distance"—its effects on faraway objects are instantaneous, no matter the distance. In an exchange of letters with Richard Bentley, however, Newton stated that "it is inconceivable that inanimate brute matter should, without the mediation of something else which is not material, operate upon and affect other matter without mutual contact".[2]: 4 It was not until the 18th century that mathematical physicists discovered a convenient description of gravity based on fields—a numerical quantity (a vector in the case of gravitational field) assigned to every point in space indicating the action of gravity on any particle at that point. However, this was considered merely a mathematical trick.[3]: 18
Fields began to take on an existence of their own with the development of electromagnetism in the 19th century. Michael Faraday coined the English term "field" in 1845. He introduced fields as properties of space (even when it is devoid of matter) having physical effects. He argued against "action at a distance", and proposed that interactions between objects occur via space-filling "lines of force". This description of fields remains to this day.[2][4]: 301 [5]: 2
The theory of classical electromagnetism was completed in 1864 with Maxwell's equations, which described the relationship between the electric field, the magnetic field, electric current, and electric charge. Maxwell's equations implied the existence of electromagnetic waves, a phenomenon whereby electric and magnetic fields propagate from one spatial point to another at a finite speed, which turns out to be the speed of light. Action-at-a-distance was thus conclusively refuted.[2]: 19
Despite the enormous success of classical electromagnetism, it was unable to account for the discrete lines in atomic spectra, nor for the distribution of blackbody radiation in different wavelengths.[6] Max Planck's study of blackbody radiation marked the beginning of quantum mechanics. He treated atoms, which absorb and emit electromagnetic radiation, as tiny oscillators with the crucial property that their energies can only take on a series of discrete, rather than continuous, values. These are known as quantum harmonic oscillators. This process of restricting energies to discrete values is called quantization.[7]: Ch.2 Building on this idea, Albert Einstein proposed in 1905 an explanation for the photoelectric effect, that light is composed of individual packets of energy called photons (the quanta of light). This implied that the electromagnetic radiation, while being waves in the classical electromagnetic field, also exists in the form of particles.[6]
In 1913, Niels Bohr introduced the Bohr model of atomic structure, wherein electrons within atoms can only take on a series of discrete, rather than continuous, energies. This is another example of quantization. The Bohr model successfully explained the discrete nature of atomic spectral lines. In 1924, Louis de Broglie proposed the hypothesis of wave–particle duality, that microscopic particles exhibit both wave-like and particle-like properties under different circumstances.[6] Uniting these scattered ideas, a coherent discipline, quantum mechanics, was formulated between 1925 and 1926, with important contributions from Max Planck, Louis de Broglie, Werner Heisenberg, Max Born, Erwin Schrödinger, Paul Dirac, and Wolfgang Pauli.[3]: 22–23
In the same year as his paper on the photoelectric effect, Einstein published his theory of special relativity, built on Maxwell's electromagnetism. New rules, called Lorentz transformations, were given for the way time and space coordinates of an event change under changes in the observer's velocity, and the distinction between time and space was blurred.[3]: 19 It was proposed that all physical laws must be the same for observers at different velocities, i.e. that physical laws be invariant under Lorentz transformations.
Two difficulties remained. Observationally, the Schrödinger equation underlying quantum mechanics could explain the stimulated emission of radiation from atoms, where an electron emits a new photon under the action of an external electromagnetic field, but it was unable to explain spontaneous emission, where an electron spontaneously decreases in energy and emits a photon even without the action of an external electromagnetic field. Theoretically, the Schrödinger equation could not describe photons and was inconsistent with the principles of special relativity—it treats time as an ordinary number while promoting spatial coordinates to linear operators.[6]
Quantum electrodynamics
[edit]Quantum field theory naturally began with the study of electromagnetic interactions, as the electromagnetic field was the only known classical field as of the 1920s.[8]: 1
Through the works of Born, Heisenberg, and Pascual Jordan in 1925–1926, a quantum theory of the free electromagnetic field (one with no interactions with matter) was developed via canonical quantization by treating the electromagnetic field as a set of quantum harmonic oscillators.[8]: 1 With the exclusion of interactions, however, such a theory was yet incapable of making quantitative predictions about the real world.[3]: 22
In his seminal 1927 paper The quantum theory of the emission and absorption of radiation, Dirac coined the term quantum electrodynamics (QED), a theory that adds upon the terms describing the free electromagnetic field an additional interaction term between electric current density and the electromagnetic vector potential. Using first-order perturbation theory, he successfully explained the phenomenon of spontaneous emission. According to the uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics, quantum harmonic oscillators cannot remain stationary, but they have a non-zero minimum energy and must always be oscillating, even in the lowest energy state (the ground state). Therefore, even in a perfect vacuum, there remains an oscillating electromagnetic field having zero-point energy. It is this quantum fluctuation of electromagnetic fields in the vacuum that "stimulates" the spontaneous emission of radiation by electrons in atoms. Dirac's theory was hugely successful in explaining both the emission and absorption of radiation by atoms; by applying second-order perturbation theory, it was able to account for the scattering of photons, resonance fluorescence and non-relativistic Compton scattering. Nonetheless, the application of higher-order perturbation theory was plagued with problematic infinities in calculations.[6]: 71
In 1928, Dirac wrote down a wave equation that described relativistic electrons: the Dirac equation. It had the following important consequences: the spin of an electron is 1/2; the electron g-factor is 2; it led to the correct Sommerfeld formula for the fine structure of the hydrogen atom; and it could be used to derive the Klein–Nishina formula for relativistic Compton scattering. Although the results were fruitful, the theory also apparently implied the existence of negative energy states, which would cause atoms to be unstable, since they could always decay to lower energy states by the emission of radiation.[6]: 71–72
The prevailing view at the time was that the world was composed of two very different ingredients: material particles (such as electrons) and quantum fields (such as photons). Material particles were considered to be eternal, with their physical state described by the probabilities of finding each particle in any given region of space or range of velocities. On the other hand, photons were considered merely the excited states of the underlying quantized electromagnetic field, and could be freely created or destroyed. It was between 1928 and 1930 that Jordan, Eugene Wigner, Heisenberg, Pauli, and Enrico Fermi discovered that material particles could also be seen as excited states of quantum fields. Just as photons are excited states of the quantized electromagnetic field, so each type of particle had its corresponding quantum field: an electron field, a proton field, etc. Given enough energy, it would now be possible to create material particles. Building on this idea, Fermi proposed in 1932 an explanation for beta decay known as Fermi's interaction. Atomic nuclei do not contain electrons per se, but in the process of decay, an electron is created out of the surrounding electron field, analogous to the photon created from the surrounding electromagnetic field in the radiative decay of an excited atom.[3]: 22–23
It was realized in 1929 by Dirac and others that negative energy states implied by the Dirac equation could be removed by assuming the existence of particles with the same mass as electrons but opposite electric charge. This not only ensured the stability of atoms, but it was also the first proposal of the existence of antimatter. Indeed, the evidence for positrons was discovered in 1932 by Carl David Anderson in cosmic rays. With enough energy, such as by absorbing a photon, an electron-positron pair could be created, a process called pair production; the reverse process, annihilation, could also occur with the emission of a photon. This showed that particle numbers need not be fixed during an interaction. Historically, however, positrons were at first thought of as "holes" in an infinite electron sea, rather than a new kind of particle, and this theory was referred to as the Dirac hole theory.[6]: 72 [3]: 23 QFT naturally incorporated antiparticles in its formalism.[3]: 24
Infinities and renormalization
[edit]Robert Oppenheimer showed in 1930 that higher-order perturbative calculations in QED always resulted in infinite quantities, such as the electron self-energy and the vacuum zero-point energy of the electron and photon fields,[6] suggesting that the computational methods at the time could not properly deal with interactions involving photons with extremely high momenta.[3]: 25 It was not until 20 years later that a systematic approach to remove such infinities was developed.
A series of papers was published between 1934 and 1938 by Ernst Stueckelberg that established a relativistically invariant formulation of QFT. In 1947, Stueckelberg also independently developed a complete renormalization procedure. Such achievements were not understood and recognized by the theoretical community.[6]
Faced with these infinities, John Archibald Wheeler and Heisenberg proposed, in 1937 and 1943 respectively, to supplant the problematic QFT with the so-called S-matrix theory. Since the specific details of microscopic interactions are inaccessible to observations, the theory should only attempt to describe the relationships between a small number of observables (e.g. the energy of an atom) in an interaction, rather than be concerned with the microscopic minutiae of the interaction. In 1945, Richard Feynman and Wheeler daringly suggested abandoning QFT altogether and proposed action-at-a-distance as the mechanism of particle interactions.[3]: 26
In 1947, Willis Lamb and Robert Retherford measured the minute difference in the 2S1/2 and 2P1/2 energy levels of the hydrogen atom, also called the Lamb shift. By ignoring the contribution of photons whose energy exceeds the electron mass, Hans Bethe successfully estimated the numerical value of the Lamb shift.[6][3]: 28 Subsequently, Norman Myles Kroll, Lamb, James Bruce French, and Victor Weisskopf again confirmed this value using an approach in which infinities cancelled other infinities to result in finite quantities. However, this method was clumsy and unreliable and could not be generalized to other calculations.[6]
The breakthrough eventually came around 1950 when a more robust method for eliminating infinities was developed by Julian Schwinger, Richard Feynman, Freeman Dyson, and Shinichiro Tomonaga. The main idea is to replace the calculated values of mass and charge, infinite though they may be, by their finite measured values. This systematic computational procedure is known as renormalization and can be applied to arbitrary order in perturbation theory.[6] As Tomonaga said in his Nobel lecture:
Since those parts of the modified mass and charge due to field reactions [become infinite], it is impossible to calculate them by the theory. However, the mass and charge observed in experiments are not the original mass and charge but the mass and charge as modified by field reactions, and they are finite. On the other hand, the mass and charge appearing in the theory are… the values modified by field reactions. Since this is so, and particularly since the theory is unable to calculate the modified mass and charge, we may adopt the procedure of substituting experimental values for them phenomenologically... This procedure is called the renormalization of mass and charge… After long, laborious calculations, less skillful than Schwinger's, we obtained a result... which was in agreement with [the] Americans'.[9]
By applying the renormalization procedure, calculations were finally made to explain the electron's anomalous magnetic moment (the deviation of the electron g-factor from 2) and vacuum polarization. These results agreed with experimental measurements to a remarkable degree, thus marking the end of a "war against infinities".[6]
At the same time, Feynman introduced the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics and Feynman diagrams.[8]: 2 The latter can be used to visually and intuitively organize and to help compute terms in the perturbative expansion. Each diagram can be interpreted as paths of particles in an interaction, with each vertex and line having a corresponding mathematical expression, and the product of these expressions gives the scattering amplitude of the interaction represented by the diagram.[1]: 5
It was with the invention of the renormalization procedure and Feynman diagrams that QFT finally arose as a complete theoretical framework.[8]: 2
Non-renormalizability
[edit]Given the tremendous success of QED, many theorists believed, in the few years after 1949, that QFT could soon provide an understanding of all microscopic phenomena, not only the interactions between photons, electrons, and positrons. Contrary to this optimism, QFT entered yet another period of depression that lasted for almost two decades.[3]: 30
The first obstacle was the limited applicability of the renormalization procedure. In perturbative calculations in QED, all infinite quantities could be eliminated by redefining a small (finite) number of physical quantities (namely the mass and charge of the electron). Dyson proved in 1949 that this is only possible for a small class of theories called "renormalizable theories", of which QED is an example. However, most theories, including the Fermi theory of the weak interaction, are "non-renormalizable". Any perturbative calculation in these theories beyond the first order would result in infinities that could not be removed by redefining a finite number of physical quantities.[3]: 30
The second major problem stemmed from the limited validity of the Feynman diagram method, which is based on a series expansion in perturbation theory. In order for the series to converge and low-order calculations to be a good approximation, the coupling constant, in which the series is expanded, must be a sufficiently small number. The coupling constant in QED is the fine-structure constant α ≈ 1/137, which is small enough that only the simplest, lowest order, Feynman diagrams need to be considered in realistic calculations. In contrast, the coupling constant in the strong interaction is roughly of the order of one, making complicated, higher order, Feynman diagrams just as important as simple ones. There was thus no way of deriving reliable quantitative predictions for the strong interaction using perturbative QFT methods.[3]: 31
With these difficulties looming, many theorists began to turn away from QFT. Some focused on symmetry principles and conservation laws, while others picked up the old S-matrix theory of Wheeler and Heisenberg. QFT was used heuristically as guiding principles, but not as a basis for quantitative calculations.[3]: 31
Source theory
[edit]Schwinger, however, took a different route. For more than a decade he and his students had been nearly the only exponents of field theory,[10]: 454 but in 1951[11][12] he found a way around the problem of the infinities with a new method using external sources as currents coupled to gauge fields.[13] Motivated by the former findings, Schwinger kept pursuing this approach in order to "quantumly" generalize the classical process of coupling external forces to the configuration space parameters known as Lagrange multipliers. He summarized his source theory in 1966[14] then expanded the theory's applications to quantum electrodynamics in his three volume-set titled: Particles, Sources, and Fields.[15][16][17] Developments in pion physics, in which the new viewpoint was most successfully applied, convinced him of the great advantages of mathematical simplicity and conceptual clarity that its use bestowed.[15]
In source theory there are no divergences, and no renormalization. It may be regarded as the calculational tool of field theory, but it is more general.[18] Using source theory, Schwinger was able to calculate the anomalous magnetic moment of the electron, which he had done in 1947, but this time with no ‘distracting remarks’ about infinite quantities.[10]: 467
Schwinger also applied source theory to his QFT theory of gravity, and was able to reproduce all four of Einstein's classic results: gravitational red shift, deflection and slowing of light by gravity, and the perihelion precession of Mercury.[19] The neglect of source theory by the physics community was a major disappointment for Schwinger:
The lack of appreciation of these facts by others was depressing, but understandable. -J. Schwinger[15]
See "the shoes incident" between J. Schwinger and S. Weinberg.[10]
Standard model
[edit]In 1954, Yang Chen-Ning and Robert Mills generalized the local symmetry of QED, leading to non-Abelian gauge theories (also known as Yang–Mills theories), which are based on more complicated local symmetry groups.[20]: 5 In QED, (electrically) charged particles interact via the exchange of photons, while in non-Abelian gauge theory, particles carrying a new type of "charge" interact via the exchange of massless gauge bosons. Unlike photons, these gauge bosons themselves carry charge.[3]: 32 [21]
Sheldon Glashow developed a non-Abelian gauge theory that unified the electromagnetic and weak interactions in 1960. In 1964, Abdus Salam and John Clive Ward arrived at the same theory through a different path. This theory, nevertheless, was non-renormalizable.[22]
Peter Higgs, Robert Brout, François Englert, Gerald Guralnik, Carl Hagen, and Tom Kibble proposed in their famous Physical Review Letters papers that the gauge symmetry in Yang–Mills theories could be broken by a mechanism called spontaneous symmetry breaking, through which originally massless gauge bosons could acquire mass.[20]: 5–6
By combining the earlier theory of Glashow, Salam, and Ward with the idea of spontaneous symmetry breaking, Steven Weinberg wrote down in 1967 a theory describing electroweak interactions between all leptons and the effects of the Higgs boson. His theory was at first mostly ignored,[22][20]: 6 until it was brought back to light in 1971 by Gerard 't Hooft's proof that non-Abelian gauge theories are renormalizable. The electroweak theory of Weinberg and Salam was extended from leptons to quarks in 1970 by Glashow, John Iliopoulos, and Luciano Maiani, marking its completion.[22]
Harald Fritzsch, Murray Gell-Mann, and Heinrich Leutwyler discovered in 1971 that certain phenomena involving the strong interaction could also be explained by non-Abelian gauge theory. Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) was born. In 1973, David Gross, Frank Wilczek, and Hugh David Politzer showed that non-Abelian gauge theories are "asymptotically free", meaning that under renormalization, the coupling constant of the strong interaction decreases as the interaction energy increases. (Similar discoveries had been made numerous times previously, but they had been largely ignored.) [20]: 11 Therefore, at least in high-energy interactions, the coupling constant in QCD becomes sufficiently small to warrant a perturbative series expansion, making quantitative predictions for the strong interaction possible.[3]: 32
These theoretical breakthroughs brought about a renaissance in QFT. The full theory, which includes the electroweak theory and chromodynamics, is referred to today as the Standard Model of elementary particles.[23] The Standard Model successfully describes all fundamental interactions except gravity, and its many predictions have been met with remarkable experimental confirmation in subsequent decades.[8]: 3 The Higgs boson, central to the mechanism of spontaneous symmetry breaking, was finally detected in 2012 at CERN, marking the complete verification of the existence of all constituents of the Standard Model.[24]
Other developments
[edit]The 1970s saw the development of non-perturbative methods in non-Abelian gauge theories. The 't Hooft–Polyakov monopole was discovered theoretically by 't Hooft and Alexander Polyakov, flux tubes by Holger Bech Nielsen and Poul Olesen, and instantons by Polyakov and coauthors. These objects are inaccessible through perturbation theory.[8]: 4
Supersymmetry also appeared in the same period. The first supersymmetric QFT in four dimensions was built by Yuri Golfand and Evgeny Likhtman in 1970, but their result failed to garner widespread interest due to the Iron Curtain. Supersymmetry only took off in the theoretical community after the work of Julius Wess and Bruno Zumino in 1973.[8]: 7
Among the four fundamental interactions, gravity remains the only one that lacks a consistent QFT description. Various attempts at a theory of quantum gravity led to the development of string theory,[8]: 6 itself a type of two-dimensional QFT with conformal symmetry.[25] Joël Scherk and John Schwarz first proposed in 1974 that string theory could be the quantum theory of gravity.[26]
Condensed-matter-physics
[edit]Although quantum field theory arose from the study of interactions between elementary particles, it has been successfully applied to other physical systems, particularly to many-body systems in condensed matter physics.
Historically, the Higgs mechanism of spontaneous symmetry breaking was a result of Yoichiro Nambu's application of superconductor theory to elementary particles, while the concept of renormalization came out of the study of second-order phase transitions in matter.[27]
Soon after the introduction of photons, Einstein performed the quantization procedure on vibrations in a crystal, leading to the first quasiparticle—phonons. Lev Landau claimed that low-energy excitations in many condensed matter systems could be described in terms of interactions between a set of quasiparticles. The Feynman diagram method of QFT was naturally well suited to the analysis of various phenomena in condensed matter systems.[28]
Gauge theory is used to describe the quantization of magnetic flux in superconductors, the resistivity in the quantum Hall effect, as well as the relation between frequency and voltage in the AC Josephson effect.[28]
Principles
[edit]For simplicity, natural units are used in the following sections, in which the reduced Planck constant ħ and the speed of light c are both set to one.
Classical fields
[edit]A classical field is a function of spatial and time coordinates.[29] Examples include the gravitational field in Newtonian gravity g(x, t) and the electric field E(x, t) and magnetic field B(x, t) in classical electromagnetism. A classical field can be thought of as a numerical quantity assigned to every point in space that changes in time. Hence, it has infinitely many degrees of freedom.[29][30]
Many phenomena exhibiting quantum mechanical properties cannot be explained by classical fields alone. Phenomena such as the photoelectric effect are best explained by discrete particles (photons), rather than a spatially continuous field. The goal of quantum field theory is to describe various quantum mechanical phenomena using a modified concept of fields.
Canonical quantization and path integrals are two common formulations of QFT.[31]: 61 To motivate the fundamentals of QFT, an overview of classical field theory follows.
The simplest classical field is a real scalar field — a real number at every point in space that changes in time. It is denoted as ϕ(x, t), where x is the position vector, and t is the time. Suppose the Lagrangian of the field, , is
where is the Lagrangian density, is the time-derivative of the field, ∇ is the gradient operator, and m is a real parameter (the "mass" of the field). Applying the Euler–Lagrange equation on the Lagrangian:[1]: 16
we obtain the equations of motion for the field, which describe the way it varies in time and space:
This is known as the Klein–Gordon equation.[1]: 17
The Klein–Gordon equation is a wave equation, so its solutions can be expressed as a sum of normal modes (obtained via Fourier transform) as follows:
where a is a complex number (normalized by convention), * denotes complex conjugation, and ωp is the frequency of the normal mode:
Thus each normal mode corresponding to a single p can be seen as a classical harmonic oscillator with frequency ωp.[1]: 21,26
Canonical quantization
[edit]The quantization procedure for the above classical field to a quantum operator field is analogous to the promotion of a classical harmonic oscillator to a quantum harmonic oscillator.
The displacement of a classical harmonic oscillator is described by
where a is a complex number (normalized by convention), and ω is the oscillator's frequency. Note that x is the displacement of a particle in simple harmonic motion from the equilibrium position, not to be confused with the spatial label x of a quantum field.
For a quantum harmonic oscillator, x(t) is promoted to a linear operator :
Complex numbers a and a* are replaced by the annihilation operator and the creation operator , respectively, where † denotes Hermitian conjugation. The commutation relation between the two is
The Hamiltonian of the simple harmonic oscillator can be written as
The vacuum state , which is the lowest energy state, is defined by
and has energy One can easily check that which implies that increases the energy of the simple harmonic oscillator by . For example, the state is an eigenstate of energy . Any energy eigenstate state of a single harmonic oscillator can be obtained from by successively applying the creation operator :[1]: 20 and any state of the system can be expressed as a linear combination of the states
A similar procedure can be applied to the real scalar field ϕ, by promoting it to a quantum field operator , while the annihilation operator , the creation operator and the angular frequency are now for a particular p:
Their commutation relations are:[1]: 21
where δ is the Dirac delta function. The vacuum state is defined by
Any quantum state of the field can be obtained from by successively applying creation operators (or by a linear combination of such states), e.g. [1]: 22
While the state space of a single quantum harmonic oscillator contains all the discrete energy states of one oscillating particle, the state space of a quantum field contains the discrete energy levels of an arbitrary number of particles. The latter space is known as a Fock space, which can account for the fact that particle numbers are not fixed in relativistic quantum systems.[32] The process of quantizing an arbitrary number of particles instead of a single particle is often also called second quantization.[1]: 19
The foregoing procedure is a direct application of non-relativistic quantum mechanics and can be used to quantize (complex) scalar fields, Dirac fields,[1]: 52 vector fields (e.g. the electromagnetic field), and even strings.[33] However, creation and annihilation operators are only well defined in the simplest theories that contain no interactions (so-called free theory). In the case of the real scalar field, the existence of these operators was a consequence of the decomposition of solutions of the classical equations of motion into a sum of normal modes. To perform calculations on any realistic interacting theory, perturbation theory would be necessary.
The Lagrangian of any quantum field in nature would contain interaction terms in addition to the free theory terms. For example, a quartic interaction term could be introduced to the Lagrangian of the real scalar field:[1]: 77
where μ is a spacetime index, , etc. The summation over the index μ has been omitted following the Einstein notation. If the parameter λ is sufficiently small, then the interacting theory described by the above Lagrangian can be considered as a small perturbation from the free theory.
Path integrals
[edit]The path integral formulation of QFT is concerned with the direct computation of the scattering amplitude of a certain interaction process, rather than the establishment of operators and state spaces. To calculate the probability amplitude for a system to evolve from some initial state at time t = 0 to some final state at t = T, the total time T is divided into N small intervals. The overall amplitude is the product of the amplitude of evolution within each interval, integrated over all intermediate states. Let H be the Hamiltonian (i.e. generator of time evolution), then[31]: 10
Taking the limit N → ∞, the above product of integrals becomes the Feynman path integral:[1]: 282 [31]: 12
where L is the Lagrangian involving ϕ and its derivatives with respect to spatial and time coordinates, obtained from the Hamiltonian H via Legendre transformation. The initial and final conditions of the path integral are respectively
In other words, the overall amplitude is the sum over the amplitude of every possible path between the initial and final states, where the amplitude of a path is given by the exponential in the integrand.
Two-point correlation function
[edit]In calculations, one often encounters expression likein the free or interacting theory, respectively. Here, and are position four-vectors, is the time ordering operator that shuffles its operands so the time-components and increase from right to left, and is the ground state (vacuum state) of the interacting theory, different from the free ground state . This expression represents the probability amplitude for the field to propagate from y to x, and goes by multiple names, like the two-point propagator, two-point correlation function, two-point Green's function or two-point function for short.[1]: 82
The free two-point function, also known as the Feynman propagator, can be found for the real scalar field by either canonical quantization or path integrals to be[1]: 31,288 [31]: 23
In an interacting theory, where the Lagrangian or Hamiltonian contains terms or that describe interactions, the two-point function is more difficult to define. However, through both the canonical quantization formulation and the path integral formulation, it is possible to express it through an infinite perturbation series of the free two-point function.
In canonical quantization, the two-point correlation function can be written as:[1]: 87
where ε is an infinitesimal number and ϕI is the field operator under the free theory. Here, the exponential should be understood as its power series expansion. For example, in -theory, the interacting term of the Hamiltonian is ,[1]: 84 and the expansion of the two-point correlator in terms of becomesThis perturbation expansion expresses the interacting two-point function in terms of quantities that are evaluated in the free theory.
In the path integral formulation, the two-point correlation function can be written[1]: 284
where is the Lagrangian density. As in the previous paragraph, the exponential can be expanded as a series in λ, reducing the interacting two-point function to quantities in the free theory.
Wick's theorem further reduce any n-point correlation function in the free theory to a sum of products of two-point correlation functions. For example,
Since interacting correlation functions can be expressed in terms of free correlation functions, only the latter need to be evaluated in order to calculate all physical quantities in the (perturbative) interacting theory.[1]: 90 This makes the Feynman propagator one of the most important quantities in quantum field theory.
Feynman diagram
[edit]Correlation functions in the interacting theory can be written as a perturbation series. Each term in the series is a product of Feynman propagators in the free theory and can be represented visually by a Feynman diagram. For example, the λ1 term in the two-point correlation function in the ϕ4 theory is
After applying Wick's theorem, one of the terms is
This term can instead be obtained from the Feynman diagram
The diagram consists of
- external vertices connected with one edge and represented by dots (here labeled and ).
- internal vertices connected with four edges and represented by dots (here labeled ).
- edges connecting the vertices and represented by lines.
Every vertex corresponds to a single field factor at the corresponding point in spacetime, while the edges correspond to the propagators between the spacetime points. The term in the perturbation series corresponding to the diagram is obtained by writing down the expression that follows from the so-called Feynman rules:
- For every internal vertex , write down a factor .
- For every edge that connects two vertices and , write down a factor .
- Divide by the symmetry factor of the diagram.
With the symmetry factor , following these rules yields exactly the expression above. By Fourier transforming the propagator, the Feynman rules can be reformulated from position space into momentum space.[1]: 91–94
In order to compute the n-point correlation function to the k-th order, list all valid Feynman diagrams with n external points and k or fewer vertices, and then use Feynman rules to obtain the expression for each term. To be precise,
is equal to the sum of (expressions corresponding to) all connected diagrams with n external points. (Connected diagrams are those in which every vertex is connected to an external point through lines. Components that are totally disconnected from external lines are sometimes called "vacuum bubbles".) In the ϕ4 interaction theory discussed above, every vertex must have four legs.[1]: 98
In realistic applications, the scattering amplitude of a certain interaction or the decay rate of a particle can be computed from the S-matrix, which itself can be found using the Feynman diagram method.[1]: 102–115
Feynman diagrams devoid of "loops" are called tree-level diagrams, which describe the lowest-order interaction processes; those containing n loops are referred to as n-loop diagrams, which describe higher-order contributions, or radiative corrections, to the interaction.[31]: 44 Lines whose end points are vertices can be thought of as the propagation of virtual particles.[1]: 31
Renormalization
[edit]Feynman rules can be used to directly evaluate tree-level diagrams. However, naïve computation of loop diagrams such as the one shown above will result in divergent momentum integrals, which seems to imply that almost all terms in the perturbative expansion are infinite. The renormalisation procedure is a systematic process for removing such infinities.
Parameters appearing in the Lagrangian, such as the mass m and the coupling constant λ, have no physical meaning — m, λ, and the field strength ϕ are not experimentally measurable quantities and are referred to here as the bare mass, bare coupling constant, and bare field, respectively. The physical mass and coupling constant are measured in some interaction process and are generally different from the bare quantities. While computing physical quantities from this interaction process, one may limit the domain of divergent momentum integrals to be below some momentum cut-off Λ, obtain expressions for the physical quantities, and then take the limit Λ → ∞. This is an example of regularization, a class of methods to treat divergences in QFT, with Λ being the regulator.
The approach illustrated above is called bare perturbation theory, as calculations involve only the bare quantities such as mass and coupling constant. A different approach, called renormalized perturbation theory, is to use physically meaningful quantities from the very beginning. In the case of ϕ4 theory, the field strength is first redefined:
where ϕ is the bare field, ϕr is the renormalized field, and Z is a constant to be determined. The Lagrangian density becomes:
where mr and λr are the experimentally measurable, renormalized, mass and coupling constant, respectively, and
are constants to be determined. The first three terms are the ϕ4 Lagrangian density written in terms of the renormalized quantities, while the latter three terms are referred to as "counterterms". As the Lagrangian now contains more terms, so the Feynman diagrams should include additional elements, each with their own Feynman rules. The procedure is outlined as follows. First select a regularization scheme (such as the cut-off regularization introduced above or dimensional regularization); call the regulator Λ. Compute Feynman diagrams, in which divergent terms will depend on Λ. Then, define δZ, δm, and δλ such that Feynman diagrams for the counterterms will exactly cancel the divergent terms in the normal Feynman diagrams when the limit Λ → ∞ is taken. In this way, meaningful finite quantities are obtained.[1]: 323–326
It is only possible to eliminate all infinities to obtain a finite result in renormalizable theories, whereas in non-renormalizable theories infinities cannot be removed by the redefinition of a small number of parameters. The Standard Model of elementary particles is a renormalizable QFT,[1]: 719–727 while quantum gravity is non-renormalizable.[1]: 798 [31]: 421
Renormalization group
[edit]The renormalization group, developed by Kenneth Wilson, is a mathematical apparatus used to study the changes in physical parameters (coefficients in the Lagrangian) as the system is viewed at different scales.[1]: 393 The way in which each parameter changes with scale is described by its β function.[1]: 417 Correlation functions, which underlie quantitative physical predictions, change with scale according to the Callan–Symanzik equation.[1]: 410–411
As an example, the coupling constant in QED, namely the elementary charge e, has the following β function:
where Λ is the energy scale under which the measurement of e is performed. This differential equation implies that the observed elementary charge increases as the scale increases.[34] The renormalized coupling constant, which changes with the energy scale, is also called the running coupling constant.[1]: 420
The coupling constant g in quantum chromodynamics, a non-Abelian gauge theory based on the symmetry group SU(3), has the following β function:
where Nf is the number of quark flavours. In the case where Nf ≤ 16 (the Standard Model has Nf = 6), the coupling constant g decreases as the energy scale increases. Hence, while the strong interaction is strong at low energies, it becomes very weak in high-energy interactions, a phenomenon known as asymptotic freedom.[1]: 531
Conformal field theories (CFTs) are special QFTs that admit conformal symmetry. They are insensitive to changes in the scale, as all their coupling constants have vanishing β function. (The converse is not true, however — the vanishing of all β functions does not imply conformal symmetry of the theory.)[35] Examples include string theory[25] and N = 4 supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory.[36]
According to Wilson's picture, every QFT is fundamentally accompanied by its energy cut-off Λ, i.e. that the theory is no longer valid at energies higher than Λ, and all degrees of freedom above the scale Λ are to be omitted. For example, the cut-off could be the inverse of the atomic spacing in a condensed matter system, and in elementary particle physics it could be associated with the fundamental "graininess" of spacetime caused by quantum fluctuations in gravity. The cut-off scale of theories of particle interactions lies far beyond current experiments. Even if the theory were very complicated at that scale, as long as its couplings are sufficiently weak, it must be described at low energies by a renormalizable effective field theory.[1]: 402–403 The difference between renormalizable and non-renormalizable theories is that the former are insensitive to details at high energies, whereas the latter do depend on them.[8]: 2 According to this view, non-renormalizable theories are to be seen as low-energy effective theories of a more fundamental theory. The failure to remove the cut-off Λ from calculations in such a theory merely indicates that new physical phenomena appear at scales above Λ, where a new theory is necessary.[31]: 156
Other theories
[edit]The quantization and renormalization procedures outlined in the preceding sections are performed for the free theory and ϕ4 theory of the real scalar field. A similar process can be done for other types of fields, including the complex scalar field, the vector field, and the Dirac field, as well as other types of interaction terms, including the electromagnetic interaction and the Yukawa interaction.
As an example, quantum electrodynamics contains a Dirac field ψ representing the electron field and a vector field Aμ representing the electromagnetic field (photon field). (Despite its name, the quantum electromagnetic "field" actually corresponds to the classical electromagnetic four-potential, rather than the classical electric and magnetic fields.) The full QED Lagrangian density is:
where γμ are Dirac matrices, , and is the electromagnetic field strength. The parameters in this theory are the (bare) electron mass m and the (bare) elementary charge e. The first and second terms in the Lagrangian density correspond to the free Dirac field and free vector fields, respectively. The last term describes the interaction between the electron and photon fields, which is treated as a perturbation from the free theories.[1]: 78
Shown above is an example of a tree-level Feynman diagram in QED. It describes an electron and a positron annihilating, creating an off-shell photon, and then decaying into a new pair of electron and positron. Time runs from left to right. Arrows pointing forward in time represent the propagation of electrons, while those pointing backward in time represent the propagation of positrons. A wavy line represents the propagation of a photon. Each vertex in QED Feynman diagrams must have an incoming and an outgoing fermion (positron/electron) leg as well as a photon leg.
Gauge symmetry
[edit]If the following transformation to the fields is performed at every spacetime point x (a local transformation), then the QED Lagrangian remains unchanged, or invariant:
where α(x) is any function of spacetime coordinates. If a theory's Lagrangian (or more precisely the action) is invariant under a certain local transformation, then the transformation is referred to as a gauge symmetry of the theory.[1]: 482–483 Gauge symmetries form a group at every spacetime point. In the case of QED, the successive application of two different local symmetry transformations and is yet another symmetry transformation . For any α(x), is an element of the U(1) group, thus QED is said to have U(1) gauge symmetry.[1]: 496 The photon field Aμ may be referred to as the U(1) gauge boson.
U(1) is an Abelian group, meaning that the result is the same regardless of the order in which its elements are applied. QFTs can also be built on non-Abelian groups, giving rise to non-Abelian gauge theories (also known as Yang–Mills theories).[1]: 489 Quantum chromodynamics, which describes the strong interaction, is a non-Abelian gauge theory with an SU(3) gauge symmetry. It contains three Dirac fields ψi, i = 1,2,3 representing quark fields as well as eight vector fields Aa,μ, a = 1,...,8 representing gluon fields, which are the SU(3) gauge bosons.[1]: 547 The QCD Lagrangian density is:[1]: 490–491
where Dμ is the gauge covariant derivative:
where g is the coupling constant, ta are the eight generators of SU(3) in the fundamental representation (3×3 matrices),
and fabc are the structure constants of SU(3). Repeated indices i,j,a are implicitly summed over following Einstein notation. This Lagrangian is invariant under the transformation:
where U(x) is an element of SU(3) at every spacetime point x:
The preceding discussion of symmetries is on the level of the Lagrangian. In other words, these are "classical" symmetries. After quantization, some theories will no longer exhibit their classical symmetries, a phenomenon called anomaly. For instance, in the path integral formulation, despite the invariance of the Lagrangian density under a certain local transformation of the fields, the measure of the path integral may change.[31]: 243 For a theory describing nature to be consistent, it must not contain any anomaly in its gauge symmetry. The Standard Model of elementary particles is a gauge theory based on the group SU(3) × SU(2) × U(1), in which all anomalies exactly cancel.[1]: 705–707
The theoretical foundation of general relativity, the equivalence principle, can also be understood as a form of gauge symmetry, making general relativity a gauge theory based on the Lorentz group.[37]
Noether's theorem states that every continuous symmetry, i.e. the parameter in the symmetry transformation being continuous rather than discrete, leads to a corresponding conservation law.[1]: 17–18 [31]: 73 For example, the U(1) symmetry of QED implies charge conservation.[38]
Gauge-transformations do not relate distinct quantum states. Rather, it relates two equivalent mathematical descriptions of the same quantum state. As an example, the photon field Aμ, being a four-vector, has four apparent degrees of freedom, but the actual state of a photon is described by its two degrees of freedom corresponding to the polarization. The remaining two degrees of freedom are said to be "redundant" — apparently different ways of writing Aμ can be related to each other by a gauge transformation and in fact describe the same state of the photon field. In this sense, gauge invariance is not a "real" symmetry, but a reflection of the "redundancy" of the chosen mathematical description.[31]: 168
To account for the gauge redundancy in the path integral formulation, one must perform the so-called Faddeev–Popov gauge fixing procedure. In non-Abelian gauge theories, such a procedure introduces new fields called "ghosts". Particles corresponding to the ghost fields are called ghost particles, which cannot be detected externally.[1]: 512–515 A more rigorous generalization of the Faddeev–Popov procedure is given by BRST quantization.[1]: 517
Spontaneous symmetry-breaking
[edit]Spontaneous symmetry breaking is a mechanism whereby the symmetry of the Lagrangian is violated by the system described by it.[1]: 347
To illustrate the mechanism, consider a linear sigma model containing N real scalar fields, described by the Lagrangian density:
where μ and λ are real parameters. The theory admits an O(N) global symmetry:
The lowest energy state (ground state or vacuum state) of the classical theory is any uniform field ϕ0 satisfying
Without loss of generality, let the ground state be in the N-th direction:
The original N fields can be rewritten as:
and the original Lagrangian density as:
where k = 1, ..., N − 1. The original O(N) global symmetry is no longer manifest, leaving only the subgroup O(N − 1). The larger symmetry before spontaneous symmetry breaking is said to be "hidden" or spontaneously broken.[1]: 349–350
Goldstone's theorem states that under spontaneous symmetry breaking, every broken continuous global symmetry leads to a massless field called the Goldstone boson. In the above example, O(N) has N(N − 1)/2 continuous symmetries (the dimension of its Lie algebra), while O(N − 1) has (N − 1)(N − 2)/2. The number of broken symmetries is their difference, N − 1, which corresponds to the N − 1 massless fields πk.[1]: 351
On the other hand, when a gauge (as opposed to global) symmetry is spontaneously broken, the resulting Goldstone boson is "eaten" by the corresponding gauge boson by becoming an additional degree of freedom for the gauge boson. The Goldstone boson equivalence theorem states that at high energy, the amplitude for emission or absorption of a longitudinally polarized massive gauge boson becomes equal to the amplitude for emission or absorption of the Goldstone boson that was eaten by the gauge boson.[1]: 743–744
In the QFT of ferromagnetism, spontaneous symmetry breaking can explain the alignment of magnetic dipoles at low temperatures.[31]: 199 In the Standard Model of elementary particles, the W and Z bosons, which would otherwise be massless as a result of gauge symmetry, acquire mass through spontaneous symmetry breaking of the Higgs boson, a process called the Higgs mechanism.[1]: 690
Supersymmetry
[edit]All experimentally known symmetries in nature relate bosons to bosons and fermions to fermions. Theorists have hypothesized the existence of a type of symmetry, called supersymmetry, that relates bosons and fermions.[1]: 795 [31]: 443
The Standard Model obeys Poincaré symmetry, whose generators are the spacetime translations Pμ and the Lorentz transformations Jμν.[39]: 58–60 In addition to these generators, supersymmetry in (3+1)-dimensions includes additional generators Qα, called supercharges, which themselves transform as Weyl fermions.[1]: 795 [31]: 444 The symmetry group generated by all these generators is known as the super-Poincaré group. In general there can be more than one set of supersymmetry generators, QαI, I = 1, ..., N, which generate the corresponding N = 1 supersymmetry, N = 2 supersymmetry, and so on.[1]: 795 [31]: 450 Supersymmetry can also be constructed in other dimensions,[40] most notably in (1+1) dimensions for its application in superstring theory.[41]
The Lagrangian of a supersymmetric theory must be invariant under the action of the super-Poincaré group.[31]: 448 Examples of such theories include: Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM), N = 4 supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory,[31]: 450 and superstring theory. In a supersymmetric theory, every fermion has a bosonic superpartner and vice versa.[31]: 444
If supersymmetry is promoted to a local symmetry, then the resultant gauge theory is an extension of general relativity called supergravity.[42]
Supersymmetry is a potential solution to many current problems in physics. For example, the hierarchy problem of the Standard Model—why the mass of the Higgs boson is not radiatively corrected (under renormalization) to a very high scale such as the grand unified scale or the Planck scale—can be resolved by relating the Higgs field and its super-partner, the Higgsino. Radiative corrections due to Higgs boson loops in Feynman diagrams are cancelled by corresponding Higgsino loops. Supersymmetry also offers answers to the grand unification of all gauge coupling constants in the Standard Model as well as the nature of dark matter.[1]: 796–797 [43]
Nevertheless, experiments have yet to provide evidence for the existence of supersymmetric particles. If supersymmetry were a true symmetry of nature, then it must be a broken symmetry, and the energy of symmetry breaking must be higher than those achievable by present-day experiments.[1]: 797 [31]: 443
Other spacetimes
[edit]The ϕ4 theory, QED, QCD, as well as the whole Standard Model all assume a (3+1)-dimensional Minkowski space (3 spatial and 1 time dimensions) as the background on which the quantum fields are defined. However, QFT a priori imposes no restriction on the number of dimensions nor the geometry of spacetime.
In condensed matter physics, QFT is used to describe (2+1)-dimensional electron gases.[44] In high-energy physics, string theory is a type of (1+1)-dimensional QFT,[31]: 452 [25] while Kaluza–Klein theory uses gravity in extra dimensions to produce gauge theories in lower dimensions.[31]: 428–429
In Minkowski space, the flat metric ημν is used to raise and lower spacetime indices in the Lagrangian, e.g.
where ημν is the inverse of ημν satisfying ημρηρν = δμν. For QFTs in curved spacetime on the other hand, a general metric (such as the Schwarzschild metric describing a black hole) is used:
where gμν is the inverse of gμν. For a real scalar field, the Lagrangian density in a general spacetime background is
where g = det(gμν), and ∇μ denotes the covariant derivative.[45] The Lagrangian of a QFT, hence its calculational results and physical predictions, depends on the geometry of the spacetime background.
Topological quantum field theory
[edit]The correlation functions and physical predictions of a QFT depend on the spacetime metric gμν. For a special class of QFTs called topological quantum field theories (TQFTs), all correlation functions are independent of continuous changes in the spacetime metric.[46]: 36 QFTs in curved spacetime generally change according to the geometry (local structure) of the spacetime background, while TQFTs are invariant under spacetime diffeomorphisms but are sensitive to the topology (global structure) of spacetime. This means that all calculational results of TQFTs are topological invariants of the underlying spacetime. Chern–Simons theory is an example of TQFT and has been used to construct models of quantum gravity.[47] Applications of TQFT include the fractional quantum Hall effect and topological quantum computers.[48]: 1–5 The world line trajectory of fractionalized particles (known as anyons) can form a link configuration in the spacetime,[49] which relates the braiding statistics of anyons in physics to the link invariants in mathematics. Topological quantum field theories (TQFTs) applicable to the frontier research of topological quantum matters include Chern-Simons-Witten gauge theories in 2+1 spacetime dimensions, other new exotic TQFTs in 3+1 spacetime dimensions and beyond.[50]
Perturbative and non-perturbative methods
[edit]Using perturbation theory, the total effect of a small interaction term can be approximated order by order by a series expansion in the number of virtual particles participating in the interaction. Every term in the expansion may be understood as one possible way for (physical) particles to interact with each other via virtual particles, expressed visually using a Feynman diagram. The electromagnetic force between two electrons in QED is represented (to first order in perturbation theory) by the propagation of a virtual photon. In a similar manner, the W and Z bosons carry the weak interaction, while gluons carry the strong interaction. The interpretation of an interaction as a sum of intermediate states involving the exchange of various virtual particles only makes sense in the framework of perturbation theory. In contrast, non-perturbative methods in QFT treat the interacting Lagrangian as a whole without any series expansion. Instead of particles that carry interactions, these methods have spawned such concepts as 't Hooft–Polyakov monopole, domain wall, flux tube, and instanton.[8] Examples of QFTs that are completely solvable non-perturbatively include minimal models of conformal field theory[51] and the Thirring model.[52]
Mathematical rigor
[edit]In spite of its overwhelming success in particle physics and condensed matter physics, QFT itself lacks a formal mathematical foundation. For example, according to Haag's theorem, there does not exist a well-defined interaction picture for QFT, which implies that perturbation theory of QFT, which underlies the entire Feynman diagram method, is fundamentally ill-defined.[53]
However, perturbative quantum field theory, which only requires that quantities be computable as a formal power series without any convergence requirements, can be given a rigorous mathematical treatment. In particular, Kevin Costello's monograph Renormalization and Effective Field Theory[54] provides a rigorous formulation of perturbative renormalization that combines both the effective-field theory approaches of Kadanoff, Wilson, and Polchinski, together with the Batalin-Vilkovisky approach to quantizing gauge theories. Furthermore, perturbative path-integral methods, typically understood as formal computational methods inspired from finite-dimensional integration theory,[55] can be given a sound mathematical interpretation from their finite-dimensional analogues.[56]
Since the 1950s,[57] theoretical physicists and mathematicians have attempted to organize all QFTs into a set of axioms, in order to establish the existence of concrete models of relativistic QFT in a mathematically rigorous way and to study their properties. This line of study is called constructive quantum field theory, a subfield of mathematical physics,[58]: 2 which has led to such results as CPT theorem, spin–statistics theorem, and Goldstone's theorem,[57] and also to mathematically rigorous constructions of many interacting QFTs in two and three spacetime dimensions, e.g. two-dimensional scalar field theories with arbitrary polynomial interactions,[59] the three-dimensional scalar field theories with a quartic interaction, etc.[60]
Compared to ordinary QFT, topological quantum field theory and conformal field theory are better supported mathematically — both can be classified in the framework of representations of cobordisms.[61]
Algebraic quantum field theory is another approach to the axiomatization of QFT, in which the fundamental objects are local operators and the algebraic relations between them. Axiomatic systems following this approach include Wightman axioms and Haag–Kastler axioms.[58]: 2–3 One way to construct theories satisfying Wightman axioms is to use Osterwalder–Schrader axioms, which give the necessary and sufficient conditions for a real time theory to be obtained from an imaginary time theory by analytic continuation (Wick rotation).[58]: 10
Yang–Mills existence and mass gap, one of the Millennium Prize Problems, concerns the well-defined existence of Yang–Mills theories as set out by the above axioms. The full problem statement is as follows.[62]
Prove that for any compact simple gauge group G, a non-trivial quantum Yang–Mills theory exists on and has a mass gap Δ > 0. Existence includes establishing axiomatic properties at least as strong as those cited in Streater & Wightman (1964), Osterwalder & Schrader (1973) and Osterwalder & Schrader (1975).
See also
[edit]- Abraham–Lorentz force
- AdS/CFT correspondence
- Axiomatic quantum field theory
- Introduction to quantum mechanics
- Common integrals in quantum field theory
- Conformal field theory
- Constructive quantum field theory
- Dirac's equation
- Form factor (quantum field theory)
- Feynman diagram
- Green–Kubo relations
- Green's function (many-body theory)
- Group field theory
- Lattice field theory
- List of quantum field theories
- Local quantum field theory
- Maximally helicity violating amplitudes
- Noncommutative quantum field theory
- Quantization of a field
- Quantum electrodynamics
- Quantum field theory in curved spacetime
- Quantum chromodynamics
- Quantum flavordynamics
- Quantum hadrodynamics
- Quantum hydrodynamics
- Quantum triviality
- Relation between Schrödinger's equation and the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics
- Relationship between string theory and quantum field theory
- Schwinger–Dyson equation
- Static forces and virtual-particle exchange
- Symmetry in quantum mechanics
- Topological quantum field theory
- Ward–Takahashi identity
- Wheeler–Feynman absorber theory
- Wigner's classification
- Wigner's theorem
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- Bibliography
- Streater, R.; Wightman, A. (1964). PCT, Spin and Statistics and all That. W. A. Benjamin.
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Further reading
[edit]- General readers
- Pais, A. (1994) [1986]. Inward Bound: Of Matter and Forces in the Physical World (reprint ed.). Oxford, New York, Toronto: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198519973.
- Schweber, S. S. (1994). QED and the Men Who Made It: Dyson, Feynman, Schwinger, and Tomonaga. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691033273.
- Feynman, R.P. (2001) [1964]. The Character of Physical Law. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-56003-0.
- Feynman, R.P. (2006) [1985]. QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-12575-6.
- Gribbin, J. (1998). Q is for Quantum: Particle Physics from A to Z. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-81752-9.
- Introductory text
- Kaku Michio (1993). Quantum Field Theory. Oxford University Press ISBN 0-19-509158-2.
- McMahon, D. (2008). Quantum Field Theory. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-154382-8.
- Bogolyubov, N.; Shirkov, D. (1982). Quantum Fields. Benjamin Cummings. ISBN 978-0-8053-0983-6.
- Frampton, P.H. (2000). Gauge Field Theories. Frontiers in Physics (2nd ed.). Wiley.; Frampton, Paul H. (22 September 2008). 2008, 3rd edition. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-3527408351.
- Greiner, W.; Müller, B. (2000). Gauge Theory of Weak Interactions. Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-67672-0.
- Itzykson, C.; Zuber, J.-B. (1980). Quantum Field Theory. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-032071-0.
- Kane, G.L. (1987). Modern Elementary Particle Physics. Perseus Group. ISBN 978-0-201-11749-3.
- Kleinert, H.; Schulte-Frohlinde, Verena (2001). Critical Properties of φ4-Theories. World Scientific. ISBN 978-981-02-4658-7.
- Kleinert, H. (2008). Multivalued Fields in Condensed Matter, Electrodynamics, and Gravitation (PDF). World Scientific. ISBN 978-981-279-170-2.
- Lancaster, Tom; Blundell, Stephen (2014). Quantum field theory for the gifted amateur. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-969933-9. OCLC 859651399.
- Loudon, R. (1983). The Quantum Theory of Light. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-851155-7.
- Mandl, F.; Shaw, G. (1993). Quantum Field Theory. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-94186-6.
- Ryder, L.H. (1985). Quantum Field Theory. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-33859-2.
- Schwartz, M.D. (2014). Quantum Field Theory and the Standard Model. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107034730. Archived from the original on 2018-03-22. Retrieved 2020-05-13.
- Ynduráin, F.J. (1996). Relativistic Quantum Mechanics and Introduction to Field Theory (1st ed.). Springer. Bibcode:1996rqmi.book.....Y. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-61057-8. ISBN 978-3-540-60453-2.
- Greiner, W.; Reinhardt, J. (1996). Field Quantization. Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-59179-5.
- Peskin, M.; Schroeder, D. (1995). An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory. Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-201-50397-5.
- Scharf, Günter (2014) [1989]. Finite Quantum Electrodynamics: The Causal Approach (third ed.). Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0486492735.
- Srednicki, M. (2007). Quantum Field Theory. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521-8644-97.
- Tong, David (2015). "Lectures on Quantum Field Theory". Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- Williams, A.G. (2022). Introduction to Quantum Field Theory: Classical Mechanics to Gauge Field Theories. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1108470902.
- Zee, Anthony (2010). Quantum Field Theory in a Nutshell (2nd ed.). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691140346.
- Advanced texts
- Heitler, W. (1953). The Quantum Theory of Radiation. Dover Publications, Inc. ISBN 0-486-64558-4.
- Umezawa, H. (1956) Quantum Field Theory. North Holland Puplishing.
- Barton, G. (1963). Introduction to Advanced Field Theory. Intescience Publishers.
- Brown, Lowell S. (1994). Quantum Field Theory. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-46946-3.
- Bogoliubov, N.; Logunov, A.A.; Oksak, A.I.; Todorov, I.T. (1990). General Principles of Quantum Field Theory. Kluwer Academic Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7923-0540-8.
- Weinberg, S. (1995). The Quantum Theory of Fields. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521550017.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Quantum field theory at Wikimedia Commons
- "Quantum field theory", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: "Quantum Field Theory", by Meinard Kuhlmann.
- Siegel, Warren, 2005. Fields. arXiv:hep-th/9912205.
- Quantum Field Theory by P. J. Mulders