Questions tagged [quantum-electrodynamics]

Quantum electrodynamics (QED) is the quantum field theory believed to describe electromagnetic interaction. It is the simplest example of a quantum gauge theory, where the gauge group is abelian, U(1).

In QED, electrically charged particles are coupled by an uncharged, massless vector boson called the photon. The former are described by means of a fermionic spinor field $\psi$, and the latter by a bosonic vector (gauge) field $A$. The classical Lagrangian is postulated to be $$ \mathcal L=\bar\psi(i\not D-m)\psi+\frac{1}{4e^2}F^2 $$ where $D\equiv\partial-iA$ is the so-called gauge covariant derivative and $F\equiv \mathrm dA$ is the so-called field strength tensor. The quantum Lagrangian requires several modifications, such as fixing the gauge and introducing renormalisation constants. Once this is done, one may read off from $\mathcal L$ the Feynman rules of the theory, which are enough to calculate any prediction to an arbitrary order in perturbation theory.

By adding three additional, massive vector bosons (the $Z^0$ and $W^{\pm}$) which couple to the weak hyper-charge ($T_3 - q \ \sin^2 \theta_W$ in which $q$ is electric charge and $T_3$ is the third component of the weak isospin), the theory can be extended to cover the weak nuclear force as well.

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how is shown that photon speed is constant using QED?

In Feynman's simple QED book he talks about the probability amplitude P(A to B) ,where A and B are events in spacetime, and he says that it depends of the spacetime interval but he didn't put the expression. I would like to know what expression was…
Anthonny
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Vanishing of photon one-point function in QED

I would like to know why the photon one-point function vanishes in QED. I am aware that any $n$-point functions vanishes for odd $n$ because of 'charge-conjugate" argument, this does not apply to $n=1$ case. Here I want to know how to see the…
Muon
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Is there Pair production in between charged plates

In classical electromagnetic theory, If parallel plates are charged oppositely and placed close to each other, there will be no charge will not flow from one plate to another. How does this situation change if one considers Quantum electrodynamics?…
Prathyush
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Where is the velocity term in Dirac current hiding?

The dirac current is $$J^\mu = \bar{\psi}\gamma^\mu \psi $$ It looks weird at first because there is no derivative in the expression. So the velocity must be hidden somewhere in either $\gamma$ or $\psi$. (argument for $\gamma$) From Gordon…
pcr
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Calculating the ionization rate

here is a kind of silly question: in quantumn physics, we assume that the charge is reserved. So if we use a laser, which is strong enough to make ionization happen, to shot at the system, how can we calculate the decreasing rate of the electrons?…
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Derive vacuum polarization and magnetization

How does one derive these equations for vacuum polarization and magnetization? $\vec P = \frac{2 \epsilon_0 \alpha}{E_\text{c}^2} \bigg ( 2 ( E^2 - c^2 B^2) \vec E + 7 c^2 (\vec E \cdot \vec B) \vec B\bigg )$ $\vec M = - \frac{2 \alpha}{\mu_0…
Some Student
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QED: Would atoms without electrons be visible?

I have been reading a lot of QED books lately, and understand (as well as possible anyway) the interaction between electrons and photons. But I can't seem to get a clear indication of the interaction between photons and protons. It seems that normal…
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Is there a mixed field-particle representation of QED?

In QFT, we can write the amplitude for a field to be in configuration $A_{in}(x)$ at time $0$ and end in configuration $A_{out}(x)$ as $K_t[A_{in},A_{out}]$, for example. Alternatively we could expand this in terms of photons and calculate the…
user84158
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Eliminating longitudinal photons

In Feynman's paper "Mathematical Formulation of the Quantum Theory of Electromagnetic Interaction" he writes that the semiclassical Coulomb interaction can be written by eliminating longitudinal photons. I believe this was done by Fermi and Bethe in…
Ian
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Mixed electron-photon Fock state contribution to Lamb shift

In QED, on general grounds one can expect that there are mixed electron-photon Fock components contributing to the Lamb shift at 2 loops and beyond—i.e. states of the form $a^{\dagger} c^{\dagger} |0\rangle$ where $a^{\dagger}$ is the creation…
0x11111
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In QED, how do charged particles scatter without emitting a photon?

Classical electrodynamics states that every accelerating charge emits radiation. Contrary to that, when studying QED most of us have computed scattering processes involving 2 incoming and outgoing charged particles (e-e, e-p,..). In such processes…
Amit
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A question on Feynman's book "QED- the strange theory of light and matter" - on the junction number $j$

On page 91 in the Penguin edition, in the chapter "Electrons and Their Interactions", Feynman writes: There is no complicated formula for an electron to emit or absorb a photon: it doesn't depend on anything - it's just a number! The junction…
frauke
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What does a one-photon state look like as a wave functional?

According to a post on a mailing list here: https://groups.google.com/d/msg/sci.physics.research/n7Ao7N9aeq0/wqgj20-jBQAJ In general, quatum states |Psi> of the electromagnetic field, no matter if free radiation field or interacting field, can…
Brian Bi
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How are (semi-) static fields treated quantum-mechanically?

I am trying to understand a seemingly paradoxical assertion in this answer which argues that the magnetic field of an inductor corresponds to virtual photons because there is no net momentum associated with the field. At least that logic is at odds…
user73762
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Is the QED description of an electron/photon complete?

Is it possible that a future theory would add more information and understanding about electrons, photons etc., or is QED the best we can do?
11dim
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