Infraparticle
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

An infraparticle is an electrically charged particle and its surrounding cloud of
soft photon In particle physics, soft photons are photons having photon energies much smaller than the energies of the particles participating in a particular scattering process, and they are not energetic enough to be detected. Such photons can be emitted ...
s—of which there are infinite number, by virtue of the infrared divergence of quantum electrodynamics. That is, it is a dressed particle rather than a
bare particle In theoretical physics, a bare particle is an excitation of an elementary quantum field. Such a particle is not identical to the particles observed in experiments: the real particles are dressed particle In theoretical physics, the term dressed ...
. Whenever electric charges accelerate they emit Bremsstrahlung radiation, whereby an infinite number of the virtual soft photons become real particles. However, only a finite number of these photons are detectable, the remainder falling below the measurement threshold. The form of the electric field at infinity, which is determined by the velocity of a point charge, defines superselection sectors for the particle's
Hilbert space In mathematics, Hilbert spaces (named after David Hilbert) allow generalizing the methods of linear algebra and calculus from (finite-dimensional) Euclidean vector spaces to spaces that may be infinite-dimensional. Hilbert spaces arise natural ...
. This is unlike the usual Fock space description, where the Hilbert space includes particle states with different velocities. Because of their infraparticle properties, charged particles do not have a sharp delta function density of states like an ordinary particle, but instead the density of states rises like an inverse power at the mass of the particle. This collection of states which are very close in mass to m consist of the particle together with low-energy excitation of the electromagnetic field.


Noether's theorem for gauge transformations

In electrodynamics and quantum electrodynamics, in addition to the global U(1) symmetry related to the electric charge, there are also position dependent gauge transformations. Noether's theorem states that for every infinitesimal symmetry transformation that is local (local in the sense that the transformed value of a field at a given point only depends on the field configuration in an arbitrarily small neighborhood of that point), there is a corresponding conserved charge called the Noether charge, which is the space integral of a Noether density (assuming the integral converges and there is a
Noether current Noether's theorem or Noether's first theorem states that every differentiable symmetry of the action of a physical system with conservative forces has a corresponding conservation law. The theorem was proven by mathematician Emmy Noether in ...
satisfying the
continuity equation A continuity equation or transport equation is an equation that describes the transport of some quantity. It is particularly simple and powerful when applied to a conserved quantity, but it can be generalized to apply to any extensive quantity. S ...
). If this is applied to the global U(1) symmetry, the result :Q=\int d^3x \rho(\vec) (over all of space) is the conserved charge where ρ is the charge density. As long as the surface integral :\oint_ \vec\cdot d\vec at the boundary at spatial infinity is zero, which is satisfied if the
current density In electromagnetism, current density is the amount of charge per unit time that flows through a unit area of a chosen cross section. The current density vector is defined as a vector whose magnitude is the electric current per cross-sectional ar ...
J falls off sufficiently fast, the quantity ''Q'' is conserved. This is nothing other than the familiar electric charge. But what if there is a position-dependent (but not time-dependent) infinitesimal gauge transformation \delta \psi(\vec)=iq\alpha(\vec)\psi(\vec) where α is some function of position? The Noether charge is now :\int d^3x \left alpha(\vec)\rho(\vec)+\epsilon_0 \vec(\vec)\cdot \nabla\alpha(\vec)\right/math> where \vec is the
electric field An electric field (sometimes E-field) is the physical field that surrounds electrically charged particles and exerts force on all other charged particles in the field, either attracting or repelling them. It also refers to the physical field fo ...
. Using integration by parts, :\epsilon_0\oint_ \alpha \vec\cdot d\vec + \int d^3x \alpha\left rho-\epsilon_0 \nabla\cdot \vec\right This assumes that the state in question approaches the vacuum asymptotically at spatial infinity. The first integral is the surface integral at spatial infinity and the second integral is zero by the
Gauss law In physics and electromagnetism, Gauss's law, also known as Gauss's flux theorem, (or sometimes simply called Gauss's theorem) is a law relating the distribution of electric charge to the resulting electric field. In its integral form, it sta ...
. Also assume that ''α''(''r'',''θ'',''φ'') approaches ''α''(''θ'',''φ'') as ''r'' approaches infinity (in polar coordinates). Then, the Noether charge only depends upon the value of α at spatial infinity but not upon the value of ''α'' at finite values. This is consistent with the idea that symmetry transformations not affecting the boundaries are gauge symmetries whereas those that do are global symmetries. If ''α''(''θ'',''φ'') = 1 all over the ''S''2, we get the electric charge. But for other functions, we also get conserved charges (which are not so well known). This conclusion holds both in classical electrodynamics as well as in quantum electrodynamics. If α is taken as the spherical harmonics, conserved scalar charges (the electric charge) are seen as well as conserved vector charges and conserved tensor charges. This is not a violation of the Coleman–Mandula theorem as there is no mass gap. In particular, for each direction (a fixed ''θ'' and ''φ''), the quantity :\lim_\epsilon_0 r^2 E_r(r,\theta,\phi) is a
c-number The term Number C (or C number) is an old nomenclature used by Paul Dirac which refers to real and complex numbers. It is used to distinguish from operators (q-numbers or quantum numbers) in quantum mechanics. Although c-numbers are commuting ...
and a conserved quantity. Using the result that states with different charges exist in different
superselection sector In quantum mechanics, superselection extends the concept of selection rules. Superselection rules are postulated rules forbidding the preparation of quantum states that exhibit coherence between eigenstates of certain observables. It was originall ...
s, the conclusion that states with the same electric charge but different values for the directional charges lie in different superselection sectors. Even though this result is expressed in terms of a particular spherical coordinates with a given origin, translations changing the origin do not affect spatial infinity.


Implication for particle behavior

The directional charges are different for an electron that has always been at rest and an electron that has always been moving at a certain nonzero velocity (because of the Lorentz transformations). The conclusion is that both electrons lie in different superselection sectors no matter how tiny the velocity is. At first sight, this might appear to be in contradiction with Wigner's classification, which implies that the whole one-particle
Hilbert space In mathematics, Hilbert spaces (named after David Hilbert) allow generalizing the methods of linear algebra and calculus from (finite-dimensional) Euclidean vector spaces to spaces that may be infinite-dimensional. Hilbert spaces arise natural ...
lies in a single superselection sector, but it is not because ''m'' is really the greatest lower bound of a continuous mass spectrum and eigenstates of ''m'' only exist in a rigged Hilbert space. The electron, and other particles like it is called an infraparticle. The existence of the directional charges is related to
soft photon In particle physics, soft photons are photons having photon energies much smaller than the energies of the particles participating in a particular scattering process, and they are not energetic enough to be detected. Such photons can be emitted ...
s. The directional charge at t=-\infty and t=\infty are the same if we take the limit as ''r'' goes to infinity first and only then take the limit as ''t'' approaches infinity. If we interchange the limits, the directional charges change. This is related to the expanding electromagnetic waves spreading outwards at the speed of light (the soft photons). More generally, there might exist a similar situation in other quantum field theories besides QED. The name "infraparticle" still applies in those cases.


References

{{Reflist Electrodynamics Quantum field theory