On Shell Renormalization Scheme
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quantum field theory In theoretical physics, quantum field theory (QFT) is a theoretical framework that combines classical field theory, special relativity, and quantum mechanics. QFT is used in particle physics to construct physical models of subatomic particles and ...
, and especially in quantum electrodynamics, the interacting theory leads to infinite quantities that have to be absorbed in a renormalization procedure, in order to be able to predict measurable quantities. The renormalization scheme can depend on the type of particles that are being considered. For particles that can travel asymptotically large distances, or for low energy processes, the on-shell scheme, also known as the physical scheme, is appropriate. If these conditions are not fulfilled, one can turn to other schemes, like the minimal subtraction scheme (MS scheme).


Fermion propagator in the interacting theory

Knowing the different
propagator In quantum mechanics and quantum field theory, the propagator is a function that specifies the probability amplitude for a particle to travel from one place to another in a given period of time, or to travel with a certain energy and momentum. In ...
s is the basis for being able to calculate Feynman diagrams which are useful tools to predict, for example, the result of scattering experiments. In a theory where the only field is the
Dirac field In quantum field theory, a fermionic field is a quantum field whose quanta are fermions; that is, they obey Fermi–Dirac statistics. Fermionic fields obey canonical anticommutation relations rather than the canonical commutation relations of boso ...
, the Feynman propagator reads : \langle 0 , T(\psi(x)\bar(0)), 0 \rangle =iS_F(x) = \int \frac\frac where T is the time-ordering operator, , 0\rangle the vacuum in the non interacting theory, \psi(x) and \bar(x) the Dirac field and its Dirac adjoint, and where the left-hand side of the equation is the
two-point correlation function In astronomy, a correlation function describes the distribution of galaxy, galaxies in the universe. By default, "correlation function" refers to the two-point correlation function, autocorrelation function. The two-point autocorrelation functio ...
of the Dirac field. In a new theory, the Dirac field can interact with another field, for example with the electromagnetic field in quantum electrodynamics, and the strength of the interaction is measured by a parameter, in the case of QED it is the bare electron charge, e. The general form of the propagator should remain unchanged, meaning that if , \Omega\rangle now represents the vacuum in the interacting theory, the two-point correlation function would now read : \langle \Omega , T(\psi(x)\bar(0)), \Omega \rangle = \int \frac\frac Two new quantities have been introduced. First the renormalized mass m_r has been defined as the pole in the Fourier transform of the Feynman propagator. This is the main prescription of the on-shell renormalization scheme (there is then no need to introduce other mass scales like in the minimal subtraction scheme). The quantity Z_2 represents the new strength of the Dirac field. As the interaction is turned down to zero by letting e\rightarrow 0, these new parameters should tend to a value so as to recover the propagator of the free fermion, namely m_r\rightarrow m and Z_2\rightarrow 1. This means that m_r and Z_2 can be defined as a series in e if this parameter is small enough (in the unit system where \hbar=c=1, e=\sqrt\simeq 0.3, where \alpha is the fine-structure constant). Thus these parameters can be expressed as :Z_2=1+\delta_2 :m_r = m + \delta m On the other hand, the modification to the propagator can be calculated up to a certain order in e using Feynman diagrams. These modifications are summed up in the fermion
self energy In quantum field theory, the energy that a particle has as a result of changes that it causes in its environment defines self-energy \Sigma, and represents the contribution to the particle's energy, or Effective mass (solid-state physics), effecti ...
\Sigma(p) : \langle \Omega , T(\psi(x)\bar(0)), \Omega \rangle = \int \frac\frac These corrections are often divergent because they contain loops. By identifying the two expressions of the correlation function up to a certain order in e, the counterterms can be defined, and they are going to absorb the divergent contributions of the corrections to the fermion propagator. Thus, the renormalized quantities, such as m_r, will remain finite, and will be the quantities measured in experiments.


Photon propagator

Just like what has been done with the fermion propagator, the form of the photon propagator inspired by the free photon field will be compared to the photon propagator calculated up to a certain order in e in the interacting theory. The photon self energy is noted \Pi(q^2) and the
metric tensor In the mathematical field of differential geometry, a metric tensor (or simply metric) is an additional structure on a manifold (such as a surface) that allows defining distances and angles, just as the inner product on a Euclidean space allows ...
\eta^ (here taking the +--- convention) : \langle \Omega , T(A^(x)A^(0)), \Omega \rangle = \int \frac\frac = \int \frac\frac The behaviour of the counterterm \delta_3=Z_3-1 is independent of the momentum of the incoming photon q. To fix it, the behaviour of QED at large distances (which should help recover classical electrodynamics), i.e. when q^2\rightarrow 0, is used : :\frac\sim\frac Thus the counterterm \delta_3 is fixed with the value of \Pi(0).


Vertex function

A similar reasoning using the
vertex function In quantum electrodynamics, the vertex function describes the coupling between a photon and an electron beyond the leading order of perturbation theory. In particular, it is the one particle irreducible correlation function involving the fermion ...
leads to the renormalization of the electric charge e_r. This renormalization, and the fixing of renormalization terms is done using what is known from classical electrodynamics at large space scales. This leads to the value of the counterterm \delta_1, which is, in fact, equal to \delta_2 because of the Ward–Takahashi identity. It is this calculation that account for the anomalous magnetic dipole moment of fermions.


Rescaling of the QED Lagrangian

We have considered some proportionality factors (like the Z_i) that have been defined from the form of the propagator. However they can also be defined from the QED Lagrangian, which will be done in this section, and these definitions are equivalent. The Lagrangian that describes the physics of quantum electrodynamics is : \mathcal L = -\frac F_ F^ + \bar(i \partial\!\!\!/ - m )\psi + e \bar \gamma^\mu \psi A_ where F_ is the
field strength tensor In electromagnetism, the electromagnetic tensor or electromagnetic field tensor (sometimes called the field strength tensor, Faraday tensor or Maxwell bivector) is a mathematical object that describes the electromagnetic field in spacetime. Th ...
, \psi is the Dirac spinor (the relativistic equivalent of the wavefunction), and A the electromagnetic four-potential. The parameters of the theory are \psi, A, m and e. These quantities happen to be infinite due to loop corrections (see below). One can define the renormalized quantities (which will be finite and observable): : \psi = \sqrt \psi_r \;\;\;\;\; A = \sqrt A_r \;\;\;\;\; m = m_r + \delta m \;\;\;\;\; e = \frac e_r \;\;\;\;\; \text \;\;\;\;\; Z_i = 1 + \delta_i The \delta_i are called counterterms (some other definitions of them are possible). They are supposed to be small in the parameter e. The Lagrangian now reads in terms of renormalized quantities (to first order in the counterterms): : \mathcal L = -\frac Z_3 F_ F^_r + Z_2 \bar_r(i \partial\!\!\!/ - m_r )\psi_r - \bar_r\delta m \psi_r + Z_1 e_r \bar_r \gamma^\mu \psi_r A_ A renormalization prescription is a set of rules that describes what part of the divergences should be in the renormalized quantities and what parts should be in the counterterms. The prescription is often based on the theory of free fields, that is of the behaviour of \psi and A when they do not interact (which corresponds to removing the term e \bar \gamma^\mu \psi A_ in the Lagrangian).


References

* {{Cite book, author=M. Peskin, author2=D. Schroeder, title=An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory, publisher=Addison-Weasley, location=Reading, year=1995 Quantum field theory Renormalization group