Quantum Electrodynamics
Quantum electrodynamics is the quantum field theory of light and charged matter, describing electromagnetism as the exchange of photons between electrically charged particles.
Definition
Quantum electrodynamics is the relativistic quantum field theory of the electromagnetic interaction, formulated as an abelian U(1) gauge theory in which charged fermions interact by exchanging photons, with the strength of the coupling set by the fine-structure constant.
Scope
This topic covers the abelian U(1) gauge theory of electromagnetism, in which electrons, positrons, and photons interact through a single vertex governed by the fine-structure constant. It treats the calculation of electromagnetic processes such as electron scattering and pair production via Feynman diagrams, the renormalization of charge and mass, and the precision predictions, including the electron anomalous magnetic moment and the Lamb shift, that make it the most accurately tested theory in physics.
Core questions
- How is the classical electromagnetic field quantized into photons?
- How are electromagnetic scattering processes computed from Feynman diagrams?
- Why does the effective electric charge depend on the energy scale of the interaction?
- How does QED achieve agreement with experiment to many significant figures?
Key concepts
- Photon as the quantum of the electromagnetic field
- Electron-photon coupling vertex
- Fine-structure constant
- Vacuum polarization
- Anomalous magnetic moment
- Charge renormalization
Key theories
- Abelian gauge theory of electromagnetism
- Local U(1) gauge invariance of the charged fermion field requires the introduction of the photon field, fixing the form of the electromagnetic interaction and yielding a single coupling vertex.
- Renormalized perturbation theory
- Divergent loop corrections to charge, mass, and the photon propagator are absorbed by renormalization, after which QED yields finite predictions and a coupling that runs with energy.
Clinical relevance
Quantum electrodynamics is the most stringently tested theory in physics, with the predicted electron anomalous magnetic moment agreeing with measurement to about twelve significant figures, and it serves as the template for the gauge theories of the weak and strong interactions.
History
Quantum electrodynamics emerged from efforts to quantize the electromagnetic field in the late 1920s but was plagued by infinite results until the late 1940s, when Tomonaga, Schwinger, and Feynman independently developed renormalization, unified by Dyson. The successful prediction of the Lamb shift and the electron's anomalous magnetic moment established QED as a triumph of physics and earned its founders the 1965 Nobel Prize.
Key figures
- Richard Feynman
- Julian Schwinger
- Sin-Itiro Tomonaga
- Freeman Dyson
Related topics
Seminal works
- dyson1949
- feynmanqed1985
Frequently asked questions
- What is the fine-structure constant in QED?
- The fine-structure constant, approximately 1/137, is the dimensionless coupling that sets the strength of the electromagnetic interaction in QED, although its effective value grows slowly with energy.
- Why is QED considered so successful?
- QED predicts quantities such as the electron's magnetic moment in agreement with experiment to about twelve digits, making it the most precisely verified theory in all of physics.