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Teoría de Campos Efectiva×Método del Elemento Matricial×Ecuaciones del Grupo de Renormalización×
CampoFísica de partículasFísica de partículasFísica de partículas
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen197919881970
Autor originalSteven WeinbergK. KondoCurtis Callan and David Gross
TipoModel-independent approachProbability calculation frameworkScale dependence framework
Fuente seminalWeinberg, S. (1979). Baryon and lepton nonconserving processes. Physical Review Letters, 43(21), 1566. DOI ↗Kondo, K. (1988). Dynamical likelihood method for reconstruction of events produced by the top-quark pair in the lepton + jets channel at hadron colliders. Journal of the Physical Society of Japan, 57(12), 4126–4140. link ↗Callan, C. G. (1970). Broken scale invariance in scalar field theory. Physical Review D, 2(6), 1541. DOI ↗
AliasEFT, effective theory, operator product expansionMEM, matrix element calculation, amplitude evaluationRGE, running couplings, beta function evolution
Relacionados333
ResumenEffective Field Theory (EFT) is a general framework for studying physics at low energies in terms of the relevant degrees of freedom, without requiring complete knowledge of high-energy physics. By expanding in powers of energy, EFT provides model-independent parameterizations of new physics effects and systematic methods for computing precision predictions of the Standard Model.The Matrix Element Method (MEM) is a powerful analysis technique that leverages quantum field theory amplitudes to extract maximum physics information from individual events. By comparing observed detector signatures to predictions from matrix elements, MEM provides unbiased, model-independent measurements with excellent theoretical precision and sensitivity to new physics.Renormalization Group Equations (RGEs) describe how the coupling constants and masses of a quantum field theory evolve with energy scale. They are fundamental tools for understanding the scale dependence of physics, predicting the behavior of coupling strengths at different energies, and connecting high-energy physics to low-energy precision measurements.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Effective Field Theory · Matrix Element Method · Renormalization Group Equations. Recuperado el 2026-06-19 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare