Physics:Quantum Renormalization in field theory: Difference between revisions
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'''Renormalization in quantum field theory''' is the systematic procedure used to handle divergences that arise in perturbative calculations by absorbing them into redefined physical parameters such as mass, charge, and field normalization.<ref name="peskin">Peskin, M. E.; Schroeder, D. V. ''An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory'' (1995).</ref> It allows quantum field theories to produce finite, physically meaningful predictions. | '''Renormalization in quantum field theory''' is the systematic procedure used to handle divergences that arise in perturbative calculations by absorbing them into redefined physical parameters such as mass, charge, and field normalization.<ref name="peskin">Peskin, M. E.; Schroeder, D. V. ''An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory'' (1995).</ref> It allows quantum field theories to produce finite, physically meaningful predictions. | ||
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<div style="font-size:90%;">Renormalization: scale-dependent behavior of physical parameters and absorption of divergences into redefined quantities</div> | <div style="font-size:90%;">Renormalization: scale-dependent behavior of physical parameters and absorption of divergences into redefined quantities</div> | ||
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Revision as of 14:02, 17 May 2026
Renormalization in quantum field theory is the systematic procedure used to handle divergences that arise in perturbative calculations by absorbing them into redefined physical parameters such as mass, charge, and field normalization.[1] It allows quantum field theories to produce finite, physically meaningful predictions.
Origin of divergences
In quantum field theory, higher-order corrections involve integrals over all possible momenta. These integrals often diverge at high energies (ultraviolet divergences).[2]
For example, loop diagrams in perturbation theory can produce expressions such as:
which are not finite without additional procedures.
Regularization
The first step in renormalization is regularization, where divergences are controlled by introducing a parameter that makes the integrals finite.
Common methods include:
- momentum cutoff
- dimensional regularization
- Pauli–Villars regularization
For instance, a momentum cutoff replaces divergent integrals with:
where is a finite cutoff scale.[3]
Renormalization procedure
After regularization, divergences are absorbed into redefined parameters:
- bare mass → physical mass
- bare charge → physical charge
The Lagrangian is rewritten in terms of renormalized quantities plus counterterms:
These counterterms cancel the divergences arising in loop calculations.[1]
Running coupling constants
Renormalization introduces a dependence of physical parameters on the energy scale. This is described by the renormalization group.
For example, the coupling constant becomes scale-dependent:
where is the renormalization scale.
The evolution of parameters with scale is governed by equations such as:
where is the beta function.[4]
Renormalizable theories
A theory is called renormalizable if all divergences can be absorbed into a finite number of parameters.
Examples include:
- quantum electrodynamics (QED)
- quantum chromodynamics (QCD)
Non-renormalizable theories can still be useful as effective field theories valid at a limited energy scale.[2]
Physical interpretation
Renormalization reflects the fact that physical measurements depend on the energy scale at which they are performed.
Quantum fluctuations at different scales modify the effective values of parameters, leading to observable effects such as charge screening in QED.
Conceptual importance
Renormalization is one of the central concepts of modern quantum field theory. It explains how:
- infinities are handled consistently
- physical predictions remain finite
- interactions depend on scale
It also provides the foundation for the renormalization group and modern effective field theory approaches.
See also
Table of contents (217 articles)
Index
Full contents
References
Source attribution: Quantum field theory (QFT) core

