'''Quantum electrodynamics''' ('''QED''') is a
quantum field theory of
electromagnetism. QED describes all
phenomena involving
electrically charged particles interacting by means of the electromagnetic force and has been called "the jewel of physics" for its extremely accurate
predictions of quantities like the anomalous
magnetic moment of the
muon, and the
Lamb shift of the
energy levels of
hydrogen.
Mathematically, QED has the structure of an
Abelian gauge theory with a U(1) gauge group. The gauge field which mediates the interaction between the charged
spin-1/2 fields is the
electromagnetic field.
Physically, this translates to the picture of charged particles (and their
antiparticles) interacting with each other by the exchange of
photons. The magnitude of these interactions can be computed using
perturbation theory; these rather complex formulas have a remarkable pictorial representation as
Feynman diagrams. QED was historically the theory to which Feynman diagrams were first applied.
QED was the first quantum field theory in which the difficulties of building a consistent, fully quantum description of fields and creation and annihilation of quantum particles were satisfactorily resolved.
Sin-Itiro Tomonaga,
Julian Schwinger and
Richard Feynman received the 1965
Nobel Prize in Physics for its development, their contributions involving a covariant and gauge invariant prescription for the calculation of observable quantities. Feynman's mathematical technique, based on his diagrams, initially seemed very different from the field-theoretic,
operator-based approach of Schwinger and Tomonaga, but was later shown to be equivalent. The
renormalization procedure for making sense of some of the infinite predictions of
quantum field theory also found its first successful implementation in quantum electrodynamics.
The QED
Lagrangian for the interaction of
electrons and
positrons through
photons is
:
.
and its
Dirac adjoint are the
fields representing electrically
charged particles, specifically
electron and
positron fields represented as Dirac spinors.
is the
gauge covariant
derivative, with
the coupling strength (equal to the
elementary charge),
the covariant
vector potential of the
electromagnetic field and
the
electromagnetic field tensor. Also,
are Dirac matrices.
The part of the Lagrangian containing the
electromagnetic field tensor describes the free evolution of the
electromagnetic field, whereas the
Dirac-like equation with the
gauge covariant
derivative describes the free evolution of the
electron and
positron fields as well as their interaction with the
electromagnetic field.
See also
References
- R. P. Feynman, QED: The strange theory of light and matter [ Order: ISBN 0691024170]
- Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, Jacques Dupont-Roc, Gilbert Grynberg, Photons and Atoms : Introduction to Quantum Electrodynamics (John Wiley & Sons, 1997) [ Order: ISBN 0471184330]
- J. M. Jauch, F. Rohrlich, The Theory of Photons and Electrons (Springer-Verlag, 1980)
- R. P. Feynman, Quantum Electrodynamics (Perseus Publishing, 1998) [ Order: ISBN 0201360756]
Category:Electromagnetism
Category:Quantum mechanics
Category:Quantum field theory
Category:Theoretical physics
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