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Coupling constant

In physics, a coupling constant or gauge coupling parameter (or, more simply, a coupling), is a number that determines the strength of the force exerted in an interaction. Originally, the coupling constant related the force acting between two static bodies to the "charges" of the bodies (i.e. the electric charge for electrostatic and the mass for Newtonian gravity) divided by the distance squared, , between the bodies; thus: in for Newtonian gravity and in for electrostatic. This description remains valid in modern physics for linear theories with static bodies and massless force carriers.[citation needed]

A modern and more general definition uses the Lagrangian (or equivalently the Hamiltonian ) of a system. Usually, (or ) of a system describing an interaction can be separated into a kinetic part and an interaction part : (or ). In field theory, always contains 3 fields terms or more, expressing for example that an initial electron (field 1) interacted with a photon (field 2) producing the final state of the electron (field 3). In contrast, the kinetic part always contains only two fields, expressing the free propagation of an initial particle (field 1) into a later state (field 2). The coupling constant determines the magnitude of the part with respect to the part (or between two sectors of the interaction part if several fields that couple differently are present). For example, the electric charge of a particle is a coupling constant that characterizes an interaction with two charge-carrying fields and one photon field (hence the common Feynman diagram with two arrows and one wavy line). Since photons mediate the electromagnetic force, this coupling determines how strongly electrons feel such a force, and has its value fixed by experiment. By looking at the QED Lagrangian, one sees that indeed, the coupling sets the proportionality between the kinetic term and the interaction term .

A coupling plays an important role in dynamics. For example, one often sets up hierarchies of approximation based on the importance of various coupling constants. In the motion of a large lump of magnetized iron, the magnetic forces may be more important than the gravitational forces because of the relative magnitudes of the coupling constants. However, in classical mechanics, one usually makes these decisions directly by comparing forces. Another important example of the central role played by coupling constants is that they are the expansion parameters for first-principle calculations based on perturbation theory, which is the main method of calculation in many branches of physics.

Fine-structure constant edit

Couplings arise naturally in a quantum field theory. A special role is played in relativistic quantum theories by couplings that are dimensionless; i.e., are pure numbers. An example of a dimensionless such constant is the fine-structure constant,

 

where e is the charge of an electron, ε0 is the permittivity of free space, ħ is the reduced Planck constant and c is the speed of light. This constant is proportional to the square of the coupling strength of the charge of an electron to the electromagnetic field.

Gauge coupling edit

In a non-abelian gauge theory, the gauge coupling parameter,  , appears in the Lagrangian as

 

(where G is the gauge field tensor) in some conventions. In another widely used convention, G is rescaled so that the coefficient of the kinetic term is 1/4 and   appears in the covariant derivative. This should be understood to be similar to a dimensionless version of the elementary charge defined as

 

Weak and strong coupling edit

In a quantum field theory with a coupling g, if g is much less than 1, the theory is said to be weakly coupled. In this case, it is well described by an expansion in powers of g, called perturbation theory. If the coupling constant is of order one or larger, the theory is said to be strongly coupled. An example of the latter is the hadronic theory of strong interactions (which is why it is called strong in the first place). In such a case, non-perturbative methods need to be used to investigate the theory.

In quantum field theory, the dimension of the coupling plays an important role in the renormalizability property of the theory,[1] and therefore on the applicability of perturbation theory. If the coupling is dimensionless in the natural units system (i.e.  ,  ), like in QED, QCD, and the weak interaction, the theory is renormalizable and all the terms of the expansion series are finite (after renormalization). If the coupling is dimensionful, as e.g. in gravity ( ), the Fermi theory ( ) or the chiral perturbation theory of the strong force ( ), then the theory is usually not renormalizable. Perturbation expansions in the coupling might still be feasible, albeit within limitations,[2][3] as most of the higher order terms of the series will be infinite.

Running coupling edit

 
Fig. 1 Virtual particles renormalize the coupling

One may probe a quantum field theory at short times or distances by changing the wavelength or momentum, k, of the probe used. With a high frequency (i.e., short time) probe, one sees virtual particles taking part in every process. This apparent violation of the conservation of energy may be understood heuristically by examining the uncertainty relation

 

which virtually allows such violations at short times. The foregoing remark only applies to some formulations of quantum field theory, in particular, canonical quantization in the interaction picture.

In other formulations, the same event is described by "virtual" particles going off the mass shell. Such processes renormalize the coupling and make it dependent on the energy scale, μ, at which one probes the coupling. The dependence of a coupling g(μ) on the energy-scale is known as "running of the coupling". The theory of the running of couplings is given by the renormalization group, though it should be kept in mind that the renormalization group is a more general concept describing any sort of scale variation in a physical system (see the full article for details).

Phenomenology of the running of a coupling edit

The renormalization group provides a formal way to derive the running of a coupling, yet the phenomenology underlying that running can be understood intuitively.[4] As explained in the introduction, the coupling constant sets the magnitude of a force which behaves with distance as  . The  -dependence was first explained by Faraday as the decrease of the force flux: at a point B distant by   from the body A generating a force, this one is proportional to the field flux going through an elementary surface S perpendicular to the line AB. As the flux spreads uniformly through space, it decreases according to the solid angle sustaining the surface S. In the modern view of quantum field theory, the   comes from the expression in position space of the propagator of the force carriers. For relatively weakly-interacting bodies, as is generally the case in electromagnetism or gravity or the nuclear interactions at short distances, the exchange of a single force carrier is a good first approximation of the interaction between the bodies, and classically the interaction will obey a  -law (note that if the force carrier is massive, there is an additional   dependence). When the interactions are more intense (e.g. the charges or masses are larger, or   is smaller) or happens over briefer time spans (smaller  ), more force carriers are involved or particle pairs are created, see Fig. 1, resulting in the break-down of the   behavior. The classical equivalent is that the field flux does not propagate freely in space any more but e.g. undergoes screening from the charges of the extra virtual particles, or interactions between these virtual particles. It is convenient to separate the first-order   law from this extra  -dependence. This latter is then accounted for by being included in the coupling, which then becomes  -dependent, (or equivalently μ-dependent). Since the additional particles involved beyond the single force carrier approximation are always virtual, i.e. transient quantum field fluctuations, one understands why the running of a coupling is a genuine quantum and relativistic phenomenon, namely an effect of the high-order Feynman diagrams on the strength of the force.

Since a running coupling effectively accounts for microscopic quantum effects, it is often called an effective coupling, in contrast to the bare coupling (constant) present in the Lagrangian or Hamiltonian.

Beta functions edit

In quantum field theory, a beta function, β(g), encodes the running of a coupling parameter, g. It is defined by the relation

 

where μ is the energy scale of the given physical process. If the beta functions of a quantum field theory vanish, then the theory is scale-invariant.

The coupling parameters of a quantum field theory can flow even if the corresponding classical field theory is scale-invariant. In this case, the non-zero beta function tells us that the classical scale-invariance is anomalous.

QED and the Landau pole edit

If a beta function is positive, the corresponding coupling increases with increasing energy. An example is quantum electrodynamics (QED), where one finds by using perturbation theory that the beta function is positive. In particular, at low energies, α ≈ 1/137, whereas at the scale of the Z boson, about 90 GeV, one measures α ≈ 1/127.

Moreover, the perturbative beta function tells us that the coupling continues to increase, and QED becomes strongly coupled at high energy. In fact the coupling apparently becomes infinite at some finite energy. This phenomenon was first noted by Lev Landau, and is called the Landau pole. However, one cannot expect the perturbative beta function to give accurate results at strong coupling, and so it is likely that the Landau pole is an artifact of applying perturbation theory in a situation where it is no longer valid. The true scaling behaviour of   at large energies is not known.

QCD and asymptotic freedom edit

 
Comparison of the strong coupling constant measurements by different experiments as of 2023 with ATLAS the latest and most precise value[5][6]

In non-abelian gauge theories, the beta function can be negative, as first found by Frank Wilczek, David Politzer and David Gross. An example of this is the beta function for quantum chromodynamics (QCD), and as a result the QCD coupling decreases at high energies.[4]

Furthermore, the coupling decreases logarithmically, a phenomenon known as asymptotic freedom (the discovery of which was awarded with the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2004). The coupling decreases approximately as

 

where β0 is a constant first computed by Wilczek, Gross and Politzer.

Conversely, the coupling increases with decreasing energy. This means that the coupling becomes large at low energies, and one can no longer rely on perturbation theory. Hence, the actual value of the coupling constant is only defined at a given energy scale. In QCD, the Z boson mass scale is typically chosen, providing a value of the strong coupling constant of αs(MZ2 ) = 0.1179 ± 0.0010.[7] In 2023 Atlas measured αs(MZ2 ) = 0.1183 ± 0.0009 the most precise so far.[5][6] The most precise measurements stem from lattice QCD calculations, studies of tau-lepton decay, as well as by the reinterpretation of the transverse momentum spectrum of the Z boson.[8]

QCD scale edit

In quantum chromodynamics (QCD), the quantity Λ is called the QCD scale. The value is  [4] for three "active" quark flavors, viz when the energy–momentum involved in the process allows production of only the up, down and strange quarks, but not the heavier quarks. This corresponds to energies below 1.275 GeV. At higher energy, Λ is smaller, e.g.   MeV[9] above the bottom quark mass of about 5 GeV. The meaning of the minimal subtraction (MS) scheme scale ΛMS is given in the article on dimensional transmutation. The proton-to-electron mass ratio is primarily determined by the QCD scale.

String theory edit

A remarkably different situation exists in string theory since it includes a dilaton. An analysis of the string spectrum shows that this field must be present, either in the bosonic string or the NS–NS sector of the superstring. Using vertex operators, it can be seen that exciting this field is equivalent to adding a term to the action where a scalar field couples to the Ricci scalar. This field is therefore an entire function worth of coupling constants. These coupling constants are not pre-determined, adjustable, or universal parameters; they depend on space and time in a way that is determined dynamically. Sources that describe the string coupling as if it were fixed are usually referring to the vacuum expectation value. This is free to have any value in the bosonic theory where there is no superpotential.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ A. Zee. Quantum Field Theory in a Nutshell, Princeton University Press, ISBN 0691140340
  2. ^ Leutwyler, Heinrich (2012). "Chiral perturbation theory". Scholarpedia. 7 (10): 8708. Bibcode:2012SchpJ...7.8708L. doi:10.4249/scholarpedia.8708.
  3. ^ Donoghue, John F. (1995). "Introduction to the Effective Field Theory Description of Gravity". In Cornet, Fernando (ed.). Effective Theories: Proceedings of the Advanced School, Almunecar, Spain, 26 June – 1 July 1995. Singapore: World Scientific. arXiv:gr-qc/9512024. Bibcode:1995gr.qc....12024D. ISBN 978-981-02-2908-5.
  4. ^ a b c Deur, Alexandre; Brodsky, Stanley J.; De Téramond, Guy F. (2016). "The QCD running coupling". Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics. 90: 1–74. arXiv:1604.08082. Bibcode:2016PrPNP..90....1D. doi:10.1016/j.ppnp.2016.04.003. S2CID 118854278.
  5. ^ a b ATLAS Collaboration (2023). "A precise determination of the strong-coupling constant from the recoil of Z bosons with the ATLAS experiment at √s = 8 TeV". arXiv:2309.12986 [hep-ex].
  6. ^ a b "ATLAS measures strength of the strong force with record precision". CERN. 2023-10-11. Retrieved 2023-10-24.
  7. ^ Particle Data Group, "Review of Particle Physics, Chapter 9. Quantum Chromodynamics", 2022, https://pdg.lbl.gov/2021/reviews/rpp2021-rev-qcd.pdf
  8. ^ Camarda, Stefano; Ferrera, Giancarlo; Schott, Matthias (2022-03-10). "Determination of the strong-coupling constant from the Z-boson transverse-momentum distribution". arXiv:2203.05394 [hep-ph].
  9. ^ C. Patrignani et al. (Particle Data Group), Chin. Phys. C, 40, 100001 (2016)

External links edit

  • The Nobel Prize in Physics 2004 – Information for the Public
  • An introduction to quantum field theory, by M.E.Peskin and H.D.Schroeder, ISBN 0-201-50397-2

coupling, constant, interaction, between, bosons, gross, pitaevskii, equation, form, equation, murray, neumann, coupling, constant, neumann, algebra, coupling, constant, spectroscopy, nuclear, magnetic, resonance, spectroscopy, proton, coupling, strength, bibl. For the interaction between bosons in a BEC see Gross Pitaevskii equation Form of equation For the Murray von Neumann coupling constant see von Neumann algebra For the coupling constant in NMR spectroscopy see Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and Proton NMR For coupling strength in bibliometrics see Bibliographic coupling This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Coupling constant news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message This article relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Coupling constant news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2020 This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message This article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject Please help improve the article by providing more context for the reader June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message In physics a coupling constant or gauge coupling parameter or more simply a coupling is a number that determines the strength of the force exerted in an interaction Originally the coupling constant related the force acting between two static bodies to the charges of the bodies i e the electric charge for electrostatic and the mass for Newtonian gravity divided by the distance squared r 2 displaystyle r 2 between the bodies thus G displaystyle G in F G m 1 m 2 r 2 displaystyle F Gm 1 m 2 r 2 for Newtonian gravity and k e displaystyle k text e in F k e q 1 q 2 r 2 displaystyle F k text e q 1 q 2 r 2 for electrostatic This description remains valid in modern physics for linear theories with static bodies and massless force carriers citation needed A modern and more general definition uses the Lagrangian L displaystyle mathcal L or equivalently the Hamiltonian H displaystyle mathcal H of a system Usually L displaystyle mathcal L or H displaystyle mathcal H of a system describing an interaction can be separated into a kinetic part T displaystyle T and an interaction part V displaystyle V L T V displaystyle mathcal L T V or H T V displaystyle mathcal H T V In field theory V displaystyle V always contains 3 fields terms or more expressing for example that an initial electron field 1 interacted with a photon field 2 producing the final state of the electron field 3 In contrast the kinetic part T displaystyle T always contains only two fields expressing the free propagation of an initial particle field 1 into a later state field 2 The coupling constant determines the magnitude of the T displaystyle T part with respect to the V displaystyle V part or between two sectors of the interaction part if several fields that couple differently are present For example the electric charge of a particle is a coupling constant that characterizes an interaction with two charge carrying fields and one photon field hence the common Feynman diagram with two arrows and one wavy line Since photons mediate the electromagnetic force this coupling determines how strongly electrons feel such a force and has its value fixed by experiment By looking at the QED Lagrangian one sees that indeed the coupling sets the proportionality between the kinetic term T ps i ℏ c g s s m c 2 ps 1 4 m 0 F m n F m n displaystyle T bar psi i hbar c gamma sigma partial sigma mc 2 psi 1 over 4 mu 0 F mu nu F mu nu and the interaction term V e ps ℏ c g s A s ps displaystyle V e bar psi hbar c gamma sigma A sigma psi A coupling plays an important role in dynamics For example one often sets up hierarchies of approximation based on the importance of various coupling constants In the motion of a large lump of magnetized iron the magnetic forces may be more important than the gravitational forces because of the relative magnitudes of the coupling constants However in classical mechanics one usually makes these decisions directly by comparing forces Another important example of the central role played by coupling constants is that they are the expansion parameters for first principle calculations based on perturbation theory which is the main method of calculation in many branches of physics Contents 1 Fine structure constant 2 Gauge coupling 3 Weak and strong coupling 4 Running coupling 4 1 Phenomenology of the running of a coupling 4 2 Beta functions 4 3 QED and the Landau pole 4 4 QCD and asymptotic freedom 4 5 QCD scale 5 String theory 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksFine structure constant editCouplings arise naturally in a quantum field theory A special role is played in relativistic quantum theories by couplings that are dimensionless i e are pure numbers An example of a dimensionless such constant is the fine structure constant a e 2 4 p e 0 ℏ c displaystyle alpha frac e 2 4 pi varepsilon 0 hbar c nbsp where e is the charge of an electron e0 is the permittivity of free space ħ is the reduced Planck constant and c is the speed of light This constant is proportional to the square of the coupling strength of the charge of an electron to the electromagnetic field Gauge coupling editIn a non abelian gauge theory the gauge coupling parameter g displaystyle g nbsp appears in the Lagrangian as 1 4 g 2 T r G m n G m n displaystyle frac 1 4g 2 rm Tr G mu nu G mu nu nbsp where G is the gauge field tensor in some conventions In another widely used convention G is rescaled so that the coefficient of the kinetic term is 1 4 and g displaystyle g nbsp appears in the covariant derivative This should be understood to be similar to a dimensionless version of the elementary charge defined as e e 0 ℏ c 4 p a 0 30282212 displaystyle frac e sqrt varepsilon 0 hbar c sqrt 4 pi alpha approx 0 30282212 nbsp Weak and strong coupling editIn a quantum field theory with a coupling g if g is much less than 1 the theory is said to be weakly coupled In this case it is well described by an expansion in powers of g called perturbation theory If the coupling constant is of order one or larger the theory is said to be strongly coupled An example of the latter is the hadronic theory of strong interactions which is why it is called strong in the first place In such a case non perturbative methods need to be used to investigate the theory In quantum field theory the dimension of the coupling plays an important role in the renormalizability property of the theory 1 and therefore on the applicability of perturbation theory If the coupling is dimensionless in the natural units system i e c 1 displaystyle c 1 nbsp ℏ 1 displaystyle hbar 1 nbsp like in QED QCD and the weak interaction the theory is renormalizable and all the terms of the expansion series are finite after renormalization If the coupling is dimensionful as e g in gravity G N energy 2 displaystyle G N text energy 2 nbsp the Fermi theory G F energy 2 displaystyle G F text energy 2 nbsp or the chiral perturbation theory of the strong force F energy displaystyle F text energy nbsp then the theory is usually not renormalizable Perturbation expansions in the coupling might still be feasible albeit within limitations 2 3 as most of the higher order terms of the series will be infinite Running coupling edit nbsp Fig 1 Virtual particles renormalize the coupling One may probe a quantum field theory at short times or distances by changing the wavelength or momentum k of the probe used With a high frequency i e short time probe one sees virtual particles taking part in every process This apparent violation of the conservation of energy may be understood heuristically by examining the uncertainty relation D E D t ℏ 2 displaystyle Delta E Delta t geq frac hbar 2 nbsp which virtually allows such violations at short times The foregoing remark only applies to some formulations of quantum field theory in particular canonical quantization in the interaction picture In other formulations the same event is described by virtual particles going off the mass shell Such processes renormalize the coupling and make it dependent on the energy scale m at which one probes the coupling The dependence of a coupling g m on the energy scale is known as running of the coupling The theory of the running of couplings is given by the renormalization group though it should be kept in mind that the renormalization group is a more general concept describing any sort of scale variation in a physical system see the full article for details Phenomenology of the running of a coupling edit The renormalization group provides a formal way to derive the running of a coupling yet the phenomenology underlying that running can be understood intuitively 4 As explained in the introduction the coupling constant sets the magnitude of a force which behaves with distance as 1 r 2 displaystyle 1 r 2 nbsp The 1 r 2 displaystyle 1 r 2 nbsp dependence was first explained by Faraday as the decrease of the force flux at a point B distant by r displaystyle r nbsp from the body A generating a force this one is proportional to the field flux going through an elementary surface S perpendicular to the line AB As the flux spreads uniformly through space it decreases according to the solid angle sustaining the surface S In the modern view of quantum field theory the 1 r 2 displaystyle 1 r 2 nbsp comes from the expression in position space of the propagator of the force carriers For relatively weakly interacting bodies as is generally the case in electromagnetism or gravity or the nuclear interactions at short distances the exchange of a single force carrier is a good first approximation of the interaction between the bodies and classically the interaction will obey a 1 r 2 displaystyle 1 r 2 nbsp law note that if the force carrier is massive there is an additional r displaystyle r nbsp dependence When the interactions are more intense e g the charges or masses are larger or r displaystyle r nbsp is smaller or happens over briefer time spans smaller r displaystyle r nbsp more force carriers are involved or particle pairs are created see Fig 1 resulting in the break down of the 1 r 2 displaystyle 1 r 2 nbsp behavior The classical equivalent is that the field flux does not propagate freely in space any more but e g undergoes screening from the charges of the extra virtual particles or interactions between these virtual particles It is convenient to separate the first order 1 r 2 displaystyle 1 r 2 nbsp law from this extra r displaystyle r nbsp dependence This latter is then accounted for by being included in the coupling which then becomes 1 r displaystyle 1 r nbsp dependent or equivalently m dependent Since the additional particles involved beyond the single force carrier approximation are always virtual i e transient quantum field fluctuations one understands why the running of a coupling is a genuine quantum and relativistic phenomenon namely an effect of the high order Feynman diagrams on the strength of the force Since a running coupling effectively accounts for microscopic quantum effects it is often called an effective coupling in contrast to the bare coupling constant present in the Lagrangian or Hamiltonian Beta functions edit Main article Beta function physics In quantum field theory a beta function b g encodes the running of a coupling parameter g It is defined by the relation b g m g m g ln m displaystyle beta g mu frac partial g partial mu frac partial g partial ln mu nbsp where m is the energy scale of the given physical process If the beta functions of a quantum field theory vanish then the theory is scale invariant The coupling parameters of a quantum field theory can flow even if the corresponding classical field theory is scale invariant In this case the non zero beta function tells us that the classical scale invariance is anomalous QED and the Landau pole edit If a beta function is positive the corresponding coupling increases with increasing energy An example is quantum electrodynamics QED where one finds by using perturbation theory that the beta function is positive In particular at low energies a 1 137 whereas at the scale of the Z boson about 90 GeV one measures a 1 127 Moreover the perturbative beta function tells us that the coupling continues to increase and QED becomes strongly coupled at high energy In fact the coupling apparently becomes infinite at some finite energy This phenomenon was first noted by Lev Landau and is called the Landau pole However one cannot expect the perturbative beta function to give accurate results at strong coupling and so it is likely that the Landau pole is an artifact of applying perturbation theory in a situation where it is no longer valid The true scaling behaviour of a displaystyle alpha nbsp at large energies is not known QCD and asymptotic freedom edit nbsp Comparison of the strong coupling constant measurements by different experiments as of 2023 with ATLAS the latest and most precise value 5 6 In non abelian gauge theories the beta function can be negative as first found by Frank Wilczek David Politzer and David Gross An example of this is the beta function for quantum chromodynamics QCD and as a result the QCD coupling decreases at high energies 4 Furthermore the coupling decreases logarithmically a phenomenon known as asymptotic freedom the discovery of which was awarded with the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2004 The coupling decreases approximately as a s k 2 d e f g s 2 k 2 4 p 1 b 0 ln k 2 L 2 displaystyle alpha text s k 2 stackrel mathrm def frac g text s 2 k 2 4 pi approx frac 1 beta 0 ln left k 2 Lambda 2 right nbsp where b0 is a constant first computed by Wilczek Gross and Politzer Conversely the coupling increases with decreasing energy This means that the coupling becomes large at low energies and one can no longer rely on perturbation theory Hence the actual value of the coupling constant is only defined at a given energy scale In QCD the Z boson mass scale is typically chosen providing a value of the strong coupling constant of as MZ2 0 1179 0 0010 7 In 2023 Atlas measured as MZ2 0 1183 0 0009 the most precise so far 5 6 The most precise measurements stem from lattice QCD calculations studies of tau lepton decay as well as by the reinterpretation of the transverse momentum spectrum of the Z boson 8 QCD scale edit In quantum chromodynamics QCD the quantity L is called the QCD scale The value is L M S 332 17 MeV displaystyle Lambda rm MS 332 pm 17 text MeV nbsp 4 for three active quark flavors viz when the energy momentum involved in the process allows production of only the up down and strange quarks but not the heavier quarks This corresponds to energies below 1 275 GeV At higher energy L is smaller e g L M S 210 14 displaystyle Lambda rm MS 210 pm 14 nbsp MeV 9 above the bottom quark mass of about 5 GeV The meaning of the minimal subtraction MS scheme scale LMS is given in the article on dimensional transmutation The proton to electron mass ratio is primarily determined by the QCD scale String theory editA remarkably different situation exists in string theory since it includes a dilaton An analysis of the string spectrum shows that this field must be present either in the bosonic string or the NS NS sector of the superstring Using vertex operators it can be seen that exciting this field is equivalent to adding a term to the action where a scalar field couples to the Ricci scalar This field is therefore an entire function worth of coupling constants These coupling constants are not pre determined adjustable or universal parameters they depend on space and time in a way that is determined dynamically Sources that describe the string coupling as if it were fixed are usually referring to the vacuum expectation value This is free to have any value in the bosonic theory where there is no superpotential See also editCanonical quantization renormalization and dimensional regularization Quantum field theory especially quantum electrodynamics and quantum chromodynamics Gluon field Gluon field strength tensorReferences edit A Zee Quantum Field Theory in a Nutshell Princeton University Press ISBN 0691140340 Leutwyler Heinrich 2012 Chiral perturbation theory Scholarpedia 7 10 8708 Bibcode 2012SchpJ 7 8708L doi 10 4249 scholarpedia 8708 Donoghue John F 1995 Introduction to the Effective Field Theory Description of Gravity In Cornet Fernando ed Effective Theories Proceedings of the Advanced School Almunecar Spain 26 June 1 July 1995 Singapore World Scientific arXiv gr qc 9512024 Bibcode 1995gr qc 12024D ISBN 978 981 02 2908 5 a b c Deur Alexandre Brodsky Stanley J De Teramond Guy F 2016 The QCD running coupling Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics 90 1 74 arXiv 1604 08082 Bibcode 2016PrPNP 90 1D doi 10 1016 j ppnp 2016 04 003 S2CID 118854278 a b ATLAS Collaboration 2023 A precise determination of the strong coupling constant from the recoil of Z bosons with the ATLAS experiment at s 8 TeV arXiv 2309 12986 hep ex a b ATLAS measures strength of the strong force with record precision CERN 2023 10 11 Retrieved 2023 10 24 Particle Data Group Review of Particle Physics Chapter 9 Quantum Chromodynamics 2022 https pdg lbl gov 2021 reviews rpp2021 rev qcd pdf Camarda Stefano Ferrera Giancarlo Schott Matthias 2022 03 10 Determination of the strong coupling constant from the Z boson transverse momentum distribution arXiv 2203 05394 hep ph C Patrignani et al Particle Data Group Chin Phys C 40 100001 2016 External links editThe Nobel Prize in Physics 2004 Information for the Public Department of Physics and Astronomy of the Georgia State University Coupling Constants for the Fundamental Forces An introduction to quantum field theory by M E Peskin and H D Schroeder ISBN 0 201 50397 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coupling constant amp oldid 1214340413 Running coupling, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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