What corresponds to a static field in QFT

In summary, the Hilbert space of a quantized EM field is made up of photon states corresponding to classical EM waves. However, the static EM field in QFT has no real photons and can be calculated by perturbation theory using virtual photons, which can appear in the interaction term but do not have a sensible interpretation in terms of probabilities. In the Coulomb gauge, the longitudinal field is not quantized and can be left alone in calculations. The Coulomb repulsion is a term in the Hamiltonian and is not a quantum field.
  • #1
kof9595995
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2
For example for quantized EM field the Hilbert space is made up of photon states which corrrespond to EM waves classically. However what corresponds to static EM field in QFT? It can't live in the Hilbert space of photons because any superposition of photon states will still correspond to a traveling EM wave (wave packet).
 
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  • #2
In the Hilbert space of free-particle photon states, all the photons are transverse. There are also photons with longitudinal and timelike polarizations. Even after imposing a gauge condition, these photons can exist as virtual particles, and do appear in the interaction jμAμ, and therefore can't be completely dispensed with.
 
  • #3
Ahh, Ok, I thought some gauge condition would rule out longitudinal photons completely. Thanks.
 
  • #4
I think Bill_K's statement holds e.g. in the Lorentz gauge. In Coulomb gauge, the static longitudinal field isn't quantized at all (and also not expressed in terms of photons), but identical to the classical EM value.
 
  • #5
kof9595995 said:
For example for quantized EM field the Hilbert space is made up of photon states which corrrespond to EM waves classically. However what corresponds to static EM field in QFT? It can't live in the Hilbert space of photons because any superposition of photon states will still correspond to a traveling EM wave (wave packet).
A static EM field has no real photons. The energy between two charges can be calculated by perturbation theory involving virtual photons.
To order alpha, this gives the classical EM interaction potential.
To higher order, it gives the Lamb shift, etc.
 
  • #6
Meir Achuz said:
A static EM field has no real photons. The energy between two charges can be calculated by perturbation theory involving virtual photons.
To order alpha, this gives the classical EM interaction potential.
To higher order, it gives the Lamb shift, etc.

That's what I learned, too.

But then I read sometimes, especially here at this site, virtual photons do not exist. What's up with this?
 
  • #7
Lapidus said:
That's what I learned, too.

But then I read sometimes, especially here at this site, virtual photons do not exist. What's up with this?

In quantum field theory, a static field is a stationary e/m field whose expectation is independent of time. Photon states arise from the quantization of the fluctuations of the e/m field and are always transverse and real.

Longitudinal or virtual photons never enter the picture. Both are fictions stemming from an inadequate interpretation of the QFT formalism that takes perturbative expansions literally.

See also the entry ''Virtual particles and Coulomb interaction'' in Chapter A7 of my theoretical physics FAQ at http://arnold-neumaier.at/physfaq/physics-faq.html#virtcoul
 
  • #8
DrDu said:
I think Bill_K's statement holds e.g. in the Lorentz gauge. In Coulomb gauge, the static longitudinal field isn't quantized at all (and also not expressed in terms of photons), but identical to the classical EM value.

I think you're right, but we'll still need to quantize the longitudinal EM field if we want to calculate everything quantum mechanically, right? I suppose we'll again get something like longitudinal photons if we do this?
 
  • #9
Arnold Neumaier or tom stoer are the specialist on that topic. I think in qft the Coulomb law is implemented as a restriction in the process of quantization. Nevertheless, in the Coulomb gauge, there is no conjugate momentum corresponding to the longitudinal part of the vector potential A. Hence you also don't have to quantize it as there is no field-momentum commutator.
 
  • #10
kof9595995 said:
I think you're right, but we'll still need to quantize the longitudinal EM field if we want to calculate everything quantum mechanically, right? I suppose we'll again get something like longitudinal photons if we do this?

In covariant quantization (which is presented in most modern textbooks) one gets ''longitudinal photons'' in a Krein space with an indefinite inner product. These lack any sensible interpretation in terms of probabilities (which needs a Hilbert space, i.e., a definite inner product).

As DrDu mentioned, there are no longitudinal photons in the Coulomb gauge. See the older textbook by Bjorcken and Drell for a treatment of QED in this gauge.
 
  • #11
A. Neumaier said:
In covariant quantization (which is presented in most modern textbooks) one gets ''longitudinal photons'' in a Krein space with an indefinite inner product. These lack any sensible interpretation in terms of probabilities (which needs a Hilbert space, i.e., a definite inner product).

As DrDu mentioned, there are no longitudinal photons in the Coulomb gauge. See the older textbook by Bjorcken and Drell for a treatment of QED in this gauge.

Thanks, but I don't have time to go through it now, so just want to confirm some points from you
1."Covariant quantization" refers to Lorentz guage?
2. Even if we want to calculate static field interaction quantum mechanically, we can still leave the unquantized longitudinal field alone in Coulomb gauge?
 
  • #12
kof9595995 said:
Thanks, but I don't have time to go through it now, so just want to confirm some points from you
1."Covariant quantization" refers to Lorentz guage?
Yes. One gets different kinds of virtual stuff in different gauges - showing that there is no reality behind it.
kof9595995 said:
2. Even if we want to calculate static field interaction quantum mechanically, we can still leave the unquantized longitudinal field alone in Coulomb gauge?

I don't understand the question.
 
  • #13
A. Neumaier said:
I don't understand the question.
I mean, as DrDu said, longitudinal field(or static field) component is not quantized, so when we want to calculate, let say coulomb repulsion between two positive charges, we have to use the longitudinal field, right? But longitudinal field is still classical, so how does it make sense in QFT description?
 
  • #14
kof9595995 said:
I mean, as DrDu said, longitudinal field(or static field) component is not quantized, so when we want to calculate, let say coulomb repulsion between two positive charges, we have to use the longitudinal field, right? But longitudinal field is still classical, so how does it make sense in QFT description?

The Coulomb repulsion is a term in the Hamiltonian, not a quantum field.
 
  • #15
I haven't learned QED yet, but do you mean we first write H in terms of field, and it's a sum of several terms, and one of the terms gives rise to Coulomb interaction? If so it seems counter-intuitive because in classical EM Coulomb interaction is a longitudinal field, in QFT we quantized transverse field only(coulomb gauge), yet it gives a correspondence in the Hamiltonian?
 
  • #16
kof9595995 said:
I haven't learned QED yet, but do you mean we first write H in terms of field, and it's a sum of several terms, and one of the terms gives rise to Coulomb interaction? If so it seems counter-intuitive because in classical EM Coulomb interaction is a longitudinal field, in QFT we quantized transverse field only(coulomb gauge), yet it gives a correspondence in the Hamiltonian?
The transverse part is in the field, the longitudinal part in the Hamiltonian.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coulomb_gauge#Coulomb_gauge
 
  • #17
A. Neumaier said:
The transverse part is in the field, the longitudinal part in the Hamiltonian.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coulomb_gauge#Coulomb_gauge

Thanks for the reference, this seems to answer my question:"It is particularly useful for "semi-classical" calculations in quantum mechanics, in which the vector potential is quantized but the Coulomb interaction is not."
 
  • #18
So I found this in sakurai's book: "In 1930 E. Fermi was able to show that [tex]{A_\parallel }[/tex](longitudinal field) and [tex]{A_0}[/tex] together give rise to the instantaneous static Coulomb interactions... "
Here what does "instantaneous" mean?
 
  • #19
kof9595995 said:
So I found this in sakurai's book: "In 1930 E. Fermi was able to show that [tex]{A_\parallel }[/tex](longitudinal field) and [tex]{A_0}[/tex] together give rise to the instantaneous static Coulomb interactions... "
Here what does "instantaneous" mean?

It means ''at any fixed time''.
 
  • #20
Why need he phrase it this way?Is there anything subtle about this?
 
  • #21
kof9595995 said:
Why need he phrase it this way?Is there anything subtle about this?

I don't see any. But I don't have the book, so can't check.
 
  • #22
Thanks. From what I've read so far I don't see any either, I'll update it in this post if I find any.
 
  • #23
A. Neumaier said:
The Coulomb repulsion is a term in the Hamiltonian, not a quantum field.
Now I think I know where my confusion was. If QED is somehow exactly solvable, then jμAμ( which gives static field interaction) should indeed change the form of the quantized field. Now that we can't solve QED exactly, and we're mostly interested in asymptotic states, so we keep the free field prescription in quantization and reconstruct the quantized interaction by a term in Hamiltionian.
What I had in mind was actually an exactly solved quantum field, but didn't realize it.
 
  • #24
A. Neumaier said:
Yes. One gets different kinds of virtual stuff in different gauges - showing that there is no reality behind it.

And what of jets that have a unique flavor signature in collider experiments? I just don't see how you can say there is no reality behind the "virtual stuff" when we can scatter off of, say, virtual b quarks in the proton and produce b jets. Surely the flavor tagging does not depend on the gauge...
 
  • #25
cbetanco said:
And what of jets that have a unique flavor signature in collider experiments? I just don't see how you can say there is no reality behind the "virtual stuff" when we can scatter off of, say, virtual b quarks in the proton and produce b jets. Surely the flavor tagging does not depend on the gauge...
jets are real particles produced by real quark interactions. Nothing virtual at all.
 
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1. What is a static field in QFT?

A static field in QFT (Quantum Field Theory) refers to a field that does not change over time. In other words, it is a field that is not dependent on the position or velocity of particles, and remains constant throughout the system.

2. How is a static field different from a dynamic field in QFT?

A dynamic field, on the other hand, is one that can change over time and is dependent on the position and velocity of particles. This means that the value of a dynamic field can vary at different points in space and time.

3. What corresponds to a static field in the classical theory of electromagnetism?

In the classical theory of electromagnetism, a static field corresponds to the electric and magnetic fields that do not change with time. These fields are described by Maxwell's equations and can be represented by vectors in three-dimensional space.

4. How are static fields represented in QFT?

In QFT, static fields are represented by operators that act on the quantum state of the system. These operators describe the properties and behavior of the field, such as its energy, momentum, and interactions with other particles.

5. What is the significance of static fields in QFT?

Static fields play a crucial role in understanding the behavior of particles and their interactions in QFT. They are fundamental in describing the properties of particles and predicting their behavior in different systems, such as in particle accelerators or in the vacuum of space.

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