Causal Perturbation Theory - Comments

In summary, A. Neumaier's new PF Insights post discusses causal perturbation theory, which is a method for constructing relativistic quantum field theories without a UV cutoff in finite volume. This approach is based on distribution splitting techniques borrowed from microlocal analysis and is manifestly covariant. While it handles UV problems, it still faces the usual IR problems that must be handled by coherent state techniques. The causal approach is not fully rigorous, as it relies on a mathematically ill-defined notion of time ordering, but Epstein and Glaser's contributions have made it more rigorous. However, it has not been fully incorporated with other rigorous approaches, such as the Kulish-Faddeev paper, which has settled the QED infrared problems on
  • #106
Tendex said:
Ok, so in #62 you(and the lecturer) just meant that effective theory in the sense of Stückelberg-Petermann renormalization group was not as nice dealing with perturbative UV divergences as CPT?

Also I believe in particle physics they sometimes mix the philosophy of the Wilsonian RG approach with the perturbative RG in their quest for machines with ever higher energies.
No.

Effective field theory is always in the sense of Wilson, and #62 is only about this. The Wilson RG connects a family of different QFTs accurate at different energies.

Effective field theories deal with UV divergences by changing the problem. By imposing an effective cutoff they simply ignore the full theory and approximate it by something different, sufficient for experimental practice up to a certain energy. Thus they do not need to account for the (in local quantum field theories unavoidable) singularities from which UV divergences arise in the common sloppy treatments.

On the other hand, the Stückelberg-Petermann renormalization group describes a reparameterization of the same field theory, and hence cannot get rid of the physical singularities in the theory. Instead one needs the causal machinery.
 
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  • #107
A. Neumaier said:
How many loops are you using for your QCD calculations?The parameterization of the S-matrix of QED in terms of the physical mass and charge fixes the first order term in ##S(g)## and hence everything, so there is nothing to be renormalized.

But there is some freedom in the construction. It can be used to introduce a redundant parameter at the cost of introducing running coupling constants and more complex formulas. Since the physical electron charge corresponds to a running charge at zero energy, the parameterization of the S-matrix in terms of the physical mass and charge corresponds to a conventional renormalization at zero photon mass.

Scharf writes in the 1005 edition:The redundant parameter would have no effect in the nonperturbative solution. But since the expansion point is different, it leads to different results at each order of perturbation theory. These perturbative results are then related by finite renormalizations in terms of a Stückelberg-Petermann renormalization group. It expresses the charge appearing in the coupling constant - now no longer the experimental charge but running with the energy scale - in terms of the physical mass and charge.

Thus renormalization is finite and optional. Maybe this is special to QED since the free physical parameters have a direct physical meaning.
Well, the running of the coupling is important in perturbation theory even in QED. It's a much better approximation using tree-level scattering results at high energies using the running coupling than to use the (quasi-)onshell scheme from low-energy QED (the running coupling at a scale around the Z-mass is 1/128 rather than 1/137).

Of course, if at the end causal PT is equivalent to standard PT, there must be a possibility to renormalize, i.e., to change the renormalization scheme. Of course, if you start with a renormalized theory, i.e., finite expressions for the proper vertex functions changing the renormalization scheme is a finite change of the running parameters.
 
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  • #108
vanhees71 said:
the running of the coupling is important in perturbation theory even in QED. It's a much better approximation using tree-level scattering results at high energies using the running coupling than to use the (quasi-)onshell scheme from low-energy QED (the running coupling at a scale around the Z-mass is 1/128 rather than 1/137).
Yes, but in case of QED it just means introducing an extra parameter that modifies the free theory with respect to which you perturb. It is like changing the free frequency in the perturbation theory of an anharmonic oscillator. Physical results are independent of this choice but perturbative results are not. In the case of a QFT one can introduce even more than one such redundant parameter and then has a multipaameter RG.
vanhees71 said:
Of course, if at the end causal PT is equivalent to standard PT, there must be a possibility to renormalize, i.e., to change the renormalization scheme. Of course, if you start with a renormalized theory, i.e., finite expressions for the proper vertex functions changing the renormalization scheme is a finite change of the running parameters.
And it is, as done by Scharf in the Section on the renormalization group.
 
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  • #109
A. Neumaier said:
The whole point of resummation is that it includes important contributions from all energies. The size of the terms in the power series is completely irrelevant for the behavior of the resummed formulas.

Borel summation is not sufficient because of the appearance of renormalon contributions. The promising approach is via resurgent transseries, an approach much more powerful than Borel summation.
A nice overview is in the recent lecture
 

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