a dull boy said:
Does every quantum field have a non-zero groundstate? I understand that the energy ground state is non-zero, due to the uncertainty principle virtual particles pop in and out of the vaccum. But is this true for any quantum field (higgs field, for example)?
Thanks, Mark
Yes, that is true for any quantum field. When you measure very accurately the vacuum for a given field, you will measure non-zero magnitudes for this field. But then also, a split moment later the magnitude and/ or the direction of the field will be completely different.
How large the magnitudes and the fluctuations are, depends on how accurate you measure. When you measure at very short distances and very short time intervalls, the magnitudes and fluctuation will be higher.
For the most fields the fluctuations cancel each other out and give the field a vanishing vacuum expectation value (VEV). The values vary from one point to another and one time to the next, resulting in a zero VEV.
For one field that this is assumed not true and a non-zero VEV is postulated, and that is the Higgs field.
Also very important, note the difference between the magnitude of a field and the energy or energy density of a field. The energy density depends only on the field strength, not on its direction. So while the field fluctuates back and forth its energy density does not average out to zero. Quite to contrary, if you zoom in into smaller space and time intervals, the energy becomes infinte! Normally, physicist stop at the Planck scale, saying at that point some new and yet unknown physics must come into play. But even though this prevents the energy of the vacuum from becoming infinite, when we include all the vacuum fluctuation (of all kind of fields that exist!) down to Planck scale, we still get a crazy huge number for the energy density of the vacuum! 10^88 tons per cubic centimeter!
Of course, this not what we observe. And that what makes it one of the biggest puzzle in physics.