Does the Z boson couple to photons?

maani
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Hi I can't find a Feynman rule for the coupling of two Z bosons to a photon. Does the Z boson couple to a photon at all?
 
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You can get Z+Z -> gamma + gamma.
 
zz to fermion to 2gamma

zzA is not in the SM lagrangian
 
That's what I say: the only direct vertex is

W+ + W- => Z0 + Photon

but via intermediate states you can get (nearly) anything you like.
 
There are no all-neutral gauge boson couplings in the SM.

It's easiest to see this by working in the w1, w2, w3, B basis rather than the W+/-, Z, A basis.

Tom is right, these can appear at loop level, but these will be second-order weak and GIM surpressed. However, you still have to comply with conservation laws. For example, you can't get any electric dipole radiation because the Z is neutral. I need to think more about magnetic dipole and electric quadrupole.
 
The coupling of gauge bosons self interaction in non-abelian gauge theory is proportional to f_{abc}, i.e. only diffrent bosons can interact. So, no Z-Z-A and no Z-Z-Z interactions. You can also think that photon only couple to charged particles directly.
 
I do not see how this applies directly. In the el.-weak theory we have U(1)*SU(N); in addition the photon is "mixed" according to the original basis.
 
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