Friday, 1 June 2018

quantum field theory - How to tell local and non-local in QFT?



I'm taking QFT course in this term. I'm quite curious that in QFT by which part of the mathematical expression can we tell a quantity or a theory is local or non-local?



Answer



A quantity is local if it is a finite linear combination $\sum_k g_k P_k(x)~~$ of products $P_k(x)$ (or other pointwise functions, such as $\sin \Phi(x)~$ for sine-Gordon theory) of field operators or their derivatives at the same point $x$.


A quantum field theory is local if its classical Lagrangian density is local. (By abuse of terminology, an action or a Lagrangian may also be called local if the corresponding Lagrangian density is local.)


Since in QFT fields are only operator-valued distributions, a local quantum field product is not well-defined without a renormalization prescription, which involves an appropriate limit of nonlocal approximations. In 1+1D, normal ordering is sufficient to renormalize the field products, while in 3D and 4D more complicated (mass and wave function) renormalizations are needed to make sense of these products.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Understanding Stagnation point in pitot fluid

What is stagnation point in fluid mechanics. At the open end of the pitot tube the velocity of the fluid becomes zero.But that should result...