COUPLING CONSTANT


In physics, a 'coupling constant', usually denoted 'g', is a number that determines the strength of an interaction. Usually the Lagrangian or the Hamiltonian of a system can be separated into a ''kinetic part'' and an ''interaction part''. The coupling constant determines the strength of the interaction part with respect to the kinetic part, or between two sectors of the interaction part. For example, the electric charge of a particle is a coupling constant.
A coupling constant plays an important role in dynamics. For example, one often sets up hierarchies of approximation based on the importance of various coupling constants. In the motion of a large lump of magnetized iron, the magnetic forces are more important than the gravitational forces because of the relative magnitudes of the coupling constants. However, in classical mechanics one usually makes these decisions directly by comparing forces.

Contents
Fine structure constant
Gauge coupling
Weak and strong coupling
Running coupling
Beta-functions
QED and the Landau pole
QCD and asymptotic freedom
QCD scale
String theory
See also
References and external links

Fine structure constant


The coupling constant comes into its own in a quantum field theory. A special role is played in relativistic quantum theories by coupling constants which are dimensionless, ie, are pure numbers. For example, the fine-structure constant,
::lpha = rac{e^2}{4pi arepsilon_0hbar c}
(where 'e' is the charge of an electron, 'ε0' is the permittivity of free space, 'hbar' is the reduced Planck constant and 'c' is the speed of light) is such a dimensionless coupling constant that determines the strength of the electromagnetic force on an electron.

Gauge coupling


In a non-Abelian gauge theory, the 'gauge coupling parameter', 'g', appears in the Lagrangian as
:: rac1{4g^2}{
m Tr},G_{mu
u}G^{mu
u}
(where 'G' is the gauge field tensor) in some conventions. In another widely used convention, 'G' is rescaled so that the coefficient of the kinetic term is 1/4 and g appears in the covariant derivative. This should be understood to be similar to a dimensionless version of the electric charge defined as
::sqrt{4pi arepsilon_0lpha}.

Weak and strong coupling


In a quantum field theory with a dimensionless coupling constant, 'g', if it is (much) smaller than one, then one says that the theory is 'weakly coupled'. In this case it is well described by an expansion in powers of 'g', called perturbation theory. If the coupling constant is of order one or larger, the theory is said to be 'strongly coupled'. An example of the latter is the hadronic theory of strong interactions (which is why it is called strong in the first place). In such a case non-perturbative methods have to be used to investigate the theory.

Running coupling


Virtual particles renormalize the coupling

One can probe a quantum field theory at short times or distances by changing the wavelength or momentum, 'k' of the probe one uses. With a high frequency, ie, short time probe, one sees virtual particles taking part in every process. The reason this can happen, seemingly violating the conservation of energy is the uncertainty relation
::Delta EDelta tgehbar
which allows such violations at short times. The previous remark only applies to some formulations of QFT, in particular, canonical quantization in the interaction picture. In other formulations, the same event is described by "virtual" particles going off the mass shell. Such processes renormalize the coupling and make it dependent on the energy scale, mu at which one observes the coupling. The dependence of a coupling g(mu) on the energy-scale is known as running of the coupling. The theory of the running of couplings is known as the renormalization group.

Beta-functions


Main articles: beta-function

In quantum field theory, a 'beta-function' β(g) encodes the running of a coupling parameter, g. It is defined by the relation:
::eta(g) = mu, rac{partial g}{partial mu} = rac{partial g}{partial ln mu}.
If the beta-functions of a quantum field theory vanish, then the theory is scale-invariant.
The coupling parameters of a quantum field theory can flow even if the corresponding classical field theory is scale-invariant. In this case, the non-zero beta function tells us that the classical scale-invariance is anomalous .

QED and the Landau pole


If a beta-function is positive, the corresponding coupling increases with increasing energy. An example is quantum electrodynamics (QED), where one finds by using perturbation theory that the beta-function is positive. In particular, at low energies, α ≈ 1/137, whereas at the scale of the Z boson, about 90 GeV, one measures α ≈ 1/127.
Moreover, the perturbative beta-function tells us that the coupling continues to increase, and QED becomes ''strongly coupled'' at high energy. In fact the coupling apparently becomes infinite at some finite energy. This phenomenon was first noted by Lev Landau, and is called the Landau pole. However, one cannot expect the perturbative beta-function to give accurate results at strong coupling, and so it is likely that the Landau pole is an artefact of applying perturbation theory in a situation where it is no longer valid. The true scaling behaviour of lpha at large energies is not known.

QCD and asymptotic freedom


In non-Abelian gauge theories, the beta function can be negative, as first found by Frank Wilczek, David Politzer and David Gross. An example of this is the beta-function for Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), and as a result the QCD coupling decreases at high energies.
Furthermore, the coupling decreases logarithmically, a phenomenon known as asymptotic freedom. The coupling decreases approximately as
:: lpha_s(k^2) stackrel{mathrm{def}}{=} rac{g_s^2(k^2)}{4pi} pprox rac1{eta_0ln(k^2/Lambda^2)}
where β0 is a constant computed by Wilczek, Gross and Politzer.
Conversely, the coupling increases with decreasing energy. This means that the coupling becomes large at low energies, and one can no longer rely on perturbation theory.

QCD scale


In quantum chromodynamics (QCD), the quantity Λ is called the 'QCD scale'. The value is
::Lambda_{MS} = 217^{+25}_{-23}{
m MeV}
This value is to be used at a scale above the bottom quark mass of about 5 GeV. The meaning of ΛMS is given in the article on dimensional transmutation.

String theory


A remarkably different situation exists in string theory. Each perturbative description of string theory depends on a string coupling constant. However, in the case of string theory, these coupling constants are not pre-determined, adjustable, or universal parameters; rather they are dynamical scalar fields that can depend on the position in space and time and whose values are determined dynamically.

See also



Quantum field theory, especially quantum electrodynamics and quantum chromodynamics

Canonical quantization, renormalization and dimensional regularization

fine structure constant

gravitational coupling constant

References and external links



★ ''An introduction to quantum field theory'', by M.E.Peskin and H.D.Schroeder, ISBN 0-201-50397-2

The Nobel Prize in Physics 2004 – Information for the Public

Changing Constants, Dark Energy and the Absorption of 21 cm Radiation -- By Ben Wandelt, 2Physics.com, July 25, 2007

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