Contents
Callan–Symanzik equation
In physics, the Callan–Symanzik equation is a differential equation describing the evolution of the n-point correlation functions under variation of the energy scale at which the theory is defined and involves the beta function of the theory and the anomalous dimensions. As an example, for a quantum field theory with one massless scalar field and one self-coupling term, denote the bare field strength by \phi_0 and the bare coupling constant by g_0. In the process of renormalisation, a mass scale M must be chosen. Depending on M, the field strength is rescaled by a constant:, and as a result the bare coupling constant g_0 is correspondingly shifted to the renormalised coupling constant g. Of physical importance are the renormalised n-point functions, computed from connected Feynman diagrams, schematically of the form For a given choice of renormalisation scheme, the computation of this quantity depends on the choice of M, which affects the shift in g and the rescaling of \phi. If the choice of M is slightly altered by \delta M, then the following shifts will occur: The Callan–Symanzik equation relates these shifts: After the following definitions the Callan–Symanzik equation can be put in the conventional form: \beta(g) being the beta function. In quantum electrodynamics this equation takes the form where n and m are the numbers of electron and photon fields, respectively, for which the correlation function G^{(n,m)} is defined. The renormalised coupling constant is now the renormalised elementary charge e. The electron field and the photon field rescale differently under renormalisation, and thus lead to two separate functions, \gamma_2 and \gamma_3, respectively. The Callan–Symanzik equation was discovered independently by Curtis Callan and Kurt Symanzik in 1970. Later it was used to understand asymptotic freedom. This equation arises in the framework of renormalization group. It is possible to treat the equation using perturbation theory.
This article is derived from Wikipedia and licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. View the original article.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the
Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Bliptext is not
affiliated with or endorsed by Wikipedia or the
Wikimedia Foundation.