Physics:Quantum vacuum field

From ScholarlyWiki
Revision as of 22:04, 19 May 2026 by Maintenance script (talk | contribs) (Rebuild Matter chapter page from reviewed Wikipedia sources)
Jump to navigation Jump to search


A quantum vacuum field is a quantum field considered in or near its vacuum state. Even without ordinary particles, a field can have zero-point fluctuations, correlations, and vacuum expectation values that affect observable physics.[1][2]

Vacuum field: ground-state field fluctuations.

Core idea

The field viewpoint replaces isolated particle pictures with states, modes, operators, and excitations. It is especially powerful when particle number can change.[3]

Use in quantum physics

Field concepts organize interactions, conservation laws, measurement outcomes, and effective descriptions across particle physics, optics, condensed matter, and cosmology.[4]

See also

Table of contents (84 articles)

Index

Full contents

References

  1. "Vacuum state". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_state. 
  2. Schwartz, Matthew D. (2014). Quantum Field Theory and the Standard Model. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-03473-0. 
  3. Schwartz, Matthew D. (2014). Quantum Field Theory and the Standard Model. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-03473-0. 
  4. Peskin, Michael E.; Schroeder, Daniel V. (1995). An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory. Addison-Wesley. ISBN 978-0-201-50397-5. 


Author: Harold Foppele


Source attribution: Physics:Quantum vacuum field