Physics:Quantum methods/renormalization

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Renormalization is a set of techniques used in quantum field theory to deal with infinities that arise in calculations of physical quantities.

Renormalization adjusts parameters so predictions remain finite and measurable.

Overview

Perturbative calculations often produce divergent integrals. Renormalization absorbs these divergences into redefined physical parameters such as mass and charge.

Key ideas

  • Bare vs. physical quantities
  • Running coupling constants
  • Scale dependence

Renormalization group

The renormalization group describes how physical systems change with scale and plays a central role in modern theoretical physics.

See also

Table of contents (185 articles)

Index

Full contents

9. Quantum optics and experiments (5) ↑ Back to index
14. Plasma and fusion physics (8) ↑ Back to index
Conceptual illustration of plasma physics in a fusion context, showing magnetically confined ionized gas in a tokamak and the collective behavior governed by electromagnetic fields and transport processes.
Conceptual illustration of plasma physics in a fusion context, showing magnetically confined ionized gas in a tokamak and the collective behavior governed by electromagnetic fields and transport processes.

References


Author: Harold Foppele

Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Renormalization