Abstract

Infrared divergences have long been heralded to cancel in sufficiently inclusive cross-sections, according to the famous Kinoshita-Lee-Nauenberg theorem which mandates an initial and final state sum. While well-motivated, this theorem is much weaker than necessary: for finiteness, one need only sum over initial $\textit{or}$ final states. Moreover, the cancellation generically requires the inclusion of the forward scattering process. We provide a number of examples showing the importance of this revised understanding: in $e^+e^- \to Z$ at next-to-leading order, one can sum over certain initial and final states with an arbitrary number of extra photons, or only over final states with a finite number of photons, if forward scattering is included. For Compton scattering, infrared finiteness requires the indistinguishability of hard forward-scattered electrons and photons. This implies that in addition to experimental limits on the energy and angular resolution, there must also be an experimental limit on the momentum at which electric charge can be observed. Similar considerations are required to explain why the rate for $\gamma \gamma$ to scatter into photons alone is infrared divergent but the rate for $\gamma \gamma$ to scatter into photons or charged particles is finite. This new understanding sheds light on the importance of including degenerate initial states in physical predictions, the relevance of disconnected Feynman diagrams, the importance of dressing initial or final-state charged particles, and the quest to properly define the $S$ matrix.

Highlights

  • The appearance and interpretation of infinities has been an essential ingredient of quantum field theory since its inception

  • While ultraviolet divergences appearing in perturbation theory are completely understood through the program of renormalization, infrared divergences remain somewhat mysterious

  • In contrast to ultraviolet divergences, which drop out when amplitudes are expressed directly in terms of other amplitudes, infrared divergences seem only to cancel at the cross-section level for sufficiently inclusive quantities

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The appearance and interpretation of infinities has been an essential ingredient of quantum field theory since its inception. For the KLN cancellation to occur, must disconnected diagrams be included, and an infinite number of photons can participate at any fixed order in the coupling How to sum this infinite series, with alternating signs for the divergent and finite pieces, requires careful consideration [35,37]. One can demonstrate the cancellation of IR divergences when summing over initial and final states following the KLN theorem, a careful examination of the proof of theorem provides two revelations: 1) The processes that contribute to assure the cancellation include exactly forward scattering and 2) infrared divergences cancel when summing over final states alone for fixed initial state or summing over initial states for a fixed final state This second point is a relief: one can avoid the troublesome aspects of initial state sums.

KLN THEOREM REVISITED
FINAL OR INITIAL STATE SUMS ONLY
Generalized cross section
Final states only
COMPTON SCATTERING
VIII. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS

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