Page 5: Research news on Quantum field theory

Quantum field theory (QFT) is a research area in theoretical physics that formulates fundamental interactions in terms of quantized fields defined over spacetime, unifying special relativity and quantum mechanics. It treats particles as excitations of underlying fields and employs operator- or path-integral-based frameworks to compute scattering amplitudes, correlation functions, and vacuum structure. QFT underpins the Standard Model of particle physics, gauge theories, and renormalization methods, and provides the language for describing phenomena such as spontaneous symmetry breaking, anomalies, and topological phases. Research in QFT also interfaces with quantum gravity, conformal field theory, and nonperturbative techniques such as lattice formulations and bootstrap approaches.

Could we ever harness quantum vacuum energy?

The fabric of spacetime is roiling with vibrating quantum fields, known as vacuum energy. It's right there, everywhere we look. But could we ever get anything out of it?

The link between fuzzy images and quantum fields

Mathematical solutions to thorny quantum problems can be found more quickly by exploiting the correspondence between the statistical methods used in deep learning and techniques for implementing quantum simulations, a team ...

Physicists find a new way to represent π

While investigating how string theory can be used to explain certain physical phenomena, scientists at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) have stumbled upon on a new series representation for the irrational number π. ...

Theory and experiment combine to shine a new light on proton spin

Nuclear physicists have long been working to reveal how the proton gets its spin. Now, a new method that combines experimental data with state-of-the-art calculations has revealed a more detailed picture of spin contributions ...

page 5 from 6