Perturbative quantum chromodynamics (also perturbative QCD) is a subfield of particle physics in which the theory of strong interactions, Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), is studied by using the fact that the strong coupling constant
\alphas
An important test of perturbative QCD is the measurement of the ratio of production rates for
e+e-\tohadrons
e+e-\to\mu+\mu-
Most strong-interaction processes can not be calculated directly with perturbative QCD, since one cannot observe free quarks and gluons due to color confinement. For example, the structure hadrons has a non-perturbative nature. To account for this, physicists developed the QCD factorization theorem, which separates the cross section into two parts: the process dependent perturbatively-calculable short-distance parton cross section, and the universal long-distance functions. These universal long-distance functions can be measured with global fit to experiments and include parton distribution functions, fragmentation functions, multi-parton correlation functions, generalized parton distributions, generalized distribution amplitudes and many kinds of form factors. There are several collaborations for each kind of universal long-distance functions. They have become an important part of modern particle physics.
Quantum chromodynamics is formulated in terms of the Lagrangian density
The matter content of the Lagrangian is a spinor field
\psi
A\mu
\gamma\mu
D\mu
\psi(x)
G
G
The gauge field
A\mu
ak{g}
G
\mu
ak{g}
ta
ak{g}
tr(tatb)=\deltaab
A\mu
F\mu\nu,
g
By expanding
F\mu\nu
a | |
F | |
\mu\nu |
c(x)
ak{g}.
Where
\xi
\xi=1
After expanding out the curvature and covariant derivatives, the Feynman rules for QCD can be derived through path integral methods.
The techniques for renormalization of gauge theories and QCD were developed and carried out by 't Hooft. For a small number of particle types (quark flavors), QCD has a negative beta function and therefore exhibits asymptotic freedom.
Showing that QCD is renormalizable at one-loop order requires the evaluation of loop integrals, which can be derived from Feynman rules and evaluated using dimensional regularization.