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In quantum field theory (QFT) and the statistical mechanics of fields, renormalization refers to a collection of techniques used to express physical calculations in terms of observable quantities that already include some field effects. Renormalization arose in quantum electrodynamics as a means of making sense of the infinite results of various calculations and extracting finite answers to properly posed physical questions. Initially viewed as a suspect, provisional procedure by most of its originators, renormalization eventually was embraced as an important tool in several fields of physics, as a result of work in effective field theory and the renormalization group.

1 Prehistory: Self-interactions in classical mechanics

Some of the problems and phenomena eventually addressed by renormalization actually appeared earlier in the classical electrodynamics of point particles in the 19th and early 20th century. When calculating the electromagnetic interactions of charged particles, one often ignores the back-reaction of a particle's own field upon itself. It was realized early on that such a treatment is incomplete, and some theorists explored the intriguing idea that an electron's inertialInertia is the tendency of any state of affairs to persist in the absence of external influences. Specifically, in physics, it is the tendency of a body to maintain its state of uniform motion unless acted on by an external force''. This is called Newton' massMass is a property of physical objects that, roughly speaking, measures the amount of matter they contain. It is a central concept of classical mechanics and related subjects. Strictly speaking, there are two different quantities called mass Inertial mass could be entirely due to the back-reaction. However, if the electron is assumed to be a point, the calculated value of this back-reaction diverges, essentially because of the singularity at the origin in the inverse-square lawIn physics, an inverse-square law is a physical law stating that some quantity is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from a point. In particular, the gravitational attraction between two massive objects, in addition to being directly pro. One potential solution was to assume that, say, the electron had a nonzero size, comparable to the number known as the classical electron radiusIn science, a physical constant is a physical quantity whose numerical value does not change. It can be contrasted with a mathematical constant, which is a fixed value that does not directly involve a physical measurement. There are many physical constant, about . Then, however, according to Henri PoincaréJules Henri Poincar ( April 29, 1854 July 17, 1912) was one of France's greatest mathematicians, theoretical scientists and a philosopher of science. Poincare is often described as the last "universalist" capable of understanding and contributing in virtu, the theory became inconsistent unless the electron possessed additional forces to hold it together internally against the repulsion of like charges. Today the hypothesis of a classical electron radius might be seen as an early attempt at regularizationThe mathematical term regularization has two main meanings, both associated with making a function more `regular' or smooth. Regularization in physics In physics, especially particle physics, regularization is a method of dealing with infinite, divergent,. Attempts to deal with the back-reaction, such as the Abraham-Lorentz theory , were never entirely internally consistent and exhibited bizarre phenomena such as anti-causal "pre-acceleration", in which an electron would start moving shortly before a force was applied (Jackson 1998).

In classical field theory, therefore, the contribution of field interactions to a particle's physical properties was already problematic. Indeed, in some ways the trouble was worse than in QFT, since the short-distance divergences involved were typically stronger than the ones encountered in quantum theories.



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