Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gamboa, J., Mendez, F.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.11668
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866909836253331456
author Gamboa, J.
Mendez, F.
author_facet Gamboa, J.
Mendez, F.
contents We investigate quantum electrodynamics in the infrared regime (QED-IR) using the adiabatic approximation and the framework of the functional Berry phase. In this approach, the physical state space is exact, nonperturbatively dressed, and endowed with a topological structure. Electrons do not exist as bare particles, but as topologically protected electron--photon clouds, defining a new kind of ``infrared quantum''. These clouds are weakly bound in energy (with a binding scale estimated at \(Λ_{\mathrm{IR}} \sim 0.5~\mathrm{meV}\)) and remain stable provided photon energies stay below this threshold. Crucially, the theory becomes exactly solvable in this regime due to the quantization of the functional Berry flux, which governs the infrared dynamics of the dressed states. When hard (high-energy) processes are involved, the topological protection of the dressed states is lifted, and the theory smoothly recovers conventional perturbative QED. In contrast, in the deep infrared, the electromagnetic interaction never fully vanishes, leading to observable effects. We argue that the energy required to dissolve the infrared electron--photon cloud in QED is of order \(\mathrm{meV}\), comparable to the thermal energy of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), \(k_B T_{\mathrm{CMB}} \approx 2.3 \times 10^{-4}\,\mathrm{eV}\). However, the observed temperature anisotropies correspond to fluctuations near \(10^{-9}\,\mathrm{eV}\), far too small to destroy the cloud, though potentially capable of perturbing its topological phase structure. This suggests that CMB deviations could reflect residual topological imprints of the functional infrared dynamics. Finally, we propose that analogous cloud-like structures may manifest in other quantum systems governed by low-energy photon dynamics, such as atomic and molecular environments.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_11668
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle QED-IR as Topological Quantum Theory of Dressed States
Gamboa, J.
Mendez, F.
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
High Energy Physics - Theory
We investigate quantum electrodynamics in the infrared regime (QED-IR) using the adiabatic approximation and the framework of the functional Berry phase. In this approach, the physical state space is exact, nonperturbatively dressed, and endowed with a topological structure. Electrons do not exist as bare particles, but as topologically protected electron--photon clouds, defining a new kind of ``infrared quantum''. These clouds are weakly bound in energy (with a binding scale estimated at \(Λ_{\mathrm{IR}} \sim 0.5~\mathrm{meV}\)) and remain stable provided photon energies stay below this threshold. Crucially, the theory becomes exactly solvable in this regime due to the quantization of the functional Berry flux, which governs the infrared dynamics of the dressed states. When hard (high-energy) processes are involved, the topological protection of the dressed states is lifted, and the theory smoothly recovers conventional perturbative QED. In contrast, in the deep infrared, the electromagnetic interaction never fully vanishes, leading to observable effects. We argue that the energy required to dissolve the infrared electron--photon cloud in QED is of order \(\mathrm{meV}\), comparable to the thermal energy of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), \(k_B T_{\mathrm{CMB}} \approx 2.3 \times 10^{-4}\,\mathrm{eV}\). However, the observed temperature anisotropies correspond to fluctuations near \(10^{-9}\,\mathrm{eV}\), far too small to destroy the cloud, though potentially capable of perturbing its topological phase structure. This suggests that CMB deviations could reflect residual topological imprints of the functional infrared dynamics. Finally, we propose that analogous cloud-like structures may manifest in other quantum systems governed by low-energy photon dynamics, such as atomic and molecular environments.
title QED-IR as Topological Quantum Theory of Dressed States
topic High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
High Energy Physics - Theory
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.11668