Infrared Finite Scattering Theory in Quantum Field Theory and Quantum Gravity
Kartik Prabhu, Gautam Satishchandran, Robert M. Wald

TL;DR
This paper explores the challenges of defining an infrared finite scattering theory in quantum field theory and quantum gravity, highlighting the failure of existing constructions and proposing an algebraic framework as a solution.
Contribution
It demonstrates the failure of Faddeev-Kulish constructions in quantum gravity and suggests an algebraic approach for IR finite scattering theory.
Findings
FK construction fails in quantum gravity due to no supertranslation eigenstates.
Existing IR dressings lead to unphysical states with infinite energy flux.
An algebraic framework is proposed as a promising alternative.
Abstract
Infrared (IR) divergences arise in scattering theory with massless fields and are manifestations of the memory effect. There is nothing singular about states with memory, but they do not lie in the standard Fock space. IR divergences are artifacts of trying to represent states with memory in the standard Fock space. For collider physics, one can impose an IR cutoff and calculate inclusive quantities. But, this approach cannot treat memory as a quantum observable and is highly unsatisfactory if one views the S-matrix as fundamental in QFT and quantum gravity, since the S-matrix is undefined. For a well-defined S-matrix, it is necessary to define in/out Hilbert spaces with memory. Such a construction was given by Faddeev and Kulish (FK) for QED. Their construction "dresses" momentum states of the charged particles by pairing them with memory states of the electromagnetic field to produce…
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