Seminars

Strong field QED - Thomas Koffas (Carlton University)

Europe/London
RAL

RAL

Description

Modern Quantum Electrodynamics (QED) has been extremely successful in describing the interactions of light

with matter as long as the perturbative approach remains valid. This is not true any longer when strong

electromagnetic fields are involved, such as those present in various astrophysical phenomena or expected

in a future lepton collider. Interesting new phenomena well beyond the linear response will then be observed.

In fact, at sufficiently high fields even the vacuum becomes nonlinear. Analogous to the atomic case, tunnel

ionization of the vacuum into electron-positron pairs can occur at field strengths comparable to the electron

mass in a Compton wavelength.

 

Although such fields are orders of magnitude away from what is possible with even the most intense lasers,

they can occur in the collisions of high energy electrons or photons with a strong laser field. In this talk,

I will review the conditions imposed by the presence of strong electromagnetic fields, describe the only

experiment that observed some of the relevant non-linear effects and provide an extensive outlook that highlights

the beginnings of a new exciting era in physics research.