Yukawa potential
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Headline text
A Yukawa potential (also called a screened Coulomb potential) is a potential of the form
- [V(r)= -g^2 \;\frac}]
In the above equation, the potential is negative, denoting that the force is attractive. The constant g is a real number; it is equal to the coupling constant between the meson field and the fermion field with which it interacts. In the case of nuclear physics, the fermions would be the proton and the neutron.
Fourier transform
The easiest way to understand that the Yukawa potential is associated with a massive field is by examining its Fourier transform. One has
- [V(r)=\frac \int e^} \frac \;d^3k]
Feynman amplitude
The Yukawa potential can be derived as the lowest order amplitude of the interaction of a pair of fermions. The Yukawa interaction couples the fermion field [\psi(x)] to the meson field [\phi(x)] with the coupling term
- [\mathcal_\mathrm(x) = g\overline(x)\phi(x) \psi(x)]
The Feynman rules for each vertex associate a factor of g with the amplitude; since this diagram has two vertices, the total amplitude will have a factor of [g^2]. The line in the middle, connecting the two fermion lines, represents the exchange of a meson. The Feynman rule for a particle exchange is to use the propagator; the propagator for a massive meson is [-4\pi/(k^2+m^2)]. Thus, we see that the Feynman amplitude for this graph is nothing more than
- [V(\mathbf)=-g^2\frac]
References
- Gerald Edward Brown and A. D. Jackson, The Nucleon-Nucleon Interaction, (1976) North-Holland Publishing, Amsterdam ISBN 0-7204-0335-9
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