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These lectures aim to provide a pedagogical introduction to the philosophical underpinnings and technical features of Effective Field Theory (EFT). Improving control of $S$-matrix elements in the presence of a large hierarchy of physical scales $m ll M$ is emphasized. Utilizing $lambda sim m/M$ as a power counting expansion parameter, we show how matching an ultraviolet (UV) model onto an EFT makes manifest the notion of separating scales. Renormalization Group (RG) techniques are used to run the EFT couplings from the UV to the infrared (IR), thereby summing large logarithms that would otherwise reduce the efficacy of perturbation theory. A variety of scalar field theory based toy examples are worked out in detail. An approach to consistently evolving a coupling across a heavy particle mass threshold is demonstrated. Applying the same method to the scalar mass term forces us to confront the hierarchy problem. The summation of a logarithm that lacks explicit dependence on an RG scale is performed. After reviewing the physics of IR divergences, we build a scalar toy version of Soft Collinear Effective Theory (SCET), highlighting many subtle aspects of these constructions. We show how SCET can be used to sum the soft and collinear IR Sudakov double logarithms that often appear for processes involving external interacting light-like particles. We conclude with the generalization of SCET to theories of gauge bosons coupled to charged fermions. These lectures were presented at TASI 2018.
These lectures review the formalism of renormalization in quantum field theories with special regard to effective quantum field theories. While renormalization theory is part of every advanced course on quantum field theory, for effective theories so
We give an elementary introduction to classical and quantum bosonic string theory.
Unstable particles are notorious in perturbative quantum field theory for producing singular propagators in scattering amplitudes that require regularization by the finite width. In this review I discuss the construction of an effective field theory
We apply on-shell methods to the bottom-up construction of electroweak amplitudes, allowing for both renormalizable and non-renormalizable interactions. We use the little-group covariant massive-spinor formalism, and flesh out some of its details alo
These are lecture notes written at the University of Zurich during spring 2014 and spring 2015. The first part of the notes gives an introduction to probability theory. It explains the notion of random events and random variables, probability measure