Bosonization
In theoretical condensed matter physics and quantum field theory, bosonization is a mathematical procedure by which a system of interacting fermions in (1+1) dimensions can be transformed to a system of massless, non-interacting bosons. The method of bosonization was conceived independently by particle physicists Sidney Coleman and Stanley Mandelstam; and condensed matter physicists Daniel C. Mattis and Alan Luther in 1975.
In particle physics, however, the boson is interacting, and notably through topological interactions .
The basic physical idea behind bosonization is that particle-hole excitations are bosonic in character. However, it was shown by Tomonaga in 1950 that this principle is only valid in one-dimensional systems. Bosonization is an effective field theory that focuses on low-energy excitations.
Mathematical descriptions
A pair of chiral fermions, one being the conjugate variable of the other, can be described in terms of a chiral bosonwhere the currents of these two models are related by
where composite operators must be defined by a regularization and a subsequent renormalization.