| (1) |
To remain closer to textbook notation, display the imaginary unit with a lowercase
>
|
|
An example departing from an interaction Lagrangian
A process with one incoming and one outgoing particle a 1-loop
>
|
|
| (3) |
To evaluate the integral, using dimensional regularization, computing the integral over the loop momentum in dimension , you can use Evaluate
| (4) |
This result contains the dimensional parameter . To expand the dimension of this result around keeping terms up to order 0 in you can use
| (5) |
Computing the integral without expanding and expand in a second step allows for better control and follow-up of the computation. Alternatively, you can compute the two steps in one go using the expanddimension option of Evaluate:
>
|
|
| (6) |
The Series command has the same syntax as series but always return up to . Consider for instance:
Indicating the order as equal to 3, the output by series, however, can be relative; in this example it starts at and goes up to :
>
|
|
| (8) |
The output of Series is up to regardless of degree of the first term of the series
>
|
|
| (9) |
A different example, indicating the order equal to 1; here series default approach results in terms up to
>
|
|
| (10) |
The same computation with output up to the indicated order,
>
|
|
| (11) |