Close-up of the sterling silver Feynman Scattering Necklace, inspired by quantum physics and subatomic particles.
Model wearing the Feynman Scattering Necklace, showcasing its sleek, scientific design in sterling silver.
Side profile of the Feynman Scattering Necklace, highlighting the elegant craftsmanship and scientific inspiration.
Elegant Feynman Scattering Necklace crafted in sterling silver and inspired by particle physics.

Feynman scattering necklace

silver
|

€ 135

Length

45 cm + 5 cm extender chain included

Choose your extra chain

Earn 135 Science club points

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Feynman scattering necklace | sterling silver

If you can sketch a Feynman diagram from memory, the vertices for interactions and the lines for propagators of electrons and photons, you already know what the pendant carries. The shorthand for perturbative quantum field theory drawn the way Feynman drew it. Worn here as a 34 mm sterling silver pendant.

The Science Behind Feynman Scattering

Richard Feynman introduced his diagram notation at the 1948 Pocono Conference, where Schwinger's competing analytical approach to quantum electrodynamics dominated the room and Feynman's pictures left most of the audience confused. Within a few years the diagrams became the standard tool. Each Feynman diagram is a graphical bookkeeping device for a term in the perturbative expansion of a scattering amplitude: vertices represent interactions, internal lines represent virtual particles propagating between them, external lines represent observable particles entering or leaving the process. The 1965 Nobel Prize in Physics went jointly to Feynman, Schwinger, and Tomonaga for the renormalisation of QED. The diagrams now reach into condensed matter many-body theory, particle physics calculations at the LHC, and lattice gauge theory.

Who Will Recognise It

  • theoretical and experimental particle physicists
  • condensed matter theorists working on many-body Green's functions
  • graduate students learning QED, QCD, or perturbative quantum field theory
  • physics educators and the people who keep a Feynman diagram on the office wall

For someone who reads scattering amplitudes the way other people read sentences, and for whom QED is still the cleanest example of a quantum field theory ever calibrated against experiment.

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FAQ

Is this for a working theorist or for a physics enthusiast?

Both, in roughly equal measure. Theoretical and experimental physicists buy it as a working reference to the calculation tool they use daily. Physics enthusiasts and educators buy it because Feynman diagrams are the most-recognised image of how particles interact, the diagrammatic shorthand that even non-physicists associate with quantum field theory. The pendant works for either reading.

Why are Feynman diagrams more than just a drawing convention?

Because each diagram corresponds to an integral. The Feynman rules for QED translate any diagram into a precise mathematical expression for a scattering amplitude, whose square gives a measurable scattering rate. The notation looks like cartooning until you realise it is a complete computational system for perturbation theory. Schwinger never trusted them, then converted. By the late 1960s every paper in particle physics carried diagrams in the introduction.

What size is the pendant and what chain comes with it?

925 sterling silver, 34 mm pendant on a 45 cm sterling silver chain (ø 1.8 mm) with a 5 cm extender. Nickel-free and hypoallergenic. Free worldwide DHL Express in 1-5 business days, with all import duties and taxes covered. 30-day “Love It or Return It” returns.

Is there a gold version?

Not at present. Feynman scattering is sterling silver only. Other Math and Physics designs in the catalogue exist in 18K gold vermeil, including the integral, the phi, and the trefoil knot, if a gold counterpart in the same field is the goal.

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