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Color charge
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== Coupling constant and charge == In a [[quantum field theory]], a [[coupling constant]] and a charge are different but related notions. The coupling constant sets the magnitude of the force of interaction; for example, in [[quantum electrodynamics]], the [[fine-structure constant]] is a coupling constant. The charge in a [[gauge theory]] has to do with the way a particle transforms under the gauge symmetry; i.e., its [[group representation|representation]] under the gauge group. For example, the [[electron]] has charge β1 and the [[positron]] has charge +1, implying that the gauge transformation has opposite effects on them in some sense. Specifically, if a local [[gauge transformation]] {{math|''Ο''(''x'')}} is applied in electrodynamics, then one finds (using [[tensor index notation]]):<math display="block">\begin{align} A_\mu &\to A_\mu + \partial_\mu\,\phi(x) \\ \psi &\to \exp\left[+i\,Q\phi(x)\right]\; \psi \\ \bar\psi &\to \exp\left[-i\,Q\phi(x)\right] \; \bar\psi ~, \end{align}</math> where <math>A_\mu</math> is the [[photon]] field, and {{math|''Ο''}} is the electron field with {{math|1=''Q'' = β1}} (a bar over {{mvar|Ο}} denotes its antiparticle β the positron). Since QCD is a [[non-abelian group|non-abelian]] theory, the representations, and hence the color charges, are more complicated. They are dealt with in the next section.
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