Isolated lepton momenta, in particular their directions are the most
precisely measured quantities in pp collisions at LHC. This offers
opportunities for multitude of precision measurements. It is of practical
importance to verify if precision measurements with lep- tons in the final
state require all theoretical effects evaluated simultaneously or if QED
bremsstrahlung in the final state can be separated without unwanted precision
loss. Results for final state bremsstrahlung in the decays of narrow resonances
are obtained from the Feynman rules of QED in an unambiguous way and can be
controlled with a very high precision. Also for resonances of non-negligible
width, if calculations are appropriately performed, such separation from the
remaining electroweak effects can be expected. Our paper is devoted to
validation that final state QED bremsstrahlung can indeed be separated from the
rest of QCD and electroweak effects, in the production and decay of Z and W
bosons, and to estimation of the resulting systematic error. The quantitative
discussion is based on Monte Carlo programs PHOTOS and SANC, as well as on KKMC
which is used for benchmark results. We show, that for a large classes of W and
Z boson observables as used at LHC, theoretical error on photonic
bremsstrahlung is 0.1 or 0.2%, depending on the program options used. An
overall theoretical error on QED final state radiation, i.e. taking into
account missing corrections due to pair emission and interference with initial
state radiation is estimated respectively at 0.2% or 0.3% again depending on
the program option used.Comment: 1+28 pages, 20 figure