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6. Second Quantization and Quantum Field Theory

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1 6. Second Quantization and Quantum Field Theory
Preliminary The Occupation Number Representation Field Operators and Observables Equation of Motion and Lagrangian Formalism for Field Operators

2 Preliminary Systems with variable numbers of particles ~ Second quantization High energy scattering and decay processes. Relativistic systems. Many body systems (not necessarily relativistic). 1st quantization: Dynamical variables become operators; E, L, … take on only discrete values. 2nd quantization: Wave functions become field operators. Properties described by counting numbers of 1-particle states being occupied. Processes described in terms of exchange of real or virtual particles. For system near ground state: → Quasi-particles (fermions) or elementary excitations (bosons). → Perturbative approach.

3 6.1. The Occupation Number Representation
Many body problem ~ System of N identical particles. { | k  } = set of complete, orthonormal, 1-particle states that satisfy the BCs. is an orthonormal basis. Uncertainty principle → identical particles are indistinguishable. bosons fermions Bose-Einstein Fermi-Dirac integral half-integral statistics spin Spin-statistics theorem: this association is due to causality.

4 Basis with built-in exchange symmetry:
bosons fermions P denotes a permutation even odd if P consists of an number of transpositions (exchanges) With , is orthonormal: if 2 states with N  N  are always orthogonal.

5 Number Representation: States
Let { | α  } be a set of complete, orthonormal 1-P basis. α = 0,1,2,3,… denotes a set of quantum numbers with increasing E. E.g., one electron spinless states of H atom: | α  = | nlm  | 0  = | 100 , | 1  = | 111 , | 2  = | 110 , | 3  = | 111 , … Number (n-) representation: Basis = (symmetrized) eigenstates of number operator nα= number of particles in | α  orthonormality

6 Creation and Annihilation Operators
Conjugate variables in n-rep: annihilation operators creation operators

7 A,C real → For bosons, nα = 0, 1, 2, 3, … For fermions, nα = 0, → A(0) = 0, C(1) = 0 and 1 = C(0) A(1). Set: C(0) = A(1) = 1. Completeness of this basis is with respect to the Fock space. There exists many particle states that cannot be constructed in this manner. E.g., BCS states (Cooper pairs).

8 Commutation Relations
Exchange symmetries of states  Commutation relations between operators Fock space is the “vacuum”.  α For fermions, nα = 0, 1 → Boson Fermion Exchange symmetries are established by requiring Commutator Anti-commutator

9

10 Number Representation: Operators
1-P operator : = matrix elements The vacuum projector confines A to the 1-particle subspace. i.e., if the number of particles in either  or  is not one. Many body version :

11 2-Particle Potential Basis vector for the 2-P Hilbert space:
Completeness condition:

12 confines V to the 2-particle subspace.
Many body version :

13 Summary 1-P operator: 2-P operator:

14 6.2. Field Operators and Observables
Momentum eigenstaes for spinless particles: Orthonormality: Completeness: where

15 Field Operators The field operators are defined in the Schrodinger picture by Momentum basis: Commutation relations :

16 = total number of particles
 ρ(x) is the number density operator at x.

17 6.3. Equation of Motion & Lagrangian Formalism for Field Operators
Heisenberg picture: Equal time commutation relations:

18 Equation of Motion

19 Lagrangian  is complex → it represents 2 degrees of freedom ( Re , Im ) or ( ,  * ). Variation on  * : E-L eq: Schrodinger equation

20 Generalized momentum conjugate to  =
Variation on  : integration by part Generalized momentum conjugate to  = Hamiltonian density ~ Classical field Quantization rule: Quantum field theory


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