fbpx
Wikipedia

Ehrenfest theorem

The Ehrenfest theorem, named after Austrian theoretical physicist Paul Ehrenfest, relates the time derivative of the expectation values of the position and momentum operators x and p to the expectation value of the force on a massive particle moving in a scalar potential ,[1]

The Ehrenfest theorem is a special case of a more general relation between the expectation of any quantum mechanical operator and the expectation of the commutator of that operator with the Hamiltonian of the system [2][3]

where A is some quantum mechanical operator and A is its expectation value.

It is most apparent in the Heisenberg picture of quantum mechanics, where it amounts to just the expectation value of the Heisenberg equation of motion. It provides mathematical support to the correspondence principle.

The reason is that Ehrenfest's theorem is closely related to Liouville's theorem of Hamiltonian mechanics, which involves the Poisson bracket instead of a commutator. Dirac's rule of thumb suggests that statements in quantum mechanics which contain a commutator correspond to statements in classical mechanics where the commutator is supplanted by a Poisson bracket multiplied by . This makes the operator expectation values obey corresponding classical equations of motion, provided the Hamiltonian is at most quadratic in the coordinates and momenta. Otherwise, the evolution equations still may hold approximately, provided fluctuations are small.

Relation to classical physics edit

Although, at first glance, it might appear that the Ehrenfest theorem is saying that the quantum mechanical expectation values obey Newton’s classical equations of motion, this is not actually the case.[4] If the pair   were to satisfy Newton's second law, the right-hand side of the second equation would have to be

 
which is typically not the same as
 
If for example, the potential   is cubic, (i.e. proportional to  ), then   is quadratic (proportional to  ). This means, in the case of Newton's second law, the right side would be in the form of  , while in the Ehrenfest theorem it is in the form of  . The difference between these two quantities is the square of the uncertainty in   and is therefore nonzero.

An exception occurs in case when the classical equations of motion are linear, that is, when   is quadratic and   is linear. In that special case,   and   do agree. Thus, for the case of a quantum harmonic oscillator, the expected position and expected momentum do exactly follow the classical trajectories.

For general systems, if the wave function is highly concentrated around a point  , then   and   will be almost the same, since both will be approximately equal to  . In that case, the expected position and expected momentum will approximately follow the classical trajectories, at least for as long as the wave function remains localized in position.[5]

Derivation in the Schrödinger picture edit

Suppose some system is presently in a quantum state Φ. If we want to know the instantaneous time derivative of the expectation value of A, that is, by definition

 
where we are integrating over all of space. If we apply the Schrödinger equation, we find that
 

By taking the complex conjugate we find [6]

 

Note H = H, because the Hamiltonian is Hermitian. Placing this into the above equation we have

 

Often (but not always) the operator A is time-independent so that its derivative is zero and we can ignore the last term.

Derivation in the Heisenberg picture edit

In the Heisenberg picture, the derivation is straightforward. The Heisenberg picture moves the time dependence of the system to operators instead of state vectors. Starting with the Heisenberg equation of motion,

 
Ehrenfest's theorem follows simply upon projecting the Heisenberg equation onto   from the right and   from the left, or taking the expectation value, so
 

One may pull the d/dt out of the first term, since the state vectors are no longer time dependent in the Heisenberg Picture. Therefore,

 

General example edit

For the very general example of a massive particle moving in a potential, the Hamiltonian is simply

 
where x is the position of the particle.

Suppose we wanted to know the instantaneous change in the expectation of the momentum p. Using Ehrenfest's theorem, we have

 

since the operator p commutes with itself and has no time dependence.[7] By expanding the right-hand-side, replacing p by , we get

 

After applying the product rule on the second term, we have

 

As explained in the introduction, this result does not say that the pair   satisfies Newton's second law, because the right-hand side of the formula is   rather than  . Nevertheless, as explained in the introduction, for states that are highly localized in space, the expected position and momentum will approximately follow classical trajectories, which may be understood as an instance of the correspondence principle.

Similarly, we can obtain the instantaneous change in the position expectation value.

 

This result is actually in exact accord with the classical equation.

Derivation of the Schrödinger equation from the Ehrenfest theorems edit

It was established above that the Ehrenfest theorems are consequences of the Schrödinger equation. However, the converse is also true: the Schrödinger equation can be inferred from the Ehrenfest theorems.[8] We begin from

 

Application of the product rule leads to

 
Here, apply Stone's theorem, using Ĥ to denote the quantum generator of time translation. The next step is to show that this is the same as the Hamiltonian operator used in quantum mechanics. Stone's theorem implies
 
where ħ was introduced as a normalization constant to the balance dimensionality. Since these identities must be valid for any initial state, the averaging can be dropped and the system of commutator equations for Ĥ are derived:
 

Assuming that observables of the coordinate and momentum obey the canonical commutation relation [, ] = . Setting  , the commutator equations can be converted into the differential equations[8][9]

 
whose solution is the familiar quantum Hamiltonian
 

Whence, the Schrödinger equation was derived from the Ehrenfest theorems by assuming the canonical commutation relation between the coordinate and momentum. If one assumes that the coordinate and momentum commute, the same computational method leads to the Koopman–von Neumann classical mechanics, which is the Hilbert space formulation of classical mechanics.[8] Therefore, this derivation as well as the derivation of the Koopman–von Neumann mechanics, shows that the essential difference between quantum and classical mechanics reduces to the value of the commutator [, ].

The implications of the Ehrenfest theorem for systems with classically chaotic dynamics are discussed at Scholarpedia article Ehrenfest time and chaos. Due to exponential instability of classical trajectories the Ehrenfest time, on which there is a complete correspondence between quantum and classical evolution, is shown to be logarithmically short being proportional to a logarithm of typical quantum number. For the case of integrable dynamics this time scale is much larger being proportional to a certain power of quantum number.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hall 2013 Section 3.7.5
  2. ^ Ehrenfest, P. (1927). "Bemerkung über die angenäherte Gültigkeit der klassischen Mechanik innerhalb der Quantenmechanik". Zeitschrift für Physik. 45 (7–8): 455–457. Bibcode:1927ZPhy...45..455E. doi:10.1007/BF01329203. S2CID 123011242.
  3. ^ Smith, Henrik (1991). Introduction to Quantum Mechanics. World Scientific Pub Co Inc. pp. 108–109. ISBN 978-9810204754.
  4. ^ Wheeler, Nicholas. "Remarks concerning the status & some ramifications of Ehrenfest's theorem" (PDF).
  5. ^ Hall 2013 p. 78
  6. ^ In bra–ket notation  , so  where   is the Hamiltonian operator, and H is the Hamiltonian represented in coordinate space (as is the case in the derivation above). In other words, we applied the adjoint operation to the entire Schrödinger equation, which flipped the order of operations for H and Φ.
  7. ^ Although the expectation value of the momentum p, which is a real-number-valued function of time, will have time dependence, the momentum operator itself, p does not, in this picture: Rather, the momentum operator is a constant linear operator on the Hilbert space of the system. The time dependence of the expectation value, in this picture, is due to the time evolution of the wavefunction for which the expectation value is calculated. An Ad hoc example of an operator which does have time dependence is xt2, where x is the ordinary position operator and t is just the (non-operator) time, a parameter.
  8. ^ a b c Bondar, D.; Cabrera, R.; Lompay, R.; Ivanov, M.; Rabitz, H. (2012). "Operational Dynamic Modeling Transcending Quantum and Classical Mechanics". Physical Review Letters. 109 (19): 190403. arXiv:1105.4014. Bibcode:2012PhRvL.109s0403B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.190403. PMID 23215365. S2CID 19605000.
  9. ^ Transtrum, M. K.; Van Huele, J. F. O. S. (2005). "Commutation relations for functions of operators". Journal of Mathematical Physics. 46 (6): 063510. Bibcode:2005JMP....46f3510T. doi:10.1063/1.1924703.

References edit

  • Hall, Brian C. (2013), Quantum Theory for Mathematicians, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 267, Springer, ISBN 978-1461471158

ehrenfest, theorem, named, after, austrian, theoretical, physicist, paul, ehrenfest, relates, time, derivative, expectation, values, position, momentum, operators, expectation, value, force, displaystyle, massive, particle, moving, scalar, potential, displayst. The Ehrenfest theorem named after Austrian theoretical physicist Paul Ehrenfest relates the time derivative of the expectation values of the position and momentum operators x and p to the expectation value of the force F V x displaystyle F V x on a massive particle moving in a scalar potential V x displaystyle V x 1 mddt x p ddt p V x displaystyle m frac d dt langle x rangle langle p rangle frac d dt langle p rangle left langle V x right rangle The Ehrenfest theorem is a special case of a more general relation between the expectation of any quantum mechanical operator and the expectation of the commutator of that operator with the Hamiltonian of the system 2 3 ddt A 1iℏ A H A t displaystyle frac d dt langle A rangle frac 1 i hbar langle A H rangle left langle frac partial A partial t right rangle where A is some quantum mechanical operator and A is its expectation value It is most apparent in the Heisenberg picture of quantum mechanics where it amounts to just the expectation value of the Heisenberg equation of motion It provides mathematical support to the correspondence principle The reason is that Ehrenfest s theorem is closely related to Liouville s theorem of Hamiltonian mechanics which involves the Poisson bracket instead of a commutator Dirac s rule of thumb suggests that statements in quantum mechanics which contain a commutator correspond to statements in classical mechanics where the commutator is supplanted by a Poisson bracket multiplied by iħ This makes the operator expectation values obey corresponding classical equations of motion provided the Hamiltonian is at most quadratic in the coordinates and momenta Otherwise the evolution equations still may hold approximately provided fluctuations are small Contents 1 Relation to classical physics 2 Derivation in the Schrodinger picture 3 Derivation in the Heisenberg picture 4 General example 5 Derivation of the Schrodinger equation from the Ehrenfest theorems 6 Notes 7 ReferencesRelation to classical physics editAlthough at first glance it might appear that the Ehrenfest theorem is saying that the quantum mechanical expectation values obey Newton s classical equations of motion this is not actually the case 4 If the pair x p displaystyle langle x rangle langle p rangle nbsp were to satisfy Newton s second law the right hand side of the second equation would have to be V x displaystyle V left left langle x right rangle right nbsp which is typically not the same as V x displaystyle left langle V x right rangle nbsp If for example the potential V x displaystyle V x nbsp is cubic i e proportional to x3 displaystyle x 3 nbsp then V displaystyle V nbsp is quadratic proportional to x2 displaystyle x 2 nbsp This means in the case of Newton s second law the right side would be in the form of x 2 displaystyle langle x rangle 2 nbsp while in the Ehrenfest theorem it is in the form of x2 displaystyle langle x 2 rangle nbsp The difference between these two quantities is the square of the uncertainty in x displaystyle x nbsp and is therefore nonzero An exception occurs in case when the classical equations of motion are linear that is when V displaystyle V nbsp is quadratic and V displaystyle V nbsp is linear In that special case V x displaystyle V left left langle x right rangle right nbsp and V x displaystyle left langle V x right rangle nbsp do agree Thus for the case of a quantum harmonic oscillator the expected position and expected momentum do exactly follow the classical trajectories For general systems if the wave function is highly concentrated around a point x0 displaystyle x 0 nbsp then V x displaystyle V left left langle x right rangle right nbsp and V x displaystyle left langle V x right rangle nbsp will be almost the same since both will be approximately equal to V x0 displaystyle V x 0 nbsp In that case the expected position and expected momentum will approximately follow the classical trajectories at least for as long as the wave function remains localized in position 5 Derivation in the Schrodinger picture editSuppose some system is presently in a quantum state F If we want to know the instantaneous time derivative of the expectation value of A that is by definitionddt A ddt F AFd3x F t AFd3x F A t Fd3x F A F t d3x F t AFd3x A t F A F t d3x displaystyle begin aligned frac d dt langle A rangle amp frac d dt int Phi A Phi d 3 x amp int left frac partial Phi partial t right A Phi d 3 x int Phi left frac partial A partial t right Phi d 3 x int Phi A left frac partial Phi partial t right d 3 x amp int left frac partial Phi partial t right A Phi d 3 x left langle frac partial A partial t right rangle int Phi A left frac partial Phi partial t right d 3 x end aligned nbsp where we are integrating over all of space If we apply the Schrodinger equation we find that F t 1iℏHF displaystyle frac partial Phi partial t frac 1 i hbar H Phi nbsp By taking the complex conjugate we find 6 F t 1iℏF H 1iℏF H displaystyle frac partial Phi partial t frac 1 i hbar Phi H frac 1 i hbar Phi H nbsp Note H H because the Hamiltonian is Hermitian Placing this into the above equation we haveddt A 1iℏ F AH HA F d3x A t 1iℏ A H A t displaystyle frac d dt langle A rangle frac 1 i hbar int Phi AH HA Phi d 3 x left langle frac partial A partial t right rangle frac 1 i hbar langle A H rangle left langle frac partial A partial t right rangle nbsp Often but not always the operator A is time independent so that its derivative is zero and we can ignore the last term Derivation in the Heisenberg picture editIn the Heisenberg picture the derivation is straightforward The Heisenberg picture moves the time dependence of the system to operators instead of state vectors Starting with the Heisenberg equation of motion ddtA t A t t 1iℏ A t H displaystyle frac d dt A t frac partial A t partial t frac 1 i hbar A t H nbsp Ehrenfest s theorem follows simply upon projecting the Heisenberg equation onto PS displaystyle Psi rangle nbsp from the right and PS displaystyle langle Psi nbsp from the left or taking the expectation value so PS ddtA t PS PS A t t PS PS 1iℏ A t H PS displaystyle left langle Psi left frac d dt A t right Psi right rangle left langle Psi left frac partial A t partial t right Psi right rangle left langle Psi left frac 1 i hbar A t H right Psi right rangle nbsp One may pull the d dt out of the first term since the state vectors are no longer time dependent in the Heisenberg Picture Therefore ddt A t A t t 1iℏ A t H displaystyle frac d dt langle A t rangle left langle frac partial A t partial t right rangle frac 1 i hbar left langle A t H right rangle nbsp General example editFor the very general example of a massive particle moving in a potential the Hamiltonian is simplyH x p t p22m V x t displaystyle H x p t frac p 2 2m V x t nbsp where x is the position of the particle Suppose we wanted to know the instantaneous change in the expectation of the momentum p Using Ehrenfest s theorem we haveddt p 1iℏ p H p t 1iℏ p V x t displaystyle frac d dt langle p rangle frac 1 i hbar langle p H rangle left langle frac partial p partial t right rangle frac 1 i hbar langle p V x t rangle nbsp since the operator p commutes with itself and has no time dependence 7 By expanding the right hand side replacing p by iħ we getddt p F V x t xF dx F x V x t F dx displaystyle frac d dt langle p rangle int Phi V x t frac partial partial x Phi dx int Phi frac partial partial x V x t Phi dx nbsp After applying the product rule on the second term we haveddt p F V x t xF dx F xV x t F dx F V x t xF dx F xV x t F dx xV x t F displaystyle begin aligned frac d dt langle p rangle amp int Phi V x t frac partial partial x Phi dx int Phi left frac partial partial x V x t right Phi dx int Phi V x t frac partial partial x Phi dx amp int Phi left frac partial partial x V x t right Phi dx amp left langle frac partial partial x V x t right rangle langle F rangle end aligned nbsp As explained in the introduction this result does not say that the pair X P displaystyle langle X rangle langle P rangle nbsp satisfies Newton s second law because the right hand side of the formula is F x t displaystyle langle F x t rangle nbsp rather than F X t displaystyle F langle X rangle t nbsp Nevertheless as explained in the introduction for states that are highly localized in space the expected position and momentum will approximately follow classical trajectories which may be understood as an instance of the correspondence principle Similarly we can obtain the instantaneous change in the position expectation value ddt x 1iℏ x H x t 1iℏ x p22m V x t 0 1iℏ x p22m 1iℏ2m x p ddpp2 1iℏ2m iℏ2p 1m p displaystyle begin aligned frac d dt langle x rangle amp frac 1 i hbar langle x H rangle left langle frac partial x partial t right rangle 5pt amp frac 1 i hbar left langle left x frac p 2 2m V x t right right rangle 0 5pt amp frac 1 i hbar left langle left x frac p 2 2m right right rangle 5pt amp frac 1 i hbar 2m left langle x p frac d dp p 2 right rangle 5pt amp frac 1 i hbar 2m langle i hbar 2p rangle 5pt amp frac 1 m langle p rangle end aligned nbsp This result is actually in exact accord with the classical equation Derivation of the Schrodinger equation from the Ehrenfest theorems editIt was established above that the Ehrenfest theorems are consequences of the Schrodinger equation However the converse is also true the Schrodinger equation can be inferred from the Ehrenfest theorems 8 We begin frommddt PS t x PS t PS t p PS t ddt PS t p PS t PS t V x PS t displaystyle begin aligned m frac d dt left langle Psi t right hat x left Psi t right rangle amp left langle Psi t right hat p left Psi t right rangle 5pt frac d dt left langle Psi t right hat p left Psi t right rangle amp left langle Psi t right V hat x left Psi t right rangle end aligned nbsp Application of the product rule leads to dPSdt x PS PS x dPSdt PS p m PS dPSdt p PS PS p dPSdt PS V x PS displaystyle begin aligned left langle frac d Psi dt Big hat x Big Psi right rangle left langle Psi Big hat x Big frac d Psi dt right rangle amp left langle Psi Big frac hat p m Big Psi right rangle 5pt left langle frac d Psi dt Big hat p Big Psi right rangle left langle Psi Big hat p Big frac d Psi dt right rangle amp langle Psi V hat x Psi rangle end aligned nbsp Here apply Stone s theorem using Ĥ to denote the quantum generator of time translation The next step is to show that this is the same as the Hamiltonian operator used in quantum mechanics Stone s theorem implies iℏ dPSdt H PS t displaystyle i hbar left frac d Psi dt right rangle hat H Psi t rangle nbsp where ħ was introduced as a normalization constant to the balance dimensionality Since these identities must be valid for any initial state the averaging can be dropped and the system of commutator equations for Ĥ are derived im H x ℏp i H p ℏV x displaystyle im hat H hat x hbar hat p qquad i hat H hat p hbar V hat x nbsp Assuming that observables of the coordinate and momentum obey the canonical commutation relation x p iħ Setting H H x p displaystyle hat H H hat x hat p nbsp the commutator equations can be converted into the differential equations 8 9 m H x p p p H x p x V x displaystyle m frac partial H x p partial p p qquad frac partial H x p partial x V x nbsp whose solution is the familiar quantum Hamiltonian H p 22m V x displaystyle hat H frac hat p 2 2m V hat x nbsp Whence the Schrodinger equation was derived from the Ehrenfest theorems by assuming the canonical commutation relation between the coordinate and momentum If one assumes that the coordinate and momentum commute the same computational method leads to the Koopman von Neumann classical mechanics which is the Hilbert space formulation of classical mechanics 8 Therefore this derivation as well as the derivation of the Koopman von Neumann mechanics shows that the essential difference between quantum and classical mechanics reduces to the value of the commutator x p The implications of the Ehrenfest theorem for systems with classically chaotic dynamics are discussed at Scholarpedia article Ehrenfest time and chaos Due to exponential instability of classical trajectories the Ehrenfest time on which there is a complete correspondence between quantum and classical evolution is shown to be logarithmically short being proportional to a logarithm of typical quantum number For the case of integrable dynamics this time scale is much larger being proportional to a certain power of quantum number Notes edit Hall 2013 Section 3 7 5 Ehrenfest P 1927 Bemerkung uber die angenaherte Gultigkeit der klassischen Mechanik innerhalb der Quantenmechanik Zeitschrift fur Physik 45 7 8 455 457 Bibcode 1927ZPhy 45 455E doi 10 1007 BF01329203 S2CID 123011242 Smith Henrik 1991 Introduction to Quantum Mechanics World Scientific Pub Co Inc pp 108 109 ISBN 978 9810204754 Wheeler Nicholas Remarks concerning the status amp some ramifications of Ehrenfest s theorem PDF Hall 2013 p 78 In bra ket notation ϕ ϕ x displaystyle phi langle phi x rangle nbsp so t ϕ x 1iℏ ϕ H x 1iℏ ϕ x H 1iℏF H displaystyle frac partial partial t langle phi x rangle frac 1 i hbar langle phi hat H x rangle frac 1 i hbar langle phi x rangle H frac 1 i hbar Phi H nbsp where H displaystyle hat H nbsp is the Hamiltonian operator and H is the Hamiltonian represented in coordinate space as is the case in the derivation above In other words we applied the adjoint operation to the entire Schrodinger equation which flipped the order of operations for H and F Although the expectation value of the momentum p which is a real number valued function of time will have time dependence the momentum operator itself p does not in this picture Rather the momentum operator is a constant linear operator on the Hilbert space of the system The time dependence of the expectation value in this picture is due to the time evolution of the wavefunction for which the expectation value is calculated An Ad hoc example of an operator which does have time dependence is xt2 where x is the ordinary position operator and t is just the non operator time a parameter a b c Bondar D Cabrera R Lompay R Ivanov M Rabitz H 2012 Operational Dynamic Modeling Transcending Quantum and Classical Mechanics Physical Review Letters 109 19 190403 arXiv 1105 4014 Bibcode 2012PhRvL 109s0403B doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 109 190403 PMID 23215365 S2CID 19605000 Transtrum M K Van Huele J F O S 2005 Commutation relations for functions of operators Journal of Mathematical Physics 46 6 063510 Bibcode 2005JMP 46f3510T doi 10 1063 1 1924703 References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ehrenfest theorem Hall Brian C 2013 Quantum Theory for Mathematicians Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 267 Springer ISBN 978 1461471158 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ehrenfest theorem amp oldid 1165160591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.