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Kramers–Kronig relations

The Kramers–Kronig relations are bidirectional mathematical relations, connecting the real and imaginary parts of any complex function that is analytic in the upper half-plane. The relations are often used to compute the real part from the imaginary part (or vice versa) of response functions in physical systems, because for stable systems, causality implies the condition of analyticity, and conversely, analyticity implies causality of the corresponding stable physical system.[1] The relation is named in honor of Ralph Kronig and Hans Kramers.[2][3] In mathematics, these relations are known by the names Sokhotski–Plemelj theorem and Hilbert transform.

Formulation edit

 
Illustration for one of the Kramers–Kronig relations, determining the real part of the susceptibility given the imaginary part.

Let   be a complex function of the complex variable  , where   and   are real. Suppose this function is analytic in the closed upper half-plane of   and tends to   as  . The Kramers–Kronig relations are given by

 
and
 
where   is real and where   denotes the Cauchy principal value. The real and imaginary parts of such a function are not independent, allowing the full function to be reconstructed given just one of its parts.

Derivation edit

 
Integral contour for deriving Kramers–Kronig relations

The proof begins with an application of Cauchy's residue theorem for complex integration. Given any analytic function   in the closed upper half-plane, the function  , where   is real, is analytic in the (open) upper half-plane. The residue theorem consequently states that

 
for any closed contour within this region. When the contour is chosen to trace the real axis, a hump over the pole at  , and a large semicircle in the upper half-plane. This follows decomposition of the integral into its contributions along each of these three contour segments and pass them to limits. The length of the semicircular segment increases proportionally to  , but the integral over it vanishes in the limit because   vanishes faster than  . We are left with the segments along the real axis and the half-circle around the pole. We pass the size of the half-circle to zero and obtain
 

The second term in the last expression is obtained using the theory of residues,[4] more specifically, the Sokhotski–Plemelj theorem. Rearranging, we arrive at the compact form of the Kramers–Kronig relations:

 

The single   in the denominator effectuates the connection between the real and imaginary components. Finally, split   and the equation into their real and imaginary parts to obtain the forms quoted above.

Physical interpretation and alternate form edit

The Kramers–Kronig formalism can be applied to response functions. In certain linear physical systems, or in engineering fields such as signal processing, the response function   describes how some time-dependent property   of a physical system responds to an impulse force   at time   For example,   could be the angle of a pendulum and   the applied force of a motor driving the pendulum motion. The response   must be zero for   since a system cannot respond to a force before it is applied. It can be shown (for instance, by invoking Titchmarsh's theorem) that this causality condition implies that the Fourier transform   of   is analytic in the upper half plane.[5] Additionally, if the system is subjected to an oscillatory force with a frequency much higher than its highest resonant frequency, there will be almost no time for the system to respond before the forcing has switched direction, and so the frequency response   will converge to zero as   becomes very large. From these physical considerations, it results that   will typically satisfy the conditions needed for the Kramers–Kronig relations.

The imaginary part of a response function describes how a system dissipates energy, since it is in phase with the driving force.[citation needed] The Kramers–Kronig relations imply that observing the dissipative response of a system is sufficient to determine its out of phase (reactive) response, and vice versa.

The integrals run from   to  , implying we know the response at negative frequencies. Fortunately, in most physical systems, the positive frequency-response determines the negative-frequency response because   is the Fourier transform of a real-valued response  . We will make this assumption henceforth.

As a consequence,  . This means   is an even function of frequency and   is odd.

Using these properties, we can collapse the integration ranges to  . Consider the first relation, which gives the real part  . We transform the integral into one of definite parity by multiplying the numerator and denominator of the integrand by   and separating:

 

Since   is odd, the second integral vanishes, and we are left with

 

The same derivation for the imaginary part gives

 

These are the Kramers–Kronig relations in a form that is useful for physically realistic response functions.

Related proof from the time domain edit

Hu[6] and Hall and Heck[7] give a related and possibly more intuitive proof that avoids contour integration. It is based on the facts that:

  • A causal impulse response can be expressed as the sum of an even function and an odd function, where the odd function is the even function multiplied by the sign function.
  • The even and odd parts of a time domain waveform correspond to the real and imaginary parts of its Fourier integral, respectively.
  • Multiplication by the sign function in the time domain corresponds to the Hilbert transform (i.e. convolution by the Hilbert kernel  ) in the frequency domain.
 

Combining the formulas provided by these facts yields the Kramers–Kronig relations. This proof covers slightly different ground from the previous one in that it relates the real and imaginary parts in the frequency domain of any function that is causal in the time domain, offering an approach somewhat different from the condition of analyticity in the upper half plane of the frequency domain.

An article with an informal, pictorial version of this proof is also available.[8]

Magnitude (gain)–phase relation edit

The conventional form of Kramers–Kronig above relates the real and imaginary part of a complex response function. A related goal is to find a relation between the magnitude and phase of a complex response function.

In general, unfortunately, the phase cannot be uniquely predicted from the magnitude.[9] A simple example of this is a pure time delay of time T, which has amplitude 1 at any frequency regardless of T, but has a phase dependent on T (specifically, phase = 2π × T × frequency).

There is, however, a unique amplitude-vs-phase relation in the special case of a minimum phase system,[9] sometimes called the Bode gain–phase relation. The terms Bayard–Bode relations and Bayard–Bode theorem, after the works of Marcel Bayard (1936) and Hendrik Wade Bode (1945) are also used for either the Kramers–Kronig relations in general or the amplitude–phase relation in particular, particularly in the fields of telecommunication and control theory.[10][11]

Applications in physics edit

Complex refractive index edit

The Kramers–Kronig relations are used to relate the real and imaginary portions for the complex refractive index   of a medium, where   is the extinction coefficient.[12] Hence, in effect, this also applies for the complex relative permittivity and electric susceptibility.[13]

Optical activity edit

The Kramers–Kronig relations establish a connection between optical rotary dispersion and circular dichroism.

Magneto-optics edit

Kramers–Kronig relations enable exact solutions of nontrivial scattering problems, which find applications in magneto-optics.[14]

Electron spectroscopy edit

In electron energy loss spectroscopy, Kramers–Kronig analysis allows one to calculate the energy dependence of both real and imaginary parts of a specimen's light optical permittivity, together with other optical properties such as the absorption coefficient and reflectivity.[15]

In short, by measuring the number of high energy (e.g. 200 keV) electrons which lose a given amount of energy in traversing a very thin specimen (single scattering approximation), one can calculate the imaginary part of permittivity at that energy. Using this data with Kramers–Kronig analysis, one can calculate the real part of permittivity (as a function of energy) as well.

This measurement is made with electrons, rather than with light, and can be done with very high spatial resolution. One might thereby, for example, look for ultraviolet (UV) absorption bands in a laboratory specimen of interstellar dust less than a 100 nm across, i.e. too small for UV spectroscopy. Although electron spectroscopy has poorer energy resolution than light spectroscopy, data on properties in visible, ultraviolet and soft x-ray spectral ranges may be recorded in the same experiment.

In angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy the Kramers–Kronig relations can be used to link the real and imaginary parts of the electrons self-energy. This is characteristic of the many body interaction the electron experiences in the material. Notable examples are in the high temperature superconductors, where kinks corresponding to the real part of the self-energy are observed in the band dispersion and changes in the MDC width are also observed corresponding to the imaginary part of the self-energy.[16]

Hadronic scattering edit

The Kramers–Kronig relations are also used under the name "integral dispersion relations" with reference to hadronic scattering.[17] In this case, the function is the scattering amplitude. Through the use of the optical theorem the imaginary part of the scattering amplitude is then related to the total cross section, which is a physically measurable quantity.

Electron scattering edit

Similarly to Hadronic scattering, the Kramers–Kronig relations are employed in high energy electron scattering. In particular, they enter the derivation of the Gerasimov–Drell–Hearn sum rule.[18]

Geophysics edit

For seismic wave propagation, the Kramer–Kronig relation helps to find right form for the quality factor in an attenuating media.[19]

Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy edit

The Kramers-Kronig test is used in battery and fuel cell applications (Dielectric spectroscopy) to test for linearity, causality and stationarity. Since, it is not possible in practice to obtain data in the whole frequency range, as the Kramers-Kronig formula requires, approximations are necessarily made.

At high frequencies (> 1 MHz) it is usually safe to assume, that the impedance is dominated by ohmic resistance of the electrolyte, although inductance artefacts are often observed.

At low frequencies, the KK test can be used to verify whether experimental data are reliable. In battery practice, data obtained with experiments of duration less than one minute usually fail the test for frequencies below 10 Hz. Therefore, care should be exercised, when interpreting such data.[20]

In electrochemistry practice, due to the finite frequency range of experimental data, Z-HIT relation is used instead of Kramers-Kronig relations. Unilke Kramers-Kronig (which is written for an infinite frequency range), Z-HIT integration requires only a finite frequncy range. Furthermore, Z-HIT is more robust with respect to error in the Re and Im of impedance, since its accuracy depends mostly on the accuracy of the phase data.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ John S. Toll (1956). "Causality and the Dispersion Relation: Logical Foundations". Physical Review. 104 (6): 1760–1770. Bibcode:1956PhRv..104.1760T. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.104.1760.
  2. ^ R. de L. Kronig (1926). "On the theory of the dispersion of X-rays". J. Opt. Soc. Am. 12 (6): 547–557. doi:10.1364/JOSA.12.000547.
  3. ^ H. A. Kramers (1927). "La diffusion de la lumière par les atomes". Atti Cong. Intern. Fisici, (Transactions of Volta Centenary Congress) Como. 2: 545–557.
  4. ^ G. Arfken (1985). Mathematical Methods for Physicists. Orlando: Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-059877-9.
  5. ^ John David Jackson (1999). Classical Electrodynamics. Wiley. pp. 332–333. ISBN 0-471-43132-X.
  6. ^ Hu, Ben Yu-Kuang (1989-09-01). "Kramers–Kronig in two lines". American Journal of Physics. 57 (9): 821. Bibcode:1989AmJPh..57..821H. doi:10.1119/1.15901. ISSN 0002-9505.
  7. ^ Stephen H. Hall; Howard L. Heck. (2009). Advanced signal integrity for high-speed digital designs. Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley. pp. 331–336. ISBN 978-0-470-19235-1.
  8. ^ Colin Warwick. "Understanding the Kramers–Kronig Relation Using A Pictorial Proof" (PDF).
  9. ^ a b John Bechhoefer (2011). "Kramers–Kronig, Bode, and the meaning of zero". American Journal of Physics. 79 (10): 1053–1059. arXiv:1107.0071. Bibcode:2011AmJPh..79.1053B. doi:10.1119/1.3614039. S2CID 51819925.
  10. ^ Hervé Sizun (2006-03-30). Radio Wave Propagation for Telecommunication Applications. Springer. Bibcode:2004rwpt.book.....S. ISBN 978-3-540-26668-6.
  11. ^ María M. Seron; Julio H. Braslavsky; Graham C. Goodwin (1997). Fundamental Limitations In Filtering And Control (PDF). p. 21.
  12. ^ Fox, Mark (2010). Optical Properties of Solids (2 ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 44-46. ISBN 978-0-19-957337-0.
  13. ^ Orfanidis, Sophocles J. (2016). Electromagnetic Waves and Antennas. p. 27-29.
  14. ^ Chen Sun; Nikolai A. Sinitsyn (2015). "Exact transition probabilities for a linear sweep through a Kramers-Kronig resonance". J. Phys. A: Math. Theor. 48 (50): 505202. arXiv:1508.01213. Bibcode:2015JPhA...48X5202S. doi:10.1088/1751-8113/48/50/505202. S2CID 118437244.
  15. ^ R. F. Egerton (1996). Electron energy-loss spectroscopy in the electron microscope (2nd ed.). New York: Plenum Press. ISBN 0-306-45223-5.
  16. ^ Andrea Damascelli (2003). "Angle-resolved photoemission studies of the cuprate superconductors". Rev. Mod. Phys. 75 (2): 473–541. arXiv:cond-mat/0208504. Bibcode:2003RvMP...75..473D. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.75.473. S2CID 118433150.
  17. ^ M. M. Block; R. N. Cahn (1985). "High-energy pp̅ and pp forward elastic scattering and total cross sections". Rev. Mod. Phys. 57 (2): 563–598. Bibcode:1985RvMP...57..563B. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.57.563.
  18. ^ A. Deur, S. J. Brodsky, G. F. de Teramond (2019) "The Spin Structure of the Nucleon" Rept. Prog. Phys. 82 076201
  19. ^ Futterman, Walter I. (1962). "Dispersive Body Waves". Journal of Geophysical Research. 67 (13): 5279–5291. Bibcode:1962JGR....67.5279F. doi:10.1029/JZ067i013p05279.
  20. ^ Urquidi-Macdonald, Mirna; Real, Silvia; Macdonald, Digby D. (1 October 1990). "Applications of Kramers—Kronig transforms in the analysis of electrochemical impedance data—III. Stability and linearity". Electrochimica Acta. 35 (10): 1559–1566. doi:10.1016/0013-4686(90)80010-L. ISSN 0013-4686. Retrieved 2 August 2023.

Sources edit

  • Mansoor Sheik-Bahae (2005). "Nonlinear Optics Basics. Kramers–Kronig Relations in Nonlinear Optics". In Robert D. Guenther (ed.). Encyclopedia of Modern Optics. Amsterdam: Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-227600-0.
  • Valerio Lucarini; Jarkko J. Saarinen; Kai-Erik Peiponen; Erik M. Vartiainen (2005). Kramers-Kronig relations in Optical Materials Research. Heidelberg: Springer. Bibcode:2005kkro.book.....L. ISBN 3-540-23673-2.
  • Frederick W. King (2009). "19–22". Hilbert Transforms. Vol. 2. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-51720-1.
  • J. D. Jackson (1975). "section 7.10". Classical Electrodynamics (2nd ed.). New York: Wiley. ISBN 0-471-43132-X.

kramers, kronig, relations, bidirectional, mathematical, relations, connecting, real, imaginary, parts, complex, function, that, analytic, upper, half, plane, relations, often, used, compute, real, part, from, imaginary, part, vice, versa, response, functions,. The Kramers Kronig relations are bidirectional mathematical relations connecting the real and imaginary parts of any complex function that is analytic in the upper half plane The relations are often used to compute the real part from the imaginary part or vice versa of response functions in physical systems because for stable systems causality implies the condition of analyticity and conversely analyticity implies causality of the corresponding stable physical system 1 The relation is named in honor of Ralph Kronig and Hans Kramers 2 3 In mathematics these relations are known by the names Sokhotski Plemelj theorem and Hilbert transform Contents 1 Formulation 2 Derivation 3 Physical interpretation and alternate form 4 Related proof from the time domain 5 Magnitude gain phase relation 6 Applications in physics 6 1 Complex refractive index 6 2 Optical activity 6 3 Magneto optics 6 4 Electron spectroscopy 6 5 Hadronic scattering 6 6 Electron scattering 6 7 Geophysics 6 8 Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 SourcesFormulation edit nbsp Illustration for one of the Kramers Kronig relations determining the real part of the susceptibility given the imaginary part Let x w x 1 w i x 2 w displaystyle chi omega chi 1 omega i chi 2 omega nbsp be a complex function of the complex variable w displaystyle omega nbsp where x 1 w displaystyle chi 1 omega nbsp and x 2 w displaystyle chi 2 omega nbsp are real Suppose this function is analytic in the closed upper half plane of w displaystyle omega nbsp and tends to 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp as w displaystyle omega to infty nbsp The Kramers Kronig relations are given byx 1 w 1 p P x 2 w w w d w displaystyle chi 1 omega frac 1 pi mathcal P int infty infty frac chi 2 omega omega omega d omega nbsp and x 2 w 1 p P x 1 w w w d w displaystyle chi 2 omega frac 1 pi mathcal P int infty infty frac chi 1 omega omega omega d omega nbsp where w displaystyle omega nbsp is real and where P displaystyle mathcal P nbsp denotes the Cauchy principal value The real and imaginary parts of such a function are not independent allowing the full function to be reconstructed given just one of its parts Derivation edit nbsp Integral contour for deriving Kramers Kronig relationsThe proof begins with an application of Cauchy s residue theorem for complex integration Given any analytic function x displaystyle chi nbsp in the closed upper half plane the function w x w w w displaystyle omega mapsto chi omega omega omega nbsp where w displaystyle omega nbsp is real is analytic in the open upper half plane The residue theorem consequently states that x w w w d w 0 displaystyle oint frac chi omega omega omega d omega 0 nbsp for any closed contour within this region When the contour is chosen to trace the real axis a hump over the pole at w w displaystyle omega omega nbsp and a large semicircle in the upper half plane This follows decomposition of the integral into its contributions along each of these three contour segments and pass them to limits The length of the semicircular segment increases proportionally to w displaystyle omega nbsp but the integral over it vanishes in the limit because x w w w displaystyle frac chi omega omega omega nbsp vanishes faster than 1 w displaystyle 1 omega nbsp We are left with the segments along the real axis and the half circle around the pole We pass the size of the half circle to zero and obtain 0 x w w w d w P x w w w d w i p x w displaystyle 0 oint frac chi omega omega omega d omega mathcal P int infty infty frac chi omega omega omega d omega i pi chi omega nbsp The second term in the last expression is obtained using the theory of residues 4 more specifically the Sokhotski Plemelj theorem Rearranging we arrive at the compact form of the Kramers Kronig relations x w 1 i p P x w w w d w displaystyle chi omega frac 1 i pi mathcal P int infty infty frac chi omega omega omega d omega nbsp The single i displaystyle i nbsp in the denominator effectuates the connection between the real and imaginary components Finally split x w displaystyle chi omega nbsp and the equation into their real and imaginary parts to obtain the forms quoted above Physical interpretation and alternate form editThe Kramers Kronig formalism can be applied to response functions In certain linear physical systems or in engineering fields such as signal processing the response function x t t displaystyle chi t t nbsp describes how some time dependent property P t displaystyle P t nbsp of a physical system responds to an impulse force F t displaystyle F t nbsp at time t displaystyle t nbsp For example P t displaystyle P t nbsp could be the angle of a pendulum and F t displaystyle F t nbsp the applied force of a motor driving the pendulum motion The response x t t displaystyle chi t t nbsp must be zero for t lt t displaystyle t lt t nbsp since a system cannot respond to a force before it is applied It can be shown for instance by invoking Titchmarsh s theorem that this causality condition implies that the Fourier transform x w displaystyle chi omega nbsp of x t displaystyle chi t nbsp is analytic in the upper half plane 5 Additionally if the system is subjected to an oscillatory force with a frequency much higher than its highest resonant frequency there will be almost no time for the system to respond before the forcing has switched direction and so the frequency response x w displaystyle chi omega nbsp will converge to zero as w displaystyle omega nbsp becomes very large From these physical considerations it results that x w displaystyle chi omega nbsp will typically satisfy the conditions needed for the Kramers Kronig relations The imaginary part of a response function describes how a system dissipates energy since it is in phase with the driving force citation needed The Kramers Kronig relations imply that observing the dissipative response of a system is sufficient to determine its out of phase reactive response and vice versa The integrals run from displaystyle infty nbsp to displaystyle infty nbsp implying we know the response at negative frequencies Fortunately in most physical systems the positive frequency response determines the negative frequency response because x w displaystyle chi omega nbsp is the Fourier transform of a real valued response x t displaystyle chi t nbsp We will make this assumption henceforth As a consequence x w x w displaystyle chi omega chi omega nbsp This means x 1 w displaystyle chi 1 omega nbsp is an even function of frequency and x 2 w displaystyle chi 2 omega nbsp is odd Using these properties we can collapse the integration ranges to 0 displaystyle 0 infty nbsp Consider the first relation which gives the real part x 1 w displaystyle chi 1 omega nbsp We transform the integral into one of definite parity by multiplying the numerator and denominator of the integrand by w w displaystyle omega omega nbsp and separating x 1 w 1 p P w x 2 w w 2 w 2 d w w p P x 2 w w 2 w 2 d w displaystyle chi 1 omega 1 over pi mathcal P int infty infty omega chi 2 omega over omega 2 omega 2 d omega omega over pi mathcal P int infty infty chi 2 omega over omega 2 omega 2 d omega nbsp Since x 2 w displaystyle chi 2 omega nbsp is odd the second integral vanishes and we are left withx 1 w 2 p P 0 w x 2 w w 2 w 2 d w displaystyle chi 1 omega 2 over pi mathcal P int 0 infty omega chi 2 omega over omega 2 omega 2 d omega nbsp The same derivation for the imaginary part givesx 2 w 2 p P 0 w x 1 w w 2 w 2 d w 2 w p P 0 x 1 w w 2 w 2 d w displaystyle chi 2 omega 2 over pi mathcal P int 0 infty omega chi 1 omega over omega 2 omega 2 d omega 2 omega over pi mathcal P int 0 infty chi 1 omega over omega 2 omega 2 d omega nbsp These are the Kramers Kronig relations in a form that is useful for physically realistic response functions Related proof from the time domain editHu 6 and Hall and Heck 7 give a related and possibly more intuitive proof that avoids contour integration It is based on the facts that A causal impulse response can be expressed as the sum of an even function and an odd function where the odd function is the even function multiplied by the sign function The even and odd parts of a time domain waveform correspond to the real and imaginary parts of its Fourier integral respectively Multiplication by the sign function in the time domain corresponds to the Hilbert transform i e convolution by the Hilbert kernel 1 p w displaystyle 1 pi omega nbsp in the frequency domain nbsp Combining the formulas provided by these facts yields the Kramers Kronig relations This proof covers slightly different ground from the previous one in that it relates the real and imaginary parts in the frequency domain of any function that is causal in the time domain offering an approach somewhat different from the condition of analyticity in the upper half plane of the frequency domain An article with an informal pictorial version of this proof is also available 8 Magnitude gain phase relation editSee also Minimum phase Relationship of magnitude response to phase response The conventional form of Kramers Kronig above relates the real and imaginary part of a complex response function A related goal is to find a relation between the magnitude and phase of a complex response function In general unfortunately the phase cannot be uniquely predicted from the magnitude 9 A simple example of this is a pure time delay of time T which has amplitude 1 at any frequency regardless of T but has a phase dependent on T specifically phase 2p T frequency There is however a unique amplitude vs phase relation in the special case of a minimum phase system 9 sometimes called the Bode gain phase relation The terms Bayard Bode relations and Bayard Bode theorem after the works of Marcel Bayard 1936 and Hendrik Wade Bode 1945 are also used for either the Kramers Kronig relations in general or the amplitude phase relation in particular particularly in the fields of telecommunication and control theory 10 11 Applications in physics editComplex refractive index edit The Kramers Kronig relations are used to relate the real and imaginary portions for the complex refractive index n n i k displaystyle tilde n n i kappa nbsp of a medium where k displaystyle kappa nbsp is the extinction coefficient 12 Hence in effect this also applies for the complex relative permittivity and electric susceptibility 13 Optical activity edit The Kramers Kronig relations establish a connection between optical rotary dispersion and circular dichroism Magneto optics edit Kramers Kronig relations enable exact solutions of nontrivial scattering problems which find applications in magneto optics 14 Electron spectroscopy edit In electron energy loss spectroscopy Kramers Kronig analysis allows one to calculate the energy dependence of both real and imaginary parts of a specimen s light optical permittivity together with other optical properties such as the absorption coefficient and reflectivity 15 In short by measuring the number of high energy e g 200 keV electrons which lose a given amount of energy in traversing a very thin specimen single scattering approximation one can calculate the imaginary part of permittivity at that energy Using this data with Kramers Kronig analysis one can calculate the real part of permittivity as a function of energy as well This measurement is made with electrons rather than with light and can be done with very high spatial resolution One might thereby for example look for ultraviolet UV absorption bands in a laboratory specimen of interstellar dust less than a 100 nm across i e too small for UV spectroscopy Although electron spectroscopy has poorer energy resolution than light spectroscopy data on properties in visible ultraviolet and soft x ray spectral ranges may be recorded in the same experiment In angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy the Kramers Kronig relations can be used to link the real and imaginary parts of the electrons self energy This is characteristic of the many body interaction the electron experiences in the material Notable examples are in the high temperature superconductors where kinks corresponding to the real part of the self energy are observed in the band dispersion and changes in the MDC width are also observed corresponding to the imaginary part of the self energy 16 Hadronic scattering edit The Kramers Kronig relations are also used under the name integral dispersion relations with reference to hadronic scattering 17 In this case the function is the scattering amplitude Through the use of the optical theorem the imaginary part of the scattering amplitude is then related to the total cross section which is a physically measurable quantity Electron scattering edit Similarly to Hadronic scattering the Kramers Kronig relations are employed in high energy electron scattering In particular they enter the derivation of the Gerasimov Drell Hearn sum rule 18 Geophysics edit For seismic wave propagation the Kramer Kronig relation helps to find right form for the quality factor in an attenuating media 19 Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy edit The Kramers Kronig test is used in battery and fuel cell applications Dielectric spectroscopy to test for linearity causality and stationarity Since it is not possible in practice to obtain data in the whole frequency range as the Kramers Kronig formula requires approximations are necessarily made At high frequencies gt 1 MHz it is usually safe to assume that the impedance is dominated by ohmic resistance of the electrolyte although inductance artefacts are often observed At low frequencies the KK test can be used to verify whether experimental data are reliable In battery practice data obtained with experiments of duration less than one minute usually fail the test for frequencies below 10 Hz Therefore care should be exercised when interpreting such data 20 In electrochemistry practice due to the finite frequency range of experimental data Z HIT relation is used instead of Kramers Kronig relations Unilke Kramers Kronig which is written for an infinite frequency range Z HIT integration requires only a finite frequncy range Furthermore Z HIT is more robust with respect to error in the Re and Im of impedance since its accuracy depends mostly on the accuracy of the phase data See also editDispersion optics Linear response function Numerical analytic continuationReferences editCitations edit John S Toll 1956 Causality and the Dispersion Relation Logical Foundations Physical Review 104 6 1760 1770 Bibcode 1956PhRv 104 1760T doi 10 1103 PhysRev 104 1760 R de L Kronig 1926 On the theory of the dispersion of X rays J Opt Soc Am 12 6 547 557 doi 10 1364 JOSA 12 000547 H A Kramers 1927 La diffusion de la lumiere par les atomes Atti Cong Intern Fisici Transactions of Volta Centenary Congress Como 2 545 557 G Arfken 1985 Mathematical Methods for Physicists Orlando Academic Press ISBN 0 12 059877 9 John David Jackson 1999 Classical Electrodynamics Wiley pp 332 333 ISBN 0 471 43132 X Hu Ben Yu Kuang 1989 09 01 Kramers Kronig in two lines American Journal of Physics 57 9 821 Bibcode 1989AmJPh 57 821H doi 10 1119 1 15901 ISSN 0002 9505 Stephen H Hall Howard L Heck 2009 Advanced signal integrity for high speed digital designs Hoboken N J Wiley pp 331 336 ISBN 978 0 470 19235 1 Colin Warwick Understanding the Kramers Kronig Relation Using A Pictorial Proof PDF a b John Bechhoefer 2011 Kramers Kronig Bode and the meaning of zero American Journal of Physics 79 10 1053 1059 arXiv 1107 0071 Bibcode 2011AmJPh 79 1053B doi 10 1119 1 3614039 S2CID 51819925 Herve Sizun 2006 03 30 Radio Wave Propagation for Telecommunication Applications Springer Bibcode 2004rwpt book S ISBN 978 3 540 26668 6 Maria M Seron Julio H Braslavsky Graham C Goodwin 1997 Fundamental Limitations In Filtering And Control PDF p 21 Fox Mark 2010 Optical Properties of Solids 2 ed Oxford University Press p 44 46 ISBN 978 0 19 957337 0 Orfanidis Sophocles J 2016 Electromagnetic Waves and Antennas p 27 29 Chen Sun Nikolai A Sinitsyn 2015 Exact transition probabilities for a linear sweep through a Kramers Kronig resonance J Phys A Math Theor 48 50 505202 arXiv 1508 01213 Bibcode 2015JPhA 48X5202S doi 10 1088 1751 8113 48 50 505202 S2CID 118437244 R F Egerton 1996 Electron energy loss spectroscopy in the electron microscope 2nd ed New York Plenum Press ISBN 0 306 45223 5 Andrea Damascelli 2003 Angle resolved photoemission studies of the cuprate superconductors Rev Mod Phys 75 2 473 541 arXiv cond mat 0208504 Bibcode 2003RvMP 75 473D doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 75 473 S2CID 118433150 M M Block R N Cahn 1985 High energy pp and pp forward elastic scattering and total cross sections Rev Mod Phys 57 2 563 598 Bibcode 1985RvMP 57 563B doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 57 563 A Deur S J Brodsky G F de Teramond 2019 The Spin Structure of the Nucleon Rept Prog Phys 82 076201 Futterman Walter I 1962 Dispersive Body Waves Journal of Geophysical Research 67 13 5279 5291 Bibcode 1962JGR 67 5279F doi 10 1029 JZ067i013p05279 Urquidi Macdonald Mirna Real Silvia Macdonald Digby D 1 October 1990 Applications of Kramers Kronig transforms in the analysis of electrochemical impedance data III Stability and linearity Electrochimica Acta 35 10 1559 1566 doi 10 1016 0013 4686 90 80010 L ISSN 0013 4686 Retrieved 2 August 2023 Sources edit Mansoor Sheik Bahae 2005 Nonlinear Optics Basics Kramers Kronig Relations in Nonlinear Optics In Robert D Guenther ed Encyclopedia of Modern Optics Amsterdam Academic Press ISBN 0 12 227600 0 Valerio Lucarini Jarkko J Saarinen Kai Erik Peiponen Erik M Vartiainen 2005 Kramers Kronig relations in Optical Materials Research Heidelberg Springer Bibcode 2005kkro book L ISBN 3 540 23673 2 Frederick W King 2009 19 22 Hilbert Transforms Vol 2 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 51720 1 J D Jackson 1975 section 7 10 Classical Electrodynamics 2nd ed New York Wiley ISBN 0 471 43132 X Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kramers Kronig relations amp oldid 1189609825, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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