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Mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics

The mathematical formulations of quantum mechanics are those mathematical formalisms that permit a rigorous description of quantum mechanics. This mathematical formalism uses mainly a part of functional analysis, especially Hilbert spaces, which are a kind of linear space. Such are distinguished from mathematical formalisms for physics theories developed prior to the early 1900s by the use of abstract mathematical structures, such as infinite-dimensional Hilbert spaces (L2 space mainly), and operators on these spaces. In brief, values of physical observables such as energy and momentum were no longer considered as values of functions on phase space, but as eigenvalues; more precisely as spectral values of linear operators in Hilbert space.[1]

These formulations of quantum mechanics continue to be used today. At the heart of the description are ideas of quantum state and quantum observables, which are radically different from those used in previous models of physical reality. While the mathematics permits calculation of many quantities that can be measured experimentally, there is a definite theoretical limit to values that can be simultaneously measured. This limitation was first elucidated by Heisenberg through a thought experiment, and is represented mathematically in the new formalism by the non-commutativity of operators representing quantum observables.

Prior to the development of quantum mechanics as a separate theory, the mathematics used in physics consisted mainly of formal mathematical analysis, beginning with calculus, and increasing in complexity up to differential geometry and partial differential equations. Probability theory was used in statistical mechanics. Geometric intuition played a strong role in the first two and, accordingly, theories of relativity were formulated entirely in terms of differential geometric concepts. The phenomenology of quantum physics arose roughly between 1895 and 1915, and for the 10 to 15 years before the development of quantum mechanics (around 1925) physicists continued to think of quantum theory within the confines of what is now called classical physics, and in particular within the same mathematical structures. The most sophisticated example of this is the Sommerfeld–Wilson–Ishiwara quantization rule, which was formulated entirely on the classical phase space.

History of the formalism Edit

The "old quantum theory" and the need for new mathematics Edit

In the 1890s, Planck was able to derive the blackbody spectrum, which was later used to avoid the classical ultraviolet catastrophe by making the unorthodox assumption that, in the interaction of electromagnetic radiation with matter, energy could only be exchanged in discrete units which he called quanta. Planck postulated a direct proportionality between the frequency of radiation and the quantum of energy at that frequency. The proportionality constant, h, is now called Planck's constant in his honor.

In 1905, Einstein explained certain features of the photoelectric effect by assuming that Planck's energy quanta were actual particles, which were later dubbed photons.

 
light at the right frequency

All of these developments were phenomenological and challenged the theoretical physics of the time. Bohr and Sommerfeld went on to modify classical mechanics in an attempt to deduce the Bohr model from first principles. They proposed that, of all closed classical orbits traced by a mechanical system in its phase space, only the ones that enclosed an area which was a multiple of Planck's constant were actually allowed. The most sophisticated version of this formalism was the so-called Sommerfeld–Wilson–Ishiwara quantization. Although the Bohr model of the hydrogen atom could be explained in this way, the spectrum of the helium atom (classically an unsolvable 3-body problem) could not be predicted. The mathematical status of quantum theory remained uncertain for some time.

In 1923, de Broglie proposed that wave–particle duality applied not only to photons but to electrons and every other physical system.

The situation changed rapidly in the years 1925–1930, when working mathematical foundations were found through the groundbreaking work of Erwin Schrödinger, Werner Heisenberg, Max Born, Pascual Jordan, and the foundational work of John von Neumann, Hermann Weyl and Paul Dirac, and it became possible to unify several different approaches in terms of a fresh set of ideas. The physical interpretation of the theory was also clarified in these years after Werner Heisenberg discovered the uncertainty relations and Niels Bohr introduced the idea of complementarity.

The "new quantum theory" Edit

Werner Heisenberg's matrix mechanics was the first successful attempt at replicating the observed quantization of atomic spectra. Later in the same year, Schrödinger created his wave mechanics. Schrödinger's formalism was considered easier to understand, visualize and calculate as it led to differential equations, which physicists were already familiar with solving. Within a year, it was shown that the two theories were equivalent.

Schrödinger himself initially did not understand the fundamental probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics, as he thought that the absolute square of the wave function of an electron should be interpreted as the charge density of an object smeared out over an extended, possibly infinite, volume of space. It was Max Born who introduced the interpretation of the absolute square of the wave function as the probability distribution of the position of a pointlike object. Born's idea was soon taken over by Niels Bohr in Copenhagen who then became the "father" of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics. Schrödinger's wave function can be seen to be closely related to the classical Hamilton–Jacobi equation. The correspondence to classical mechanics was even more explicit, although somewhat more formal, in Heisenberg's matrix mechanics. In his PhD thesis project, Paul Dirac[2] discovered that the equation for the operators in the Heisenberg representation, as it is now called, closely translates to classical equations for the dynamics of certain quantities in the Hamiltonian formalism of classical mechanics, when one expresses them through Poisson brackets, a procedure now known as canonical quantization.

To be more precise, already before Schrödinger, the young postdoctoral fellow Werner Heisenberg invented his matrix mechanics, which was the first correct quantum mechanics–– the essential breakthrough. Heisenberg's matrix mechanics formulation was based on algebras of infinite matrices, a very radical formulation in light of the mathematics of classical physics, although he started from the index-terminology of the experimentalists of that time, not even aware that his "index-schemes" were matrices, as Born soon pointed out to him. In fact, in these early years, linear algebra was not generally popular with physicists in its present form.

Although Schrödinger himself after a year proved the equivalence of his wave-mechanics and Heisenberg's matrix mechanics, the reconciliation of the two approaches and their modern abstraction as motions in Hilbert space is generally attributed to Paul Dirac, who wrote a lucid account in his 1930 classic The Principles of Quantum Mechanics. He is the third, and possibly most important, pillar of that field (he soon was the only one to have discovered a relativistic generalization of the theory). In his above-mentioned account, he introduced the bra–ket notation, together with an abstract formulation in terms of the Hilbert space used in functional analysis; he showed that Schrödinger's and Heisenberg's approaches were two different representations of the same theory, and found a third, most general one, which represented the dynamics of the system. His work was particularly fruitful in many types of generalizations of the field.

The first complete mathematical formulation of this approach, known as the Dirac–von Neumann axioms, is generally credited to John von Neumann's 1932 book Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, although Hermann Weyl had already referred to Hilbert spaces (which he called unitary spaces) in his 1927 classic paper and book. It was developed in parallel with a new approach to the mathematical spectral theory based on linear operators rather than the quadratic forms that were David Hilbert's approach a generation earlier. Though theories of quantum mechanics continue to evolve to this day, there is a basic framework for the mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics which underlies most approaches and can be traced back to the mathematical work of John von Neumann. In other words, discussions about interpretation of the theory, and extensions to it, are now mostly conducted on the basis of shared assumptions about the mathematical foundations.

Later developments Edit

The application of the new quantum theory to electromagnetism resulted in quantum field theory, which was developed starting around 1930. Quantum field theory has driven the development of more sophisticated formulations of quantum mechanics, of which the ones presented here are simple special cases.

A related topic is the relationship to classical mechanics. Any new physical theory is supposed to reduce to successful old theories in some approximation. For quantum mechanics, this translates into the need to study the so-called classical limit of quantum mechanics. Also, as Bohr emphasized, human cognitive abilities and language are inextricably linked to the classical realm, and so classical descriptions are intuitively more accessible than quantum ones. In particular, quantization, namely the construction of a quantum theory whose classical limit is a given and known classical theory, becomes an important area of quantum physics in itself.

Finally, some of the originators of quantum theory (notably Einstein and Schrödinger) were unhappy with what they thought were the philosophical implications of quantum mechanics. In particular, Einstein took the position that quantum mechanics must be incomplete, which motivated research into so-called hidden-variable theories. The issue of hidden variables has become in part an experimental issue with the help of quantum optics.

Postulates of quantum mechanics Edit

A physical system is generally described by three basic ingredients: states; observables; and dynamics (or law of time evolution) or, more generally, a group of physical symmetries. A classical description can be given in a fairly direct way by a phase space model of mechanics: states are points in a phase space formulated by symplectic manifold, observables are real-valued functions on it, time evolution is given by a one-parameter group of symplectic transformations of the phase space, and physical symmetries are realized by symplectic transformations. A quantum description normally consists of a Hilbert space of states, observables are self-adjoint operators on the space of states, time evolution is given by a one-parameter group of unitary transformations on the Hilbert space of states, and physical symmetries are realized by unitary transformations. (It is possible, to map this Hilbert-space picture to a phase space formulation, invertibly. See below.)

The following summary of the mathematical framework of quantum mechanics can be partly traced back to the Dirac–von Neumann axioms.[3]

Description of the state of a system Edit

Each isolated physical system is associated with a (topologically) separable complex Hilbert space H with inner product φ|ψ. Rays (that is, subspaces of complex dimension 1) in H are associated with quantum states of the system.

Postulate I

The state of an isolated physical system is represented, at a fixed time  , by a state vector   belonging to a Hilbert space   called the state space.

In other words, quantum states can be identified with equivalence classes (rays) of vectors of length 1 in H, where two vectors represent the same state if they differ only by a phase factor. Separability is a mathematically convenient hypothesis, with the physical interpretation that countably many observations are enough to uniquely determine the state. A quantum mechanical state is a ray in projective Hilbert space, not a vector. Many textbooks fail to make this distinction, which could be partly a result of the fact that the Schrödinger equation itself involves Hilbert-space "vectors", with the result that the imprecise use of "state vector" rather than ray is very difficult to avoid.[4]

Accompanying Postulate I is the composite system postulate:[5]

Composite system postulate

The Hilbert space of a composite system is the Hilbert space tensor product of the state spaces associated with the component systems. For a non-relativistic system consisting of a finite number of distinguishable particles, the component systems are the individual particles.

In the presence of quantum entanglement, the quantum state of the composite system cannot be factored as a tensor product of states of its local constituents; Instead, it is expressed as a sum, or superposition, of tensor products of states of component subsystems. A subsystem in an entangled composite system generally cannot be described by a state vector (or a ray), but instead is described by a density operator; Such quantum state is known as a mixed state. The density operator of a mixed state is a trace class, nonnegative (positive semi-definite) self-adjoint operator ρ normalized to be of trace 1. In turn, any density operator of a mixed state can be represented as a subsystem of a larger composite system in a pure state (see purification theorem).

In the absence of quantum entanglement, the quantum state of the composite system is called a separable state. The density matrix of a bipartite system in a separable state can be expressed as  , where  . If there is only a single non-zero  , then the state can be expressed just as   and is called simply separable or product state.

Measurement on a system Edit

Description of physical quantities Edit

Physical observables are represented by Hermitian matrices on H. Since these operators are Hermitian, their eigenvalues are always real, and represent the possible outcomes/results from measuring the corresponding observable. If the spectrum of the observable is discrete, then the possible results are quantized.

Postulate II.a

Every measurable physical quantity   is described by a Hermitian operator   acting in the state space  . This operator is an observable, meaning that its eigenvectors form a basis for  . The result of measuring a physical quantity   must be one of the eigenvalues of the corresponding observable  .

Results of measurement Edit

By spectral theory, we can associate a probability measure to the values of A in any state ψ. We can also show that the possible values of the observable A in any state must belong to the spectrum of A. The expectation value (in the sense of probability theory) of the observable A for the system in state represented by the unit vector ψH is  . If we represent the state ψ in the basis formed by the eigenvectors of A, then the square of the modulus of the component attached to a given eigenvector is the probability of observing its corresponding eigenvalue.

Postulate II.b

When the physical quantity   is measured on a system in a normalized state  , the probability of obtaining an eigenvalue (denoted   for discrete spectra and   for continuous spectra) of the corresponding observable   is given by the amplitude squared of the appropriate wave function (projection onto corresponding eigenvector).

 

For a mixed state ρ, the expected value of A in the state ρ is  , and the probability of obtaining an eigenvalue   in a discrete, nondegenerate spectrum of the corresponding observable   is given by  .

If the eigenvalue   has degenerate, orthonormal eigenvectors  , then the projection operator onto the eigensubspace can be defined as the identity operator in the eigensubspace:

 
and then  .

Postulates II.a and II.b are collectively known as the Born rule of quantum mechanics.

Effect of measurement on the state Edit

When a measurement is performed, only one result is obtained (according to some interpretations of quantum mechanics). This is modeled mathematically as the processing of additional information from the measurement, confining the probabilities of an immediate second measurement of the same observable. In the case of a discrete, non-degenerate spectrum, two sequential measurements of the same observable will always give the same value assuming the second immediately follows the first. Therefore the state vector must change as a result of measurement, and collapse onto the eigensubspace associated with the eigenvalue measured.

Postulate II.c

If the measurement of the physical quantity   on the system in the state   gives the result  , then the state of the system immediately after the measurement is the normalized projection of   onto the eigensubspace associated with  

 

For a mixed state ρ, after obtaining an eigenvalue   in a discrete, nondegenerate spectrum of the corresponding observable  , the updated state is given by  . If the eigenvalue   has degenerate, orthonormal eigenvectors  , then the projection operator onto the eigensubspace is  .

Postulates II.c is sometimes called the "state update rule" or "collapse rule"; Together with the Born rule (Postulates II.a and II.b), they form a complete representation of measurements, and are sometimes collectively called the measurement postulate(s).

Note that the projection-valued measures (PVM) described in the measurement postulate(s) can be generalized to positive operator-valued measures (POVM), which is the most general kind of measurement in quantum mechanics. A POVM can be understood as the effect on a component subsystem when a PVM is performed on a larger, composite system (see Naimark's dilation theorem).

Time evolution of a system Edit

Though it is possible to derive the Schrödinger equation, which describes how a state vector evolves in time, most texts assert the equation as a postulate. Common derivations include using the de Broglie hypothesis or path integrals.

Postulate III

The time evolution of the state vector   is governed by the Schrödinger equation, where   is the observable associated with the total energy of the system (called the Hamiltonian)

 

Equivalently, the time evolution postulate can be stated as:

Postulate III

The time evolution of a closed system is described by a unitary transformation on the initial state.

 

For a closed system in a mixed state ρ, the time evolution is  .

The evolution of an open quantum system can be described by quantum operations (in an operator sum formalism) and quantum instruments, and generally does not have to be unitary.

Other implications of the postulates Edit

  • Physical symmetries act on the Hilbert space of quantum states unitarily or antiunitarily due to Wigner's theorem (supersymmetry is another matter entirely).
  • Density operators are those that are in the closure of the convex hull of the one-dimensional orthogonal projectors. Conversely, one-dimensional orthogonal projectors are extreme points of the set of density operators. Physicists also call one-dimensional orthogonal projectors pure states and other density operators mixed states.
  • One can in this formalism state Heisenberg's uncertainty principle and prove it as a theorem, although the exact historical sequence of events, concerning who derived what and under which framework, is the subject of historical investigations outside the scope of this article.
  • Recent research has shown[6] that the composite system postulate (tensor product postulate) can be derived from the state postulate (Postulate I) and the measurement postulates (Postulates II); Moreover, it has also been shown[7] that the measurement postulates (Postulates II) can be derived from "unitary quantum mechanics", which includes only the state postulate (Postulate I), the composite system postulate (tensor product postulate) and the unitary evolution postulate (Postulate III).

Furthermore, to the postulates of quantum mechanics one should also add basic statements on the properties of spin and Pauli's exclusion principle, see below.

Spin Edit

In addition to their other properties, all particles possess a quantity called spin, an intrinsic angular momentum. Despite the name, particles do not literally spin around an axis, and quantum mechanical spin has no correspondence in classical physics. In the position representation, a spinless wavefunction has position r and time t as continuous variables, ψ = ψ(r, t). For spin wavefunctions the spin is an additional discrete variable: ψ = ψ(r, t, σ), where σ takes the values;

 

That is, the state of a single particle with spin S is represented by a (2S + 1)-component spinor of complex-valued wave functions.

Two classes of particles with very different behaviour are bosons which have integer spin (S = 0, 1, 2, ...), and fermions possessing half-integer spin (S = 12, 32, 52, ...).

Pauli's principle Edit

The property of spin relates to another basic property concerning systems of N identical particles: Pauli's exclusion principle, which is a consequence of the following permutation behaviour of an N-particle wave function; again in the position representation one must postulate that for the transposition of any two of the N particles one always should have

Pauli principle

 

i.e., on transposition of the arguments of any two particles the wavefunction should reproduce, apart from a prefactor (−1)2S which is +1 for bosons, but (−1) for fermions. Electrons are fermions with S = 1/2; quanta of light are bosons with S = 1. In nonrelativistic quantum mechanics all particles are either bosons or fermions; in relativistic quantum theories also "supersymmetric" theories exist, where a particle is a linear combination of a bosonic and a fermionic part. Only in dimension d = 2 can one construct entities where (−1)2S is replaced by an arbitrary complex number with magnitude 1, called anyons.

Although spin and the Pauli principle can only be derived from relativistic generalizations of quantum mechanics, the properties mentioned in the last two paragraphs belong to the basic postulates already in the non-relativistic limit. Especially, many important properties in natural science, e.g. the periodic system of chemistry, are consequences of the two properties.

Mathematical structure of quantum mechanics Edit

Pictures of dynamics Edit

  • In the so-called Schrödinger picture of quantum mechanics, the dynamics is given as follows:

    The time evolution of the state is given by a differentiable function from the real numbers R, representing instants of time, to the Hilbert space of system states. This map is characterized by a differential equation as follows: If |ψ(t)⟩ denotes the state of the system at any one time t, the following Schrödinger equation holds:

    Schrödinger equation (general)

     

    where H is a densely defined self-adjoint operator, called the system Hamiltonian, i is the imaginary unit and ħ is the reduced Planck constant. As an observable, H corresponds to the total energy of the system.

    Alternatively, by Stone's theorem one can state that there is a strongly continuous one-parameter unitary map U(t): HH such that

     
    for all times s, t. The existence of a self-adjoint Hamiltonian H such that
     
    is a consequence of Stone's theorem on one-parameter unitary groups. It is assumed that H does not depend on time and that the perturbation starts at t0 = 0; otherwise one must use the Dyson series, formally written as
     
    where   is Dyson's time-ordering symbol.

    (This symbol permutes a product of noncommuting operators of the form

     
    into the uniquely determined re-ordered expression
     
    with   The result is a causal chain, the primary cause in the past on the utmost r.h.s., and finally the present effect on the utmost l.h.s. .)
  • The Heisenberg picture of quantum mechanics focuses on observables and instead of considering states as varying in time, it regards the states as fixed and the observables as changing. To go from the Schrödinger to the Heisenberg picture one needs to define time-independent states and time-dependent operators thus:
     
     
    It is then easily checked that the expected values of all observables are the same in both pictures
     
    and that the time-dependent Heisenberg operators satisfy
    Heisenberg picture (general)

     

    which is true for time-dependent A = A(t). Notice the commutator expression is purely formal when one of the operators is unbounded. One would specify a representation for the expression to make sense of it.
  • The so-called Dirac picture or interaction picture has time-dependent states and observables, evolving with respect to different Hamiltonians. This picture is most useful when the evolution of the observables can be solved exactly, confining any complications to the evolution of the states. For this reason, the Hamiltonian for the observables is called "free Hamiltonian" and the Hamiltonian for the states is called "interaction Hamiltonian". In symbols:
    Dirac picture

     

     

    The interaction picture does not always exist, though. In interacting quantum field theories, Haag's theorem states that the interaction picture does not exist. This is because the Hamiltonian cannot be split into a free and an interacting part within a superselection sector. Moreover, even if in the Schrödinger picture the Hamiltonian does not depend on time, e.g. H = H0 + V, in the interaction picture it does, at least, if V does not commute with H0, since

     

    So the above-mentioned Dyson-series has to be used anyhow.

    The Heisenberg picture is the closest to classical Hamiltonian mechanics (for example, the commutators appearing in the above equations directly translate into the classical Poisson brackets); but this is already rather "high-browed", and the Schrödinger picture is considered easiest to visualize and understand by most people, to judge from pedagogical accounts of quantum mechanics. The Dirac picture is the one used in perturbation theory, and is specially associated to quantum field theory and many-body physics.

    Similar equations can be written for any one-parameter unitary group of symmetries of the physical system. Time would be replaced by a suitable coordinate parameterizing the unitary group (for instance, a rotation angle, or a translation distance) and the Hamiltonian would be replaced by the conserved quantity associated with the symmetry (for instance, angular or linear momentum).

Summary:

Evolution of: Picture ()
Schrödinger (S) Heisenberg (H) Interaction (I)
Ket state   constant  
Observable constant    
Density matrix   constant  

Representations Edit

The original form of the Schrödinger equation depends on choosing a particular representation of Heisenberg's canonical commutation relations. The Stone–von Neumann theorem dictates that all irreducible representations of the finite-dimensional Heisenberg commutation relations are unitarily equivalent. A systematic understanding of its consequences has led to the phase space formulation of quantum mechanics, which works in full phase space instead of Hilbert space, so then with a more intuitive link to the classical limit thereof. This picture also simplifies considerations of quantization, the deformation extension from classical to quantum mechanics.

The quantum harmonic oscillator is an exactly solvable system where the different representations are easily compared. There, apart from the Heisenberg, or Schrödinger (position or momentum), or phase-space representations, one also encounters the Fock (number) representation and the Segal–Bargmann (Fock-space or coherent state) representation (named after Irving Segal and Valentine Bargmann). All four are unitarily equivalent.

Time as an operator Edit

The framework presented so far singles out time as the parameter that everything depends on. It is possible to formulate mechanics in such a way that time becomes itself an observable associated with a self-adjoint operator. At the classical level, it is possible to arbitrarily parameterize the trajectories of particles in terms of an unphysical parameter s, and in that case the time t becomes an additional generalized coordinate of the physical system. At the quantum level, translations in s would be generated by a "Hamiltonian" HE, where E is the energy operator and H is the "ordinary" Hamiltonian. However, since s is an unphysical parameter, physical states must be left invariant by "s-evolution", and so the physical state space is the kernel of HE (this requires the use of a rigged Hilbert space and a renormalization of the norm).

This is related to the quantization of constrained systems and quantization of gauge theories. It is also possible to formulate a quantum theory of "events" where time becomes an observable (see D. Edwards).

The problem of measurement Edit

The picture given in the preceding paragraphs is sufficient for description of a completely isolated system. However, it fails to account for one of the main differences between quantum mechanics and classical mechanics, that is, the effects of measurement.[8] The von Neumann description of quantum measurement of an observable A, when the system is prepared in a pure state ψ is the following (note, however, that von Neumann's description dates back to the 1930s and is based on experiments as performed during that time – more specifically the Compton–Simon experiment; it is not applicable to most present-day measurements within the quantum domain):

  • Let A have spectral resolution
     
    where EA is the resolution of the identity (also called projection-valued measure) associated with A. Then the probability of the measurement outcome lying in an interval B of R is |EA(B) ψ|2. In other words, the probability is obtained by integrating the characteristic function of B against the countably additive measure
     
  • If the measured value is contained in B, then immediately after the measurement, the system will be in the (generally non-normalized) state EA(B)ψ. If the measured value does not lie in B, replace B by its complement for the above state.

For example, suppose the state space is the n-dimensional complex Hilbert space Cn and A is a Hermitian matrix with eigenvalues λi, with corresponding eigenvectors ψi. The projection-valued measure associated with A, EA, is then

 

where B is a Borel set containing only the single eigenvalue λi. If the system is prepared in state

 

Then the probability of a measurement returning the value λi can be calculated by integrating the spectral measure

 

over Bi. This gives trivially

 

The characteristic property of the von Neumann measurement scheme is that repeating the same measurement will give the same results. This is also called the projection postulate.

A more general formulation replaces the projection-valued measure with a positive-operator valued measure (POVM). To illustrate, take again the finite-dimensional case. Here we would replace the rank-1 projections

 
by a finite set of positive operators
 
whose sum is still the identity operator as before (the resolution of identity). Just as a set of possible outcomes {λ1 ... λn} is associated to a projection-valued measure, the same can be said for a POVM. Suppose the measurement outcome is λi. Instead of collapsing to the (unnormalized) state
 
after the measurement, the system now will be in the state
 

Since the Fi Fi* operators need not be mutually orthogonal projections, the projection postulate of von Neumann no longer holds.

The same formulation applies to general mixed states.

In von Neumann's approach, the state transformation due to measurement is distinct from that due to time evolution in several ways. For example, time evolution is deterministic and unitary whereas measurement is non-deterministic and non-unitary. However, since both types of state transformation take one quantum state to another, this difference was viewed by many as unsatisfactory. The POVM formalism views measurement as one among many other quantum operations, which are described by completely positive maps which do not increase the trace.

In any case it seems that the above-mentioned problems can only be resolved if the time evolution included not only the quantum system, but also, and essentially, the classical measurement apparatus (see above).

The relative state interpretation Edit

An alternative interpretation of measurement is Everett's relative state interpretation, which was later dubbed the "many-worlds interpretation" of quantum physics.

List of mathematical tools Edit

Part of the folklore of the subject concerns the mathematical physics textbook Methods of Mathematical Physics put together by Richard Courant from David Hilbert's Göttingen University courses. The story is told (by mathematicians) that physicists had dismissed the material as not interesting in the current research areas, until the advent of Schrödinger's equation. At that point it was realised that the mathematics of the new quantum mechanics was already laid out in it. It is also said that Heisenberg had consulted Hilbert about his matrix mechanics, and Hilbert observed that his own experience with infinite-dimensional matrices had derived from differential equations, advice which Heisenberg ignored, missing the opportunity to unify the theory as Weyl and Dirac did a few years later. Whatever the basis of the anecdotes, the mathematics of the theory was conventional at the time, whereas the physics was radically new.

The main tools include:

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Frederick W. Byron, Robert W. Fuller; Mathematics of classical and quantum physics; Courier Dover Publications, 1992.
  2. ^ Dirac, P. A. M. (1925). "The Fundamental Equations of Quantum Mechanics". Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 109 (752): 642–653. Bibcode:1925RSPSA.109..642D. doi:10.1098/rspa.1925.0150.
  3. ^ Cohen-Tannoudji, Claude (2019). Quantum mechanics. Volume 2. Bernard Diu, Franck Laloë, Susan Reid Hemley, Nicole Ostrowsky, D. B. Ostrowsky. Weinheim. ISBN 978-3-527-82272-0. OCLC 1159410161.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Solem, J. C.; Biedenharn, L. C. (1993). "Understanding geometrical phases in quantum mechanics: An elementary example". Foundations of Physics. 23 (2): 185–195. Bibcode:1993FoPh...23..185S. doi:10.1007/BF01883623. S2CID 121930907.
  5. ^ Jauch, J. M.; Wigner, E. P.; Yanase, M. M. (1997), "Some Comments Concerning Measurements in Quantum Mechanics", Part I: Particles and Fields. Part II: Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, pp. 475–482, doi:10.1007/978-3-662-09203-3_52, ISBN 978-3-642-08179-8, retrieved 2022-03-19
  6. ^ Carcassi, Gabriele; Maccone, Lorenzo; Aidala, Christine A. (2021-03-16). "Four Postulates of Quantum Mechanics Are Three". Physical Review Letters. 126 (11): 110402. arXiv:2003.11007. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.126.110402. PMID 33798366. S2CID 214623241.
  7. ^ Masanes, Lluís; Galley, Thomas D.; Müller, Markus P. (2019-03-25). "The measurement postulates of quantum mechanics are operationally redundant". Nature Communications. 10 (1): 1361. doi:10.1038/s41467-019-09348-x. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 6434053. PMID 30911009.
  8. ^ G. Greenstein and A. Zajonc

References Edit

  • J. von Neumann, Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics (1932), Princeton University Press, 1955. Reprinted in paperback form.
  • H. Weyl, The Theory of Groups and Quantum Mechanics, Dover Publications, 1950.
  • A. Gleason, Measures on the Closed Subspaces of a Hilbert Space, Journal of Mathematics and Mechanics, 1957.
  • G. Mackey, Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, W. A. Benjamin, 1963 (paperback reprint by Dover 2004).
  • R. F. Streater and A. S. Wightman, PCT, Spin and Statistics and All That, Benjamin 1964 (Reprinted by Princeton University Press)
  • R. Jost, The General Theory of Quantized Fields, American Mathematical Society, 1965.
  • J. M. Jauch, Foundations of quantum mechanics, Addison-Wesley Publ. Cy., Reading, Massachusetts, 1968.
  • G. Emch, Algebraic Methods in Statistical Mechanics and Quantum Field Theory, Wiley-Interscience, 1972.
  • M. Reed and B. Simon, Methods of Mathematical Physics, vols I–IV, Academic Press 1972.
  • T. S. Kuhn, Black-Body Theory and the Quantum Discontinuity, 1894–1912, Clarendon Press, Oxford and Oxford University Press, New York, 1978.
  • D. Edwards, The Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Synthese, 42 (1979),pp. 1–70.
  • R. Shankar, "Principles of Quantum Mechanics", Springer, 1980.
  • E. Prugovecki, Quantum Mechanics in Hilbert Space, Dover, 1981.
  • S. Auyang, How is Quantum Field Theory Possible?, Oxford University Press, 1995.
  • N. Weaver, Mathematical Quantization, Chapman & Hall/CRC 2001.
  • G. Giachetta, L. Mangiarotti, G. Sardanashvily, Geometric and Algebraic Topological Methods in Quantum Mechanics, World Scientific, 2005.
  • D. McMahon, Quantum Mechanics Demystified, 2nd Ed., McGraw-Hill Professional, 2005.
  • G. Teschl, Mathematical Methods in Quantum Mechanics with Applications to Schrödinger Operators, https://www.mat.univie.ac.at/~gerald/ftp/book-schroe/, American Mathematical Society, 2009.
  • V. Moretti, Spectral Theory and Quantum Mechanics: Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Theories, Symmetries and Introduction to the Algebraic Formulation, 2nd Edition, Springer, 2018.
  • B. C. Hall, Quantum Theory for Mathematicians, Springer, 2013.
  • V. Moretti, Fundamental Mathematical Structures of Quantum Theory, Springer, 2019.
  • K. Landsman, Foundations of Quantum Theory, Springer 2017

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The mathematical formulations of quantum mechanics are those mathematical formalisms that permit a rigorous description of quantum mechanics This mathematical formalism uses mainly a part of functional analysis especially Hilbert spaces which are a kind of linear space Such are distinguished from mathematical formalisms for physics theories developed prior to the early 1900s by the use of abstract mathematical structures such as infinite dimensional Hilbert spaces L2 space mainly and operators on these spaces In brief values of physical observables such as energy and momentum were no longer considered as values of functions on phase space but as eigenvalues more precisely as spectral values of linear operators in Hilbert space 1 These formulations of quantum mechanics continue to be used today At the heart of the description are ideas of quantum state and quantum observables which are radically different from those used in previous models of physical reality While the mathematics permits calculation of many quantities that can be measured experimentally there is a definite theoretical limit to values that can be simultaneously measured This limitation was first elucidated by Heisenberg through a thought experiment and is represented mathematically in the new formalism by the non commutativity of operators representing quantum observables Prior to the development of quantum mechanics as a separate theory the mathematics used in physics consisted mainly of formal mathematical analysis beginning with calculus and increasing in complexity up to differential geometry and partial differential equations Probability theory was used in statistical mechanics Geometric intuition played a strong role in the first two and accordingly theories of relativity were formulated entirely in terms of differential geometric concepts The phenomenology of quantum physics arose roughly between 1895 and 1915 and for the 10 to 15 years before the development of quantum mechanics around 1925 physicists continued to think of quantum theory within the confines of what is now called classical physics and in particular within the same mathematical structures The most sophisticated example of this is the Sommerfeld Wilson Ishiwara quantization rule which was formulated entirely on the classical phase space Contents 1 History of the formalism 1 1 The old quantum theory and the need for new mathematics 1 2 The new quantum theory 1 3 Later developments 2 Postulates of quantum mechanics 2 1 Description of the state of a system 2 2 Measurement on a system 2 2 1 Description of physical quantities 2 2 2 Results of measurement 2 2 3 Effect of measurement on the state 2 3 Time evolution of a system 2 4 Other implications of the postulates 2 5 Spin 2 6 Pauli s principle 3 Mathematical structure of quantum mechanics 3 1 Pictures of dynamics 3 2 Representations 3 3 Time as an operator 4 The problem of measurement 4 1 The relative state interpretation 5 List of mathematical tools 6 Notes 7 ReferencesHistory of the formalism EditThe old quantum theory and the need for new mathematics Edit Main article Old quantum theory In the 1890s Planck was able to derive the blackbody spectrum which was later used to avoid the classical ultraviolet catastrophe by making the unorthodox assumption that in the interaction of electromagnetic radiation with matter energy could only be exchanged in discrete units which he called quanta Planck postulated a direct proportionality between the frequency of radiation and the quantum of energy at that frequency The proportionality constant h is now called Planck s constant in his honor In 1905 Einstein explained certain features of the photoelectric effect by assuming that Planck s energy quanta were actual particles which were later dubbed photons light at the right frequencyAll of these developments were phenomenological and challenged the theoretical physics of the time Bohr and Sommerfeld went on to modify classical mechanics in an attempt to deduce the Bohr model from first principles They proposed that of all closed classical orbits traced by a mechanical system in its phase space only the ones that enclosed an area which was a multiple of Planck s constant were actually allowed The most sophisticated version of this formalism was the so called Sommerfeld Wilson Ishiwara quantization Although the Bohr model of the hydrogen atom could be explained in this way the spectrum of the helium atom classically an unsolvable 3 body problem could not be predicted The mathematical status of quantum theory remained uncertain for some time In 1923 de Broglie proposed that wave particle duality applied not only to photons but to electrons and every other physical system The situation changed rapidly in the years 1925 1930 when working mathematical foundations were found through the groundbreaking work of Erwin Schrodinger Werner Heisenberg Max Born Pascual Jordan and the foundational work of John von Neumann Hermann Weyl and Paul Dirac and it became possible to unify several different approaches in terms of a fresh set of ideas The physical interpretation of the theory was also clarified in these years after Werner Heisenberg discovered the uncertainty relations and Niels Bohr introduced the idea of complementarity The new quantum theory Edit Werner Heisenberg s matrix mechanics was the first successful attempt at replicating the observed quantization of atomic spectra Later in the same year Schrodinger created his wave mechanics Schrodinger s formalism was considered easier to understand visualize and calculate as it led to differential equations which physicists were already familiar with solving Within a year it was shown that the two theories were equivalent Schrodinger himself initially did not understand the fundamental probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics as he thought that the absolute square of the wave function of an electron should be interpreted as the charge density of an object smeared out over an extended possibly infinite volume of space It was Max Born who introduced the interpretation of the absolute square of the wave function as the probability distribution of the position of a pointlike object Born s idea was soon taken over by Niels Bohr in Copenhagen who then became the father of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics Schrodinger s wave function can be seen to be closely related to the classical Hamilton Jacobi equation The correspondence to classical mechanics was even more explicit although somewhat more formal in Heisenberg s matrix mechanics In his PhD thesis project Paul Dirac 2 discovered that the equation for the operators in the Heisenberg representation as it is now called closely translates to classical equations for the dynamics of certain quantities in the Hamiltonian formalism of classical mechanics when one expresses them through Poisson brackets a procedure now known as canonical quantization To be more precise already before Schrodinger the young postdoctoral fellow Werner Heisenberg invented his matrix mechanics which was the first correct quantum mechanics the essential breakthrough Heisenberg s matrix mechanics formulation was based on algebras of infinite matrices a very radical formulation in light of the mathematics of classical physics although he started from the index terminology of the experimentalists of that time not even aware that his index schemes were matrices as Born soon pointed out to him In fact in these early years linear algebra was not generally popular with physicists in its present form Although Schrodinger himself after a year proved the equivalence of his wave mechanics and Heisenberg s matrix mechanics the reconciliation of the two approaches and their modern abstraction as motions in Hilbert space is generally attributed to Paul Dirac who wrote a lucid account in his 1930 classic The Principles of Quantum Mechanics He is the third and possibly most important pillar of that field he soon was the only one to have discovered a relativistic generalization of the theory In his above mentioned account he introduced the bra ket notation together with an abstract formulation in terms of the Hilbert space used in functional analysis he showed that Schrodinger s and Heisenberg s approaches were two different representations of the same theory and found a third most general one which represented the dynamics of the system His work was particularly fruitful in many types of generalizations of the field The first complete mathematical formulation of this approach known as the Dirac von Neumann axioms is generally credited to John von Neumann s 1932 book Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics although Hermann Weyl had already referred to Hilbert spaces which he called unitary spaces in his 1927 classic paper and book It was developed in parallel with a new approach to the mathematical spectral theory based on linear operators rather than the quadratic forms that were David Hilbert s approach a generation earlier Though theories of quantum mechanics continue to evolve to this day there is a basic framework for the mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics which underlies most approaches and can be traced back to the mathematical work of John von Neumann In other words discussions about interpretation of the theory and extensions to it are now mostly conducted on the basis of shared assumptions about the mathematical foundations Later developments Edit The application of the new quantum theory to electromagnetism resulted in quantum field theory which was developed starting around 1930 Quantum field theory has driven the development of more sophisticated formulations of quantum mechanics of which the ones presented here are simple special cases Path integral formulation Phase space formulation of quantum mechanics amp geometric quantization quantum field theory in curved spacetime axiomatic algebraic and constructive quantum field theory C algebra formalism Generalized statistical model of quantum mechanicsA related topic is the relationship to classical mechanics Any new physical theory is supposed to reduce to successful old theories in some approximation For quantum mechanics this translates into the need to study the so called classical limit of quantum mechanics Also as Bohr emphasized human cognitive abilities and language are inextricably linked to the classical realm and so classical descriptions are intuitively more accessible than quantum ones In particular quantization namely the construction of a quantum theory whose classical limit is a given and known classical theory becomes an important area of quantum physics in itself Finally some of the originators of quantum theory notably Einstein and Schrodinger were unhappy with what they thought were the philosophical implications of quantum mechanics In particular Einstein took the position that quantum mechanics must be incomplete which motivated research into so called hidden variable theories The issue of hidden variables has become in part an experimental issue with the help of quantum optics Postulates of quantum mechanics EditA physical system is generally described by three basic ingredients states observables and dynamics or law of time evolution or more generally a group of physical symmetries A classical description can be given in a fairly direct way by a phase space model of mechanics states are points in a phase space formulated by symplectic manifold observables are real valued functions on it time evolution is given by a one parameter group of symplectic transformations of the phase space and physical symmetries are realized by symplectic transformations A quantum description normally consists of a Hilbert space of states observables are self adjoint operators on the space of states time evolution is given by a one parameter group of unitary transformations on the Hilbert space of states and physical symmetries are realized by unitary transformations It is possible to map this Hilbert space picture to a phase space formulation invertibly See below The following summary of the mathematical framework of quantum mechanics can be partly traced back to the Dirac von Neumann axioms 3 Description of the state of a system Edit Each isolated physical system is associated with a topologically separable complex Hilbert space H with inner product f ps Rays that is subspaces of complex dimension 1 in H are associated with quantum states of the system Postulate I The state of an isolated physical system is represented at a fixed time t displaystyle t by a state vector ps displaystyle psi rangle belonging to a Hilbert space H displaystyle mathcal H called the state space In other words quantum states can be identified with equivalence classes rays of vectors of length 1 in H where two vectors represent the same state if they differ only by a phase factor Separability is a mathematically convenient hypothesis with the physical interpretation that countably many observations are enough to uniquely determine the state A quantum mechanical state is a ray in projective Hilbert space not a vector Many textbooks fail to make this distinction which could be partly a result of the fact that the Schrodinger equation itself involves Hilbert space vectors with the result that the imprecise use of state vector rather than ray is very difficult to avoid 4 Accompanying Postulate I is the composite system postulate 5 Composite system postulate The Hilbert space of a composite system is the Hilbert space tensor product of the state spaces associated with the component systems For a non relativistic system consisting of a finite number of distinguishable particles the component systems are the individual particles In the presence of quantum entanglement the quantum state of the composite system cannot be factored as a tensor product of states of its local constituents Instead it is expressed as a sum or superposition of tensor products of states of component subsystems A subsystem in an entangled composite system generally cannot be described by a state vector or a ray but instead is described by a density operator Such quantum state is known as a mixed state The density operator of a mixed state is a trace class nonnegative positive semi definite self adjoint operator r normalized to be of trace 1 In turn any density operator of a mixed state can be represented as a subsystem of a larger composite system in a pure state see purification theorem In the absence of quantum entanglement the quantum state of the composite system is called a separable state The density matrix of a bipartite system in a separable state can be expressed as r k p k r 1 k r 2 k displaystyle rho sum k p k rho 1 k otimes rho 2 k where k p k 1 displaystyle sum k p k 1 If there is only a single non zero p k displaystyle p k then the state can be expressed just as r r 1 r 2 textstyle rho rho 1 otimes rho 2 and is called simply separable or product state Measurement on a system Edit Description of physical quantities Edit Physical observables are represented by Hermitian matrices on H Since these operators are Hermitian their eigenvalues are always real and represent the possible outcomes results from measuring the corresponding observable If the spectrum of the observable is discrete then the possible results are quantized Postulate II a Every measurable physical quantity A displaystyle mathcal A is described by a Hermitian operator A displaystyle A acting in the state space H displaystyle mathcal H This operator is an observable meaning that its eigenvectors form a basis for H displaystyle mathcal H The result of measuring a physical quantity A displaystyle mathcal A must be one of the eigenvalues of the corresponding observable A displaystyle A Results of measurement Edit By spectral theory we can associate a probability measure to the values of A in any state ps We can also show that the possible values of the observable A in any state must belong to the spectrum of A The expectation value in the sense of probability theory of the observable A for the system in state represented by the unit vector ps H is ps A ps displaystyle langle psi A psi rangle If we represent the state ps in the basis formed by the eigenvectors of A then the square of the modulus of the component attached to a given eigenvector is the probability of observing its corresponding eigenvalue Postulate II b When the physical quantity A displaystyle mathcal A is measured on a system in a normalized state ps displaystyle psi rangle the probability of obtaining an eigenvalue denoted a n displaystyle a n for discrete spectra and a displaystyle alpha for continuous spectra of the corresponding observable A displaystyle A is given by the amplitude squared of the appropriate wave function projection onto corresponding eigenvector P a n a n ps 2 Discrete nondegenerate spectrum P a n i g n a n i ps 2 Discrete degenerate spectrum d P a a ps 2 d a Continuous nondegenerate spectrum displaystyle begin aligned mathbb P a n amp langle a n psi rangle 2 amp text Discrete nondegenerate spectrum mathbb P a n amp sum i g n langle a n i psi rangle 2 amp text Discrete degenerate spectrum d mathbb P alpha amp langle alpha psi rangle 2 d alpha amp text Continuous nondegenerate spectrum end aligned For a mixed state r the expected value of A in the state r is tr A r displaystyle operatorname tr A rho and the probability of obtaining an eigenvalue a n displaystyle a n in a discrete nondegenerate spectrum of the corresponding observable A displaystyle A is given by P a n tr a n a n r a n r a n displaystyle mathbb P a n operatorname tr a n rangle langle a n rho langle a n rho a n rangle If the eigenvalue a n displaystyle a n has degenerate orthonormal eigenvectors a n 1 a n 2 a n m displaystyle a n1 rangle a n2 rangle dots a nm rangle then the projection operator onto the eigensubspace can be defined as the identity operator in the eigensubspace P n a n 1 a n 1 a n 2 a n 2 a n m a n m displaystyle P n a n1 rangle langle a n1 a n2 rangle langle a n2 dots a nm rangle langle a nm and then P a n tr P n r displaystyle mathbb P a n operatorname tr P n rho Postulates II a and II b are collectively known as the Born rule of quantum mechanics Effect of measurement on the state EditWhen a measurement is performed only one result is obtained according to some interpretations of quantum mechanics This is modeled mathematically as the processing of additional information from the measurement confining the probabilities of an immediate second measurement of the same observable In the case of a discrete non degenerate spectrum two sequential measurements of the same observable will always give the same value assuming the second immediately follows the first Therefore the state vector must change as a result of measurement and collapse onto the eigensubspace associated with the eigenvalue measured Postulate II c If the measurement of the physical quantity A displaystyle mathcal A on the system in the state ps displaystyle psi rangle gives the result a n displaystyle a n then the state of the system immediately after the measurement is the normalized projection of ps displaystyle psi rangle onto the eigensubspace associated with a n displaystyle a n ps a n P n ps ps P n ps displaystyle psi quad overset a n Longrightarrow quad frac P n psi rangle sqrt langle psi P n psi rangle For a mixed state r after obtaining an eigenvalue a n displaystyle a n in a discrete nondegenerate spectrum of the corresponding observable A displaystyle A the updated state is given by r P n r P n tr P n r P n textstyle rho frac P n rho P n dagger operatorname tr P n rho P n dagger If the eigenvalue a n displaystyle a n has degenerate orthonormal eigenvectors a n 1 a n 2 a n m displaystyle a n1 rangle a n2 rangle dots a nm rangle then the projection operator onto the eigensubspace is P n a n 1 a n 1 a n 2 a n 2 a n m a n m displaystyle P n a n1 rangle langle a n1 a n2 rangle langle a n2 dots a nm rangle langle a nm Postulates II c is sometimes called the state update rule or collapse rule Together with the Born rule Postulates II a and II b they form a complete representation of measurements and are sometimes collectively called the measurement postulate s Note that the projection valued measures PVM described in the measurement postulate s can be generalized to positive operator valued measures POVM which is the most general kind of measurement in quantum mechanics A POVM can be understood as the effect on a component subsystem when a PVM is performed on a larger composite system see Naimark s dilation theorem Time evolution of a system Edit Though it is possible to derive the Schrodinger equation which describes how a state vector evolves in time most texts assert the equation as a postulate Common derivations include using the de Broglie hypothesis or path integrals Postulate III The time evolution of the state vector ps t displaystyle psi t rangle is governed by the Schrodinger equation where H t displaystyle H t is the observable associated with the total energy of the system called the Hamiltonian i ℏ d d t ps t H t ps t displaystyle i hbar frac d dt psi t rangle H t psi t rangle Equivalently the time evolution postulate can be stated as Postulate III The time evolution of a closed system is described by a unitary transformation on the initial state ps t U t t 0 ps t 0 displaystyle psi t rangle U t t 0 psi t 0 rangle For a closed system in a mixed state r the time evolution is r t U t t 0 r t 0 U t t 0 displaystyle rho t U t t 0 rho t 0 U dagger t t 0 The evolution of an open quantum system can be described by quantum operations in an operator sum formalism and quantum instruments and generally does not have to be unitary Other implications of the postulates Edit Physical symmetries act on the Hilbert space of quantum states unitarily or antiunitarily due to Wigner s theorem supersymmetry is another matter entirely Density operators are those that are in the closure of the convex hull of the one dimensional orthogonal projectors Conversely one dimensional orthogonal projectors are extreme points of the set of density operators Physicists also call one dimensional orthogonal projectors pure states and other density operators mixed states One can in this formalism state Heisenberg s uncertainty principle and prove it as a theorem although the exact historical sequence of events concerning who derived what and under which framework is the subject of historical investigations outside the scope of this article Recent research has shown 6 that the composite system postulate tensor product postulate can be derived from the state postulate Postulate I and the measurement postulates Postulates II Moreover it has also been shown 7 that the measurement postulates Postulates II can be derived from unitary quantum mechanics which includes only the state postulate Postulate I the composite system postulate tensor product postulate and the unitary evolution postulate Postulate III Furthermore to the postulates of quantum mechanics one should also add basic statements on the properties of spin and Pauli s exclusion principle see below Spin Edit In addition to their other properties all particles possess a quantity called spin an intrinsic angular momentum Despite the name particles do not literally spin around an axis and quantum mechanical spin has no correspondence in classical physics In the position representation a spinless wavefunction has position r and time t as continuous variables ps ps r t For spin wavefunctions the spin is an additional discrete variable ps ps r t s where s takes the values s S ℏ S 1 ℏ 0 S 1 ℏ S ℏ displaystyle sigma S hbar S 1 hbar dots 0 dots S 1 hbar S hbar That is the state of a single particle with spin S is represented by a 2S 1 component spinor of complex valued wave functions Two classes of particles with very different behaviour are bosons which have integer spin S 0 1 2 and fermions possessing half integer spin S 1 2 3 2 5 2 Pauli s principle Edit The property of spin relates to another basic property concerning systems of N identical particles Pauli s exclusion principle which is a consequence of the following permutation behaviour of an N particle wave function again in the position representation one must postulate that for the transposition of any two of the N particles one always should have Pauli principle ps r i s i r j s j 1 2 S ps r j s j r i s i displaystyle psi dots mathbf r i sigma i dots mathbf r j sigma j dots 1 2S cdot psi dots mathbf r j sigma j dots mathbf r i sigma i dots i e on transposition of the arguments of any two particles the wavefunction should reproduce apart from a prefactor 1 2S which is 1 for bosons but 1 for fermions Electrons are fermions with S 1 2 quanta of light are bosons with S 1 In nonrelativistic quantum mechanics all particles are either bosons or fermions in relativistic quantum theories also supersymmetric theories exist where a particle is a linear combination of a bosonic and a fermionic part Only in dimension d 2 can one construct entities where 1 2S is replaced by an arbitrary complex number with magnitude 1 called anyons Although spin and the Pauli principle can only be derived from relativistic generalizations of quantum mechanics the properties mentioned in the last two paragraphs belong to the basic postulates already in the non relativistic limit Especially many important properties in natural science e g the periodic system of chemistry are consequences of the two properties Mathematical structure of quantum mechanics EditPictures of dynamics Edit Main article Dynamical pictures In the so called Schrodinger picture of quantum mechanics the dynamics is given as follows The time evolution of the state is given by a differentiable function from the real numbers R representing instants of time to the Hilbert space of system states This map is characterized by a differential equation as follows If ps t denotes the state of the system at any one time t the following Schrodinger equation holds Schrodinger equation general i ℏ d d t ps t H ps t displaystyle i hbar frac d dt left psi t right rangle H left psi t right rangle where H is a densely defined self adjoint operator called the system Hamiltonian i is the imaginary unit and ħ is the reduced Planck constant As an observable H corresponds to the total energy of the system Alternatively by Stone s theorem one can state that there is a strongly continuous one parameter unitary map U t H H such that ps t s U t ps s displaystyle left psi t s right rangle U t left psi s right rangle for all times s t The existence of a self adjoint Hamiltonian H such that U t e i ℏ t H displaystyle U t e i hbar tH is a consequence of Stone s theorem on one parameter unitary groups It is assumed that H does not depend on time and that the perturbation starts at t0 0 otherwise one must use the Dyson series formally written as U t T exp i ℏ t 0 t d t H t displaystyle U t mathcal T left exp left frac i hbar int t 0 t dt H t right right where T displaystyle mathcal T is Dyson s time ordering symbol This symbol permutes a product of noncommuting operators of the formB 1 t 1 B 2 t 2 B n t n displaystyle B 1 t 1 cdot B 2 t 2 cdot dots cdot B n t n into the uniquely determined re ordered expression B i 1 t i 1 B i 2 t i 2 B i n t i n displaystyle B i 1 t i 1 cdot B i 2 t i 2 cdot dots cdot B i n t i n with t i 1 t i 2 t i n displaystyle t i 1 geq t i 2 geq dots geq t i n The result is a causal chain the primary cause in the past on the utmost r h s and finally the present effect on the utmost l h s The Heisenberg picture of quantum mechanics focuses on observables and instead of considering states as varying in time it regards the states as fixed and the observables as changing To go from the Schrodinger to the Heisenberg picture one needs to define time independent states and time dependent operators thus ps ps 0 displaystyle left psi right rangle left psi 0 right rangle A t U t A U t displaystyle A t U t AU t It is then easily checked that the expected values of all observables are the same in both pictures ps A t ps ps t A ps t displaystyle langle psi mid A t mid psi rangle langle psi t mid A mid psi t rangle and that the time dependent Heisenberg operators satisfy Heisenberg picture general d d t A t i ℏ H A t A t t displaystyle frac d dt A t frac i hbar H A t frac partial A t partial t which is true for time dependent A A t Notice the commutator expression is purely formal when one of the operators is unbounded One would specify a representation for the expression to make sense of it The so called Dirac picture or interaction picture has time dependent states and observables evolving with respect to different Hamiltonians This picture is most useful when the evolution of the observables can be solved exactly confining any complications to the evolution of the states For this reason the Hamiltonian for the observables is called free Hamiltonian and the Hamiltonian for the states is called interaction Hamiltonian In symbols Dirac picture i ℏ d d t ps t H i n t t ps t displaystyle i hbar frac d dt left psi t right rangle H rm int t left psi t right rangle i ℏ d d t A t A t H 0 displaystyle i hbar frac d dt A t A t H 0 The interaction picture does not always exist though In interacting quantum field theories Haag s theorem states that the interaction picture does not exist This is because the Hamiltonian cannot be split into a free and an interacting part within a superselection sector Moreover even if in the Schrodinger picture the Hamiltonian does not depend on time e g H H0 V in the interaction picture it does at least if V does not commute with H0 sinceH i n t t e i ℏ t H 0 V e i ℏ t H 0 displaystyle H rm int t equiv e i hbar tH 0 V e i hbar tH 0 So the above mentioned Dyson series has to be used anyhow The Heisenberg picture is the closest to classical Hamiltonian mechanics for example the commutators appearing in the above equations directly translate into the classical Poisson brackets but this is already rather high browed and the Schrodinger picture is considered easiest to visualize and understand by most people to judge from pedagogical accounts of quantum mechanics The Dirac picture is the one used in perturbation theory and is specially associated to quantum field theory and many body physics Similar equations can be written for any one parameter unitary group of symmetries of the physical system Time would be replaced by a suitable coordinate parameterizing the unitary group for instance a rotation angle or a translation distance and the Hamiltonian would be replaced by the conserved quantity associated with the symmetry for instance angular or linear momentum Summary Evolution of Picture vte Schrodinger S Heisenberg H Interaction I Ket state ps S t e i H S t ℏ ps S 0 displaystyle psi rm S t rangle e iH rm S t hbar psi rm S 0 rangle constant ps I t e i H 0 S t ℏ ps S t displaystyle psi rm I t rangle e iH 0 mathrm S t hbar psi rm S t rangle Observable constant A H t e i H S t ℏ A S e i H S t ℏ displaystyle A rm H t e iH rm S t hbar A rm S e iH rm S t hbar A I t e i H 0 S t ℏ A S e i H 0 S t ℏ displaystyle A rm I t e iH 0 mathrm S t hbar A rm S e iH 0 mathrm S t hbar Density matrix r S t e i H S t ℏ r S 0 e i H S t ℏ displaystyle rho rm S t e iH rm S t hbar rho rm S 0 e iH rm S t hbar constant r I t e i H 0 S t ℏ r S t e i H 0 S t ℏ displaystyle rho rm I t e iH 0 mathrm S t hbar rho rm S t e iH 0 mathrm S t hbar Representations Edit The original form of the Schrodinger equation depends on choosing a particular representation of Heisenberg s canonical commutation relations The Stone von Neumann theorem dictates that all irreducible representations of the finite dimensional Heisenberg commutation relations are unitarily equivalent A systematic understanding of its consequences has led to the phase space formulation of quantum mechanics which works in full phase space instead of Hilbert space so then with a more intuitive link to the classical limit thereof This picture also simplifies considerations of quantization the deformation extension from classical to quantum mechanics The quantum harmonic oscillator is an exactly solvable system where the different representations are easily compared There apart from the Heisenberg or Schrodinger position or momentum or phase space representations one also encounters the Fock number representation and the Segal Bargmann Fock space or coherent state representation named after Irving Segal and Valentine Bargmann All four are unitarily equivalent Time as an operator Edit The framework presented so far singles out time as the parameter that everything depends on It is possible to formulate mechanics in such a way that time becomes itself an observable associated with a self adjoint operator At the classical level it is possible to arbitrarily parameterize the trajectories of particles in terms of an unphysical parameter s and in that case the time t becomes an additional generalized coordinate of the physical system At the quantum level translations in s would be generated by a Hamiltonian H E where E is the energy operator and H is the ordinary Hamiltonian However since s is an unphysical parameter physical states must be left invariant by s evolution and so the physical state space is the kernel of H E this requires the use of a rigged Hilbert space and a renormalization of the norm This is related to the quantization of constrained systems and quantization of gauge theories It is also possible to formulate a quantum theory of events where time becomes an observable see D Edwards The problem of measurement EditMain article Measurement in quantum mechanics The picture given in the preceding paragraphs is sufficient for description of a completely isolated system However it fails to account for one of the main differences between quantum mechanics and classical mechanics that is the effects of measurement 8 The von Neumann description of quantum measurement of an observable A when the system is prepared in a pure state ps is the following note however that von Neumann s description dates back to the 1930s and is based on experiments as performed during that time more specifically the Compton Simon experiment it is not applicable to most present day measurements within the quantum domain Let A have spectral resolution A l d E A l displaystyle A int lambda d operatorname E A lambda where EA is the resolution of the identity also called projection valued measure associated with A Then the probability of the measurement outcome lying in an interval B of R is EA B ps 2 In other words the probability is obtained by integrating the characteristic function of B against the countably additive measure ps E A ps displaystyle langle psi mid operatorname E A psi rangle If the measured value is contained in B then immediately after the measurement the system will be in the generally non normalized state EA B ps If the measured value does not lie in B replace B by its complement for the above state For example suppose the state space is the n dimensional complex Hilbert space Cn and A is a Hermitian matrix with eigenvalues li with corresponding eigenvectors psi The projection valued measure associated with A EA is thenE A B ps i ps i displaystyle operatorname E A B psi i rangle langle psi i where B is a Borel set containing only the single eigenvalue li If the system is prepared in state ps displaystyle psi rangle Then the probability of a measurement returning the value li can be calculated by integrating the spectral measure ps E A ps displaystyle langle psi mid operatorname E A psi rangle over Bi This gives trivially ps ps i ps i ps ps ps i 2 displaystyle langle psi psi i rangle langle psi i mid psi rangle langle psi mid psi i rangle 2 The characteristic property of the von Neumann measurement scheme is that repeating the same measurement will give the same results This is also called the projection postulate A more general formulation replaces the projection valued measure with a positive operator valued measure POVM To illustrate take again the finite dimensional case Here we would replace the rank 1 projections ps i ps i displaystyle psi i rangle langle psi i by a finite set of positive operators F i F i displaystyle F i F i whose sum is still the identity operator as before the resolution of identity Just as a set of possible outcomes l1 ln is associated to a projection valued measure the same can be said for a POVM Suppose the measurement outcome is li Instead of collapsing to the unnormalized state ps i ps i ps displaystyle psi i rangle langle psi i psi rangle after the measurement the system now will be in the state F i ps displaystyle F i psi rangle Since the Fi Fi operators need not be mutually orthogonal projections the projection postulate of von Neumann no longer holds The same formulation applies to general mixed states In von Neumann s approach the state transformation due to measurement is distinct from that due to time evolution in several ways For example time evolution is deterministic and unitary whereas measurement is non deterministic and non unitary However since both types of state transformation take one quantum state to another this difference was viewed by many as unsatisfactory The POVM formalism views measurement as one among many other quantum operations which are described by completely positive maps which do not increase the trace In any case it seems that the above mentioned problems can only be resolved if the time evolution included not only the quantum system but also and essentially the classical measurement apparatus see above The relative state interpretation Edit An alternative interpretation of measurement is Everett s relative state interpretation which was later dubbed the many worlds interpretation of quantum physics List of mathematical tools EditPart of the folklore of the subject concerns the mathematical physics textbook Methods of Mathematical Physics put together by Richard Courant from David Hilbert s Gottingen University courses The story is told by mathematicians that physicists had dismissed the material as not interesting in the current research areas until the advent of Schrodinger s equation At that point it was realised that the mathematics of the new quantum mechanics was already laid out in it It is also said that Heisenberg had consulted Hilbert about his matrix mechanics and Hilbert observed that his own experience with infinite dimensional matrices had derived from differential equations advice which Heisenberg ignored missing the opportunity to unify the theory as Weyl and Dirac did a few years later Whatever the basis of the anecdotes the mathematics of the theory was conventional at the time whereas the physics was radically new The main tools include linear algebra complex numbers eigenvectors eigenvalues functional analysis Hilbert spaces linear operators spectral theory differential equations partial differential equations separation of variables ordinary differential equations Sturm Liouville theory eigenfunctions harmonic analysis Fourier transformsSee also list of mathematical topics in quantum theoryNotes Edit Frederick W Byron Robert W Fuller Mathematics of classical and quantum physics Courier Dover Publications 1992 Dirac P A M 1925 The Fundamental Equations of Quantum Mechanics Proceedings of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 109 752 642 653 Bibcode 1925RSPSA 109 642D doi 10 1098 rspa 1925 0150 Cohen Tannoudji Claude 2019 Quantum mechanics Volume 2 Bernard Diu Franck Laloe Susan Reid Hemley Nicole Ostrowsky D B Ostrowsky Weinheim ISBN 978 3 527 82272 0 OCLC 1159410161 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Solem J C Biedenharn L C 1993 Understanding geometrical phases in quantum mechanics An elementary example Foundations of Physics 23 2 185 195 Bibcode 1993FoPh 23 185S doi 10 1007 BF01883623 S2CID 121930907 Jauch J M Wigner E P Yanase M M 1997 Some Comments Concerning Measurements in Quantum Mechanics Part I Particles and Fields Part II Foundations of Quantum Mechanics Berlin Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg pp 475 482 doi 10 1007 978 3 662 09203 3 52 ISBN 978 3 642 08179 8 retrieved 2022 03 19 Carcassi Gabriele Maccone Lorenzo Aidala Christine A 2021 03 16 Four Postulates of Quantum Mechanics Are Three Physical Review Letters 126 11 110402 arXiv 2003 11007 doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 126 110402 PMID 33798366 S2CID 214623241 Masanes Lluis Galley Thomas D Muller Markus P 2019 03 25 The measurement postulates of quantum mechanics are operationally redundant Nature Communications 10 1 1361 doi 10 1038 s41467 019 09348 x ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 6434053 PMID 30911009 G Greenstein and A ZajoncReferences EditJ von Neumann Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics 1932 Princeton University Press 1955 Reprinted in paperback form H Weyl The Theory of Groups and Quantum Mechanics Dover Publications 1950 A Gleason Measures on the Closed Subspaces of a Hilbert Space Journal of Mathematics and Mechanics 1957 G Mackey Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics W A Benjamin 1963 paperback reprint by Dover 2004 R F Streater and A S Wightman PCT Spin and Statistics and All That Benjamin 1964 Reprinted by Princeton University Press R Jost The General Theory of Quantized Fields American Mathematical Society 1965 J M Jauch Foundations of quantum mechanics Addison Wesley Publ Cy Reading Massachusetts 1968 G Emch Algebraic Methods in Statistical Mechanics and Quantum Field Theory Wiley Interscience 1972 M Reed and B Simon Methods of Mathematical Physics vols I IV Academic Press 1972 T S Kuhn Black Body Theory and the Quantum Discontinuity 1894 1912 Clarendon Press Oxford and Oxford University Press New York 1978 D Edwards The Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics Synthese 42 1979 pp 1 70 R Shankar Principles of Quantum Mechanics Springer 1980 E Prugovecki Quantum Mechanics in Hilbert Space Dover 1981 S Auyang How is Quantum Field Theory Possible Oxford University Press 1995 N Weaver Mathematical Quantization Chapman amp Hall CRC 2001 G Giachetta L Mangiarotti G Sardanashvily Geometric and Algebraic Topological Methods in Quantum Mechanics World Scientific 2005 D McMahon Quantum Mechanics Demystified 2nd Ed McGraw Hill Professional 2005 G Teschl Mathematical Methods in Quantum Mechanics with Applications to Schrodinger Operators https www mat univie ac at gerald ftp book schroe American Mathematical Society 2009 V Moretti Spectral Theory and Quantum Mechanics Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Theories Symmetries and Introduction to the Algebraic Formulation 2nd Edition Springer 2018 B C Hall Quantum Theory for Mathematicians Springer 2013 V Moretti Fundamental Mathematical Structures of Quantum Theory Springer 2019 K Landsman Foundations of Quantum Theory Springer 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics amp oldid 1166436698, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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