fbpx
Wikipedia

Schrödinger field

In quantum mechanics and quantum field theory, a Schrödinger field, named after Erwin Schrödinger, is a quantum field which obeys the Schrödinger equation.[1] While any situation described by a Schrödinger field can also be described by a many-body Schrödinger equation for identical particles, the field theory is more suitable for situations where the particle number changes.

A Schrödinger field is also the classical limit of a quantum Schrödinger field, a classical wave which satisfies the Schrödinger equation. Unlike the quantum mechanical wavefunction, if there are interactions between the particles the equation will be nonlinear. These nonlinear equations describe the classical wave limit of a system of interacting identical particles.

The path integral of a Schrödinger field is also known as a coherent state path integral, because the field itself is an annihilation operator whose eigenstates can be thought of as coherent states of the harmonic oscillations of the field modes.

Schrödinger fields are useful for describing Bose–Einstein condensation, the Bogolyubovde Gennes equation of superconductivity, superfluidity, and many-body theory in general. They are also a useful alternative formalism for nonrelativistic quantum mechanics.

A Schrödinger field is the nonrelativistic limit of a Klein–Gordon field.

Summary

A Schrödinger field is a quantum field whose quanta obey the Schrödinger equation. In the classical limit, it can be understood as the quantized wave equation of a Bose Einstein condensate or a superfluid.

Free field

A Schrödinger field has the free field Lagrangian

 

When   is a complex valued field in a path integral, or equivalently an operator with canonical commutation relations, it describes a collection of identical non-relativistic bosons. When   is a Grassmann valued field, or equivalently an operator with canonical anti-commutation relations, the field describes identical fermions.

External potential

If the particles interact with an external potential  , the interaction makes a local contribution to the action:

 

The field operators obey the Euler–Lagrange equations of motion, corresponding to the Schrödinger field Lagrangian density:

 

Yielding the Schrödinger equations of motion:

 
 

If the ordinary Schrödinger equation for V has known energy eigenstates   with energies  , then the field in the action can be rotated into a diagonal basis by a mode expansion:

 

The action becomes:

 

which is the position-momentum path integral for a collection of independent Harmonic oscillators.

To see the equivalence, note that decomposed into real and imaginary parts the action is:

 

after an integration by parts. Integrating over   gives the action

 

which, rescaling  , is a harmonic oscillator action with frequency  .

Pair potential

When the particles interact with a pair potential  , the interaction is a nonlocal contribution to the action:

 

A pair-potential is the non-relativistic limit of a relativistic field coupled to electrodynamics. Ignoring the propagating degrees of freedom, the interaction between nonrelativistic electrons is the coulomb repulsion. In 2+1 dimensions, this is:

 

When coupled to an external potential to model classical positions of nuclei, a Schrödinger field with this pair potential describes nearly all of condensed matter physics. The exceptions are effects like superfluidity, where the quantum mechanical interference of nuclei is important, and inner shell electrons where the electron motion can be relativistic.

Nonlinear Schrödinger equation

A special case of a delta-function interaction   is widely studied, and is known as the nonlinear Schrödinger equation. Because the interactions always happen when two particles occupy the same point, the action for the nonlinear Schrödinger equation is local:

 

The interaction strength   requires renormalization in dimensions higher than 2 and in two dimensions it has logarithmic divergence. In any dimensions, and even with power-law divergence, the theory is well defined. If the particles are fermions, the interaction vanishes.

Many-body potentials

The potentials can include many-body contributions. The interacting Lagrangian is then:

 

These types of potentials are important in some effective descriptions of close-packed atoms. Higher order interactions are less and less important.

Canonical formalism

The canonical momentum association with the field   is

 

The canonical commutation relations are like an independent harmonic oscillator at each point:

 

The field Hamiltonian is

 

and the field equation for any interaction is a nonlinear and nonlocal version of the Schrödinger equation. For pairwise interactions:

 

Perturbation theory

The expansion in Feynman diagrams is called many-body perturbation theory. The propagator is

 

The interaction vertex is the Fourier transform of the pair-potential. In all the interactions, the number of incoming and outgoing lines is equal.

Exposition

Identical particles

The many body Schrödinger equation for identical particles describes the time evolution of the many-body wavefunction ψ(x1, x2...xN) which is the probability amplitude for N particles to have the listed positions. The Schrödinger equation for ψ is:

 

with Hamiltonian

 

Since the particles are indistinguishable, the wavefunction has some symmetry under switching positions. Either

  1.  ,
  2.  .

Since the particles are indistinguishable, the potential V must be unchanged under permutations. If

 

then it must be the case that  . If

 

then   and so on.

In the Schrödinger equation formalism, the restrictions on the potential are ad-hoc, and the classical wave limit is hard to reach. It also has limited usefulness if a system is open to the environment, because particles might coherently enter and leave.

Nonrelativistic Fock space

A Schrödinger field is defined by extending the Hilbert space of states to include configurations with arbitrary particle number. A nearly complete basis for this set of states is the collection:

 

labeled by the total number of particles and their position. An arbitrary state with particles at separated positions is described by a superposition of states of this form.

 

In this formalism, keep in mind that any two states whose positions can be permuted into each other are really the same, so the integration domains need to avoid double counting. Also keep in mind that the states with more than one particle at the same point have not yet been defined. The quantity   is the amplitude that no particles are present, and its absolute square is the probability that the system is in the vacuum.

In order to reproduce the Schrödinger description, the inner product on the basis states should be

 
 

and so on. Since the discussion is nearly formally identical for bosons and fermions, although the physical properties are different, from here on the particles will be bosons.

There are natural operators in this Hilbert space. One operator, called  , is the operator which introduces an extra particle at x. It is defined on each basis state:

 

with slight ambiguity when a particle is already at x.

Another operator removes a particle at x, and is called  . This operator is the conjugate of the operator  . Because   has no matrix elements which connect to states with no particle at x,   must give zero when acting on such a state.

 

The position basis is an inconvenient way to understand coincident particles because states with a particle localized at one point have infinite energy, so intuition is difficult. In order to see what happens when two particles are at exactly the same point, it is mathematically simplest either to make space into a discrete lattice, or to Fourier transform the field in a finite volume.

The operator

 

creates a superposition of one particle states in a plane wave state with momentum k, in other words, it produces a new particle with momentum k. The operator

 

annihilates a particle with momentum k.

If the potential energy for interaction of infinitely distant particles vanishes, the Fourier transformed operators in infinite volume create states which are noninteracting. The states are infinitely spread out, and the chance that the particles are nearby is zero.

The matrix elements for the operators between non-coincident points reconstructs the matrix elements of the Fourier transform between all modes:

  1.  
  2.  
  3.  

where the delta function is either the Dirac delta function or the Kronecker delta, depending on whether the volume is infinite or finite.

The commutation relations now determine the operators completely, and when the spatial volume is finite, there are no conceptual hurdle to understand coinciding momenta because momenta are discrete. In a discrete momentum basis, the basis states are:

 

where the n's are the number of particles at each momentum. For fermions and anyons, the number of particles at any momentum is always either zero or one. The operators   have harmonic-oscillator like matrix elements between states, independent of the interaction:

 
 

So that the operator

 

counts the total number of particles.

Now it is easy to see that the matrix elements of   and   have harmonic oscillator commutation relations too.

  1.  
  2.  

So that there really is no difficulty with coincident particles in position space.

The operator   which removes and replaces a particle, acts as a sensor to detect if a particle is present at x. The operator   acts to multiply the state by the gradient of the many body wavefunction. The operator

 

acts to reproduce the right hand side of the Schrödinger equation when acting on any basis state, so that

 

holds as an operator equation. Since this is true for an arbitrary state, it is also true without the  .

 

To add interactions, add nonlinear terms in the field equations. The field form automatically ensures that the potentials obey the restrictions from symmetry.

Field Hamiltonian

The field Hamiltonian which reproduces the equations of motion is

 

The Heisenberg equations of motion for this operator reproduces the equation of motion for the field.

To find the classical field Lagrangian, apply a Legendre transform to the classical limit of the Hamiltonian.

 

Although this is correct classically, the quantum mechanical transformation is not completely conceptually straightforward because the path integral is over eigenvalues of operators ψ which are not hermitian and whose eigenvalues are not orthogonal. The path integral over field states therefore seems naively to be overcounting. This is not the case, because the time derivative term in L includes the overlap between the different field states.

Relation to Klein–Gordon field

The non-relativistic limit as   of any Klein–Gordon field is two Schrödinger fields, representing the particle and anti-particle. For clarity, all units and constants are preserved in this derivation. From the momentum space annihilation operators   of the relativistic field, one defines

 ,

such that  . Defining two "non-relativistic" fields   and  ,

 ,

which factor out a rapidly oscillating phase due to the rest mass plus a vestige of the relativistic measure, the Lagrangian density   becomes

 

where terms proportional to   are represented with ellipses and disappear in the non-relativistic limit.[note 1] When the four-gradient is expanded, the total divergence is ignored and terms proportional to   also disappear in the non-relativistic limit. After an integration by parts,

 

The final Lagrangian takes the form[2]

 

Notes

  1. ^   is a harmonic function oscillating very fast, compared to other terms, and its average value is zero. So, when integrating, its contributions may be neglected in comparison to other terms. Compare for example to  .

References

  1. ^ G, Harris, Edward (2014). A Pedestrian Approach to Quantum Field Theory. Dover Publications. ISBN 9780486793290. OCLC 968989532.
  2. ^ Padmanabhan, T. (9 July 2018). "Obtaining the non-relativistic quantum mechanics from quantum field theory: issues, folklores and facts". The European Physical Journal C. 78 (7): 563. arXiv:1712.06605. doi:10.1140/epjc/s10052-018-6039-y. S2CID 119057898.

schrödinger, field, quantum, mechanics, quantum, field, theory, named, after, erwin, schrödinger, quantum, field, which, obeys, schrödinger, equation, while, situation, described, also, described, many, body, schrödinger, equation, identical, particles, field,. In quantum mechanics and quantum field theory a Schrodinger field named after Erwin Schrodinger is a quantum field which obeys the Schrodinger equation 1 While any situation described by a Schrodinger field can also be described by a many body Schrodinger equation for identical particles the field theory is more suitable for situations where the particle number changes A Schrodinger field is also the classical limit of a quantum Schrodinger field a classical wave which satisfies the Schrodinger equation Unlike the quantum mechanical wavefunction if there are interactions between the particles the equation will be nonlinear These nonlinear equations describe the classical wave limit of a system of interacting identical particles The path integral of a Schrodinger field is also known as a coherent state path integral because the field itself is an annihilation operator whose eigenstates can be thought of as coherent states of the harmonic oscillations of the field modes Schrodinger fields are useful for describing Bose Einstein condensation the Bogolyubov de Gennes equation of superconductivity superfluidity and many body theory in general They are also a useful alternative formalism for nonrelativistic quantum mechanics A Schrodinger field is the nonrelativistic limit of a Klein Gordon field Contents 1 Summary 1 1 Free field 1 2 External potential 1 3 Pair potential 1 4 Nonlinear Schrodinger equation 1 5 Many body potentials 1 6 Canonical formalism 1 7 Perturbation theory 2 Exposition 2 1 Identical particles 2 2 Nonrelativistic Fock space 2 3 Field Hamiltonian 2 4 Relation to Klein Gordon field 3 Notes 4 ReferencesSummary EditA Schrodinger field is a quantum field whose quanta obey the Schrodinger equation In the classical limit it can be understood as the quantized wave equation of a Bose Einstein condensate or a superfluid Free field Edit A Schrodinger field has the free field Lagrangian L ps i t 2 2 m ps displaystyle L psi dagger left i partial over partial t nabla 2 over 2m right psi When ps displaystyle psi is a complex valued field in a path integral or equivalently an operator with canonical commutation relations it describes a collection of identical non relativistic bosons When ps displaystyle psi is a Grassmann valued field or equivalently an operator with canonical anti commutation relations the field describes identical fermions External potential Edit If the particles interact with an external potential V x displaystyle V x the interaction makes a local contribution to the action S x t ps i t 2 2 m ps ps x ps x V x displaystyle S int xt psi dagger left i partial over partial t nabla 2 over 2m right psi psi dagger x psi x V x The field operators obey the Euler Lagrange equations of motion corresponding to the Schrodinger field Lagrangian density L i ps o ps 1 2 m i ps i ps V ps ps displaystyle mathcal L i psi dagger partial o psi frac 1 2m partial i psi dagger partial i psi V psi dagger psi Yielding the Schrodinger equations of motion i o ps x m D 2 m V x ps x m displaystyle i partial o psi x mu left frac Delta 2m V vec x right psi x mu i o ps x m D 2 m V x ps x m displaystyle i partial o psi dagger x mu left frac Delta 2m V vec x right psi dagger x mu If the ordinary Schrodinger equation for V has known energy eigenstates ϕ i x displaystyle phi i x with energies E i displaystyle E i then the field in the action can be rotated into a diagonal basis by a mode expansion ps x i ps i ϕ i x displaystyle psi x sum i psi i phi i x The action becomes S t i ps i i t E i ps i displaystyle S int t sum i psi i dagger left i partial over partial t E i right psi i which is the position momentum path integral for a collection of independent Harmonic oscillators To see the equivalence note that decomposed into real and imaginary parts the action is S t i 2 ps r d ps i d t E i ps r 2 ps i 2 displaystyle S int t sum i 2 psi r d psi i over dt E i psi r 2 psi i 2 after an integration by parts Integrating over ps r displaystyle psi r gives the action S t i 1 E i d ps i d t 2 E i ps i 2 displaystyle S int t sum i 1 over E i left frac d psi i dt right 2 E i psi i 2 which rescaling ps i textstyle psi i is a harmonic oscillator action with frequency E i displaystyle E i Pair potential Edit When the particles interact with a pair potential V x 1 x 2 displaystyle V x 1 x 2 the interaction is a nonlocal contribution to the action S x t ps i t 2 2 m ps x y ps y ps x V x y ps x ps y displaystyle S int xt psi dagger left i frac partial partial t nabla 2 over 2m right psi int xy psi dagger y psi dagger x V x y psi x psi y A pair potential is the non relativistic limit of a relativistic field coupled to electrodynamics Ignoring the propagating degrees of freedom the interaction between nonrelativistic electrons is the coulomb repulsion In 2 1 dimensions this is V x y j 2 y x displaystyle V x y j 2 over y x When coupled to an external potential to model classical positions of nuclei a Schrodinger field with this pair potential describes nearly all of condensed matter physics The exceptions are effects like superfluidity where the quantum mechanical interference of nuclei is important and inner shell electrons where the electron motion can be relativistic Nonlinear Schrodinger equation Edit A special case of a delta function interaction V x 1 x 2 l d x 1 x 2 displaystyle V x 1 x 2 lambda delta x 1 x 2 is widely studied and is known as the nonlinear Schrodinger equation Because the interactions always happen when two particles occupy the same point the action for the nonlinear Schrodinger equation is local S x ps i t 2 2 m ps l x ps ps ps ps displaystyle S int x psi dagger left i partial over partial t nabla 2 over 2m right psi lambda int x psi dagger psi dagger psi psi The interaction strength l displaystyle lambda requires renormalization in dimensions higher than 2 and in two dimensions it has logarithmic divergence In any dimensions and even with power law divergence the theory is well defined If the particles are fermions the interaction vanishes Many body potentials Edit The potentials can include many body contributions The interacting Lagrangian is then L i x ps x 1 ps x 2 ps x n V x 1 x 2 x n ps x 1 ps x 2 ps x n displaystyle L i int x psi dagger x 1 psi dagger x 2 cdots psi dagger x n V x 1 x 2 dots x n psi x 1 psi x 2 cdots psi x n These types of potentials are important in some effective descriptions of close packed atoms Higher order interactions are less and less important Canonical formalism Edit The canonical momentum association with the field ps displaystyle psi is P x i ps displaystyle Pi x i psi dagger The canonical commutation relations are like an independent harmonic oscillator at each point ps x ps y d x y displaystyle psi x psi dagger y delta x y The field Hamiltonian is H S P x d d t ps ps 2 2 m x y ps x ps y V x y ps x ps y displaystyle H S int Pi x d over dt psi int nabla psi 2 over 2m int xy psi dagger x psi dagger y V x y psi x psi y and the field equation for any interaction is a nonlinear and nonlocal version of the Schrodinger equation For pairwise interactions i t ps 2 2 m ps y V x y ps y ps y ps x displaystyle i partial over partial t psi nabla 2 over 2m psi left int y V x y psi dagger y psi y right psi x Perturbation theory Edit The expansion in Feynman diagrams is called many body perturbation theory The propagator is G k 1 i w k 2 2 m displaystyle G k 1 over i omega k 2 over 2m The interaction vertex is the Fourier transform of the pair potential In all the interactions the number of incoming and outgoing lines is equal Exposition EditIdentical particles Edit The many body Schrodinger equation for identical particles describes the time evolution of the many body wavefunction ps x1 x2 xN which is the probability amplitude for N particles to have the listed positions The Schrodinger equation for ps is i t ps 1 2 2 m 2 2 2 m N 2 2 m V x 1 x 2 x N ps displaystyle i frac partial partial t psi left frac nabla 1 2 2m frac nabla 2 2 2m cdots frac nabla N 2 2m V x 1 x 2 dots x N right psi with Hamiltonian H p 1 2 2 m p 2 2 2 m p N 2 2 m V x 1 x N displaystyle H frac p 1 2 2m frac p 2 2 2m cdots frac p N 2 2m V x 1 dots x N Since the particles are indistinguishable the wavefunction has some symmetry under switching positions Either ps x 1 x 2 ps x 2 x 1 for bosons displaystyle psi x 1 x 2 dots psi x 2 x 1 dots qquad quad text for bosons ps x 1 x 2 ps x 2 x 1 for fermions displaystyle psi x 1 x 2 dots psi x 2 x 1 dots qquad text for fermions Since the particles are indistinguishable the potential V must be unchanged under permutations If V x 1 x N V 1 x 1 V 2 x 2 V N x N displaystyle V x 1 dots x N V 1 x 1 V 2 x 2 cdots V N x N then it must be the case that V 1 V 2 V N displaystyle V 1 V 2 cdots V N If V x 1 x N V 1 2 x 1 x 2 V 1 3 x 2 x 3 V 2 3 x 1 x 2 displaystyle V x 1 x N V 1 2 x 1 x 2 V 1 3 x 2 x 3 V 2 3 x 1 x 2 then V 1 2 V 1 3 V 2 3 displaystyle V 1 2 V 1 3 V 2 3 and so on In the Schrodinger equation formalism the restrictions on the potential are ad hoc and the classical wave limit is hard to reach It also has limited usefulness if a system is open to the environment because particles might coherently enter and leave Nonrelativistic Fock space Edit A Schrodinger field is defined by extending the Hilbert space of states to include configurations with arbitrary particle number A nearly complete basis for this set of states is the collection N x 1 x N displaystyle N x 1 ldots x N rangle labeled by the total number of particles and their position An arbitrary state with particles at separated positions is described by a superposition of states of this form ps 0 0 x ps 1 x 1 x x 1 x 2 ps 2 x 1 x 2 2 x 1 x 2 displaystyle psi 0 0 rangle int x psi 1 x 1 x rangle int x 1 x 2 psi 2 x 1 x 2 2 x 1 x 2 rangle ldots In this formalism keep in mind that any two states whose positions can be permuted into each other are really the same so the integration domains need to avoid double counting Also keep in mind that the states with more than one particle at the same point have not yet been defined The quantity ps 0 displaystyle psi 0 is the amplitude that no particles are present and its absolute square is the probability that the system is in the vacuum In order to reproduce the Schrodinger description the inner product on the basis states should be 1 x 1 1 y 1 d x 1 y 1 displaystyle langle 1 x 1 1 y 1 rangle delta x 1 y 1 2 x 1 x 2 2 y 1 y 2 d x 1 y 1 d x 2 y 2 d x 1 y 2 d x 2 y 1 displaystyle langle 2 x 1 x 2 2 y 1 y 2 rangle delta x 1 y 1 delta x 2 y 2 pm delta x 1 y 2 delta x 2 y 1 and so on Since the discussion is nearly formally identical for bosons and fermions although the physical properties are different from here on the particles will be bosons There are natural operators in this Hilbert space One operator called ps x textstyle psi dagger x is the operator which introduces an extra particle at x It is defined on each basis state ps x N x 1 x n N 1 x 1 x n x displaystyle psi dagger x left N x 1 dots x n right rangle left N 1 x 1 dots x n x right rangle with slight ambiguity when a particle is already at x Another operator removes a particle at x and is called ps displaystyle psi This operator is the conjugate of the operator ps displaystyle psi dagger Because ps textstyle psi dagger has no matrix elements which connect to states with no particle at x ps displaystyle psi must give zero when acting on such a state ps x N x 1 x N d x x 1 N 1 x 2 x N d x x 2 N 1 x 1 x 3 x N displaystyle psi x left N x 1 dots x N right rangle delta x x 1 left N 1 x 2 dots x N right rangle delta x x 2 left N 1 x 1 x 3 dots x N right rangle cdots The position basis is an inconvenient way to understand coincident particles because states with a particle localized at one point have infinite energy so intuition is difficult In order to see what happens when two particles are at exactly the same point it is mathematically simplest either to make space into a discrete lattice or to Fourier transform the field in a finite volume The operator ps k x e i k x ps x displaystyle psi dagger k int x e ikx psi dagger x creates a superposition of one particle states in a plane wave state with momentum k in other words it produces a new particle with momentum k The operator ps k x e i k x ps x displaystyle psi k int x e ikx psi x annihilates a particle with momentum k If the potential energy for interaction of infinitely distant particles vanishes the Fourier transformed operators in infinite volume create states which are noninteracting The states are infinitely spread out and the chance that the particles are nearby is zero The matrix elements for the operators between non coincident points reconstructs the matrix elements of the Fourier transform between all modes ps k ps k ps k ps k 0 displaystyle psi dagger k psi dagger k psi dagger k psi dagger k 0 ps k ps k ps k ps k 0 displaystyle psi k psi k psi k psi k 0 ps k ps k ps k ps k d k k displaystyle psi k psi dagger k psi k psi dagger k delta k k where the delta function is either the Dirac delta function or the Kronecker delta depending on whether the volume is infinite or finite The commutation relations now determine the operators completely and when the spatial volume is finite there are no conceptual hurdle to understand coinciding momenta because momenta are discrete In a discrete momentum basis the basis states are n 1 n 2 n k displaystyle n 1 n 2 n k rangle where the n s are the number of particles at each momentum For fermions and anyons the number of particles at any momentum is always either zero or one The operators ps k textstyle psi k have harmonic oscillator like matrix elements between states independent of the interaction ps k n k n k 1 n k 1 displaystyle psi dagger k dots n k ldots rangle sqrt n k 1 dots n k 1 ldots rangle ps k n k n k n k 1 displaystyle psi k left dots n k ldots right rangle sqrt n k left dots n k 1 ldots right rangle So that the operator k ps k ps k x ps x ps x displaystyle sum k psi dagger k psi k int x psi dagger x psi x counts the total number of particles Now it is easy to see that the matrix elements of ps x textstyle psi x and ps x textstyle psi dagger x have harmonic oscillator commutation relations too ps x ps y ps x ps y 0 displaystyle psi x psi y psi dagger x psi dagger y 0 ps x ps y d x y displaystyle psi x psi dagger y delta x y So that there really is no difficulty with coincident particles in position space The operator ps x ps x textstyle psi dagger x psi x which removes and replaces a particle acts as a sensor to detect if a particle is present at x The operator ps ps textstyle psi dagger nabla psi acts to multiply the state by the gradient of the many body wavefunction The operator H x ps x 2 2 m ps x displaystyle H int x psi dagger x nabla 2 over 2m psi x acts to reproduce the right hand side of the Schrodinger equation when acting on any basis state so that ps i d d t ps ps 2 2 m ps displaystyle psi dagger i d over dt psi psi dagger nabla 2 over 2m psi holds as an operator equation Since this is true for an arbitrary state it is also true without the ps textstyle psi dagger i t ps 2 2 m ps displaystyle i partial over partial t psi nabla 2 over 2m psi To add interactions add nonlinear terms in the field equations The field form automatically ensures that the potentials obey the restrictions from symmetry Field Hamiltonian Edit The field Hamiltonian which reproduces the equations of motion is H ps ps 2 m displaystyle H nabla psi dagger nabla psi over 2m The Heisenberg equations of motion for this operator reproduces the equation of motion for the field To find the classical field Lagrangian apply a Legendre transform to the classical limit of the Hamiltonian L ps i t 2 2 m ps displaystyle L psi dagger left i partial over partial t nabla 2 over 2m right psi Although this is correct classically the quantum mechanical transformation is not completely conceptually straightforward because the path integral is over eigenvalues of operators ps which are not hermitian and whose eigenvalues are not orthogonal The path integral over field states therefore seems naively to be overcounting This is not the case because the time derivative term in L includes the overlap between the different field states Relation to Klein Gordon field Edit The non relativistic limit as c displaystyle c to infty of any Klein Gordon field is two Schrodinger fields representing the particle and anti particle For clarity all units and constants are preserved in this derivation From the momentum space annihilation operators a p b p displaystyle hat a mathbf p hat b mathbf p of the relativistic field one defines a x d W p a p e i p x b x d W p b p e i p x displaystyle hat a x int d Omega mathbf p hat a mathbf p e ip cdot x quad hat b x int d Omega mathbf p hat b mathbf p e ip cdot x such that ϕ x a x b x displaystyle hat phi x hat a x hat b dagger x Defining two non relativistic fields A x displaystyle hat A x and B x displaystyle hat B x a x e i m c 2 t ℏ 2 m c 2 A x b x e i m c 2 t ℏ 2 m c 2 B x displaystyle hat a x frac e imc 2 t hbar sqrt 2mc 2 hat A x quad hat b x frac e imc 2 t hbar sqrt 2mc 2 hat B x which factor out a rapidly oscillating phase due to the rest mass plus a vestige of the relativistic measure the Lagrangian density L ℏ c 2 m ϕ m ϕ m c 2 2 ϕ ϕ displaystyle L hbar c 2 partial mu phi partial mu phi dagger mc 2 2 phi phi dagger becomes L ℏ c 2 m a m a m b m b m c 2 2 a a b b 1 2 m c 2 ℏ c 2 i m c ℏ A 0 A i m c ℏ A 0 A ℏ c 2 x A x A A B m c 2 2 A A B B ℏ 2 2 m i m c ℏ 0 A A A 0 A m A m A A B displaystyle begin aligned L amp left hbar c right 2 left partial mu hat a partial mu hat a dagger partial mu hat b partial mu hat b dagger cdots right left mc 2 right 2 left hat a hat a dagger hat b hat b dagger cdots right amp frac 1 2mc 2 left left hbar c right 2 left frac imc hbar hat A partial 0 hat A right left frac imc hbar hat A dagger partial 0 hat A dagger right left hbar c right 2 partial x hat A partial x hat A dagger A Rightarrow B cdots left mc 2 right 2 left hat A hat A dagger hat B hat B dagger cdots right right amp frac hbar 2 2m left frac imc hbar left partial 0 hat A hat A dagger hat A partial 0 hat A dagger right partial mu hat A partial mu hat A dagger A Rightarrow B cdots right end aligned where terms proportional to e 2 i m c 2 t ℏ displaystyle e pm 2imc 2 t hbar are represented with ellipses and disappear in the non relativistic limit note 1 When the four gradient is expanded the total divergence is ignored and terms proportional to 1 c textstyle 1 c also disappear in the non relativistic limit After an integration by parts L A i ℏ A A ℏ 2 2 m 1 c 2 A A x A x A i ℏ A A ℏ 2 2 m x A x A A x x A i ℏ A A ℏ 2 2 m A x x A displaystyle begin aligned L A amp i hbar hat A dagger hat A frac hbar 2 2m left frac 1 c 2 hat A hat A dagger partial x hat A partial x hat A dagger right amp i hbar hat A dagger hat A frac hbar 2 2m left left partial x left hat A partial x hat A dagger right hat A partial x partial x hat A dagger right right amp i hbar hat A dagger hat A frac hbar 2 2m hat A partial x partial x hat A dagger end aligned The final Lagrangian takes the form 2 L 1 2 A i ℏ t ℏ 2 2 2 m A B i ℏ t ℏ 2 2 2 m B h c displaystyle L frac 1 2 left hat A dagger left i hbar frac partial partial t frac hbar 2 nabla 2 2m right hat A hat B dagger left i hbar frac partial partial t frac hbar 2 nabla 2 2m right hat B text h c right Notes Edit e 2 i m c 2 t ℏ displaystyle e pm 2imc 2 t hbar is a harmonic function oscillating very fast compared to other terms and its average value is zero So when integrating its contributions may be neglected in comparison to other terms Compare for example to F x sin x sin 10 x 10 displaystyle F x sin x sin 10x 10 References Edit G Harris Edward 2014 A Pedestrian Approach to Quantum Field Theory Dover Publications ISBN 9780486793290 OCLC 968989532 Padmanabhan T 9 July 2018 Obtaining the non relativistic quantum mechanics from quantum field theory issues folklores and facts The European Physical Journal C 78 7 563 arXiv 1712 06605 doi 10 1140 epjc s10052 018 6039 y S2CID 119057898 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Schrodinger field amp oldid 1132361567, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

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