Canonical commutation relation

Canonical commutation relation

In physics, the canonical commutation relation is the relation between canonical conjugate quantities (quantities which are related by definition such that one is the Fourier transform of another), for example:

[x,p_x] = i\hbar

between the position x and momentum px in the x direction of a point particle in one dimension, where [x,px] = xpxpxx is the commutator of x and px, i is the imaginary unit, and ħ is the reduced Planck's constant h /2π . This relation is attributed to Max Born, and it was noted by E. Kennard (1927) to imply the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.

Contents

Relation to classical mechanics

By contrast, in classical physics, all observables commute and the commutator would be zero. However, an analogous relation exists, which is obtained by replacing the commutator with the Poisson bracket multiplied by i ħ:

\{x,p\} = 1 \,      .

This observation led Dirac to propose that the quantum counterparts \hat f,\hat g of classical observables f, g satisfy

[\hat f,\hat g]= i\hbar\widehat{\{f,g\}} \, .

In 1946, Hip Groenewold demonstrated that a general systematic correspondence between quantum commutators and Poisson brackets could not hold consistently. However, he did appreciate that such a systematic correspondence does, in fact, exist between the quantum commutator and a deformation of the Poisson bracket, the Moyal bracket, and, in general, quantum operators and classical observables and distributions in phase space. He thus finally elucidated the correspondence mechanism, Weyl quantization, that underlies an alternate equivalent mathematical approach to quantization known as deformation quantization.

Representations

According to the standard mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics, quantum observables such as x and p should be represented as self-adjoint operators on some Hilbert space. It is relatively easy to see that two operators satisfying the canonical commutation relations cannot both be bounded. The canonical commutation relations can be made tamer by writing them in terms of the (bounded) unitary operators e ikx and e iap, which admit finite-dimensional representations as well. The resulting braiding relations for these are the so-called Weyl relations. The uniqueness of the canonical commutation relations between position and momentum is guaranteed by the Stone-von Neumann theorem. The group associated with these commutation relations is called the Heisenberg group.

Generalizations

The simple formula

[x,p] = i\hbar,

valid for the quantization of the simplest classical system, can be generalized to the case of an arbitrary Lagrangian {\mathcal L}.[1] We identify canonical coordinates (such as x in the example above, or a field φ(x) in the case of quantum field theory) and canonical momenta πx (in the example above it is p, or more generally, some functions involving the derivatives of the canonical coordinates with respect to time):

\pi_i \ \stackrel{\mathrm{def}}{=}\  \frac{\partial {\mathcal L}}{\partial(\partial x_i / \partial t)}.

This definition of the canonical momentum ensures that one of the Euler-Lagrange equations has the form

\frac{\partial}{\partial t} \pi_i = \frac{\partial {\mathcal L}}{\partial x_i}.

The canonical commutation relations then amount to

[x_i,\pi_j] = i\hbar\delta_{ij},

where δij is the Kronecker delta.

Further, it can be easily shown that

[F(\vec{x}),p_i] = i\hbar\frac{\partial F(\vec{x})}{\partial x_i}; \qquad [x_i, F(\vec{p})] = i\hbar\frac{\partial F(\vec{p})}{\partial p_i}.

Gauge invariance

Canonical quantization is applied, by definition, on canonical coordinates. However, in the presence of an electromagnetic field, the canonical momentum p is not gauge invariant. The correct gauge-invariant momentum (or "kinetic momentum") is

p_\textrm{kin} = p - qA  \,\!   (SI units)      p_\textrm{kin} = p - \frac{qA}{c} \,\!   (cgs units),

where q is the particle's electric charge, A is the vector potential, and c is the speed of light. Although the quantity pkin is the "physical momentum", in that it is the quantity to be identified with momentum in laboratory experiments, it does not satisfy the canonical commutation relations; only the canonical momentum does that. This can be seen as follows.

The non-relativistic Hamiltonian for a quantized charged particle of mass m in a classical electromagnetic field is (in cgs units)

H=\frac{1}{2m} \left(p-\frac{qA}{c}\right)^2 +q\phi

where A is the three-vector potential and ϕ is the scalar potential. This form of the Hamiltonian, as well as the Schroedinger equation H\psi=i\hbar \partial\psi/\partial t, the Maxwell equations and the Lorentz force law are invariant under the gauge transformation

A\to A^\prime=A+\nabla \Lambda
\phi\to \phi^\prime=\phi-\frac{1}{c} \frac{\partial \Lambda}{\partial t}
\psi\to\psi^\prime=U\psi
H\to H^\prime= U HU^\dagger ,

where

U=\exp \left( \frac{iq\Lambda}{\hbar c}\right)

and Λ = Λ(x,t) is the gauge function.

The canonical angular momentum is

L=r \times p \,\!

and obeys the canonical quantization relations

[L_i, L_j]= i\hbar {\epsilon_{ijk}} L_k

defining the Lie algebra for so(3), where εijk is the Levi-Civita symbol. Under gauge transformations, the angular momentum transforms as

 \langle \psi \vert L \vert \psi \rangle \to 
\langle \psi^\prime \vert L^\prime \vert \psi^\prime \rangle = 
\langle \psi \vert L \vert \psi \rangle + 
\frac {q}{\hbar c}  \langle \psi \vert r \times \nabla \Lambda \vert \psi \rangle \, .

The gauge-invariant angular momentum (or "kinetic angular momentum") is given by

K=r \times \left(p-\frac{qA}{c}\right),

which has the commutation relations

[K_i,K_j]=i\hbar {\epsilon_{ij}}^{\,k}
\left(K_k+\frac{q\hbar}{c} x_k 
\left(x \cdot B\right)\right)

where

B=\nabla \times A

is the magnetic field. The inequivalence of these two formulations shows up in the Zeeman effect and the Aharonov-Bohm effect.

Angular momentum operators

 [{L_x}, {L_y}] = i \hbar \epsilon_{xyz} {L_z},

where \epsilon_{xyz} is the Levi-Civita symbol and simply reverses the sign of the answer under pairwise interchange of the indices. An analogous relation holds for the spin operators.

All such nontrivial commutation relations for pairs of operators lead to corresponding uncertainty relations,[2] involving positive semi-definite expectation contributions by their respective commutators and anticommutators. In general, for two Hermitian operators A and B, consider expectation values in a system in the state ψ, the variances around the corresponding expectation values being (ΔA)2 ≡ 〈 (A −<A>)2 〉, etc.

Then

 \Delta  A \, \Delta  B \geq  \frac{1}{2} \sqrt{ \left|\left\langle\left[{A},{B}\right]\right\rangle \right|^2 + \left|\left\langle\left\{ A-\langle A\rangle ,B-\langle B\rangle  \right\} \right\rangle \right|^2} ,

where [A,B] ≡ ABBA is the commutator of A and B, and {A,B} ≡ AB+BA is the anticommutator. This follows through use of the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality, since |〈A2〉| |〈B2〉| ≥ |〈AB〉|2, and AB = ([A,B] + {A,B}) /2 ; and similarly for the shifted operators A−〈A〉 and B−〈B〉 . Judicious choices for A and B yield Heisenberg's familiar uncertainty relation, for x and p, as usual; or, here, Lx and Ly , in angular momentum multiplets, ψ = |l , m 〉 , useful constraints such as l (l+1) ≥ m (m+1), and hence lm, among others.

See also

References

  1. ^ Townsend, J. S. (2000). A Modern Approach to Quantum Mechanics. Sausalito, CA: University Science Books. ISBN 1891389130. 
  2. ^ Robertson, H. P. (1929). "The Uncertainty Principle". Physical Review 34 (1): 163–164. Bibcode 1929PhRv...34..163R. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.34.163. 

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