Why this equation is an integral over all paths?

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In summary, the conversation is about a question regarding the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics. The equation in question involves <q_F|e^{-iHT}|q_i>=\int{}Dq(t)e^{i\int_0^T dt \frac{1}{2}m{\dot{q}}^2}, where \int{}Dq(t) is a functional. The discussion delves into the mathematical form of this equation and how it relates to summing over all possible paths. The concept of inserting \int dx\,|x,t\rangle\langle x,t| for each timeslice t is mentioned, but its relevance is debated. The original poster ultimately asks for clarification on how to mathematically evaluate
  • #1
ianhoolihan
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Dear all,

I have decided to begin working my way through Quantum Field Theory in a Nutshell (Zee), and hopefully thoroughly. Here is one simple question from page 11, relating to the path integral formulation of QM.

Equation (4) is

[tex]<q_F|e^{-iHT}|q_i>=\int{}Dq(t)e^{i\int_0^T dt \frac{1}{2}m{\dot{q}}^2} [/tex]

where

[tex]\int{}Dq(t)=\lim_{N\to\infty}\left(\frac{-im}{2\pi \delta t}\right)^{\frac{N}{2}}\left(\prod_{k=1}^{N-1}\int dq_k\right)[/tex]

and then Zee states that

this tells us that to obtain [itex]<q_F|e^{-iHT}|q_i>[/itex] we simply integrate over all possible paths [itex]q(t)[/itex] such that [itex]q(0)=q_i[/itex] and [itex]q(T)=q_F[/itex].

I was just wondering how one can tell that this is an integral over all possible paths? As far as I can tell, it could just be a multi-dimensional volume integral (i.e. the [itex]\prod_{k=1}^{N-1}\int dq_k[/itex] term).

Could someone please dot my "i"s?

Ianhoolihan
 
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  • #2
I think the previous few pages of Zee explain quite nicely why this is a sum over all paths. Did you read the previous few pages? He spends them all developing the idea that this is a sum over paths.
 
  • #3
Thanks Matterwave,

I understand the first few pages, and this heuristic argument. However I was wondering how one tells from the mathematical form of the equation that it is a sum over paths?

Ianhoolihan
 
  • #4
ianhoolihan said:
However I was wondering how one tells from the mathematical form of the equation that it is a sum over paths?
Only the derivation and the physical context tell you that it is a sum over paths. A formula alone is not sufficient.

Why is U(t) = exp[-iHt] a time-evolution operator? This can be understood only if you know what H is, how it acts on states and other observables (via Heisenberg equation of motion).
 
  • #5
Although an integral with a capital D is usually reserved for path integrals, D in this case is a functional and is sometimes notated as

[tex]\int D[q] [/tex]
 
  • #6
Thanks maverick_starstrider,

How do you know that

[tex]\int{}Dq(t)=\lim_{N\to\infty}\left(\frac{-im}{2\pi \delta t}\right)^{\frac{N}{2}}\left(\prod_{k=1}^{N-1}\int dq_k\right)[/tex]

is a functional? I know that

[tex]S[q(t)]=\int_{t_1}^{t_2}L[q(t),\dot{q}(t),t]dt[/tex]

is a functional, as for a given function [itex]q(t)[/itex] one can operate on it with [itex]S[/itex] to return a scalar [itex]S[q(t)][/itex]. I do not see how this follows, as I don't see how [itex]D[q(t)][/itex] is a functional?

Is the solution to my problem that here the [itex]dq_k[/itex] are not variables of integration, such as [itex]dx,dy,dz[/itex], but actually are specific to the given curve in the sense of at each position [itex]k[/itex], you have a triangle at each point on the curve, of width [itex]\delta t[/itex] and height [itex]dq_k[/itex]? Then one takes the limit for [itex]N\to\infty[/itex] of the sume of the area of these triangles? So it is not a usual integration (where the "height" is [itex]h+dq_k[/itex] as such), but still takes a function to give a scalar?

Ianhoolihan
 
  • #7
ianhoolihan said:
Thanks maverick_starstrider,

How do you know that

[tex]\int{}Dq(t)=\lim_{N\to\infty}\left(\frac{-im}{2\pi \delta t}\right)^{\frac{N}{2}}\left(\prod_{k=1}^{N-1}\int dq_k\right)[/tex]

is a functional? I know that

[tex]S[q(t)]=\int_{t_1}^{t_2}L[q(t),\dot{q}(t),t]dt[/tex]

is a functional, as for a given function [itex]q(t)[/itex] one can operate on it with [itex]S[/itex] to return a scalar [itex]S[q(t)][/itex]. I do not see how this follows, as I don't see how [itex]D[q(t)][/itex] is a functional?

Is the solution to my problem that here the [itex]dq_k[/itex] are not variables of integration, such as [itex]dx,dy,dz[/itex], but actually are specific to the given curve in the sense of at each position [itex]k[/itex], you have a triangle at each point on the curve, of width [itex]\delta t[/itex] and height [itex]dq_k[/itex]? Then one takes the limit for [itex]N\to\infty[/itex] of the sume of the area of these triangles? So it is not a usual integration (where the "height" is [itex]h+dq_k[/itex] as such), but still takes a function to give a scalar?

Ianhoolihan

Because you're integrating over all paths through q_k for all q_k's
 
  • #8
Because you're integrating over all paths through q_k for all q_k's

I still don't see why it is over all paths instead of a single given path. As far as I can tell, in the equation

[tex]<q_F|e^{-iHT}|q_i>=\int{}Dq(t)e^{i\int_0^T dt \frac{1}{2}m{\dot{q}}^2}[/tex]

you take a given path [itex]q(t)[/itex] from [itex]q_i[/itex] to [itex]q_F[/itex] and evaluate the function [itex]D[q(t)][/itex] and then the remaining path integral [itex]\int_0^T dt \frac{1}{2}m{\dot{q}}^2[/itex] along [itex]q(t)[/itex]. So where does the "integrating over all possible paths" come from, given you are doing it for a given [itex]q(t)[/itex]?

Ianhoolihan
 
  • #9
No - but in order to understand that you have to understand Feynman's derivation. What he basically did is to insert

[tex]\int dx\,|x,t\rangle\langle x,t|[/tex]

for each timeslice t.

So you do not start from a single path
 
  • #10
Is not my procedure in the previous post correct for evaluating [itex]<q_F|e^{-iHT}|q_i>[/itex] , in a purely mathematical sense? Where does it mathematically indicate to sum over all possible paths? If it does not, then how would one go about actually evaluating [itex]<q_F|e^{-iHT}|q_i>[/itex] over all possible paths?

I understand how [itex]\int dx\,|x,t\rangle\langle x,t|[/itex] was added in between each time slice. However, I don't see how that is relevant (possibly as I don't fully understand its role). For example, in a normal functional, I could add [itex]x_i+1-x_i[/itex] as a factor between each [itex]dx[/itex] slice in the normal riemannian sum, and then take the limit, and obtain exactly the same standard integral [itex]\int dx[/itex]. It doesn't mean I have to sum over all possible paths.

When you answer, please quote the parts you addressing, so I don't get confused.

Ianhoolihan
 
  • #11
ianhoolihan said:
I understand how [itex]\int dx\,|x,t\rangle\langle x,t|[/itex] was added in between each time slice. However, I don't see how that is relevant (possibly as I don't fully understand its role).
It seems that you don't understand the equation

[tex]<q_F|e^{-iHT}|q_i>=\int{}Dq(t)e^{i\int_0^T dt \frac{1}{2}m{\dot{q}}^2}[/tex]

and its derivation.

There is no a priory (pure mathematical) reason for this equation to hold, it requires a proof. But exactly during this proof the insertion of [itex]\int dx\,|x,t\rangle\langle x,t|[/itex] IS relevant, and it's excatly this procedure which gives us the interpretation as a path integral. w/o this insertion you can neither claim the equatility to hold, nor can you present a reasonable interpretation.

The l.h.s. of your equation need not be evaluated using path integrals; you can apply several different ideas. But there is one formal manipulation (Feynman's) which tells you that it can be interpreted as the r.h.s. Note that numerous physicists calculated expressions like the l.h.s. decades before Feynman invented the r.h.s.

Are you aware of the fact that Feynman's derivation first gives you a Hamiltonian path integral which only via a Gaussian integration d[p] transforms into the Lagrangian one? It is by no means clear that this Gaussian integration always works b/c it depends crucially on the presence of a p² term. In more complicated cases for the kinetic energy e.g. for particles moving on curved manifolds, this d[p] integration is no longer trivial.
 
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  • #12
tom.stoer said:
It seems that you don't understand the equation

[tex]<q_F|e^{-iHT}|q_i>=\int{}Dq(t)e^{i\int_0^T dt \frac{1}{2}m{\dot{q}}^2}[/tex]

and its derivation.

I clearly don't understand the equation =). But what was wrong with my mathematical interpretation? If I had a function [itex]q(t)[/itex], could I not evaluate it as I have described previously? How would I evaluate it with two, or infinitely many, functions/paths?

There is no a priory (pure mathematical) reason for this equation to hold, it requires a proof.

I agree --- and I followed the proof. As you suggest, I must be missing the point regarding

[tex]\int dx\,|x,t\rangle\langle x,t|[/tex]

Can you please explain why this implies a sum over all paths? All I know is that [itex]\int dx\,|x,t\rangle\langle x,t|=1[/itex].

Ianhoolihan
 
  • #13
We start with

[tex]\langle x_f|e^{-iHT}|x_i\rangle = \langle x_f|e^{-iHT/2}e^{-iHT/2}|x_i\rangle = \int dy\,\langle x_f|e^{-iHT/2}|y\rangle\langle y|e^{-iHT/2}|x_i\rangle [/tex]

Instead of having a particle traveling from xi at t=0 to xf at time t=T we now have a particle traveling
i) from xi at t=0 to all points x at time t=T/2 and then
ii) from each x at t=T/2 to xf at t=T
This is now an integral over all contributions from all straight lines (the paths) from xi to and all straight lines from x to xf. Note that x can take any value.

What we want to do is to get rid of the exponential exp(-iHt) and replace it with 1-iH*dt, therefore we do this slicing infinitly many times, i.e. we introduce x, x', x'', for t=0, t=t', t=t'' etc. where t''-t' = dt.

That means we get straight lines from intermediate x'(t') to x''(t'') with t''-t' = dt, but x'' and x' (and all other x''', ...) are integrated over, and t', t'', ... act as indices labelling x', x'', ...

This justifies the interpretation as a path integral.

Note that I have omitted the dp integrations which are required for the derivation, but which drop out when doing the Gaussian integral d[p].
 
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  • #14
[Solved] Why this equation is an integral over all paths?

Instead of having a particle traveling from xi at t=0 to xf at time t=T we now have a particle traveling
i) from xi at t=0 to all points x at time t=T/2 and then
ii) from each x at t=T/2 to xf at t=T

Aha! That was what I was looking for tom.stoer!

Very good explanation as well,

Ianhholihan
 
  • #15
You're welcome.

You are saying that you are reading 'Quantum Field Theory in a Nutshell' from Zee - and that my explanation was what you was looking for. So it's not explained that way in that book? Strange b/c that's the basic explanation in QM when introducing PIs.
 
  • #16
This book is more confusing than illuminating anyway. I've never understood the hype made about it, given the fact that there are many good qft books around. My favorites are:

To begin with: Ryder, Bailin-Love
To learn all the details: Weinberg, Quantum Theory of Fields
 
  • #17
vanhees71 said:
My favorites are:

To begin with: Ryder, Bailin-Love
To learn all the details: Weinberg, Quantum Theory of Fields
I don't know Bailin-Love, but I studied Ryder intensively and I know Weinberg, so I can fully agree .
 
  • #18
I've read the first few chapters of Weinberg, and my lecturer considers it one of the only good textbooks on QFT. He thinks Ryder has errors, and to be honest, after trying to make sense of his introduction to spinors, I passed it over.

I passed on Weinberg for something a little more approachable and heuristic. Zee seems good so far. He did describe Feynman's path integral formalism well, but missed the key point regarding why adding [itex]\int dx\,|x,t\rangle\langle x,t|[/itex] results in an integral over all paths.

I haven't heard of Bailin-Love --- I'll look into it.

Thanks again,

Ianhoolihan
 

1. Why is this equation an integral over all paths?

The integral over all paths is a mathematical concept used in quantum mechanics to calculate the probability of a particle moving from one point to another. It takes into account the uncertainty principle, which states that the exact path of a particle cannot be determined, and instead considers all possible paths the particle could take.

2. How does the integral over all paths relate to quantum mechanics?

In quantum mechanics, particles do not have a defined path, but rather exist in a state of superposition, meaning they can exist in multiple places at once. The integral over all paths takes this into account and calculates the probability of a particle existing at a specific point based on all possible paths it could take to get there.

3. Can you give an example of an application of the integral over all paths?

One application of the integral over all paths is in the calculation of the ground state energy of a particle in a potential well. By considering all possible paths the particle could take within the well, the integral over all paths can determine the most likely energy level of the particle.

4. What is the significance of the integral over all paths in quantum mechanics?

The integral over all paths is a fundamental concept in quantum mechanics that allows for the calculation of probabilities in a universe where particles do not have defined paths. It highlights the probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics and its departure from classical physics.

5. How does the integral over all paths differ from a traditional integral?

The integral over all paths is a type of path integral, which differs from traditional integrals in that it considers all possible paths a particle could take, rather than just one specific path. It also takes into account the probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics, rather than the deterministic nature of classical physics.

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