Second quantization of the Schrodinger fields

In summary, the canonical quantization of the Schrodinger field involves a Lagrangian that results in the Schrodinger equation for a free particle. The canonical momentum is given by the partial derivative of the Lagrangian with respect to the field, and can be influenced by adding or subtracting a total divergence term. This can result in different Lagrangians describing the same equations of motion having different canonical momentums. The factor of 2 in the canonical commutation relation for the field and its conjugate may not have a significant impact on the final conceptual result, but it is important to understand these types of tricks in order to fully comprehend the concept of canonical quantization.
  • #1
AlbertEi
27
0
Hi,

I'm reading www.phys.ethz.ch/~babis/Teaching/QFTI/qft1.pdf and trying to understand the canonical quantization of the Schrodinger field. In particular, the Lagrangian:
\begin{equation}
\mathcal{L} = \frac{i}{2}\psi^* \partial_0 \psi - \frac{i}{2}\psi \partial_0 \psi^* + \frac{\left(\partial_i \psi^*\right) \left(\partial^i \psi\right)}{2m}
\end{equation}
results in the Schrodinger equation for a free particle. Now, the canonical momentum is given by:
\begin{equation}
\Pi = \frac{\partial \mathcal{L}}{\partial \left(\partial_0 \psi\right)}= \frac{i}{2} \psi^*
\end{equation}
and:
\begin{equation}
\Pi^* = \frac{\partial \mathcal{L}}{\partial \left(\partial_0 \psi^* \right)}= - \frac{i}{2} \psi
\end{equation}
Subsequently, imposing the canonical commutation relation, I obtain:
\begin{equation}
[ \psi(\mathbf{x}_1,t),\Pi(\mathbf{x}_2,t)] = [ \psi(\mathbf{x}_1,t),\frac{i}{2}\psi^*(\mathbf{x}_2,t)] = i \delta^3(\mathbf{x}_1 - \mathbf{x}_2)
\end{equation}
and therefore:
\begin{equation}
[ \psi(\mathbf{x}_1,t),\psi^*(\mathbf{x}_2,t)] = 2 \delta^3(\mathbf{x}_1 - \mathbf{x}_2)
\end{equation}
However, it turns out I'm wrong by a factor of 2, because according to the link I provided (see equation (3.22)), the canonical commutation relation should be:
\begin{equation}
[ \psi(\mathbf{x}_1,t),\psi^*(\mathbf{x}_2,t)] = \delta^3(\mathbf{x}_1 - \mathbf{x}_2)
\end{equation}
Have I done something wrong in my calculations? Or am I supposed to renormalize the wave function such that the factor of 2 disappears? Or is there something else I am not understanding?

Any help would be much appreciated.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
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  • #2
AlbertEi said:
Hi,

I'm reading www.phys.ethz.ch/~babis/Teaching/QFTI/qft1.pdf and trying to understand the canonical quantization of the Schrodinger field. In particular, the Lagrangian:
\begin{equation}
\mathcal{L} = \frac{i}{2}\psi^* \partial_0 \psi - \frac{i}{2}\psi \partial_0 \psi^* + \frac{\left(\partial_i \psi^*\right) \left(\partial^i \psi\right)}{2m}
\end{equation}
results in the Schrodinger equation for a free particle. Now, the canonical momentum is given by:
\begin{equation}
\Pi = \frac{\partial \mathcal{L}}{\partial \left(\partial_0 \psi\right)}= \frac{i}{2} \psi^*
\end{equation}
and:
\begin{equation}
\Pi^* = \frac{\partial \mathcal{L}}{\partial \left(\partial_0 \psi^* \right)}= - \frac{i}{2} \psi
\end{equation}
Subsequently, imposing the canonical commutation relation, I obtain:
\begin{equation}
[ \psi(\mathbf{x}_1,t),\Pi(\mathbf{x}_2,t)] = [ \psi(\mathbf{x}_1,t),\frac{i}{2}\psi^*(\mathbf{x}_2,t)] = i \delta^3(\mathbf{x}_1 - \mathbf{x}_2)
\end{equation}
and therefore:
\begin{equation}
[ \psi(\mathbf{x}_1,t),\psi^*(\mathbf{x}_2,t)] = 2 \delta^3(\mathbf{x}_1 - \mathbf{x}_2)
\end{equation}
However, it turns out I'm wrong by a factor of 2, because according to the link I provided (see equation (3.22)), the canonical commutation relation should be:
\begin{equation}
[ \psi(\mathbf{x}_1,t),\psi^*(\mathbf{x}_2,t)] = \delta^3(\mathbf{x}_1 - \mathbf{x}_2)
\end{equation}
Have I done something wrong in my calculations? Or am I supposed to renormalize the wave function such that the factor of 2 disappears? Or is there something else I am not understanding?

Any help would be much appreciated.

Hmm. I checked with Hatfield (in "Quantum Field Theory of Point Particles and Strings") and he claims that for the Lagrangian

[itex]\mathcal{L} = \frac{i}{2}(\psi^* \dot{\psi} - \dot{\psi^*}\psi) + ...[/itex]

the canonical momentum is [itex]i \psi^*[/itex], not [itex]\frac{i}{2} \psi^*[/itex]

I don't know how he got that. However, I do know that you can use a different Lagrangian

[itex]\mathcal{L'} = \mathcal{L} + \frac{i}{2} \frac{d}{dt}(\psi^* \psi) = i (\psi^* \dot{\psi}) + ...[/itex]

Using [itex]\mathcal{L'}[/itex] definitely leads to the canonical momentum [itex]i \psi^*[/itex]. In Lagrangian theory, adding or subtracting a total derivative is supposed to make no difference (it has no bearing on the equations of motion). So [itex]\mathcal{L'}[/itex] is supposed to be an equivalent Lagrangian.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #3
Hmmm... that is very interesting. So you don't think my calculations are wrong, but that the author just adds a total divergence term to influence the expression for the canonical momentum. I never realized that this was allowed and makes me rethink the idea of canonical momentum, because basically this means that the canonical momentum is not a fundamental property of the universe. Or am I wrong?

In other words, different Lagrangian describing the same equations of motion can have different canonical momentums. How do we know what is the correct Lagrangian?
 
  • #4
The second term in the Lagrangian also contributes to the canonical momentum despite the appearances doubling its value as can be seen by doing an integration by parts of the Lagrangian.
 
Last edited:
  • #5
Ahhh very clever. Thanks!
 
  • #6
Interesting. I would be careful with the complex operators as they are not hermitian whence I won't suppose them to fulfill canconical commutation relations. Maybe you could try to work with real operators and see what happens.
 
  • #7
This has also been realized by others
http://users.physik.fu-berlin.de/~schotte/QUANT/schroeder.pdf

Maybe the book by Eugen Fick "Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik" contains a deeper discussion as I remember him to discuss the second quantization of the Schroedinger field in great detail.
As is also the case with first quantization, this is not a unique procedure.
I also wonder whether the factor 2 really makes a difference. After all it only rescales hbar whose value can't be inferred by second quantization but has to be put in by hand.
 
  • #8
Unfortunately my German is not as good as I wish it was so I can't read the article. I think you are right that the factor of 2 is not important for the final (conceptual) result, but these kind of things really annoy me for some reason. And I'm happy I asked this question on this forum, because the answer by dauto has been very helpful and I think it might be important to understand these type of tricks.

Also, I don't really understand your first comment. I remember having seen a discussion that it was quite normal for operators to be non-Hermitian in QTF?
 

1. What is second quantization?

Second quantization is a mathematical framework used in quantum mechanics to describe systems with an arbitrary number of particles. It involves representing quantum states as wave functions and operators, and treating particle creation and annihilation as mathematical operations.

2. What are Schrodinger fields?

Schrodinger fields are quantum fields that describe the dynamics of particles with integer spin, such as bosons. They are named after the physicist Erwin Schrodinger, who developed the Schrodinger equation to describe the behavior of quantum particles.

3. How does second quantization relate to Schrodinger fields?

Second quantization is used to describe the dynamics of Schrodinger fields by treating them as operators that create and destroy particles. This allows for a more comprehensive understanding of the behavior of quantum particles and their interactions.

4. What are the advantages of using second quantization for Schrodinger fields?

Second quantization allows for a more efficient and elegant way to describe systems with an arbitrary number of particles. It also allows for the calculation of various properties of the system, such as energy levels and transition probabilities, without having to explicitly account for all the individual particles.

5. Are there any limitations to using second quantization for Schrodinger fields?

Second quantization is most effective for systems with a large number of particles, and may become less accurate for systems with a small number of particles. It also does not take into account relativistic effects, so it may not be suitable for describing high-energy particles.

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