Quantum States and ladder operator

In summary: Omega\rangle is the vacuum (ground) state, then a a^\dagger |0\rangle = a |\Omega\rangle = 0 |0\rangle = 0 is the zero vector.
  • #1
kashokjayaram
15
0
In any textbooks I have seen, vacuum states are defined as:
a |0>= 0
What is the difference between |0> and 0?

Again, what happens when a+ act on |0> and 0?

and Number Operator a+a act on |0> and 0?
 
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  • #2
0 is a real number, like 1 and ##\pi##
Edit: Sorry not here, see post #5.

|0> is a state. The digit inside is just a convenient name. You could name it |myfavoritestate> and nothing would change (well, the formulas would look more complicated).

Operators "act on" states. If you write a+ 0 (or any other operator instead of a+), this is not an operator acting on a state, it is an operator multiplied with a real number - and a multiplication with 0 has the result 0.

Again, what happens when a+ act on |0>
You get another state, called |1>.

and Number Operator a+a act on |0>
You get the number of the state |0>, which is 0 (hence the name of the state).
 
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  • #3
Really, you should first thoroughly understand the way raising and lowering operators work in the non-relativistic quantum mechanics of the Harmonic Oscillator. There, you start with observables [itex]x[/itex] and [itex]p[/itex], and you make the switch to ladder operators

[itex]A = \sqrt{\frac{m \omega}{2 \hbar}} x + i \sqrt{\frac{1}{2 m \omega \hbar}} p[/itex]
[itex]A^\dagger = \sqrt{\frac{m \omega}{2 \hbar}} x - i \sqrt{\frac{1}{2 m \omega \hbar}} p[/itex]
In terms of [itex]A[/itex] and [itex]A^\dagger[/itex], the corresponding states are:

[itex]|n\rangle[/itex] where

[itex]A\ |n \rangle = \sqrt{n}\ |n-1\rangle[/itex]
[itex]A^\dagger\ |n\rangle = \sqrt{n+1}\ |n+1\rangle[/itex]

The state [itex]|0\rangle[/itex], when you translate back into [itex]x[/itex] language, is something like [itex]C e^{-\lambda x^2}[/itex] for appropriate constants [itex]\lambda[/itex] and [itex]C[/itex]. It's not zero, it's just that the operator [itex]A[/itex] acting on it produces 0.
 
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  • #4
|0> represents a physical state. 0 is just a number.
 
  • #5
mfb said:
0 is a real number, like 1 and ##\pi##

dauto said:
|0> represents a physical state. 0 is just a number.

Not in this case. When you act on a state like |0> with an operator like a, you do not get a number, you get another element of the Hilbert space.

In the example given, a |0>= 0, the 0 on the right hand side is the zero element of the Hilbert space.
 
  • #7
Bill_K said:
In the example given, a |0>= 0, the 0 on the right hand side is the zero element of the Hilbert space.

Zero element of the Hilbert space means what??
|0> is also the element of Hilbert space...! Isn't it?
Is it the "smallest element(norm of which is small)"..??
Or why is then a acts gives zero..??

Sorry I can't distinguish... that's why..!
 
  • #8
No, [itex]|0 \rangle[/itex] is the vacuum (ground) state. It's not the null vector of the Hilbert space. That's why often one better writes another symbol, e.g., [itex]|\Omega \rangle[/itex] for the vacuum or ground state, which is a state of minimal energy.
 
  • #9
kashokjayaram said:
Or why is then a acts gives zero..??

Because ##|0\rangle## is the lowest possible energy eigenstate of ##\hat{H}##. You can't go any lower. ##\hat{a}## is a lowering operator that takes you from excited states to less excited states but if ##|0 \rangle## is the lowest possible mode excitation of the harmonic oscillator then ##\hat{a}## can't take you any lower than that so it must annihilate ##|0 \rangle## i.e. ##\hat{a} |0 \rangle = 0##.

But ##|0\rangle## is not the zero vector. In fact if you solve for ##\psi_0(x) = \langle x | 0 \rangle## in the differential equation ##\langle x | \hat{a} | 0 \rangle = x\psi_0 + x_0^2 \frac{d\psi_0}{dx} = 0## you'll get a Gaussian.
 
  • #10
kashokjayaram said:
Zero element of the Hilbert space means what??
|0> is also the element of Hilbert space...! Isn't it?
Is it the "smallest element(norm of which is small)"..??
Or why is then a acts gives zero..??

Sorry I can't distinguish... that's why..!

If [itex]|\psi\rangle[/itex] is any state, and [itex]\alpha[/itex] is any number (real or complex), then there is another state [itex]|\psi'\rangle = \alpha |\psi\rangle[/itex]. The "zero element" 0 is what you get when you choose [itex]\alpha = 0[/itex].

The state [itex]|0\rangle[/itex] is not the zero element. It's a state with no particles in it--the vacuum. The operator [itex]N = a^\dagger\ a[/itex] is the "number operator". The state [itex]|n\rangle[/itex] is the eigenstate with [itex]n[/itex] particles. It satisfies the equation:

[itex]N\ |n\rangle = n\ |n \rangle[/itex]

So the state [itex]|0\rangle[/itex] is the state satisfying [itex]N |0\rangle = 0 |0\rangle = [/itex]0.
 
  • #11
stevendaryl said:
If [itex]|\psi\rangle[/itex] is any state, and [itex]\alpha[/itex] is any number (real or complex), then there is another state [itex]|\psi'\rangle = \alpha |\psi\rangle[/itex]. The "zero element" 0 is what you get when you choose [itex]\alpha = 0[/itex].

The state [itex]|0\rangle[/itex] is not the zero element. It's a state with no particles in it--the vacuum. The operator [itex]N = a^\dagger\ a[/itex] is the "number operator". The state [itex]|n\rangle[/itex] is the eigenstate with [itex]n[/itex] particles. It satisfies the equation:

[itex]N\ |n\rangle = n\ |n \rangle[/itex]

So the state [itex]|0\rangle[/itex] is the state satisfying [itex]N |0\rangle = 0 |0\rangle = [/itex]0.

Why is it another state...?? [itex]\alpha[/itex] is a number which doesnot change the vectors in vector space. So it will be the same state. Am I right..?
What happens when [itex]a^\dagger[/itex] act on 0??
 
  • #12
kashokjayaram said:
Why is it another state...?? [itex]\alpha[/itex] is a number which doesnot change the vectors in vector space. So it will be the same state. Am I right..?
What happens when [itex]a^\dagger[/itex] act on 0??

Well, there is an ambiguity about what "the same state" means. A lot of quantum mechanics uses normalized states, where you multiply by a constant so that [itex]\langle \Psi | \Psi \rangle = 1[/itex]. But the zero vector cannot be normalized. It's not equal to any other state.

And operating on the zero vector with any operator just returns the zero vector again.
 
  • #13
In standard quantum theory the pure states are equivalently described by either rays in Hilbert space or the special class of statistical operators that are projection operators.

A ray in Hilbert space is given by an equivalence class of non-zero vectors. Two non-zero vectors [itex]|\psi_1 \rangle and [itex]\psi_2 \rangle[/itex] belong to the same class if and only if there is a non-zero complex number [itex]\lambda[/itex] such that [itex]|\psi_2 \rangle=\lambda |\psi_1 \rangle[/itex]. Sometimes (and again equivalently) for convenience one restricts oneself to normalized state vectors only. Then two state vectors are in the same ray if they differ by a phase factor only, i.e., a complex number of modulus 1.

A Statistical operator is any self-adjoint positive semidefinite operator [itex]\hat{R}[/itex] with [itex]\mathrm{Tr} \hat{R}=1[/itex]. It represents a pure state if and only if it is a projection operator, i.e.,
if additionally [itex]\hat{R}^2=\hat{R}[/itex].

It's clear that both definitions of a pure state are equivalent. For each representant [itex]|\psi \rangle \neq 0[/itex] the operator
[tex]\hat{R}=\frac{1}{\|\psi \|^2} |\psi \rangle \langle \psi|[/tex]
fulfills the requirements of a Statistical operator, representing a pure state.

If, on the other hand, [itex]\hat{R}[/itex] represents a pure state in the above given sense, then due to [itex]\hat{R}^2=\hat{R}[/itex] it has only eigenvalues [itex]0[/itex] and [itex]1[/itex]. Since at the same time [itex]\mathrm{Tr} \hat{R}=1[/itex] there is one and only one eigenvector with eigenvalue [itex]1[/itex]. Choosing it normalized [itex]\langle \psi|\psi \rangle[/itex] this implies that the statistical operator must be the projection operator
[tex]\hat{R}=|\psi \rangle \langle \psi|.[/tex]

It is important to keep in mind that a pure state is represented not exactly by a (normalized) Hilbert-space vector but by an entire ray (normalized Hilbert-space vector modulo an arbitrary phase factor), because it implies important subtle points: e.g., it admits that also half-integer eigenvalues make sense for angular momenta and thus that particles with half-integer spins exist. Among others these are the electrons, protons, and neutrons, making up all everyday matter!
 
  • #14
vanhees71 said:
It is important to keep in mind that a pure state is represented not exactly by a (normalized) Hilbert-space vector but by an entire ray (normalized Hilbert-space vector modulo an arbitrary phase factor), because it implies important subtle points: e.g., it admits that also half-integer eigenvalues make sense for angular momenta and thus that particles with half-integer spins exist. Among others these are the electrons, protons, and neutrons, making up all everyday matter!

That's a leap that's too big for me to follow. Why does the use of rays, rather than vectors, imply anything about half-integer spins? Oh, maybe because you don't require that a 360 degree rotation is the identity, but only that it brings you another vector in the same ray?
 

1. What is a quantum state?

A quantum state is a mathematical representation of the physical properties of a quantum system. It describes the possible values of observable quantities, such as position and momentum, and their probabilities of occurring.

2. What are ladder operators in quantum mechanics?

Ladder operators are mathematical operators that are used to describe the energy levels of a quantum system. They are represented by matrices that act on the quantum state and change its energy level.

3. How are ladder operators related to quantum states?

Ladder operators are used to create and destroy quantum states. They are responsible for the transitions between different energy levels in a quantum system.

4. What is the significance of ladder operators in quantum mechanics?

Ladder operators are essential in understanding the energy levels and transitions of quantum systems. They also provide a mathematical framework for calculating the probabilities of different energy states.

5. How are ladder operators used in quantum computing?

In quantum computing, ladder operators are used to manipulate and control the quantum state of qubits. They are used in quantum gates to perform operations on qubits, such as rotations and entanglement.

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