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Is there a proof for Fermi and Bose statistics? |
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| Nov24-05, 02:49 AM | #1 |
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Is there a proof for Fermi and Bose statistics?
Is there a proof for Fermi and Bose statistics? What is the background of this proof? To what extent it is mathematically strict? Can one prove that no other statistics is posible?
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| Nov24-05, 03:18 AM | #2 |
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(i) symmetric, or (ii) anti-symmetric. Those are the only possibilities. The first leads to BE statistics and the second, to FD statistics. |
| Nov24-05, 01:41 PM | #3 |
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| Nov24-05, 04:53 PM | #4 |
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Recognitions:
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Is there a proof for Fermi and Bose statistics?
In three or more dimensions, Bose and Fermi statistics are the only possibilities. The parastatistics you speak of, where higher dimensional reps of the permutation group are used, are equivalent to Bose or Fermi statistics plus extra internal degress of freedom. A good example of this is the color quantum number in QCD where quarks can be cast as parafermions of order 3 and gluons as parabosons of order 8. In lower spacetime dimensions, there are other kinds of exotic statistics that are associated with non-trivial topologies. Such statistics occur in the fractional quantum hall effect, for example. As for composite particles, I think its fair to say that they behave as good bosons or fermions so long as their composite nature is not important.
This is what I know about it, I would be happy to hear from someone more informed if I have it wrong. |
| Nov24-05, 05:50 PM | #5 |
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I guess I should have thrown in a disclaimer saying I was talking about the weakly interacting limit. Yes, in strongly correlated systems, you can have other exotic statistics like the fractional (anyonic) statistics for a strongly interacting 2D electron gas (as PM pointed out) in a magnetic field. There are (tricks and) limits, though, (such as low number density in a composite boson gas) where the approximation of one or other of FD/BE statistics works pretty well.
So, it really comes down to how you want to do the math - even a seemingly strongly interacting system can be cleverly magicked into a weakly interacting system by renormalizing the correlations into say, an effective mass/charge. Having done that, you can use the simpler statistics of the quasiparticles to deal with the behavior of the system. |
| Nov25-05, 03:20 AM | #6 |
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| Nov25-05, 04:26 AM | #7 |
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Daniel. |
| Nov25-05, 04:51 AM | #8 |
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| Nov25-05, 05:41 AM | #9 |
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Nope, gauge symmetry is bad for physics, it yields an infinite path integral, because the number of degrees of freedom is less than the number implied in the functional integration. Technically, ghost fields are used in "gauge fixing".Distinguishibility has nothing to do here, basically some virtual particles, Lorentz even spin fermions are involved in Feynman diagrams, nothing more...
Daniel. |
| Nov25-05, 06:29 AM | #10 |
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I was more hinting at the fact that you can derive the possible *statistics* for N particles without using quantum field theory at all, but that you need to assume that particles are perfectly indistinguishable or distinguishable (that is what Sorkin does in this paper). Now, for a relativist these are very fishy concepts ... and much has been written on this issue (unfortunatly QFT theorists have a rather one sided view on this matter). |
| Nov25-05, 09:27 AM | #11 |
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| Dec6-05, 05:27 AM | #12 |
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hmm, many people will disagreeOfcourse, the Fadeev Poppov ghost fields are used to get rid of the unphysical degrees of freedom that arise due to gauge fixing. marlon |
| Dec6-05, 11:54 AM | #13 |
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| Dec6-05, 12:13 PM | #14 |
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marlon edit : isn't Dexter Romanian ? |
| Dec6-05, 12:38 PM | #15 |
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