blechman said:
Not sure what you mean. The state |\phi(x)\rangle=\hat{\Phi}(x)|0\rangle, and the wavefunction is \phi(x)\equiv\langle 0|\phi(x)\rangle in my above notation. Does that make sense?
This makes no sense to me. Doesn't the operator \hat{\Phi}(x) annihilate the particle vacuum state |0\rangle?
Moreover, the state with 0 particles is orthogonal to the one with a particle.
Perhaps there is a confusion between different second quantized notation going on. As I understand it, the notation in the original post is the following:
\hat{\Phi}^{\dagger}(x) creates a particle at x. i.e, \hat{\Phi}^{\dagger}(x)|0\rangle = | x\rangle
\hat{\Phi}(x) destroys a particle at x.
The fact that the symbol for the operators is \Phi is neither here nor there, we could have chosen c^{\dagger}_x.
I was under the impression, that for a 1-particle system, we have the wave function when the system is in state |\psi\rangle as \psi(x) = \langle x|\psi\rangle
Inserting the the other expression for |x\rangle in second quantized language
<br />
\psi(x) = \langle 0|\Phi(x)|\psi\rangle<br />
The quantity |\psi|^2 is then
<br />
|\psi(x)|^2 = \langle \psi|\Phi^\dagger(x)|0\rangle\langle 0|\Phi(x)|\psi\rangle<br />
As long as |\psi\rangle is a one particle state (so our single particle wavefunction makes sense), the vacuum projection operator just acts like the resolution of the identity so we can ignore it to give <br />
|\psi(x)|^2 = \langle \psi|\Phi^\dagger(x)\Phi(x)|\psi\rangle<br />
For a many particle state, the particle density is more complicated in the wavefunction picture, but the second quantised operator remains the same.
As far as book recommendations go, if you are coming at this from the condensed matter perspective, the book by Negele and Orland is highly recommended (by me at least) - the first couple of chapters on second quantisation are very thorough. "Condensed matter field theory" by Altland and Simons has a good intro to second quantisation - you can get the flavour of the book by reading Ben Simon's lecture notes for his Quantum Condensed Matter Field Theory course. (google him). MIT Open Course Ware might well have some decent lecture notes available too, I haven't checked. Wen has a recent graduate level Condensed Matter Field Theory textbook too, which surely has a chapter on second quantization.