f95toli said:
The Heisenberg picture is very convenient in some problems, in other problems the Schrödinger picture is easier to use. In quite a few problems the interaction picture is the best choice. Occasionaly you change pictures several times while solving a problem.
Changing picture is a bit like changing coordinate systems in that you use whatever picture works best for a given problem; asking why someone is using the Heisenberg picture is therefore a bit like like asking why someone is using cylindrical coordinates; the answer is usually that it makes the calculations easier or/and makes the problem easier to understand.
Your post is oversimplification. That case isn’t matter of convenience. In QM we have two layers of convenience:
1)As in CM, choice of the geometrical (space-time) coordinate system which is “natural” for your physical system sharply simplifies the calculations;
2)Choice of the Hilbert space geometry coordinate system (for a layman, they are called a special functions and they are similar to sin,cos,sh and ch). In QM the set of mutually commuting hermitian operators (observables) is less than in CM; only if every dynamical variable is observable the Hilbert space is rigid. Again, the “natural” choice sharply simplifies the mathematical complexity of the problem.
However, the existence of Heisenberg and Schrödinger pictures is connected with the dual nature of the quantum mechanical behavior of the physical system and they are complementary to each other. According to the current formulation of the CM there is no difference between the system state and the dynamical variables which define that state. In QM it is not so. We may say that the dynamical variables represent the particle nature of the physical system (Heisenberg’s quantum mechanics) and the states – wave mechanical (Schrödinger’s wave mechanics). It was shown by E. Schrödinger that these two pictures are equivalent in the non-relativistic limit. If you describe the electron by the Dirac equation, it was shown by P.A.M.Dirac that the equivalence (duality) is broken.
The serious and organized investigation of that and related questions was initiated by P.A.M.Dirac (see, for example, “Lectures on QM” (1964), “Lectures on QFT” (1967), Yeshiva Univ. Press). For the detailed discussion I would suggest the papers and books written by N.Mukunda. In addition, recently published paper PRL,97,154101(2006)
http://docto.ipgp.jussieu.fr/IMG/pdf...t_PRL_2006.pdf I consider directly relevant to that problem.
Regards, Dany.