sadegh4137 said:
what's exactly definition of coherent state?
There are at least 3 definitions that I know of:
1) Eigenstate of an annihilation operator (assuming bosons here),
2) A state of minimum uncertainty product,
3) A state obtained by acting on the vacuum with a (so-called) "displacement" operator.
In the bosonic case this is something like:
$$
e^{za - \bar z a^\dagger} \, |0\rangle
$$
You can study the following tome for a more complete introduction to bosonic coherent state in terms of "displacement" operators:
L. Mandel and E. Wolf, "Optical coherence and quantum optics",
Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge 1995.
In the non-relativistic case, it turns out that these 3 definitions are equivalent, but not so in the relativistic case. Hence the question arises: what is the "best" definition of "coherent state"?
One has several possibilities for generalization.
In fact, the cases described above are a special case of so-called group-theoretic "generalized coherent states". In the above, the group is the usual Weyl--Heisenberg group.
More generally, however, one starts with a dynamics given by a Hamiltonian ##H## (and probably some other operators such as rotations, etc). The vacuum state is assumed to be invariant under the action of the Hamiltonian and other "symmetry generators" such as rotations and spatial translations. However, the full dynamical group (which maps solutions of the equations or motion into other solutions) often involves other generators as well. Call this set of generators ##L##. Typically, ##L## together with ##H## form a Lie algebra such that ##[L,H] \in L##. Then (modulo some technical details), one can construct states of the form
$$
\psi(z) ~=~ e^{L(z)} |0\rangle
$$
where now the exponentiated ##L(z)## is shorthand for some particular combination of the generators in ##L##, determined by a set of constant coefficients ##z##.
It turns out that such generalized coherent states ##\psi(z)## form an overcomplete basis for a Hilbert space that carries a representation of the full dynamics, and many calculations of physical properties are more convenient using them.
A classic review article on generalized coherent states is this one:
W.-M. Zhang, D.H. Feng and R. Gilmore, "Coherent states: Theory and some applications",
Rev. Mod. Phys. 62 (1990), 867--927.
Also the following books:
A. Perelomov, "Generalized Coherent States and Their Applications",
Springer-Verlag, 1986, ISBN 3-540-15912-6
J-P Gazeau, "Coherent States in Quantum Physics",
Wiley-VCH, 2009, ISBN 978-3-527-40709-5
Anyway... back to fermionic coherent states...
Clearly, exponentiating a fermionic creation operator isn't very useful, since ##(a^\dagger)^2 = 0##, unlike the bosonic case.
However, one can approach it via a different route. Just as the Weyl--Heisenberg emerges when one tries to find the group which preserves the canonical commutation relations, one can also investigate which group preserves the canonical
anti-commutation relations. It turns out to involve the group SO(2n+m), iirc, where (I think) there are n paired degrees of freedom and m unpaired ones. My memory might be a bit faulty on this point, so check the Zhang-Feng-Gilmore paper. It all depends on the details of the Hamiltonian for the system under consideration.