If u thought Hurkyl's opinion was abstract,check this out.
I'll try to give some rigurosity to the statements made by Galileo.
Sterj said:
But how can we derive this operators? (Can somebody me derive the operator of momentum oder the operator of place?).
The heart of the second/quantization postulate.How to quantize classical systems.Take the Hamiltonian observable and associate to it a densly defined self-adjoint linear operator.That's how you get quantum observables.As for the fundamental commutatio relations,they come from the canonical quantization rule (used in QFT as well):
[A,B]^{*}\rightarrow \frac{1}{i\hbar} [\hat{A},\hat{B}]_{\pm}(1)
,which reads:graded Dirac bracket goes to graded commutator multiplied by (1/i\hbar).
As for momentum and position operator,let's consider the simplest case of the general formula (1).Consider a classical dynamical system described at Hamiltonian level by 2 commutative/bosonic phase space coordinates (i assumed that the system was nondegenerate) "x" and "p_{x}".Then graded Dirac bracket goes to bosonic Poisson bracket which has the form
[x,p_{x}]=1.(2)
Applying the quantization postulate,we get:the densly defined unbounded selfadjoint linear operators \hat{x} and \hat{p}_{x} (i didn't want to place the index under the hat,should it should have been) which satistfy the fundamental commutation relation:
[\hat{x},\hat{p}_{x}]_{-}=i\hbar \hat{1} (3)
So that's how u quantize a simple system.
Daniel.
PS.U see that the quantization postulate has been applied to the constant "1" as well.It became the unit operator.