I'm getting the wrong inner product of Fock space

Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the calculation of inner products in Fock space within the context of quantum field theory (QFT). Participants are examining the discrepancies in results derived from different texts, specifically regarding the normalization factors in the inner product of multi-particle states, and the implications of the creation and annihilation operators.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant follows a derivation from Tom Banks' QFT text but finds a discrepancy in the factor of 1/2 in the two-particle inner product compared to Banks' formula.
  • Another participant questions the origin of the k! factor in the normalization, suggesting it may relate to avoiding double counting.
  • Some participants discuss the necessity of multiple creation and annihilation operators for two-particle states, with one participant asserting that only one creation operator is being used in their approach.
  • A participant references an alternative QFT text that does not include the 1/2 factor, suggesting a potential error in Banks' work.
  • Concerns are raised regarding the treatment of fermionic and bosonic states, with one participant arguing that factorials should not appear for fermions due to occupancy restrictions.
  • Another participant cites a well-known reference that contradicts Banks' result, indicating a broader debate on the validity of Banks' approach.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the necessity of the k! factor and the presence of the 1/2 factor in the inner product calculations. There is no consensus on the correctness of Banks' formulation, with some participants supporting the original poster's calculations while others challenge them.

Contextual Notes

Participants note that the treatment of creation and annihilation operators may vary based on the definitions used, and that the calculations depend on the specific context of fermionic versus bosonic states. The discussion highlights unresolved issues regarding normalization factors and the implications of different QFT texts.

hideelo
Messages
88
Reaction score
15
I am trying to follow modern QFT by Tom Banks and I am having an issue with literally the first equation.

He claims that beginning from ## |p_1 , p_2, ... , p_k> \: = \: a^\dagger (p_1) a^\dagger (p_2) \cdots a^\dagger (p_k)|0> ## with the commutation relation ##[a (p),a^\dagger (q)]_\pm \: = \: \delta^3(p-q)##, (+for fermions, - for bosons) I can reproduce the following equation

$$<p_1 , p_2, ... , p_k|q_1 , q_2, ... , q_l> \: = \: \frac{\delta_{kl}}{k!}\sum_\sigma (-1)^{S\sigma}\delta^3(p_1-q_{\sigma(1)}) \cdots \delta^3(p_k-q_{\sigma(k)})$$Where S = 1 for fermions and 0 for bosons. I can show that for the 1 particle state I get ##<p|q> \: = \: \delta^3(p-q)##, but as soon as I get to the two particle state my result differs from his.His formula tells me that for the two particle state I should get:

$$<sr|pq> \: = \: \frac{1}{2} \left( \delta^3(p-s)\delta^3(r-q) \mp \delta^3(r-p) \delta^3(q-s) \right)$$

But I am getting

$$<sr|pq> \: = \: \delta^3(p-s)\delta^3(r-q) \mp \delta^3(r-p) \delta^3(q-s) $$

missing the factor of ##\frac{1}{2}##

$$<sr|pq> \: = \:<r|a(s)a^\dagger(p)|q>\: = \:<r|[a(s),a^\dagger(p)]_\pm |q> \mp <r|a^\dagger(p)a(s)|q> \:= $$
$$ \delta^3(p-s)<r|q> \mp <r|a^\dagger(p)a(s)|q> \: = \: \delta^3(p-s)\delta^3(r-q) \mp <r|a^\dagger(p)a(s)a^\dagger(q)|0> \: = $$
$$ \delta^3(p-s)\delta^3(r-q) \mp <r|a^\dagger(p)[a(s),a^\dagger(q)]_\pm |0> \pm <r|a^\dagger(p)a^\dagger(q)a(s) |0> \: = $$
$$ \delta^3(p-s)\delta^3(r-q) \mp <r|a^\dagger(p)|0> \delta^3(q-s) \: = \: \delta^3(p-s)\delta^3(r-q) \mp <r|p> \delta^3(q-s) \: = $$
$$ \delta^3(p-s)\delta^3(r-q) \mp \delta^3(r-p) \delta^3(q-s)$$

Whats going wrong?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Are you happy where the k! comes from? ( As that seems to be the difference)
 
Jilang said:
Are you happy where the k! comes from? ( As that seems to be the difference)
No, it's the k! that's bothering me
 
Isnt it there to avoid double counting?
 
Jilang said:
Isnt it there to avoid double counting?
That's what I thought, but when I worked it out I found no double counting
 
Maybe I’m not understanding your notation, but which operator in your first line annihilates the q state?
 
The convention I am using (and I think its standard) is that ##a^\dagger(q)## creates a state with momentum q and annihilates a costate with momentum q i.e.

$$a^\dagger(q)|0> = |q>$$
and
$$<q|a^\dagger(q) = <0|$$

Similarly ##a(q)## annihilates a state with momentum q and creates a costate with momentum q i.e.

$$a(q)|q> = |0>$$
and
$$<0|a(q) = <q|$$
 
Great thanks for confirming that. So wouldn’t you need four operators for 2 particles? Two to annihilate the two original states and two to create the new ones?
 
Jilang said:
Great thanks for confirming that. So wouldn’t you need four operators for 2 particles? Two to annihilate the two original states and two to create the new ones?
In general yes, but what I'm doing is in only "pulling out" one creation operator. So while it's true that ## |pq> =a^\dagger(p) a^\dagger(q)|0>## I can then let the ##a^\dagger(q)|0> =|q>## which gives me what I have up there ## |pq> a^\dagger(p) |q>##

I think that was OK to do...
 
  • #10
Quantum Field Theory for the Gifted Amateur by Lancaster and Blundell doesn’t have the 1/2, which is interesting! In that text the factors only appear when calculating the wave-function. So something is wrong with one of them...
 
  • #11
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Jilang
  • #12
For fermions there shouldn't be any factorials since each single-particle state can only be occupied with at most one particle. For bosons you have factorials for normalizing the states which occur only when a single-particle state is occupied by more than one particle. In the infinite-volume limit this leads to trouble. So you should keep all the momenta (labeled with ##p## and ##q## in your formula) general. The proper expression comes out right due to the ##\delta## distributions. So in the standard meaning of the creation and annihilation operators there should be indeed no ##k!## in the formula in the OP. So you are right with your calculation.

For a very nice and careful treatment of the operator formalism, see

Fetter, Walecka, Quantum theory of many-particle systems

For this calculational technique it doesn't play a role whether you consider relativistic or non-relativistic QFT (Fetter&Walecka is non-relativistic).
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: eys_physics, Jilang and Demystifier

Similar threads

  • · Replies 12 ·
Replies
12
Views
3K
  • · Replies 0 ·
Replies
0
Views
1K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
1K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 8 ·
Replies
8
Views
2K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
4K
  • · Replies 15 ·
Replies
15
Views
3K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
2K