What is the Interaction Hamiltonian in Quantum Mechanics?

The thinker
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Homework Statement



Write out:

H_{SE}(\left|\right\beta,i_{\beta}\rangle\otimes\left|\right e_{j}\rangle)

and

exp(-iH_{SE}t)(\left|\right\beta,i_{\beta}\rangle\otimes\left|\right e_{j}\rangle)


Where:

H_{SE}=\sum_{\alpha,j}\gamma(\alpha,j)P^{(\alpha)}\otimes\left|e_{j}\right\rangle\left\langle e_{j}\right|

and

P^{(\alpha)}=\sum_{i_{\alpha}}\left|i_{\alpha}\right\rangle\left\langle i_{\alpha}\right|


(\left|i_{\alpha}\right\rangle can be written \left|\right\alpha,i_{\alpha}\rangle where alpha is a quantum number indexed by i_{\alpha} )

The Attempt at a Solution



For the first part I'm fairly sure it comes out as:

\sum_{\beta,j}\gamma(\beta,j)\left|\right\beta,i_{\beta}\rangle\otimes\left|\right e_{j}\rangle


But the second part I am not sure of, is it something like:

(Cos(t)-i\gamma(\alpha,j)Sin(t))(\left|\right\beta,i_{\beta}\rangle\otimes\left|\right e_{j}\rangle)


Thanks!
 
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In the first you should not summate over j (and you need to explain why ;))

For the second you first apply the Taylor expansion for the exponential. After that, compute:

H_{SE}^2 followed by generalizing this to H_{SE}^n.
 
Thanks for that.

I'll have a bash at that.. although I honestly can't see why you wouldn't sum over j
 
Oh wait... is it because the e_{j} basis correspond to different alpha's but not i's?

Edit: Actually on second thought that doesn't make sense because we are summing over alpha(beta).
 
Can anyone else offer some more help?

-I've been teaching myself dirac notation as part of my project this year. This is the first time I've looked at interaction Hamiltonians.
 
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