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In quantum harmonic oscillator, we define the so called number operator as
\hat{N} = \hat{a}^\dagger\hat{a}
Apply \hat{N} to the state with n number of particles, it gives
\hat{N}|n\rangle = n |n\rangle
so
\langle n| \hat{N}|n\rangle = \langle n| n |n\rangle = n
But in other textbook about statistical mechanics, it gives
\langle n |\hat{N}|n\rangle = \bar{n}
Why these two results are not the same? For later one, it seems to consider something related to the statistics, but how?
I still have another question by the trace, in harmonic oscillator, the density operator is given by
<br /> \hat{\rho} = \sum_n |n\rangle\langle n|<br />
But sometimes, for a specific state, says |\varphi\rangle, the density operator just
<br /> \hat{\rho} = |\varphi\rangle\langle \varphi|<br />
why there is no summation? When do we need to consider the summation?
\hat{N} = \hat{a}^\dagger\hat{a}
Apply \hat{N} to the state with n number of particles, it gives
\hat{N}|n\rangle = n |n\rangle
so
\langle n| \hat{N}|n\rangle = \langle n| n |n\rangle = n
But in other textbook about statistical mechanics, it gives
\langle n |\hat{N}|n\rangle = \bar{n}
Why these two results are not the same? For later one, it seems to consider something related to the statistics, but how?
I still have another question by the trace, in harmonic oscillator, the density operator is given by
<br /> \hat{\rho} = \sum_n |n\rangle\langle n|<br />
But sometimes, for a specific state, says |\varphi\rangle, the density operator just
<br /> \hat{\rho} = |\varphi\rangle\langle \varphi|<br />
why there is no summation? When do we need to consider the summation?
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