stevendaryl said:
In this paper,
http://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0308119v2.pdf, the relationship between the Wigner function and path integrals is described.
I haven't read it. I'm a little curious about how complex-conjugates come into a path-integral derivation.
naima said:
Path integrals are in space time
Here the author shows how a Wigner function, at a given moment, can be computed with paths in the phase space. It is closer to the density matrix <-> Wigner function equivalence than Feynman paths integrals.
HI naima. Thanks for you responses. Just to double check, you are referring to the Samson paper given by stevendaryl right? I looked at it but it didn't feel to be space-timey so I left it. (cheer for putting it on here though stevendaryl)
atyy said:
The path integrals are just a convenient way of doing some calculations. They are not an independent formulation of quantum mechanics. The Hilbert space formulation is primary, because it determines which path integrals are acceptable. For example, one set of conditions that determines an acceptable path integral formulation are the Osterwalder-Schrader conditions.
Hi atyy, thank you for your response too. I am unfamiliar the Osterwalder-Schrader conditions and I don't know if I am going to be able to understand exactly what you are saying. This is my understanding:
We have a configuration space based on space-time. On this configuration space we have a tangent and cotangent bundle, related by the Legendre transform. These bundles give a sense of change in the configuration space by applying (co)tangent vectors. The Wigner function on the cotangent bundle (phase space) leads the way to one form of quantisation. A second way is to take the Lagrangian as a map from the
tangent bundle and have a path integral quantisation. A third way would be in some way adding commutation relations to the axes of the phase space and having these as operators on some Hilbert space which is presumably related to the configuration space.
It seems me that I could probably find places that give me the link between Feynman and Hilbert and Wigner and Hilbert, but not Feynman and Wigner.
I would be grateful if anyone could give a clarification of my picture (which may be woefully misguided), or an idea of how the Wigner function and the path integral connect. The paper provided by stevendaryl shows that they look similar in being included as weights in an integral. Do I just take the logarithm of e
S and then Legendre transform? (my guess is "No!").