Time-Ordered Definition & Summary: What Is It?

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SUMMARY

The discussion defines "time-order" as the arrangement of items based on their temporal sequence, where earlier items are positioned to the right of later ones. It emphasizes the significance of time-ordered products and integrals in quantum field theory, particularly in perturbation theory. The time-ordering operator, denoted by T, is crucial for rearranging items into the correct sequence before multiplication. The discussion also provides mathematical examples illustrating time-ordered integrals and their applications in calculating the S-matrix.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of quantum field theory concepts
  • Familiarity with perturbation theory
  • Knowledge of time-ordered products and integrals
  • Basic proficiency in mathematical notation and integrals
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  • Study the application of the time-ordering operator in quantum mechanics
  • Learn about the Dyson series and its derivation in quantum field theory
  • Explore Lorentz covariance and its implications in physics
  • Investigate the role of the S-matrix in scattering theory
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Physicists, quantum field theorists, and students studying advanced quantum mechanics who seek to understand the intricacies of time-ordering in calculations and its relevance in perturbation theory.

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Definition/Summary

Time-order means in order of time. A sequence or product is in time-order if "earlier" items are placed to the right of "later" ones.

For example, if t_1\ t_2\ \cdots t_n\text{ are times}\text{, and if }t_1>t_2>\cdots t_n, they are in time-order. And so is the product V(t_1)\ V(t_2)\ \cdots V(t_n), where V is an operator depending on time.

And if (x_1,y_1,z_1,t_1)\ (x_2,y_2,z_2,t_2)\ \cdots(x_n,y_n,z_n,t_n)\text{ are position-time 4-vectors}\text{, and if }t_1>t_2>\cdots t_n, they are in time-order. And so is the product \mathcal{H}(x_1,y_1,z_1,t_1)\ \mathcal{H}(x_2,y_2,z_2,t_2)\ \cdots \mathcal{H}(x_n,y_n,z_n,t_n), where \mathcal{H} is an operator depending on position and time.

Time-ordered integrals, and time-ordered products, are used in perturbation theory in quantum field theory: a time-ordered integral is either the integral of an ordinary product with time-ordered limits, or the integral of a time-ordered product with ordinary limits (and one can be converted to the other by using the time-ordering symbol T).

Equations

EXAMPLE OF INTEGRAL OF PRODUCT WITH TIME-ORDERED LIMITS:

S\ =\ \sum_{N\ =\ 1}^{\infty} (-i)^N\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\int_{-\infty}^{t_1}\int_{-\infty}^{t_2}\cdots\int_{-\infty}^{t_{N-1}}V(t_1)\cdots V(t_N)\,dt_1\cdots dt_N

THE SAME INTEGRAL, WRITTEN AS AN INTEGRAL OF TIME-ORDERED PRODUCT WITH ORDINARY LIMITS:

S\ =\ \sum_{N\ =\ 1}^{\infty}\frac{(-i)^N}{N!}\ \int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\cdots\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}T\{V(t_1)\cdots V(t_N)\}\,dt_1\cdots dt_N

Extended explanation

Time-ordered product:

The time-ordered product of any items is the ordinary product of the same items, but with the items first rearranged into time-order.

If the items depend on a 4-vector variable, (x,y,z,t), then the rearrangement is in order of the time-components, t, only.

The T symbol:

The symbol T placed before a product indicates that the items in the product are to be re-arranged into time-order before multiplying them:

For example:

T\,\{\mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{a},3)\mathcal{H}( \boldsymbol{b},5.5)\mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{c},7)\}\ =\ \mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{a},3)\mathcal{H}( \boldsymbol{b},5.5)\mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{c},7)

T\,\{\mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{a},3)\mathcal{H}( \boldsymbol{b},7)\mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{c},5.5)\}\ =\ \mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{a},3)\mathcal{H}( \boldsymbol{c},5.5)\mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{b},7)

T\,\{\mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{a},7)\mathcal{H}( \boldsymbol{b},5.5)\mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{c},3)\}\ =\ \mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{c},3)\mathcal{H}( \boldsymbol{b},5.5)\mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{a},7)

etc :wink:

Perturbation theory:

The S-matrix (in quantum field theory) is the limit as \tau_0\rightarrow -\infty\text{ and }\tau\rightarrow \infty of an operator U(\tau,\tau_0) satisfying:

U(\tau,\tau_0)\ =\ 1 - i\int_{\tau_0}^{\tau}\,V(t)\,U(t,\tau_0)\,dt

and by repeated integration we obtain the Dyson series:

S\ =\ \lim_{\tau_0\rightarrow -\infty,\,\tau\rightarrow \infty}\, U(\tau,\tau_0)\ =\ \sum_{N\ =\ 1}^{\infty} (-i)^N\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\int_{-\infty}^{t_1}\int_{-\infty}^{t_2}\cdots\int_{-\infty}^{t_{N-1}}V(t_1)\cdots V(t_N)\,dt_1\cdots dt_N

The limits of integration are time-ordered, which is awkward to calculate , so we change to the following integral, which has the same value, but has easy limits of integration:

S\ =\ \sum_{N\ =\ 1}^{\infty}\frac{(-i)^N}{N!}\ \int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\cdots\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}T\{V(t_1)\cdots V(t_N)\}\,dt_1\cdots dt_N

For the advantage of Lorentz covariance, we further change from integrals over the whole of time to integrals over the whole of space-time, and use a (scalar) Hamiltonian density \mathcal{H}(x)\ =\ \mathcal{H}(\boldsymbol{x},t)\text{ with }V(t)\ =\ \int\int\int\,d^3\boldsymbol{x}\,\mathcal{H}( \boldsymbol{x},t), to obtain:

S\ =\ \sum_{N\ =\ 1}^{\infty}\frac{(-i)^N}{N!}\ \int\,T\{\mathcal{H}(x_1)\cdots \mathcal{H}(x_N)\}\,d^4x_1\cdots d^4x_N

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