Sunday, 31 July 2016

quantum mechanics - Fock Space and fermionic annihilation & creation operators


I have been trying very hard to understand, I am reading Ballentine's book on this topic, but I need help:


I realized that I don't understand how many particle states work with the creation & annihilation operators Ca and Ca while trying to calculate {Ca,Cb}.


I will illustrate my problem starting with CaCb|a...(b) where Ballentine uses b to mean the state b is not occupied.


Here is my confusion. If I do what seems sensible: CaCb|a...(b)=Ca|a...b=|(a)...b but CbCa|a...(b)=Cb|(a)...(b)=|(a)...b



This is obviously wrong but from the definition I don't get what to do in the above case: CaCb|0=|ab


Can someone explain how exactly one can relate a general fock state to the nice but confusing: |a,b,c.... And how formally one can make sense of just a row of operators CaCb so I can transfer this to other situations?


I would be really glad for help. If my problem is unclear please comment.



Answer



So, the problem is that you've got to enforce Fermionic antisymmetry, but Fock space tries to make things easier by making that invisible.


So if we've got two electrons in a box in a definite Fock state, the electrons definitively occupy some single-particle states which we can just call 1,2. The actual state that is being occupied is therefore:


|ψ=|12|21


where the "first electron" (arbitrarily chosen) is in the first numbered state, etc.


Looking at your Ca and Ca operators, it is somewhat clear that they are not capturing this distinction completely. Let us say that we're looking at C3 and C1. Perhaps the action of C3 will look like:


|123|213|132+|231|321+|312



Here I am associating the + sign with appending onto the end, a sign with appending one before that. This means that C1 should probably have a + sign for deleting from the end, a sign for deleting from the one before that, etc. This sign convention leads to the state:


|23|32


But if we reverse these for C3C1 then the very same sign convention would force us first into the state |2 thus generating |23+|32. So you see that the results you get are negatives of each other, but this result is hidden by a naive Fock space solution.


We can focus on the orders which are associated with a + sign and phrase all of this simply as:



  1. For C1C3 I started with [12], prepended a 3 to get [312], swapped 1 to the front to get -[132], then removed the 1 from the front to get -[32].

  2. For C3C1 I started with [12], removed the 1 from the front, prepended with 3, got +[32].


Similarly with a starting point of three states, you start with [123] having a + sign associated with it:




  1. For C3C4 I started with [123], prepended a 4 to get [4123], swapped 3 to the front with 3 swaps to get -[3412], then removed it from the front to get -[412].

  2. For C4C3 I started with [123], swapped the 3 to the front with 2 swaps to get [312], removed the 3 from the front, prepended with 4, got +[412].


Now you can maybe see why they will always be negatives of each other: in the first case you will do k swaps to get that number to the start of the permutation. In the second case you will do k1 because the 4 will not be there. So you'll do an odd number of swaps total.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Understanding Stagnation point in pitot fluid

What is stagnation point in fluid mechanics. At the open end of the pitot tube the velocity of the fluid becomes zero.But that should result...