Thursday, 29 December 2016

quantum mechanics - Interpretation of "transition rate" in Fermi's golden rule


This is a question I asked myself a couple of years back, and which a student recently reminded me of. My off-the-cuff answer is wrong, and whilst I can make some hand-waving responses I'd like a canonical one!


In the derivation of Fermi's Golden Rule (#2 of course), one first calculates the quantity $P(t)\equiv P_{a\rightarrow b}(t)$ to lowest order in $t$. This is the probability that, if the system was in initial state $a$, and a measurement is made after a time $t$, the system is found to be in state $b$. One finds that, to lowest order in the perturbation and for $\left< a \mid b \right > = 0$, $$P(t) \propto \left( \frac{\sin(\omega t/2)}{\omega/2} \right)^2, \qquad \hbar\omega = E_b - E_a $$


Then one says $P(t) = \text{const.} \times t \times f_\omega(t)$ where as $t$ increases $f$ becomes very sharply peaked around $\omega=0$, with peak of height $t$ and width $1/t$, and with total area below the curve fixed at $2\pi$. In other words, $f_t(\omega)$ looks like $2\pi \delta(\omega)$ for large $t$.


Now suppose we consider the total probability $Q(t)$ of jumping to any one of a family of interesting states, e.g. emitting photons of arbitrary momenta. Accordingly, let us assume a continuum of states with density in energy given by $\rho(\omega)$. Then one deduces that $Q(t) \sim \text{const.} \times t \rho$, and defines a "transition rate" by $Q(t)/t$ which we note is independent of time.


The issue I have with this is the following: $Q(t)/t$ has the very specific meaning of "The chance that a jump $a \to F$ (for a family $F$ of interesting states) occurs after making a measurement a time $t$ from the system being in state $a$, divided by the time we wait to make this measurement." It is not immediately clear to me why this is a quantity in a physical/experimental context which is deserving of the name "transition rate". In particular, note that




  • $t$ must be large enough that the $\delta$ function approximation is reasonable, so the small-$t$ regime of the formula is not trustworthy;

  • $t$ must be small enough that the perturbation expansion is reasonable (and also presumably so that the $\delta$ function approximation is not insanely sensitive to whether there is a genuine continuum of states or simply very finely spaced states) so the large-$t$ regime of the formula is not trustworthy.

  • Therefore the physical setup in which one measures $P(t)/t$ events per unit time must use properties as if some measurement/decoherence occurs made in some intermediate range of $t$. What is the microscopic detail of this physical setup, and why is this intermediate range interesting?

  • Edit: Also I would like to emphasize that the nature of $P(t),Q(t)$ is such that whenever one "makes a measurement", the "time since in initial state" is reset to 0. It seems that the "time between measurements" is in this intermediate range. (Of course, this isn't necessarily about measurements, but might be to do with decoherence times or similar too, I'm simply not sure.) People tell me that the Golden Rule is used in calculating lifetimes on occasion, so I would like to understand why this works!




Succinct question: In what sense is $Q(t)/t$ a transition rate?




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