Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE
- NOTATION
- 1 HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION
- 2 RELATIVISTIC QUANTUM MECHANICS
- 3 SCATTERING THEORY
- 4 THE CLUSTER DECOMPOSITION PRINCIPLE
- 5 QUANTUM FIELDS AND ANTIPARTICLES
- 6 THE FEYNMAN RULES
- 7 THE CANONICAL FORMALISM
- 8 ELECTRODYNAMICS
- 9 PATH-INTEGRAL METHODS
- 10 NON-PERTURBATIVE METHODS
- 11 ONE-LOOP RADIATIVE CORRECTIONS IN QUANTUM ELECTRODYNAMICS
- 12 GENERAL RENORMALIZATION THEORY
- 13 INFRARED EFFECTS
- 14 BOUND STATES IN EXTERNAL FIELDS
- AUTHOR INDEX
- SUBJECT INDEX
4 - THE CLUSTER DECOMPOSITION PRINCIPLE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE
- NOTATION
- 1 HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION
- 2 RELATIVISTIC QUANTUM MECHANICS
- 3 SCATTERING THEORY
- 4 THE CLUSTER DECOMPOSITION PRINCIPLE
- 5 QUANTUM FIELDS AND ANTIPARTICLES
- 6 THE FEYNMAN RULES
- 7 THE CANONICAL FORMALISM
- 8 ELECTRODYNAMICS
- 9 PATH-INTEGRAL METHODS
- 10 NON-PERTURBATIVE METHODS
- 11 ONE-LOOP RADIATIVE CORRECTIONS IN QUANTUM ELECTRODYNAMICS
- 12 GENERAL RENORMALIZATION THEORY
- 13 INFRARED EFFECTS
- 14 BOUND STATES IN EXTERNAL FIELDS
- AUTHOR INDEX
- SUBJECT INDEX
Summary
Up to this point we have not had much to say about the detailed structure of the Hamiltonian operator H. This operator can be defined by giving all its matrix elements between states with arbitrary numbers of particles. Equivalently, as we shall show here, any such operator may be expressed as a function of certain operators that create and destroy single particles. We saw in Chapter 1 that such creation and annihilation operators were first encountered in the canonical quantization of the electromagnetic field and other fields in the early days of quantum mechanics. They provided a natural formalism for theories in which massive particles as well as photons can be produced and destroyed, beginning in the early 1930s with Fermi's theory of beta decay.
However, there is a deeper reason for constructing the Hamiltonian out of creation and annihilation operators, which goes beyond the need to quantize any pre-existing field theory like electrodynamics, and has nothing to do with whether particles can actually be produced or destroyed. The great advantage of this formalism is that if we express the Hamiltonian as a sum of products of creation and annihilation operators, with suitable non-singular coefficients, then the S-matrix will automatically satisfy a crucial physical requirement, the cluster decomposition principle, which says in effect that distant experiments yield uncorrelated results. Indeed, it is for this reason that the formalism of creation and annihilation operators is widely used in non-relativistic quantum statistical mechanics, where the number of particles is typically fixed.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Quantum Theory of Fields , pp. 169 - 190Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995