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Questions tagged [operators]

In physics, an operator is almost always either a square matrix or a linear mapping between two function spaces (defined on, say, $\mathbb R^n$). Operators serve as observables and as time evolution operators in Quantum Mechanics. This tag will most often find valid use in quantum mechanics; don't use this tag just because your equations contain "everyday operations" like $\times$, $+$!

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I have a coherent-state path integral of complex scalar fields $\psi^+,\psi^-$ which I want to integrate out, but the linear terms are operators. $$ \mathbb{P}(t) = \int D[\psi^+]D[\psi^-] \exp(S_0)T\...
user1830663's user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
339 views

Given two bosonic operators $A$, $B$ (in the Heisenberg picture) in a QFT, the time-ordered product of $A$ and $B$ is defined as $$ T\{A(t_1)B(t_2)\}=\theta(t_1-t_2)A(t_1)B(t_2)+\theta(t_2-t_1)B(t_2)A(...
Hezaraki 's user avatar
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We calculate Tr$(\rho H)$ using the eigenbasis $\sum \Pi a_n|0\rangle$(linear combination of all kinds of creation operator product acting a the vacuum state). And $\langle0|\text{creation/...
MakiseKurisu's user avatar
18 votes
6 answers
2k views

From Wikipedia, Pauli has said in his Nobel lecture that "It is clear that this zero-point energy has no physical reality". This feels natural - I've always been slightly puzzled by the ...
Matthijs Van den Brink's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
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If two operators commute, they share simultaneous eigenvectors. I understand the proof of this statement, however, I'm trying to gain physical insight as to what this means practically. When two ...
user30517380's user avatar
2 votes
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By test space I specifically mean this (RG) (see Section 5.1 for formal definition). A somewhat more thorough (and more specific) treatment is the article "Test Spaces" by Alexander Wilce, ...
John Forkosh's user avatar
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In my understanding of Quantum mechanics, which is demonstrably limited, Operators have corresponding observables. I imagine it like operators helping draw a graph, with probability on the y-axis and ...
OdinOblivion's user avatar
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130 views

How to calculate any expectation value from path integral in quantum mechanics? In QM path integral the initial and final points are fixed and points between them are varied. But as far as i ...
Peter's user avatar
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The typical expectation value formula given most places is $$\langle A \rangle_\psi = \langle\psi|A|\psi\rangle.$$ this assumes that the state is normalised. For unnormalised states the formula is $$\...
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On Chapter 7 of Fetter & Walecka, the authors prove Dyson formula for the (imaginary time) propagator $U(t,t_{0}) = e^{H_{0}t_{0}}e^{-H(t_{0}-t)}e^{-H_{0}t}$, where I am ommitting the $\hbar$'s. ...
InMathweTrust's user avatar
2 votes
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I am reading Vassili N. Kolokoltsov's paper arXiv:2505.14605, "On the Mathematical Theory of Quantum Stochastic Filtering Equations for Mixed States", and having trouble understanding the ...
Significant page's user avatar
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2 answers
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In a QFT with Euclidean signature, the correlation functions can only be well-defined in a time-ordered manner (This is Claim 1 on Page 2 of Simmons-Duffin's lecture note). For example, a scalar 2pt ...
Hezaraki 's user avatar
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From wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wigner%27s_theorem For unitary case $$\langle U \Psi, U \Phi \rangle = \langle \Psi, \Phi \rangle .\tag{1} $$ If I apply the definition of adjoint https://...
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An effective two-band Hamiltonian can be written in terms of the Pauli matrices as: $$H=\mathbf{d}(\mathbf{k})\cdot \mathbf{\sigma}$$ The unit vector $$\hat{\mathbf{d}}(\mathbf{k}) = \frac{\mathbf{d}(\...
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Suppose we compute an expectation value of $r_{12} r_{13}^{-1}$ over a wave function $\phi_p (1) \otimes \phi_q(2) \otimes \phi_r (3)$, we denote it as $$\langle pqr | r_{12} r_{13}^{-1} |pqr \rangle. ...
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