The Fock space is an
algebraic construction used in
quantum mechanics to construct the
quantum states space of a variable or unknown number of identical
particles from a single particle
Hilbert space
In mathematics, Hilbert spaces (named after David Hilbert) allow generalizing the methods of linear algebra and calculus from (finite-dimensional) Euclidean vector spaces to spaces that may be infinite-dimensional. Hilbert spaces arise natural ...
. It is named after
V. A. Fock who first introduced it in his 1932 paper "Konfigurationsraum und zweite Quantelung" ("
Configuration space and
second quantization").
[ M.C. Reed, B. Simon, "Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics, Volume II", Academic Press 1975. Page 328.]
Informally, a Fock space is the sum of a set of Hilbert spaces representing zero particle states, one particle states, two particle states, and so on. If the identical particles are
bosons, the -particle states are vectors in a
symmetrized tensor product of single-particle Hilbert spaces . If the identical particles are
fermions, the -particle states are vectors in an
antisymmetrized tensor product of single-particle Hilbert spaces (see
symmetric algebra and
exterior algebra respectively). A general state in Fock space is a
linear combination of -particle states, one for each .
Technically, the Fock space is (the
Hilbert space
In mathematics, Hilbert spaces (named after David Hilbert) allow generalizing the methods of linear algebra and calculus from (finite-dimensional) Euclidean vector spaces to spaces that may be infinite-dimensional. Hilbert spaces arise natural ...
completion of) the
direct sum
The direct sum is an operation between structures in abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics. It is defined differently, but analogously, for different kinds of structures. To see how the direct sum is used in abstract algebra, consider a more ...
of the symmetric or antisymmetric tensors in the
tensor power
In mathematics, the tensor algebra of a vector space ''V'', denoted ''T''(''V'') or ''T''(''V''), is the algebra of tensors on ''V'' (of any rank) with multiplication being the tensor product. It is the free algebra on ''V'', in the sense of being ...
s of a single-particle Hilbert space ,
Here
is the
operator
Operator may refer to:
Mathematics
* A symbol indicating a mathematical operation
* Logical operator or logical connective in mathematical logic
* Operator (mathematics), mapping that acts on elements of a space to produce elements of another ...
which symmetrizes or
antisymmetrizes a tensor, depending on whether the Hilbert space describes particles obeying
bosonic or
fermion
In particle physics, a fermion is a particle that follows Fermi–Dirac statistics. Generally, it has a half-odd-integer spin: spin , spin , etc. In addition, these particles obey the Pauli exclusion principle. Fermions include all quarks an ...
ic
statistics, and the overline represents the completion of the space. The bosonic (resp. fermionic) Fock space can alternatively be constructed as (the Hilbert space completion of) the
symmetric tensors
(resp.
alternating tensors
). For every basis for there is a natural basis of the Fock space, the
Fock states.
Definition
The Fock space is the (Hilbert)
direct sum
The direct sum is an operation between structures in abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics. It is defined differently, but analogously, for different kinds of structures. To see how the direct sum is used in abstract algebra, consider a more ...
of
tensor products of copies of a single-particle Hilbert space
Here
, the
complex scalars, consists of the states corresponding to no particles,
the states of one particle,
the states of two identical particles etc.
A general state in
is given by
where
*
is a vector of length 1 called the vacuum state and
is a complex coefficient,
*
is a state in the single particle Hilbert space and
is a complex coefficient,
*
, and
is a complex coefficient, etc.
The convergence of this infinite sum is important if
is to be a Hilbert space. Technically we require
to be the Hilbert space completion of the algebraic direct sum. It consists of all infinite
tuples
such that the
norm, defined by the inner product is finite
where the
particle norm is defined by
i.e., the restriction of the
norm on the tensor product
For two general states
and
the
inner product on
is then defined as
where we use the inner products on each of the
-particle Hilbert spaces. Note that, in particular the
particle subspaces are orthogonal for different
.
Product states, indistinguishable particles, and a useful basis for Fock space
A
product state of the Fock space is a state of the form
which describes a collection of
particles, one of which has quantum state
, another
and so on up to the
th particle, where each
is ''any'' state from the single particle Hilbert space
. Here juxtaposition (writing the single particle kets side by side, without the
) is symmetric (resp. antisymmetric) multiplication in the symmetric (antisymmetric)
tensor algebra. The general state in a Fock space is a linear combination of product states. A state that cannot be written as a convex sum of product states is called an
entangled state.
When we speak of ''one particle in state
'', we must bear in mind that in quantum mechanics identical particles are
indistinguishable. In the same Fock space, all particles are identical. (To describe many species of particles, we take the tensor product of as many different Fock spaces as there are species of particles under consideration). It is one of the most powerful features of this formalism that states are implicitly properly symmetrized. For instance, if the above state
is fermionic, it will be 0 if two (or more) of the
are equal because the antisymmetric
(exterior) product
. This is a mathematical formulation of the
Pauli exclusion principle that no two (or more) fermions can be in the same quantum state. In fact, whenever the terms in a formal product are linearly dependent; the product will be zero for antisymmetric tensors. Also, the product of orthonormal states is properly orthonormal by construction (although possibly 0 in the Fermi case when two states are equal).
A useful and convenient basis for a Fock space is the ''occupancy number basis''. Given a basis
of
, we can denote the state with
particles in state
,
particles in state
, ...,
particles in state
, and no particles in the remaining states, by defining
where each
takes the value 0 or 1 for fermionic particles and 0, 1, 2, ... for bosonic particles. Note that trailing zeroes may be dropped without changing the state. Such a state is called a
Fock state. When the
are understood as the steady states of a free field, the Fock states describe an assembly of non-interacting particles in definite numbers. The most general Fock state is a linear superposition of pure states.
Two operators of great importance are the
creation and annihilation operators, which upon acting on a Fock state add or respectively remove a particle in the ascribed quantum state. They are denoted
for creation and
for annihilation respectively. To create ("add") a particle, the quantum state
is symmetric or exterior- multiplied with
; and respectively to annihilate ("remove") a particle, an (even or odd)
interior product is taken with
, which is the adjoint of
. It is often convenient to work with states of the basis of
so that these operators remove and add exactly one particle in the given basis state. These operators also serve as generators for more general operators acting on the Fock space, for instance the
number operator
In quantum mechanics, for systems where the total number of particles may not be preserved, the number operator is the observable that counts the number of particles.
The number operator acts on Fock space. Let
:, \Psi\rangle_\nu=, \phi_1,\p ...
giving the number of particles in a specific state
is
.
Wave function interpretation
Often the one particle space
is given as
, the space of
square-integrable function
In mathematics, a square-integrable function, also called a quadratically integrable function or L^2 function or square-summable function, is a real- or complex-valued measurable function for which the integral of the square of the absolute value i ...
s on a space
with
measure (strictly speaking, the
equivalence class
In mathematics, when the elements of some set S have a notion of equivalence (formalized as an equivalence relation), then one may naturally split the set S into equivalence classes. These equivalence classes are constructed so that elements a ...
es of square integrable functions where functions are equivalent if they differ on a
set of measure zero). The typical example is the
free particle with
the space of square integrable functions on three-dimensional space. The Fock spaces then have a natural interpretation as symmetric or anti-symmetric square integrable functions as follows.
Let
and
,
,
, etc.
Consider the space of tuples of points which is the
disjoint union
It has a natural measure
such that
and the restriction of
to
is
.
The even Fock space
can then be identified with the space of symmetric functions in
whereas the odd Fock space
can be identified with the space of anti-symmetric functions. The identification follows directly from the
isometric
The term ''isometric'' comes from the Greek for "having equal measurement".
isometric may mean:
* Cubic crystal system, also called isometric crystal system
* Isometre, a rhythmic technique in music.
* "Isometric (Intro)", a song by Madeon from ...
mapping
.
Given wave functions
, the
Slater determinant
is an antisymmetric function on
. It can thus be naturally interpreted as an element of the
-particle sector of the odd Fock space. The normalization is chosen such that
if the functions
are orthonormal. There is a similar "Slater permanent" with the determinant replaced with the
permanent which gives elements of
-sector of the even Fock space.
Relation to the Segal–Bargmann space
Define the
Segal–Bargmann space of complex
holomorphic function
In mathematics, a holomorphic function is a complex-valued function of one or more complex variables that is complex differentiable in a neighbourhood of each point in a domain in complex coordinate space . The existence of a complex derivativ ...
s square-integrable with respect to a
Gaussian measure:
where
Then defining a space
as the nested union of the spaces
over the integers
, Segal
and Bargmann showed
that
is isomorphic to a bosonic Fock space. The monomial
corresponds to the Fock state
See also
*
Fock state
*
Tensor algebra
*
Holomorphic Fock space
In mathematics, the oscillator representation is a projective unitary representation of the symplectic group, first investigated by Irving Segal, David Shale, and André Weil. A natural extension of the representation leads to a semigroup of contr ...
*
Creation and annihilation operators
*
Slater determinant
*
Wick's theorem
*
Noncommutative geometry
*
Grand canonical ensemble, thermal distribution over Fock space
References
External links
Feynman diagrams and Wick products associated with q-Fock space - noncommutative analysis Edward G. Effros and Mihai Popa, Department of Mathematics, UCLA
* R. Geroch, Mathematical Physics, Chicago University Press, Chapter 21.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fock Space
Quantum mechanics
Quantum field theory