Displacement operator
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In the
quantum mechanics Quantum mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that provides a description of the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. It is the foundation of all quantum physics including quantum chemistry, ...
study of optical phase space, the displacement operator for one mode is the shift operator in
quantum optics Quantum optics is a branch of atomic, molecular, and optical physics dealing with how individual quanta of light, known as photons, interact with atoms and molecules. It includes the study of the particle-like properties of photons. Photons have ...
, :\hat(\alpha)=\exp \left ( \alpha \hat^\dagger - \alpha^\ast \hat \right ) , where \alpha is the amount of displacement in optical phase space, \alpha^* is the complex conjugate of that displacement, and \hat and \hat^\dagger are the lowering and raising operators, respectively. The name of this operator is derived from its ability to displace a localized state in phase space by a magnitude \alpha. It may also act on the vacuum state by displacing it into a
coherent state In physics, specifically in quantum mechanics, a coherent state is the specific quantum state of the quantum harmonic oscillator, often described as a state which has dynamics most closely resembling the oscillatory behavior of a classical h ...
. Specifically, \hat(\alpha), 0\rangle=, \alpha\rangle where , \alpha\rangle is a
coherent state In physics, specifically in quantum mechanics, a coherent state is the specific quantum state of the quantum harmonic oscillator, often described as a state which has dynamics most closely resembling the oscillatory behavior of a classical h ...
, which is an
eigenstate In quantum physics, a quantum state is a mathematical entity that provides a probability distribution for the outcomes of each possible measurement on a system. Knowledge of the quantum state together with the rules for the system's evolution in ...
of the annihilation (lowering) operator.


Properties

The displacement operator is a
unitary operator In functional analysis, a unitary operator is a surjective bounded operator on a Hilbert space that preserves the inner product. Unitary operators are usually taken as operating ''on'' a Hilbert space, but the same notion serves to define the co ...
, and therefore obeys \hat(\alpha)\hat^\dagger(\alpha)=\hat^\dagger(\alpha)\hat(\alpha)=\hat, where \hat is the identity operator. Since \hat^\dagger(\alpha)=\hat(-\alpha), the hermitian conjugate of the displacement operator can also be interpreted as a displacement of opposite magnitude (-\alpha). The effect of applying this operator in a similarity transformation of the ladder operators results in their displacement. :\hat^\dagger(\alpha) \hat \hat(\alpha)=\hat+\alpha :\hat(\alpha) \hat \hat^\dagger(\alpha)=\hat-\alpha The product of two displacement operators is another displacement operator whose total displacement, up to a phase factor, is the sum of the two individual displacements. This can be seen by utilizing the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula. : e^ e^ = e^ e^. which shows us that: :\hat(\alpha)\hat(\beta)= e^ \hat(\alpha + \beta) When acting on an eigenket, the phase factor e^ appears in each term of the resulting state, which makes it physically irrelevant.Christopher Gerry and Peter Knight: ''Introductory Quantum Optics''. Cambridge (England): Cambridge UP, 2005. It further leads to the braiding relation :\hat(\alpha)\hat(\beta)=e^ \hat(\beta)\hat(\alpha)


Alternative expressions

The Kermack-McCrae identity gives two alternative ways to express the displacement operator: :\hat(\alpha) = e^ e^ e^ :\hat(\alpha) = e^ e^e^


Multimode displacement

The displacement operator can also be generalized to multimode displacement. A multimode creation operator can be defined as :\hat A_^=\int d\mathbf\psi(\mathbf)\hat a^(\mathbf), where \mathbf is the wave vector and its magnitude is related to the frequency \omega_ according to , \mathbf, =\omega_/c. Using this definition, we can write the multimode displacement operator as :\hat_(\alpha)=\exp \left ( \alpha \hat A_^ - \alpha^\ast \hat A_ \right ) , and define the multimode coherent state as :, \alpha_\rangle\equiv\hat_(\alpha), 0\rangle.


See also

* Optical phase space


References

{{Physics operators Quantum optics