Relation between Schrödinger's equation and the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics
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Schrödinger equation The Schrödinger equation is a linear partial differential equation that governs the wave function of a quantum-mechanical system. It is a key result in quantum mechanics, and its discovery was a significant landmark in the development of th ...
with the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics using a simple nonrelativistic one-dimensional single-particle
Hamiltonian Hamiltonian may refer to: * Hamiltonian mechanics, a function that represents the total energy of a system * Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics), an operator corresponding to the total energy of that system ** Dyall Hamiltonian, a modified Hamiltonian ...
composed of kinetic and potential energy.


Background


Schrödinger's equation

Schrödinger's equation, in bra–ket notation, is i\hbar \frac \left, \psi\right\rangle = \hat H \left, \psi\right\rangle where \hat H is the
Hamiltonian operator Hamiltonian may refer to: * Hamiltonian mechanics, a function that represents the total energy of a system * Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics), an operator corresponding to the total energy of that system ** Dyall Hamiltonian, a modified Hamiltonia ...
. The Hamiltonian operator can be written \hat H = \frac + V(\hat q ) where V(\hat q ) is the potential energy, m is the mass and we have assumed for simplicity that there is only one spatial dimension . The formal solution of the equation is \left, \psi(t)\right\rangle = \exp\left(-\frac \hat H t\right) \left, q_0\right\rangle \equiv \exp\left(-\frac \hat H t\right) \left, 0\right\rangle where we have assumed the initial state is a free-particle spatial state \left, q_0\right\rangle . The transition probability amplitude for a transition from an initial state \left, 0 \right\rangle to a final free-particle spatial state , F \rangle at time is \langle F , \psi(T)\rangle = \left \langle F \Biggr, \exp\left(- \frac \hat H T\right) \Biggl , 0 \right \rangle.


Path integral formulation

The path integral formulation states that the transition amplitude is simply the integral of the quantity \exp\left( \frac S \right) over all possible paths from the initial state to the final state. Here is the classical
action Action may refer to: * Action (narrative), a literary mode * Action fiction, a type of genre fiction * Action game, a genre of video game Film * Action film, a genre of film * ''Action'' (1921 film), a film by John Ford * ''Action'' (1980 fil ...
. The reformulation of this transition amplitude, originally due to Dirac and conceptualized by Feynman, forms the basis of the path integral formulation.


From Schrödinger's equation to the path integral formulation

The following derivationSee makes use of the Trotter product formula, which states that for self-adjoint operators and (satisfying certain technical conditions), we have e^\psi = \lim_ \left(e^ e^\right)^N \psi, even if and do not commute. We can divide the time interval into segments of length \delta t = \frac. The transition amplitude can then be written \left \langle F \biggr, \exp\left(-\frac \hat H T \right) \biggl, 0 \right \rangle = \left \langle F \bigg , \exp\left(-\frac \hat H \delta t \right) \exp\left(-\frac \hat H \delta t \right) \cdots \exp\left(-\frac \hat H \delta t \right) \bigg, 0 \right \rangle. Although the kinetic energy and potential energy operators do not commute, the Trotter product formula, cited above, says that over each small time-interval, we can ignore this noncommutativity and write \exp\left(- \frac \hat H \delta t \right) \approx \exp\left( \right) \exp\left( \right) . For notational simplicity, we delay making this substitution for the moment. We can insert the identity matrix I = \int dq \left, q\right\rangle \left\langle q \ times between the exponentials to yield \left \langle F \bigg, \exp\left(- \frac \hat H T \right) \bigg, 0 \right \rangle = \left( \prod_^ \int dq_j \right) \left \langle F \bigg , \exp\left(- \frac \hat H \delta t \right) \bigg, q_ \right \rangle \left \langle q_ \bigg , \exp\left(- \frac \hat H \delta t \right) \bigg , q_ \right \rangle \cdots \left \langle q_ \bigg , \exp\left(- \frac \hat H \delta t \right) \bigg , 0 \right \rangle. We now implement the substitution associated to the Trotter product formula, so that we have, effectively \left \langle q_ \bigg, \exp\left(- \frac \hat H \delta t \right) \bigg, q_j \right \rangle = \left \langle q_ \Bigg, \exp\left( \right) \exp\left( \right)\Bigg , q_j \right \rangle. We can insert the identity I = \int \left, p\right\rangle \left\langle p \ into the amplitude to yield \begin \left \langle q_ \bigg, \exp\left(- \frac \hat H \delta t \right) \bigg, q_j \right \rangle &= \exp\left(- \frac V \left( q_j \right) \delta t \right) \int \frac \left \langle q_ \bigg, \exp\left(-\frac \frac \delta t \right) \bigg , p \right \rangle \langle p , q_j\rangle \\ &= \exp\left(-\frac V \left( q_j \right) \delta t \right) \int \frac \exp\left(-\frac \frac \delta t \right) \left \langle q_ , p \right \rangle \left \langle p , q_j \right \rangle \\ &= \exp \left(- \frac V \left( q_j \right) \delta t \right) \int \frac \exp\left(-\frac \frac \delta t -\frac p \left( q_ - q_ \right) \right) \end where we have used the fact that the free particle wave function is \langle p , q_j\rangle = \frac\exp\left(\frac p q_ \right). The integral over can be performed (see
Common integrals in quantum field theory Common integrals in quantum field theory are all variations and generalizations of Gaussian integrals to the complex plane and to multiple dimensions. Other integrals can be approximated by versions of the Gaussian integral. Fourier integrals are a ...
) to obtain \left \langle q_ \bigg, \exp\left(-\frac \hat H \delta t \right) \bigg, q_j \right \rangle = \sqrt \exp\left \delta t \left( m \left( \right)^2 - V \left( q_j \right) \right) \right The transition amplitude for the entire time period is \left \langle F \bigg, \exp\left(- \frac \hat H T \right) \bigg, 0 \right \rangle = \left( \right)^ \left( \prod_^ \int dq_j \right) \exp\left \sum_^ \delta t \left( m \left( \right)^2 - V \left( q_j \right) \right) \right If we take the limit of large the transition amplitude reduces to \left \langle F \bigg, \exp\left( \right) \bigg , 0 \right \rangle = \int Dq(t) \exp\left( S \right) where is the classical
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given by S = \int_0^T dt L\left( q(t), \dot(t) \right) and is the classical
Lagrangian Lagrangian may refer to: Mathematics * Lagrangian function, used to solve constrained minimization problems in optimization theory; see Lagrange multiplier ** Lagrangian relaxation, the method of approximating a difficult constrained problem with ...
given by L\left( q, \dot \right) = m ^2 - V (q) Any possible path of the particle, going from the initial state to the final state, is approximated as a broken line and included in the measure of the integral \int Dq(t) = \lim_\left(\frac \right)^ \left( \prod_^ \int dq_j \right) This expression actually defines the manner in which the path integrals are to be taken. The coefficient in front is needed to ensure that the expression has the correct dimensions, but it has no actual relevance in any physical application. This recovers the path integral formulation from Schrödinger's equation.


From path integral formulation to Schrödinger's equation

The path integral reproduces the Schrödinger equation for the initial and final state even when a potential is present. This is easiest to see by taking a path-integral over infinitesimally separated times. Since the time separation is infinitesimal and the cancelling oscillations become severe for large values of , the path integral has most weight for close to . In this case, to lowest order the potential energy is constant, and only the kinetic energy contribution is nontrivial. (This separation of the kinetic and potential energy terms in the exponent is essentially the Trotter product formula.) The exponential of the action is e^ e^ The first term rotates the phase of locally by an amount proportional to the potential energy. The second term is the free particle propagator, corresponding to times a diffusion process. To lowest order in they are additive; in any case one has with : \psi(y;t+\varepsilon) \approx \int \psi(x;t) e^ e^\frac \,dx\,. As mentioned, the spread in is diffusive from the free particle propagation, with an extra infinitesimal rotation in phase which slowly varies from point to point from the potential: \frac = i \left(\tfrac 1 2 \nabla^2 - V(x)\right)\psi and this is the Schrödinger equation. Note that the normalization of the path integral needs to be fixed in exactly the same way as in the free particle case. An arbitrary continuous potential does not affect the normalization, although singular potentials require careful treatment.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Relation between Schrodinger's equation and the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics Statistical mechanics Quantum field theory Schrödinger equation