The rotating-wave approximation is an approximation used in
atom optics and
magnetic resonance
Magnetic resonance is a process by which a physical excitation ( resonance) is set up via magnetism.
This process was used to develop magnetic resonance imaging and Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy technology.
It is also being used to ...
. In this approximation, terms in a
Hamiltonian that oscillate rapidly are neglected. This is a valid approximation when the applied electromagnetic radiation is near resonance with an atomic transition, and the intensity is low.
Explicitly, terms in the Hamiltonians that oscillate with frequencies
are neglected, while terms that oscillate with frequencies
are kept, where
is the light frequency, and
is a transition frequency.
The name of the approximation stems from the form of the Hamiltonian in the
interaction picture
In quantum mechanics, the interaction picture (also known as the Dirac picture after Paul Dirac) is an intermediate representation between the Schrödinger picture and the Heisenberg picture. Whereas in the other two pictures either the state ...
, as shown below. By switching to this picture the evolution of an atom due to the corresponding atomic Hamiltonian is absorbed into the system
ket
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, leaving only the evolution due to the interaction of the atom with the light field to consider. It is in this picture that the rapidly oscillating terms mentioned previously can be neglected. Since in some sense the interaction picture can be thought of as rotating with the system ket only that part of the electromagnetic wave that approximately co-rotates is kept; the counter-rotating component is discarded.
The rotating-wave approximation is closely related to, but different from, the
secular approximation.
Mathematical formulation
For simplicity consider a
two-level atomic system with
ground
Ground may refer to:
Geology
* Land, the surface of the Earth not covered by water
* Soil, a mixture of clay, sand and organic matter present on the surface of the Earth
Electricity
* Ground (electricity), the reference point in an electrical c ...
and
excited states
and
, respectively (using the
Dirac bracket notation). Let the energy difference between the states be
so that
is the transition frequency of the system. Then the unperturbed
Hamiltonian of the atom can be written as
:
.
Suppose the atom experiences an external classical
electric field of frequency
, given by
; e.g., a
plane wave
In physics, a plane wave is a special case of wave or field: a physical quantity whose value, at any moment, is constant through any plane that is perpendicular to a fixed direction in space.
For any position \vec x in space and any time t, t ...
propagating in space. Then under the
dipole approximation the interaction Hamiltonian between the atom and the electric field can be expressed as
:
,
where
is the
dipole moment operator of the atom. The total Hamiltonian for the atom-light system is therefore
The atom does not have a dipole moment when it is in an
energy eigenstate, so
This means that defining
allows the dipole operator to be written as
:
(with
denoting the
complex conjugate
In mathematics, the complex conjugate of a complex number is the number with an equal real part and an imaginary part equal in magnitude but opposite in sign. That is, (if a and b are real, then) the complex conjugate of a + bi is equal to a - ...
). The
interaction Hamiltonian can then be shown to be
:
where
is the
Rabi frequency The Rabi frequency is the frequency at which the probability amplitudes of two atomic energy levels fluctuate in an oscillating electromagnetic field. It is proportional to the Transition Dipole Moment of the two levels and to the amplitude (''no ...
and
is the counter-rotating frequency. To see why the
terms are called ''counter-rotating'' consider a
unitary transformation to the
interaction or Dirac picture where the transformed Hamiltonian
is given by
:
where
is the detuning between the light field and the atom.
Making the approximation

This is the point at which the rotating wave approximation is made. The dipole approximation has been assumed, and for this to remain valid the electric field must be near
resonance
Resonance describes the phenomenon of increased amplitude that occurs when the frequency of an applied periodic force (or a Fourier component of it) is equal or close to a natural frequency of the system on which it acts. When an oscillat ...
with the atomic transition. This means that
and the complex exponentials multiplying
and
can be considered to be rapidly oscillating. Hence on any appreciable time scale, the oscillations will quickly average to 0. The rotating wave approximation is thus the claim that these terms may be neglected and thus the Hamiltonian can be written in the interaction picture as
:
Finally, transforming back into the
Schrödinger picture, the Hamiltonian is given by
:
Another criterion for rotating wave approximation is the weak coupling condition, that is, the Rabi frequency should be much less than the transition frequency.
At this point the rotating wave approximation is complete. A common first step beyond this is to remove the remaining time dependence in the Hamiltonian via another unitary transformation.
Derivation
Given the above definitions the interaction Hamiltonian is
:
as stated. The next step is to find the Hamiltonian in the
interaction picture
In quantum mechanics, the interaction picture (also known as the Dirac picture after Paul Dirac) is an intermediate representation between the Schrödinger picture and the Heisenberg picture. Whereas in the other two pictures either the state ...
,
. The required unitary transformation is
:
,
where the last step can be seen to follow e.g. from a
Taylor series
In mathematics, the Taylor series or Taylor expansion of a function is an infinite sum of terms that are expressed in terms of the function's derivatives at a single point. For most common functions, the function and the sum of its Taylor se ...
expansion with the fact that
, and due to the orthogonality of the states
and
. The substitution for
in the second step being different from the definition given in the previous section can be justified either by shifting the overall energy levels such that
has energy
and
has energy
, or by noting that a multiplication by an overall phase (
in this case) on a unitary operator does not affect the underlying physics. We now have
:
Now we apply the RWA by eliminating the counter-rotating terms as explained in the previous section, and finally transform the approximate Hamiltonian
back to the Schrödinger picture:
:
The atomic Hamiltonian was unaffected by the approximation, so the total Hamiltonian in the Schrödinger picture under the rotating wave approximation is
:
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rotating Wave Approximation
Atomic, molecular, and optical physics
Chemical physics