Quantization of the electromagnetic field: Difference between revisions

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Template:Short description Template:Multiple issues The quantization of the electromagnetic field is a procedure in physics turning Maxwell's classical electromagnetic waves into particles called photons. Photons are massless particles of definite energy, definite momentum, and definite spin.

To explain the photoelectric effect, Albert Einstein assumed heuristically in 1905 that an electromagnetic field consists of particles of energy of amount hΞ½, where h is the Planck constant and Ξ½ is the wave frequency. In 1927 Paul A. M. Dirac was able to weave the photon concept into the fabric of the new quantum mechanics and to describe the interaction of photons with matter.[1] He applied a technique which is now generally called second quantization,[2] although this term is somewhat of a misnomer for electromagnetic fields, because they are solutions of the classical Maxwell equations. In Dirac's theory the fields are quantized for the first time and it is also the first time that the Planck constant enters the expressions. In his original work, Dirac took the phases of the different electromagnetic modes (Fourier components of the field) and the mode energies as dynamic variables to quantize (i.e., he reinterpreted them as operators and postulated commutation relations between them). At present it is more common to quantize the Fourier components of the vector potential. This is what is done below.

A quantum mechanical photon state |𝐀,μ belonging to mode (𝐀,μ) is introduced below, and it is shown that it has the following properties:

mphoton=0H|𝐀,μ=hν|𝐀,μwithν=c|𝐀|PEM|𝐀,μ=𝐀|𝐀,μSz|𝐀,μ=μ|𝐀,μμ=±1.

These equations say respectively: a photon has zero rest mass; the photon energy is hΞ½ = hc|k| (k is the wave vector, c is speed of light); its electromagnetic momentum is Δ§k [Δ§ = h/(2Ο€)]; the polarization ΞΌ = Β±1 is the eigenvalue of the z-component of the photon spin.

Second quantization

Second quantization starts with an expansion of a scalar or vector field (or wave functions) in a basis consisting of a complete set of functions. These expansion functions depend on the coordinates of a single particle. The coefficients multiplying the basis functions are interpreted as operators and (anti)commutation relations between these new operators are imposed, commutation relations for bosons and anticommutation relations for fermions (nothing happens to the basis functions themselves). By doing this, the expanded field is converted into a fermion or boson operator field. The expansion coefficients have been promoted from ordinary numbers to operators, creation and annihilation operators. A creation operator creates a particle in the corresponding basis function and an annihilation operator annihilates a particle in this function.

In the case of EM fields the required expansion of the field is the Fourier expansion.

Electromagnetic field and vector potential

As the term suggests, an EM field consists of two vector fields, an electric field 𝐄(𝐫,t) and a magnetic field 𝐁(𝐫,t). Both are time-dependent vector fields that in vacuum depend on a third vector field 𝐀(𝐫,t) (the vector potential), as well as a scalar field ϕ(𝐫,t)

𝐁(𝐫,t)=×𝐀(𝐫,t)𝐄(𝐫,t)=ϕ(𝐫,t)𝐀(𝐫,t)t,

where βˆ‡ Γ— A is the curl of A.

Choosing the Coulomb gauge, for which βˆ‡β‹…A = 0, makes A into a transverse field. The Fourier expansion of the vector potential enclosed in a finite cubic box of volume V = L3 is then

𝐀(𝐫,t)=𝐀μ=±1(𝐞(μ)(𝐀)a𝐀(μ)(t)ei𝐀𝐫+𝐞¯(μ)(𝐀)a¯𝐀(μ)(t)ei𝐀𝐫),

where a denotes the complex conjugate of a. The wave vector k gives the propagation direction of the corresponding Fourier component (a polarized monochromatic wave) of A(r,t); the length of the wave vector is

|𝐀|=2πνc=ωc,

with Ξ½ the frequency of the mode. In this summation k runs over all integers, both positive and negative. (The component of Fourier basis ei𝐀𝐫 is complex conjugate of component of ei𝐀𝐫 as 𝐀(𝐫,t) is real.) The components of the vector k have discrete values (a consequence of the boundary condition that A has the same value on opposite walls of the box):

kx=2πnxL,ky=2πnyL,kz=2πnzL,nx,ny,nz=0,±1,±2,.

Two e(ΞΌ) ("polarization vectors") are conventional unit vectors for left and right hand circular polarized (LCP and RCP) EM waves (See Jones calculus or Jones vector, Jones calculus) and perpendicular to k. They are related to the orthonormal Cartesian vectors ex and ey through a unitary transformation,

𝐞(±1)12(𝐞x±i𝐞y)with𝐞x𝐀=𝐞y𝐀=0.

The kth Fourier component of A is a vector perpendicular to k and hence is a linear combination of e(1) and e(βˆ’1). The superscript ΞΌ indicates a component along e(ΞΌ).

Clearly, the (discrete infinite) set of Fourier coefficients a𝐀(μ)(t) and a¯𝐀(μ)(t) are variables defining the vector potential. In the following they will be promoted to operators.

By using field equations of 𝐁 and 𝐄 in terms of 𝐀 above, electric and magnetic fields are

𝐄(𝐫,t)=i𝐀μ=±1ω(𝐞(μ)(𝐀)a𝐀(μ)(t)ei𝐀𝐫𝐞(μ)(𝐀)a¯𝐀(μ)(t)ei𝐀𝐫)[6pt]𝐁(𝐫,t)=i𝐀μ=±1{(𝐀×𝐞(μ)(𝐀))a𝐀(μ)(t)ei𝐀𝐫(𝐀×𝐞(μ)(𝐀))a¯𝐀(μ)(t)ei𝐀𝐫}

By using identity ×eAr=A×eAr (A and r are vectors) and a𝐀(μ)(t)=a𝐀(μ)eiwt as each mode has single frequency dependence.

Quantization of EM field

The best known example of quantization is the replacement of the time-dependent linear momentum of a particle by the rule

𝐩(t)i.

Note that the Planck constant is introduced here and that the time-dependence of the classical expression is not taken over in the quantum mechanical operator (this is true in the so-called SchrΓΆdinger picture).

For the EM field we do something similar. The quantity ϵ0 is the electric constant, which appears here because of the use of electromagnetic SI units. The quantization rules are:

a𝐀(μ)(t)2ωVϵ0a(μ)(𝐀)a¯𝐀(μ)(t)2ωVϵ0a(μ)(𝐀)

subject to the boson commutation relations

[a(μ)(𝐀),a(μ)(𝐀)]=0[a(μ)(𝐀),a(μ)(𝐀)]=0[a(μ)(𝐀),a(μ)(𝐀)]=δ𝐀,𝐀δμ,μ

The square brackets indicate a commutator, defined by [A,B]ABBA for any two quantum mechanical operators A and B. The introduction of the Planck constant is essential in the transition from a classical to a quantum theory. The factor

12ωVϵ0

is introduced to give the Hamiltonian (energy operator) a simple form, see below.

The quantized fields (operator fields) are the following

𝐀(𝐫)=𝐀,μ2ωVϵ0{𝐞(μ)a(μ)(𝐀)ei𝐀𝐫+𝐞¯(μ)a(μ)(𝐀)ei𝐀𝐫}𝐄(𝐫)=i𝐀,μω2Vϵ0{𝐞(μ)a(μ)(𝐀)ei𝐀𝐫𝐞¯(μ)a(μ)(𝐀)ei𝐀𝐫}𝐁(𝐫)=i𝐀,μ2ωVϵ0{(𝐀×𝐞(μ))a(μ)(𝐀)ei𝐀𝐫(𝐀×𝐞¯(μ))a(μ)(𝐀)ei𝐀𝐫}

where ω = c Template:Abs = ck.

Hamiltonian of the field

The classical Hamiltonian has the form

H=12ϵ0V(|E(𝐫,t)|2+c2|B(𝐫,t)|2)d3𝐫=Vϵ0𝐀μ=±1ω2(a¯𝐀(μ)(t)a𝐀(μ)(t)+a𝐀(μ)(t)a¯𝐀(μ)(t)).

The right-hand-side is easily obtained by first using

Veikreikrdr=Vδk,k

(can be derived from Euler equation and trigonometric orthogonality) where k is wavenumber for wave confined within the box of V = L Γ— L Γ— L as described above and second, using Ο‰ = kc.

Substitution of the field operators into the classical Hamiltonian gives the Hamilton operator of the EM field,

H=12𝐀,μ=±1ω(a(μ)(𝐀)a(μ)(𝐀)+a(μ)(𝐀)a(μ)(𝐀))=𝐀,μω(a(μ)(𝐀)a(μ)(𝐀)+12)

The second equality follows by use of the third of the boson commutation relations from above with kβ€² = k and ΞΌβ€² = ΞΌ. Note again that Δ§Ο‰ = hΞ½ = Δ§c|k| and remember that Ο‰ depends on k, even though it is not explicit in the notation. The notation Ο‰(k) could have been introduced, but is not common as it clutters the equations.

Digression: harmonic oscillator

The second quantized treatment of the one-dimensional quantum harmonic oscillator is a well-known topic in quantum mechanical courses. We digress and say a few words about it. The harmonic oscillator Hamiltonian has the form

H=ω(aa+12)

where Ο‰ ≡ 2πν is the fundamental frequency of the oscillator. The ground state of the oscillator is designated by |0; and is referred to as the "vacuum state". It can be shown that a is an excitation operator, it excites from an n fold excited state to an n + 1 fold excited state:

a|n=|n+1n+1.

In particular: a|0=|1 and (a)n|0|n.

Since harmonic oscillator energies are equidistant, the n-fold excited state |n; can be looked upon as a single state containing n particles (sometimes called vibrons) all of energy hΞ½. These particles are bosons. For obvious reason the excitation operator a is called a creation operator.

From the commutation relation follows that the Hermitian adjoint a de-excites: a|n=|n1n in particular a|00, so that a|0=0. For obvious reason the de-excitation operator a is called an annihilation operator.

By mathematical induction the following "differentiation rule", that will be needed later, is easily proved,

[a,(a)n]=n(a)n1with(a)0=1.

Suppose now we have a number of non-interacting (independent) one-dimensional harmonic oscillators, each with its own fundamental frequency Ο‰i . Because the oscillators are independent, the Hamiltonian is a simple sum:

H=iωi(a(i)a(i)+12).

By substituting (𝐀,μ) for i we see that the Hamiltonian of the EM field can be considered a Hamiltonian of independent oscillators of energy Ο‰ = Template:Absc oscillating along direction e(ΞΌ) with ΞΌ = Β±1.

Photon number states (Fock states)

The quantized EM field has a vacuum (no photons) state |0. The application of it to, say,

(a(μ)(𝐀))m(a(μ)(𝐀))n|0|(𝐀,μ)m;(𝐀,μ)n,

gives a quantum state of m photons in mode (k, ΞΌ) and n photons in mode (kβ€², ΞΌβ€²). The proportionality symbol is used because the state on the left-hand is not normalized to unity, whereas the state on the right-hand may be normalized.

The operator

N(μ)(𝐀)a(μ)(𝐀)a(μ)(𝐀)

is the number operator. When acting on a quantum mechanical photon number state, it returns the number of photons in mode (k, ΞΌ). This also holds when the number of photons in this mode is zero, then the number operator returns zero. To show the action of the number operator on a one-photon ket, we consider

N(μ)(𝐀)|𝐀,μ=a(μ)(𝐀)a(μ)(𝐀)a(μ)(𝐀)|0=a(μ)(𝐀)(δ𝐀,𝐀δμ,μ+a(μ)(𝐀)a(μ)(𝐀))|0=δ𝐀,𝐀δμ,μ|𝐀,μ,

i.e., a number operator of mode (k, ΞΌ) returns zero if the mode is unoccupied and returns unity if the mode is singly occupied. To consider the action of the number operator of mode (k, ΞΌ) on a n-photon ket of the same mode, we drop the indices k and ΞΌ and consider

N(a)n|0=a([a,(a)n]+(a)na)|0=a[a,(a)n]|0.

Use the "differentiation rule" introduced earlier and it follows that

N(a)n|0=n(a)n|0.

A photon number state (or a Fock state) is an eigenstate of the number operator. This is why the formalism described here is often referred to as the occupation number representation.

Photon energy

Earlier the Hamiltonian,

H=𝐀,μω(a(μ)(𝐀)a(μ)(𝐀)+12)

was introduced. The zero of energy can be shifted, which leads to an expression in terms of the number operator,

H=𝐀,μωN(μ)(𝐀)

The effect of H on a single-photon state is

H|𝐀,μH(a(μ)(𝐀)|0)=𝐀,μωN(μ)(𝐀)a(μ)(𝐀)|0=ω(a(μ)(𝐀)|0)=ω|𝐀,μ.

Thus the single-photon state is an eigenstate of H and Δ§Ο‰ = hΞ½ is the corresponding energy. In the same way

H|(𝐀,μ)m;(𝐀,μ)n=[m(ω)+n(ω)]|(𝐀,μ)m;(𝐀,μ)n,withω=c|𝐀|andω=c|𝐀|.


Photon momentum

Introducing the Fourier expansion of the electromagnetic field into the classical form

𝐏EM=ϵ0V𝐄(𝐫,t)×𝐁(𝐫,t)d3𝐫,

yields

𝐏EM=Vϵ0𝐀μ=1,1ω𝐀(a𝐀(μ)(t)a¯𝐀(μ)(t)+a¯𝐀(μ)(t)a𝐀(μ)(t)).

Quantization gives

𝐏EM=𝐀,μ𝐀(a(μ)(𝐀)a(μ)(𝐀)+12)=𝐀,μ𝐀N(μ)(𝐀).

The term 1/2 could be dropped, because when one sums over the allowed k, k cancels with βˆ’k. The effect of PEM on a single-photon state is

𝐏EM|𝐀,μ=𝐏EM(a(μ)(𝐀)|0)=𝐀(a(μ)(𝐀)|0)=𝐀|𝐀,μ.

Apparently, the single-photon state is an eigenstate of the momentum operator, and Δ§k is the eigenvalue (the momentum of a single photon).

Photon mass

The photon having non-zero linear momentum, one could imagine that it has a non-vanishing rest mass m0, which is its mass at zero speed. However, we will now show that this is not the case: m0 = 0.

Since the photon propagates with the speed of light, special relativity is called for. The relativistic expressions for energy and momentum squared are,

E2=m02c41v2/c2,p2=m02v21v2/c2.

From p2/E2,

v2c2=c2p2E2E2=m02c41c2p2/E2m02c4=E2c2p2.

Use

E2=2ω2andp2=2k2=2ω2c2

and it follows that

m02c4=E2c2p2=2ω2c22ω2c2=0,

so that m0 = 0.

Photon spin

The photon can be assigned a triplet spin with spin quantum number S = 1. This is similar to, say, the nuclear spin of the 14N isotope, but with the important difference that the state with MS = 0 is zero, only the states with MS = Β±1 are non-zero.

Define spin operators:

Szi(𝐞x𝐞y𝐞y𝐞x)and cyclicallyxyzx.

The two operators between the two orthogonal unit vectors are dyadic products. The unit vectors are perpendicular to the propagation direction k (the direction of the z axis, which is the spin quantization axis).

The spin operators satisfy the usual angular momentum commutation relations

[Sx,Sy]=iSzand cyclicallyxyzx.

Indeed, use the dyadic product property

(𝐞y𝐞z)(𝐞z𝐞x)=(𝐞y𝐞x)(𝐞z𝐞z)=𝐞y𝐞x

because ez is of unit length. In this manner,

[Sx,Sy]=2(𝐞y𝐞z𝐞z𝐞y)(𝐞z𝐞x𝐞x𝐞z)+2(𝐞z𝐞x𝐞x𝐞z)(𝐞y𝐞z𝐞z𝐞y)=2[(𝐞y𝐞z𝐞z𝐞y)(𝐞z𝐞x𝐞x𝐞z)+(𝐞z𝐞x𝐞x𝐞z)(𝐞y𝐞z𝐞z𝐞y)]=i[i(𝐞x𝐞y𝐞y𝐞x)]=iSz

By inspection it follows that

i(𝐞x𝐞y𝐞y𝐞x)𝐞(μ)=μ𝐞(μ),μ=±1,

and therefore ΞΌ labels the photon spin,

Sz|𝐀,μ=μ|𝐀,μ,μ=±1.

Because the vector potential A is a transverse field, the photon has no forward (ΞΌ = 0) spin component.

Classical approximation

The classical approximation to EM radiation is good when the number of photons is much larger than unity in the volume λ3(2π)3, where Ξ» is the length of the radio waves.Template:Cn In that case quantum fluctuations are negligible.

For example, the photons emitted by a radio station broadcast at the frequency Ξ½ = 100 MHz, have an energy content of Ξ½h = (1 Γ— 108) Γ— (6.6 Γ— 10βˆ’34) = 6.6 Γ— 10βˆ’26 J, where h is the Planck constant. The wavelength of the station is Ξ» = c/Ξ½ = 3 m, so that Ξ»/(2Ο€) = 48 cm and the volume is 0.109 m3. The energy content of this volume element at 5 km from the station is 2.1 Γ— 10βˆ’10 Γ— 0.109 = 2.3 Γ— 10βˆ’11 J, which amounts to 3.4 Γ— 1014 photons per λ3(2π)3. Since 3.4 Γ— 1014 > 1, quantum effects do not play a role. The waves emitted by this station are well-described by the classical limit and quantum mechanics is not needed.

See also

References

Template:Citizendium Template:Reflist

  1. ↑ P. A. M. Dirac, The Quantum Theory of the Emission and Absorption of Radiation, Proc. Royal Soc. Lond. A 114, pp. 243–265, (1927) Online (pdf)
  2. ↑ The name derives from the second quantization of quantum mechanical wave functions. Such a wave function is a scalar field (the "SchrΓΆdinger field") and can be quantized in the very same way as electromagnetic fields. Since a wave function is derived from a "first" quantized Hamiltonian, the quantization of the SchrΓΆdinger field is the second time quantization is performed, hence the name.