!main_tags!Heisenberg Picture - quantum-physics | What's Your IQ !main_header!

Introduction

Heisenberg picture: alternative formulation of quantum mechanics. Operators carry time dependence; state vectors remain constant. Emphasizes observables evolving in time. Complements Schrödinger picture where states evolve and operators are fixed. Enables elegant treatment of quantum dynamics, symmetries, and measurement.

"In the Heisenberg picture, the entire time dependence is transferred to the operators, leaving the state vectors fixed." -- Wolfgang Pauli

Historical Background

Development by Werner Heisenberg

Introduced 1925; matrix mechanics framework. Focused on observable quantities, avoiding ill-defined classical trajectories. Provided foundation for operator algebra in quantum mechanics.

Comparison with Schrödinger’s Wave Mechanics

1926 Schrödinger introduced wavefunction-based formulation. Both pictures mathematically equivalent, differing in representation of time evolution.

Dirac’s Contribution

Paul Dirac unified pictures via transformation theory. Formalized unitary transformations connecting representations.

Fundamental Concepts

Operators and Observables

Quantum observables represented by Hermitian operators. Heisenberg picture assigns explicit time dependence to these operators.

State Vectors

State vectors remain fixed in time; represent system’s quantum state. Encapsulate initial conditions and probability amplitudes.

Time Dependence

Time evolution encoded in operators: \( O_H(t) \). Contrasts Schrödinger picture where \( |\psi(t)\rangle \) changes.

Mathematical Formulation

Operator Time Evolution

Operators evolve via unitary transformation:

O_H(t) = U^\dagger (t) \, O_S \, U(t)

Where \( U(t) = e^{-iHt/\hbar} \) is time evolution operator, \( O_S \) operator in Schrödinger picture.

State Vector Time Independence

States satisfy \( |\psi_H\rangle = |\psi_S(0)\rangle \), constant in time.

Expectation Values

Expectation value: \( \langle O \rangle (t) = \langle \psi_H | O_H(t) | \psi_H \rangle \), identical to Schrödinger picture.

Comparison with Schrödinger Picture

Time Dependence Distribution

Schrödinger: states evolve, operators fixed. Heisenberg: operators evolve, states fixed.

Mathematical Equivalence

Unitary equivalence ensures measurable predictions identical.

Interpretational Differences

Heisenberg emphasizes observables’ dynamics; Schrödinger focuses on state evolution.

Aspect Schrödinger Picture Heisenberg Picture
Time Dependence States evolve Operators evolve
State Vectors Time-dependent Time-independent
Operators Time-independent Time-dependent

Time Evolution of Operators

Unitary Operator Definition

Time evolution operator: \( U(t) = e^{-iHt/\hbar} \), generated by Hamiltonian \( H \).

Heisenberg Operator

Defined as \( O_H(t) = U^\dagger(t) \, O_S \, U(t) \). Encodes dynamics via conjugation.

Properties

Preserves Hermiticity, spectrum, commutation relations. Ensures physical consistency.

Equations of Motion

Heisenberg Equation

Derived by differentiating operator with respect to time:

i\hbar \frac{d}{dt} O_H(t) = [O_H(t), H] + i\hbar \left(\frac{\partial O_S}{\partial t}\right)_H

Where \( [A,B] = AB - BA \) is commutator; last term accounts for explicit time dependence.

Correspondence with Classical Mechanics

Quantum commutator analogous to classical Poisson bracket. Provides quantum analog of Hamilton’s equations.

Stationary Operators

Operators commuting with \( H \) are constants of motion: \( \frac{d}{dt} O_H(t) = 0 \).

Unitary Transformations

Definition and Role

Unitary operators preserve inner product and probability. Govern changes of representation.

Transformation Between Pictures

Map Schrödinger operators and states to Heisenberg counterparts via \( U(t) \).

Generator: Hamiltonian

Time evolution generated by Hamiltonian operator \( H \). Infinitesimal transformations yield equations of motion.

Transformation Formula
Operator Evolution \( O_H(t) = U^\dagger(t) O_S U(t) \)
State Evolution \( |\psi_H\rangle = |\psi_S(0)\rangle \)

Applications

Quantum Field Theory

Heisenberg picture fundamental in QFT; fields as time-dependent operators.

Quantum Optics

Operator evolution crucial for describing photonic states, measurement dynamics.

Many-Body Physics

Time-dependent operators describe interacting systems, correlation functions.

Quantum Measurement Theory

Clarifies measurement as interaction affecting operator properties over time.

Advantages and Limitations

Advantages

Clear separation of dynamics; useful for symmetrical systems. Simplifies treatment of constants of motion. Natural framework for quantum field theory.

Limitations

Less intuitive for state evolution visualization. Operator complexity can increase with time. Not always simplest for computational methods.

Contextual Use

Preferred in theoretical analysis; Schrödinger picture favored in numerical simulations.

Examples

Simple Harmonic Oscillator

Operators \( a, a^\dagger \) evolve as \( a_H(t) = a e^{-i\omega t} \). Demonstrates periodic operator dynamics.

Spin-1/2 System

Pauli matrices evolve under magnetic field Hamiltonian. Time-dependent spin operators describe precession.

Free Particle Momentum Operator

Momentum operator commutes with free particle Hamiltonian; remains constant in Heisenberg picture.

Example: Harmonic Oscillator annihilation operatora_H(t) = e^{iHt/\hbar} a e^{-iHt/\hbar} = a e^{-i\omega t}with Hamiltonian H = \hbar \omega (a^\dagger a + \frac{1}{2})

Summary

Heisenberg picture: time evolution encoded in operators via unitary conjugation. State vectors static; observables evolve. Provides complementary view to Schrödinger picture; essential in advanced quantum theory. Enables direct analysis of observable dynamics and symmetries.

References

  • J. J. Sakurai, Modern Quantum Mechanics, Addison-Wesley, 1994, pp. 45-78.
  • P. A. M. Dirac, The Principles of Quantum Mechanics, Oxford University Press, 1958, pp. 60-85.
  • W. Heisenberg, “Über quantentheoretische Umdeutung kinematischer und mechanischer Beziehungen,” Zeitschrift für Physik, vol. 33, no. 1, 1925, pp. 879-893.
  • L. E. Ballentine, Quantum Mechanics: A Modern Development, World Scientific, 1998, pp. 112-138.
  • R. Shankar, Principles of Quantum Mechanics, Springer, 1994, pp. 210-245.
!main_footer!