Geometric quantum mechanics
β Scribed by Dorje C. Brody; Lane P. Hughston
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 547 KB
- Volume
- 38
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0393-0440
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The manifold of pure quantum states can be regarded as a complex projective space endowed with the unitary-invariant Fubini-Study metric. According to the principles of geometric quantum mechanics, the physical characteristics of a given quantum system can be represented by geometrical features that are preferentially identified in this complex manifold. Here we construct a number of examples of such features as they arise in the state spaces for spin 1 2 , spin 1, spin 3 2 and spin 2 systems, and for pairs of spin 1 2 systems. A study is then undertaken on the geometry of entangled states. A locally invariant measure is assigned to the degree of entanglement of a given state for a general multi-particle system, and the properties of this measure are analysed for the entangled states of a pair of spin 1 2 particles. With the specification of a quantum Hamiltonian, the resulting SchrΓΆdinger trajectories induce an isometry of the Fubini-Study manifold, and hence also an isometry of each of the energy surfaces generated by level values of the expectation of the Hamiltonian. For a generic quantum evolution, the corresponding Killing trajectory is quasiergodic on a toroidal subspace of the energy surface through the initial state. When a dynamical trajectory is lifted orthogonally to Hilbert space, it induces a geometric phase shift on the wave function. The uncertainty of an observable in a given state is the length of the gradient vector of the level surface of the expectation of the observable in that state, a fact that allows us to calculate higher order corrections to the Heisenberg relations. A general mixed state is determined by a probability density function on the state space, for which the associated first moment is the density matrix. The advantage of a general state is in its applicability in various attempts to go beyond the standard quantum theory, some of which admit a natural phase-space characterisation.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES