- KMS state
The
statistical mechanics ofquantum field theory (seethermal quantum field theory ) at theinverse temperature β andchemical potential μ can be characterized by a condition called the KMS condition.Preliminaries
The simplest case to study is that of a finite-dimensional
Hilbert space , in which one does not encounter complications likephase transition s orspontaneous symmetry breaking . Thedensity matrix of athermal state is given by:
where "H" is the
Hamiltonian operator and "N" is theparticle number operator (or charge operator, if we wish to be more general) and:
is the
partition function . We assume that "N" commutes with "H," or in other words, that particle number is conserved.In the
Heisenberg picture , the density matrix does not change with time, but the operators are time-dependent. In particular, translating an operator "A" by τ into the future gives the operator:.
A combination of time translation with an
internal symmetry "rotation" gives the more general:
A bit of algebraic manipulation shows that the
expected value s:
for any two operators "A" and "B" and any real τ (we are working with finite-dimensional Hilbert spaces after all). We used that fact that the density matrix commutes with any function of ("H"-μ"N") and that the trace is cyclic.
As hinted at earlier, with infinite dimensional Hilbert spaces, we run into a lot of problems like phase transitions, spontaneous symmetry breaking, operators which aren't
trace class , divergent partition functions, etc..The
complex function s of "z", converges in the complex strip whereas converges in the complex stripif we make certain technical assumptions like the spectrum of "H"-μ"N" is bounded from below and its density doesn't increase exponentially (seeHagedorn temperature ). If the functions converge, then they have to beanalytic within the strip they are defined over as their derivatives,:
and
:
exist.
However, we can still define a KMS state as any state satisfying
:
with and being analytic functions of "z" within their domain strips.
and are the boundary distribution values of the analytic functions in question.
This gives the right large volume, large particle number thermodynamic limit. If there is a phase transition or spontaneous symmetry breaking, the KMS state isn't unique.
The density matrix of a KMS state is related to
unitary transformation s involving time translations (or time translations and aninternal symmetry transformation for nonzero chemical potentials) via theTomita-Takesaki theory .
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