- Exchange symmetry
Exchange symmetry is derived from a fundamental
postulate ofquantum statistics , which states that no observablephysical quantity should change after exchanging twoidentical particles . It states that because all observables are proportional to for a system ofidentical particles , thewave function must either remain the same or change sign upon such an exchange.Because the exchange of two identical particles is mathematically equivalent to the
rotation of each particle by 360 degrees, the symmetric nature of the wave function depends on the particle's spin after therotation operator is applied to it. Integer spin particles do not change the sign of their wave function upon a 360 degree rotation—therefore the sign of the wave function of the entire system does not change. Semi-integer spin particles change the sign of their wave function upon a 360 degree rotation (see more inspin-statistics theorem ).Particles for which the wave function does not change sign upon exchange are called
bosons , or particles with asymmetric wave function. The particles for which the wave function of the system changes sign are calledfermion s, or particles with anantisymmetric wave function.Fermions therefore obey different statistics (called
Fermi-Dirac statistics ) than bosons (which obeyBose-Einstein statistics ). One of the consequences of Fermi-Dirac statistics is theexclusion principle for fermions—no two fermions can share the same quantum state (in other words, the wave function of two fermions in the same state is zero). This in turn results indegeneracy pressure for fermions—the strong resistance of fermions to compression into smaller volume. This resistance gives rise to the “stiffness” or “rigidity” of ordinary atomic matter (as atoms contain electrons which are fermions).ee also
*
Exchange interaction
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.