- Gupta-Bleuler formalism
In
quantum field theory , the Gupta-Bleuler formalism is a way of quantizing theelectromagnetic field . The formulation is due to theoretical physicistSuraj N. Gupta andKonrad Bleuler .Let's start with a single
photon first. A basis of the one photon vector space (we'll explain why it's not aHilbert space below) is given by theeigenstate s |k,εμ> where k, the 4-momentum is null (k2=0) and the k0 component, the energy, is positive and εμ is the unitpolarization vector and the index μ ranges from 0 to 3. So, k is uniquely determined by the spatial momentum . Using thebra-ket notation , we equip this space with asesquilinear form defined by:
where the factor is to implement
Lorentz covariance . We are using the +−−−metric signature here. However, this sesquilinear form gives positive norms for spatial polarizations but negative norms for timelike polarizations. Negative probabilities are unphysical. Not to mention a physical photon only has two transverse polarizations, not four.If we include gauge covariance, we realize a photon can have three possible polarizations (two transverse and one
longitudinal (i.e. parallel to the 4-momentum)). This is given by the restriction . However, the longitudinal component is merely unphysical gauge. While it would be nice to define a stricter restriction than the one given above which only leaves us with the two transverse components, it's easy to check that this can't be defined in aLorentz covariant manner because what is transverse in one frame of reference isn't transverse anymore in another.To resolve this difficulty, first look at the subspace with three polarizations. The sesquilinear form restricted to it is merely
semidefinite , which is better than indefinite.In addition, the subspace with zero norm turns out to be none other than the gauge degrees of freedom. So, define the physicalHilbert space to be thequotient space of the three polarization subspace by its zero norm subspace. This space has apositive definite form, making it a true Hilbert space.This technique can be similarly extended to the bosonic
Fock space of multiparticle photons. Using the standard trick of adjoint creation andannihilation operator s, but with this quotient trick, we come up with thefree field vector potential operator valued distribution A satisfying:
with the condition
:
for physical states |χ> and |ψ> in the Fock space (it is understood that physical states are really equivalence classes of states which differ by a state of zero norm).
It should be emphasised that this is not the same thing as
:
Note that if O is any gauge invariant operator,
:
does not depend upon the choice of the representatives of the equivalence classes, and so, this quantity is well-defined.
This is not true for nongauge-invariant operators in general because the
Lorenz gauge still leaves us with residual gauge degrees of freedom.In an interacting theory of
quantum electrodynamics , the Lorenz gauge condition still applies, but A no longer satisfies the free wave equation.See also
*
BRST formalism ,quantum gauge theory ,quantum electrodynamics * S. Gupta, Proc. Phys. Soc. v. A63, nr.267, p.681-691, 1950
* K. Bleuler, Helv.Phys.Acta, v.23, rn.5, p.567-586, 1950
External links
* [http://daarb.narod.ru/qed-eng.html On quantization of electromagnetic field]
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