This Quantum World/Feynman route/Free propagator: Difference between revisions

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Propagator for a free and stable particle

The propagator as a path integral

Suppose that we make m intermediate position measurements at fixed intervals of duration Δt. Each of these measurements is made with the help of an array of detectors monitoring n mutually disjoint regions Rk, k=1,,n. Under the conditions stipulated by Rule B, the [[../two slits|propagator]] B|A now equals the sum of amplitudes

k1=1nkm=1nB|RkmRk2|Rk1Rk1|A.

It is not hard to see what happens in the double limit Δt0 (which implies that m) and n. The multiple sum k1=1nkm=1n becomes an integral 𝒟𝒞 over continuous spacetime paths from A to B, and the amplitude B|RkmRk1|A becomes a complex-valued functional Z[𝒞:AB] — a complex function of continuous functions representing continuous spacetime paths from A to B:

B|A=𝒟𝒞Z[𝒞:AB]

The integral 𝒟𝒞 is not your standard Riemann integral abdxf(x), to which each infinitesimal interval dx makes a contribution proportional to the value that f(x) takes inside the interval, but a functional or path integral, to which each "bundle" of paths of infinitesimal width 𝒟𝒞 makes a contribution proportional to the value that Z[𝒞] takes inside the bundle.

As it stands, the path integral 𝒟𝒞 is just the idea of an idea. Appropriate evaluation methods have to be devised on a more or less case-by-case basis.

A free particle

Now pick any path 𝒞 from A to B, and then pick any infinitesimal segment d𝒞 of 𝒞. Label the start and end points of d𝒞 by inertial coordinates t,x,y,z and t+dt,x+dx,y+dy,z+dz, respectively. In the general case, the amplitude Z(d𝒞) will be a function of t,x,y,z and dt,dx,dy,dz. In the case of a free particle, Z(d𝒞) depends neither on the position of d𝒞 in spacetime (given by t,x,y,z) nor on the spacetime orientiaton of d𝒞 (given by the four-velocity (cdt/ds,dx/ds,dy/ds,dz/ds) but only on the proper time interval ds=dt2(dx2+dy2+dz2)/c2.

(Because its norm equals the speed of light, the four-velocity depends on three rather than four independent parameters. Together with ds, they contain the same information as the four independent numbers dt,dx,dy,dz.)

Thus for a free particle Z(d𝒞)=Z(ds). With this, the [[../two_slits#Why_product.3F|multiplicativity of successive propagators]] tells us that

jZ(dsj)=Z(jdsj)Z(𝒞ds)

It follows that there is a complex number z such that Z[𝒞]=ezs[𝒞:AB], where the line integral s[𝒞:AB]=𝒞ds gives the time that passes on a clock as it travels from A to B via 𝒞.

A free and stable particle

By integrating |B|A|2 (as a function of 𝐫B) over the whole of space, we obtain the probability of finding that a particle launched at the spacetime point tA,𝐫A still exists at the time tB. For a stable particle this probability equals 1:

d3rB|tB,𝐫B|tA,𝐫A|2=d3rB|𝒟𝒞ezs[𝒞:AB]|2=1

If you contemplate this equation with a calm heart and an open mind, you will notice that if the complex number z=a+ib had a real part a0, then the integral between the two equal signs would either blow up (a>0) or drop off (a<0) exponentially as a function of tB, due to the exponential factor eas[𝒞].

Meaning of mass

The propagator for a free and stable particle thus has a single "degree of freedom": it depends solely on the value of b. If proper time is measured in seconds, then b is measured in radians per second. We may think of eibs, with s a proper-time parametrization of 𝒞, as a clock carried by a particle that travels from A to B via 𝒞, provided we keep in mind that we are thinking of an aspect of the mathematical formalism of quantum mechanics rather than an aspect of the real world.

It is customary

  • to insert a minus (so the clock actually turns clockwise!): Z=eibs[𝒞],
  • to multiply by 2π (so that we may think of b as the rate at which the clock "ticks" — the number of cycles it completes each second): Z=ei2πbs[𝒞],
  • to divide by Planck's constant h (so that b is measured in energy units and called the rest energy of the particle): Z=ei(2π/h)bs[𝒞]=e(i/)bs[𝒞],
  • and to multiply by c2 (so that b is measured in mass units and called the particle's rest mass): Z=e(i/)bc2s[𝒞].

The purpose of using the same letter b everywhere is to emphasize that it denotes the same physical quantity, merely measured in different units. If we use natural units in which =c=1, rather than conventional ones, the identity of the various b's is immediately obvious.

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