Quantum Field Theory/Quantization of free fields

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Spin 0 field

Real and complex scalar fields. Klein-Gordon equation. Plane-wave (normal mode) solutions. Generation and anihilation operators. Hamiltonian. Commutation relations.

Real and complex scalar fields.

The equations of motion for a real scalar field ϕ can be obtained from the following lagrangian densities

=12μϕμϕ12M2ϕ2=12ϕ(μμ+M2)ϕ

and the result is (+M2)ϕ(x)=0.

The complex scalar field ϕ can be considered as a sum of two scalar fields: ϕ1 and ϕ2, ϕ=(ϕ1+iϕ2)/2

The Langrangian density of a complex scalar field is

=(μϕ)+μϕM2ϕ+ϕ

Klein-Gordon equation

Klein-Gordon equation is precisely the equation of motion for the spin-0 particle as derived above: (+M2)ϕ(x)=0

Spin 1/2 field

Dirac equation

The Dirac equation is given by:

(iγμμm)ψ(x)=0

where ψ is a four-dimensional Dirac spinor. The γ matrices obey the following anticommutation relation (known as the Dirac algebra):

{γμ,γν}γμγν+γνγμ=2gμν×1n×n

Notice that the Dirac algebra does not define a priori how many dimensions the matrices should be. For a four-dimensional Minkowski space, however, it turns out that the matrices have to be at least 4×4.

Plane-wave (normal mode) solutions. Generation and annihilation operators. Hamiltonian. Anticommutation relations.

Spin 1 field

Massive spin 1 field. Additional (Lorentz) condition to eliminate spin-0.

Massless spin 1 field. Gauge invariance. Quantization within Coulomb (radiation) gauge.

Spin-statistics theorem. Discrete symmetries (C,P,T). CPT theorem.

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