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04:47
@Slereah hm okay
well i will perhaps check out Moretti's suggestion "Varadarajan’s book 'The geometry of quantum theory'" to see what happens to such linear operators
 
6 hours later…
10:50
hi
i have some very interesting results connecting Lie theory, physics and Number theory (lemme finish)
theorem : for a quantum system to have periodic time evolution, the energy eigenvalues must be commensurable
proof: for periodicity, we have $e^{-iHt}=1$ at some $t$. for the energy value $E_n$, we have $e^{-iE_nt}=1$ at $t=\frac{2\pi a}{E_1}, a\in Z$. therefore, for all $e^{-iE_nt}$ to simultaneously be $1$ at some $t$, we require $\frac{2\pi}{E_n}a=\frac{2\pi}{E_m}b$, or $\frac{E_m}{E_n}=\frac{a}{b}$ which is a rational number
this means all $E_m$ and $E_n$ are commensurable
this idea is relevant in the quantum harmonic oscillator and the angular momentum generator
the converse of the theorem need not hold in infintie dimensional spaces. e.g. consider a Hamiltonian with eigenvalues : 0.1,0.01,0.001.....
this paper seems interesting: "Convergence of Dynamics on Inductive Systems of Banach Spaces" link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00023-024-01413-6
now we connect this to Lie theory. for a Lie group to be compact wrt a generator, we require $e^{-iAa}=1$. this means the compactness of a Lie group is related to the commensurability of the eigenvalues of a representation of the generator
"Many features of physical theories become really clear only in some limit- ing situation. Quite often, the limit is not just the limit of some parameters in a fixed framework, but the structure of the theory changes in the limit."

"The structural limits are essentially obtained via inductive-limit construc- tions for a sequence of Banach spaces that describe either states or observables of the approximating systems."
11:07
to check for commensurability, we can divide the generator by an unknown constant $a$ and assume that the resulting eigenvalues are rational
then we form the characteristic polynomial of $\frac{A}{a}$ and look for rational solutions using p-adic numbers
so this connects compactness of a Lie group to p-adic numbers
i am finished
let me know if u think this is correct
11:31
and ur thoughts on these results
 
2 hours later…
13:56
@RyderRude The two results that you are so eagerly putting forth, the former applies equally to classical systems and is inside Goldstein, and the latter is trivially obvious once you consider the former. They are necessarily correct. Not sure if it is necessary to require $\mathrm e^{-\mathrm iAa}=1$ though.
14:15
@naturallyInconsistent how can it apply to classical mech when classical mech always has a continuum of energy values? the theorem requires commensurable eigenvalues.
@naturallyInconsistent $e^{-iAa}=1$ implies that the subgroup generated by $A$ is compact... and then i relate this to commensurability of eigenvalues, which is related to rational solutions of characteristic polynomial, which relates to number theory
@RyderRude Goldstein was considering celestial mechanics. For periodic orbits to be closed the periods of x-y must be commensurate. Same with for $\vartheta$ and $\varphi$ orbits.
@naturallyInconsistent it makes sense i guess but it's unrelated to energy
That's just because it is in the classical context. It is perfectly analogous.
yes... there seems to be a general relation between commensurability and periodic phenomena
There is no extra insight that you are bringing in, once a person understands what Goldstein is saying, what you are saying is obvious.
14:19
it is still connecting Lie theory to number theory
it brings the structure of rational numbers to continuum mechanics
It is literally a trivial observation and noted in the literature. What "deep" are you talking about?
I suppose you are entitled to have a little celebration whenever you learn about a connection between topics.
i think, after further investigation, this can bring deep results by relating group theory/matrix theory/operator theory to number theory
i was wondering if this particular connection has already been made
Goldstein's observation seems to be relatively limited in scope, as they merely relate periodic trajectories to commensurability
to have classical trajectories, u have to solve differential equations. maybe Goldstein's idea can relate differential equations to number theory
but this idea relates operator spectra and group theory to number theory, which has more scope
 
5 hours later…
19:11
Hi! I have a question about the phase space, and the wigner function.
In the classical case, if a system is represented with a point in phase space, then what do we represent an ensemble with? collection of points, which translates to a volume in the N-dimensional phase space ?
Feb 10, 2023 at 8:31, by ACuriousMind
@imbAF You're making this again more complicated than it needs to be: The ensemble is represented by a probability density $\rho(q,p;t)$ on phase space. Equilibrium is $\partial_t \rho(q,p;t) = 0$ (and $\partial_t\rho = \{H,\rho\}$ due to Liouville's theorem)
we've literally talked about this over a year ago :P
Yes I do remember the lengthy discussion but I have forgotten some stuff
And I was hoping you would reference that :P
ACM I will ask 2 questions, but they will sound stupid because of the way I will construct them
So sorry in advance
I make a distinction between probability distribution and pdf. With an exampe. The normal distribution f(x) is a function bell-shaped, and for every x value we have a corresponding f(x) value. In terms of probability , when we consider a continuous variable , the probability for a specific x is zero. The pdf, mathematically speaking is a corresponding value of f(x) for a given x. And the totality of all f(x) for a range of the x, is the probability distribution.
I am describing this, for a reason
But first I want to hear your opinion on what I just said
It's not what I am aiming to understand, but I believe it's necessary later
I don't really understand what distinction you're trying to make here
for example
for the normal distribution
"pdf" means "probability distribution function", it's just a function that defines a probability distribution
19:19
the pdf is the function itself f(x). While the probability distribution are the corresponding values for all the x values of the considered interval
the only context in which I would consider the two not synonymous would be in a rigorous math context where there may be distributions (e.g. the $\delta$-distribution) that are not functions
What I am trying to get is that, in order for you to draw the bell shaped curve
you need, mathematically speaking, to calculate the f(x) value for every x in a considered interval of values
would you agree with that
And also would it be correct to say that the ensemble is represented by a probability distribution?
@imbAF That's not how people use these terms. If you want to draw a distinction here, here's how the terms are formally used: A probability distribution $P$ on a space $X$ is a measure on $X$ obeying certain condition, i.e. it's a function on the $\sigma$-algebra of measurable sets on $X$
A probability distribution function is a function $f$ on $X$ that induces such a measure $P_f$ by $P_f(S) = \int_S f$, i.e. assigning to each measurable set the integral of the function over that set
Ok
importantly the abstract distribution does not have values "for every x", or rather, in the usual case, those values are just all 0
19:25
yes
in the continuous case
I'm not quite sure what you're trying to get at, but you should definitely not use the "distribution vs. function" terminology for that
Ok
is this accurate
And also would it be correct to say that the ensemble is represented by a probability distribution?
An ensemble is more or less defined by a particular probability distribution, yes
Ok. Now the issue I am having is with the wigner function
So I need to be as accurate as I possibly can, so that you can see where my problem is
the Wigner function is not a probability distribution (function)
19:27
I know
I will get at what I am trying to say
First of all the physical setup I am considering, for simplicity, is an electromagnetic mode in some setup i.e waveguide, resonator or w/e else
In my lecture the following is said:
The WF is a quasi-probability distribution function used in quantum mechanics, to represent the quantum state in phase space.
In wikipedia:
WF is the analogues of the Liouville density.
I don't know if you have any issues with these two definitions
no, it's fine
(although I don't think the name "Liouville density" for the phase space density is particularly common)
My problem is the following. In the classical case, a state of a system is a point. And we also have the probability density which is an ensemble.
In quantum mechanics, the role of the pdf is played by the WF
and from my poor understanding, at the same time the WF distribution in phase space, is the representative of the state in it
Does that make sense?
Do you understand what I am trying to get at, when comparing both pictures ?
I don't know what you mean by the WF distribution being "the repesentative of the state in it", but I think I see your underlying confusion
in classic case state = point in phase space
pdf = ensemble
in qm state=????
quasi pdf = wf
if the classical theory has as the "real" state points in phase space and then these probability densities that are probabilities over them, and the quantum theory produces also such quasi-probability densities, then what's the quantum equivalent to the point in phase space?
the answer is: there is none, this is precisely the fundamental difference between classical mechanics and quantum mechanics
19:35
So, you can't represent the state with something in phase space?
in quantum mechanics, position and momentum cannot be simultaneously definite, so there is no quantum equivalent to the single point in phase space
Yes
@imbAF you are representing the quantum state by something in phase space - by the Wigner function!
note that even a pure QM state results in a Wigner function that isn't a $\delta$, i.e. a pure QM state does not correspond to a point, but also already to a distribution
But the wigner function can to a certain extend play the role of pdf
do you see the non consistency ?
it's not an inconsistency
it's just the fundamental difference between classical mechanics and quantum mechanics
19:37
How not? the distribution in Classic mechanics is the result of considering an ensemble, while here not
Or does the uncertainty plays a role?
@imbAF that's not an inconsistency, that's just the way it is
Ok, so how would one represent an ensemble in the qm case?
@imbAF with a density matrix
in the phase space
with the Wigner function associated with that density matrix
quantum mechanics is fundamentally probabilistic: even the pure states result in probabilities for measurements, not definite knowledge, and so the difference between pure and mixed states is not the same as the difference between points and distributions in classical phase space
19:39
But what if the state of the system, the state itself is a mixed state , i.e thermal state
and additionally you consider an ensemble of the system
I don't know what you mean "additionally"
when you declare the system to be in a mixed state, that's your ensemble
Oh...
e.g. the quantum canonical ensemble declares the system to be in the state $\mathrm{e}^{-\beta H}$
anologous to the classical probability density of the canonical ensemble being $\mathrm{e}^{-\beta E(x,p)}$
as we initially discussed, the ensemble is the probability distribution, so in the quantum case, the ensemble is the mixed state
I see
I mean I am a bit rusty, compared to before but it's good that, cuz it makes me think more
So in the qm case a state and ensemble both are represented by the WG, in difference to classic where a state is a point and an ensemble a pdf
is that correct?
yes
(assuming WG means Wigner function ;) )
19:50
yes
Ok so my 2nd question is regarding the integration of the corresponding pdfs and their meanings. What I mean is
if you were to integrate the pdf, in the classical case, over some region in phase space, the result you'd get, could be interpreted as the probability of the system being in one of the states in the integrated volume
or I remember it wrong?
that's correct
this interpretation obviously fails for the Wigner function because it has regions where it is negative
Yes, but that;s not the issue I am dealing with
if I can say it in a very caveman way
the state in QM, in phase space, has finite dimensions
because the WF represents it in phase space
I don't know what you mean by that
I mean
what's the "dimension" of a state?
19:55
I mean
this
that's the state in phase space
that's a graph of the Wigner function of a system with 1 spatial dimension yes
the graph of wigner function
in what can be considered as the phase space
cuz that's the whole point
we are abstract at this point
As you can see, for picture 1, the distribution is spread over a certain interval in each space (position and momentum)
which wouldn't be the case for the classical scenario, as you'd have a point
so there is no finite dimension of the state, in that case
in the context, as to how it's represented in the phase space
I still don't know what you mean by "dimension of the state"
forget dimension
I mean
then stop saying "dimension" :P
20:00
No wait,
I should
How do I explain that the state, represented with a WF, has a spread in phase space, it has a volume,
I mean, think of a state how it's represented in classic case and compare it to here
@imbAF well, just saying that is much better than talking about its dimension!
dimensions in the sense, that you can see the spread over an interval in x and p
that's what I mean
but I still feel we're comparing apples to oranges here: A classical state and a quantum state are, obviously, not the same thing
But I haven't reached my point
it's not that you have "a state" and you represent it once classically and once quantumly, the two notions of state are simply entirely different
20:03
And I am fine with that
@ACuriousMind Having this in mind. I know that integrating the WF for one of the conjugate variables, gives you the probability distribution of the other. Does this marginal probability distribution (if it's correct to say) of one of the conjugate variables, plays the role of the pdf, similar to the classical case? Which would mean, that integrating this marginal distribution over an interval, would give us something. And that something would be? How would you interpret the result of that integratio
@imbAF it's just the probability density to measure the variable you didn't integrate - if you just unpack the definitions, you'll find that for a state with position space wavefunction $\psi(x)$, you get $\int W(x,p)\mathrm{d}p = \lvert \psi(x)\rvert^2$
Yes
and if you would integrate the marginal distribution
of x, what do you get ?
Can you say something similar as to what I described above ?
Cuz when I integrated the pdf, the way I described the result was
oh, you mean the other way around - of course you just get $\int W(x,p)\mathrm{d}x = \lvert \psi(p)\rvert^2$, i.e. the momentum space probability density
20:12
I mean this
(where $\psi(p)$ is the Fourier transform of $\psi(x)$)
First of all, let's just write $w(x)=\int W(x,p)dp$ as the marginal distribution for x.
In the picture I sent, this marginal distribution would be the shadow case in the position axis
right?
yes (but be mindful that it's not literally the "shadow" of the 3d graph, it's just drawn in dark grey)
In the first graph
for simplicity
But we are getting to what I want to know
@ACuriousMind I get this part. And let's just write this probability density as w(x)
In the classical picture I said:
if you were to integrate the pdf, in the classical case, over some region in phase space, the result you'd get, could be interpreted as the probability of the system being in one of the states in the integrated volume
Now in the qm picture, where we consider w(x) as pdf, how do you interpret the integration over an interval in the position axis ? You cannot have 1 to 1 explanation with what I said for the classical case, because here we are talking about a single state, while in the classic case, we had an ensemble
Do you understand where I am trying to go with this?
no, because just from the fact that $w(x) = \lvert \psi(x)\rvert^2$, you should be able to figure out the interpretation yourself
20:18
If I have to
there is nothing novel here, this is the very elementary question of what the square of the wavefunction gives you
If I have to, then the integration of w(x) would give me the probability of the system having an x value in the range that I integrated it for
or no?
what does "having" mean?
quiantum mechanical systems don't "have" positions
being physically
with un uncertainty
since we cannot pin point position
no, you're being too vague
20:20
ok
spread of the wavefunction
I am not sure
what to say
there is an well-established meaning of what the square of the wavefunction gives you the probability density for
this has nothing to do with statistical mechanics or phase spaces or whatever else, it's what you should have learned and applied over and over again in basic QM
Yes
the probability of finding the system at an arbitrary region
exactly, finding, i.e. it's a probability for the result of a measurement
Yes
this is very importantly different from the probability of the system "being" there, since "being" implies that it would also have been there if the measurement had not taken place, and QM does not allow us to make such counterfactual statements easily
20:23
I cannot see the distinction
if there's a probability of the system being found at a certain region, isn't that the same as it being there
In quantum mechanics, you're not allowed to talk about a system "having" a position or momentum outside of the context of a measurement
Why?it sounds deterministic ?
what exactly the ontological status of a particle is when no measurement is being performed - if it has a definite position and we don't know it or if it doesn't have one - is a matter of your quantum interpretation
the mere formalism alone does not know a definite quantity like "the position of the particle" outside of the context of a measurement and so you need to avoid language that implies there is (or commit to an interpretation that allows you to speak in that way)
I see. Well that's quite the detail
@imbAF the technical term for the assumption that definite positions exist when we're not looking is realist, not determinist, and this issue is at the heart of much-discussed things like Bell's theorem, which is why I'm insisting on getting the phrasing right here
20:29
Ok I will keep this interaction in mind
I need to be more precise with the way I say things
But
You do see the distinction in the interpretation when integrating the pdf in the classical case and in the qm case for a single state
right ?
sure; again, that's just a manifestation of the difference between classical and quantum mechanics
Sure
what if the state of the system in qm would be mixed one
nothing changes
really?
really.
20:31
Ok, that's quite different than in the classical case
I was thinking something like this:
"if you were to integrate the pdf, in the classical case, over some region in phase space, the result you'd get, could be interpreted as the probability of the system being in one of the states in the integrated volume"
for when the state in qm is a mixed one
But you say no
indeed and again - that's because of the fundamental difference that in QM even a pure state isn't a point
Yes
so talking about the probability to be in "one of the states" in QM doesn't make any sense to begin with
This is what I was trying to get at
:P
the pure state is already probabilistic - going to the mixed state doesn't change that, you're just adding and additional "source" of probability, but the interpretations of the quantum mechanical probability distributions don't change - they're still probability distributions for the results of measurements
20:35
Ok and finally, in the simple case, that we were considering, of a single state. By integrating over w(x) you can make claims about the probable position of finding the system. And can you say anything about the momentum, or nothing at all?
@ACuriousMind RIIIIGHT. This makes sense
But if the system considered is an EM mode, how can I understand position?
the field is spread over space
and I am pretty sure we are not talking about the mode value at some position
but the mode's position
how ?
how to imagine assigning position to a field? the same way you'd do for a particle in some region of space
there is no position
so amplitude of the mode then?
the quadratures of optical phase space are the real and imaginary parts of the complex amplitude, not position and momentum
Ok but again what are we getting when we integrate w(x) if not position ?
the quadratures of optical phase space?
you're getting a probability amplitude for the other quadrature
it's not a particularly meaningful quantity
20:41
wait
I said integration of w(x) and not w(x,p). I acquire w(x) as $w(x)=\int w(x,p)dp$. So I already did this
@ACuriousMind when I got w(x)
yes, so this would be the probability density for measuring $x$
But you can then, integrate w(x) (the gray colored shadow in the pictures)
it's just that $x$ isn't a particularly meaningful quantity :P
ahaa
wtf, then what is the point?
the point of what?
20:43
of calculating something that has no sense or, no physical interpretation?
I don't know, why are you calculating it?
cuz it's a pdf, and that's what you do
if a quantum optics text shows interest in this function, I'd expect it to also explain what it's gonna use it for
All this for something that can't be interpreted in some way
@imbAF I have never felt the need to compute a marginal distribution in optical phase space :P
20:45
I mean, in the classical case, the integrating of the pdf, has, and correct me if I am wrong, a meaning and interpretation, which I described above and you agreed
here the marginal w(x) distribution
is of no use
so what?
shit happens
though I'm really not an expert in quantum optics, there might be a specific use for this function, but at least there isn't a straightforward physical interpretation of it
But then, doesn't it mean that
the WF in phase space
the representation of a state
doesn't really, in the end, give us anything of value
I say this because
you really should stop saying "phase space" when you mean "optical phase space" :P
We started with the WF, and we ended up with these marginal distributions
Sorry
ops
optical phase space
the classical phase space of positions and momenta is very different in its meaning from the optical phase space, even if both look the same mathematically
and yes, I'd agree, there's plenty of situations where the optical phase space picture isn't particularly useful
20:49
then the WF is not useful in this case, because we started with it in the optical phase space, and we ended up talking about marginal distributions, which physically mean nothing
or perhaps one can make position synonymous with amplitude of the field and momentum with phase
which is what takes place in my lecture
though idk how accurate that is
to do so
I mean, that's not entirely true, for instance you can draw pretty pictures about the Wigner function of a coherent state vs. that of a number eigenstate etc.
I know you know this because you were in here asking about those pictures a while back :P
Yes
but that's nothing of value
ok, I just have to accept that
@ACuriousMind xD
some people find that kind of visualization useful
If I consider the electromagnetic field a superposition of modes, in which case the state of the field is a tensor product of the states of all the modes
can I assign a WF to the state of the field
I don't understand the question - what do you think the state that you compute a Wigner function for in the optical phase space is?
oh, you mean if you don't restrict to a single wavelength
20:53
yes
if you remember I did describe the setup
in the beginning
exactly because I would ask this question in the end
no, then there's no useful optical phase space, since you'd have countably many different $x$ and $p$
So, the optical phase space is useful for when we talk about single modes
in whatever state the mode might be
And regarding the quadrature ($\hat{X_1}$, $\hat{X_2}$) some of the commentary in my lecture:
1. They represent amplitude and phase of a quantum state (I assume in optical phase space).
2. Correspond to two oscillations of 90 degree phase difference.
3. Describe the amplitude and phase of $E(\vec r,t)$.
4. Play the role of position and momentum
you agree with these statements ?
I agree, but especially for point 4 I would caution against reading this too strictly - "play the role of" does not mean "are", it's just about the mathematical equivalence to position and momentum in ordinary phase space
Ok, so if I were to have the WF as a function of the quadratures
then can I have a meaningful interpretation of the integration of one of the marginal distibutions?
didn't I just say that there is no straightforward interpretation?
21:02
Yes
I thought one could
so why would my opinion change :P
if I were to consider the quadratures
@ACuriousMind Ok
I'll leave it at that
I thank you for your time. I learned quite a lot from this discussion and I am more clear with my thoughts
I was guessing stuff all the time

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