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Real and complex scalar fields. Klein-Gordon equation. Plane-wave (normal mode) solutions. Generation and anihilation operators. Hamiltonian. Commutation relations.[ edit | edit source ]
The equations of motion for a real scalar field
ϕ
{\displaystyle \phi }
can be obtained from the following lagrangian densities
L
=
1
2
∂
μ
ϕ
∂
μ
ϕ
−
1
2
M
2
ϕ
2
=
−
1
2
ϕ
(
∂
μ
∂
μ
+
M
2
)
ϕ
{\displaystyle {\begin{matrix}{\mathcal {L}}&=&{\frac {1}{2}}\partial _{\mu }\phi \partial ^{\mu }\phi -{\frac {1}{2}}M^{2}\phi ^{2}\\&=&-{\frac {1}{2}}\phi \left(\partial _{\mu }\partial ^{\mu }+M^{2}\right)\phi \end{matrix}}}
and the result is
(
◻
+
M
2
)
ϕ
(
x
)
=
0
{\displaystyle \left(\Box +M^{2}\right)\phi (x)=0}
.
The complex scalar field
ϕ
{\displaystyle \phi }
can be considered as a sum of two scalar fields:
ϕ
1
{\displaystyle \phi _{1}}
and
ϕ
2
{\displaystyle \phi _{2}}
,
ϕ
=
(
ϕ
1
+
i
ϕ
2
)
/
2
{\displaystyle \phi =\left(\phi _{1}+i\phi _{2}\right)/{\sqrt {2}}}
The Langrangian density of a complex scalar field is
L
=
(
∂
μ
ϕ
)
+
∂
μ
ϕ
−
M
2
ϕ
+
ϕ
{\displaystyle {\mathcal {L}}=(\partial _{\mu }\phi )^{+}\partial ^{\mu }\phi -M^{2}\phi ^{+}\phi }
Klein-Gordon equation is precisely the equation of motion for the spin-0 particle as derived above:
(
◻
+
M
2
)
ϕ
(
x
)
=
0
{\displaystyle \left(\Box +M^{2}\right)\phi (x)=0}
The Dirac equation is given by:
(
i
γ
μ
∂
μ
−
m
)
ψ
(
x
)
=
0
{\displaystyle \left(i\gamma ^{\mu }\partial _{\mu }-m\right)\psi \left(x\right)=0}
where
ψ
{\displaystyle \psi }
is a four-dimensional Dirac spinor. The
γ
{\displaystyle \gamma }
matrices obey the following anticommutation relation (known as the Dirac algebra):
{
γ
μ
,
γ
ν
}
≡
γ
μ
γ
ν
+
γ
ν
γ
μ
=
2
g
μ
ν
×
1
n
×
n
{\displaystyle \left\{\gamma ^{\mu },\gamma ^{\nu }\right\}\equiv \gamma ^{\mu }\gamma ^{\nu }+\gamma ^{\nu }\gamma ^{\mu }=2g^{\mu \nu }\times 1_{n\times 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
{\displaystyle 4\times 4}
.
Plane-wave (normal mode) solutions. Generation and annihilation operators. Hamiltonian. Anticommutation relations.[ edit | edit source ]
Massive spin 1 field. Additional (Lorentz) condition to eliminate spin-0.[ edit | edit source ]
Massless spin 1 field. Gauge invariance. Quantization within Coulomb (radiation) gauge.[ edit | edit source ]
Spin-statistics theorem. Discrete symmetries (C,P,T). CPT theorem.[ edit | edit source ]