Fock space
Fok space
In the simplest and most often used case, a Hilbert space consisting of infinite sequences of the form
$$ \tag{1 } F = \{ f _ {0} , f _ {1} \dots f _ {n} ,\dots \} , $$
where
$$ f _ {0} \in \mathbf C ,\ \ f _ {1} \in L _ {2} ( \mathbf R ^ \nu , d ^ \nu x),\ \ f _ {n} \in L _ {2} ^ {s} (( \mathbf R ^ \nu ) ^ {n} ,\ ( d ^ \nu x) ^ {n} ), $$
or
$$ f _ {n} \in L _ {2} ^ {a} (( \mathbf R ^ \nu ) ^ {n} ,\ ( d ^ \nu x) ^ {n} ),\ \ n = 2, 3 \dots \ \ \nu = 1, 2 \dots $$
in which
$$ L _ {2} ^ {s} (( \mathbf R ^ \nu ) ^ {n} , ( d ^ \nu x) ^ {n} ) \ \ ( \textrm{ or } \ \ L _ {2} ^ {a} (( \mathbf R ^ \nu ) ^ {n} , ( d ^ \nu x) ^ {n} )) $$
denotes the Hilbert space of symmetric (respectively, anti-symmetric) functions in $ n $ variables $ x _ {1} \dots x _ {n} \in \mathbf R ^ \nu $, $ n = 2, 3 ,\dots $. The scalar product of two sequences $ F $ and $ G $ of the form (1) is equal to
$$ ( F, G) = \ f _ {0} \overline{g}\; _ {0} + \sum _ {n = 1 } ^ \infty ( f _ {n} , g _ {n} ) _ {L _ {2} (( \mathbf R ^ \nu ) ^ {n} , ( d ^ \nu x) ^ {n} ) } . $$
In the case when the sequences $ F $ consist of symmetric functions, one speaks of a symmetric (or boson) Fock space, and in the case of sequences of anti-symmetric functions the Fock space is called anti-symmetric (or fermion). Fock spaces were first introduced by V.A. Fock [V.A. Fok] [1] in this simplest case.
In the general case of an arbitrary Hilbert space $ H $, the Fock space $ \Gamma ^ {s} ( H) $( or $ \Gamma ^ {a} ( H) $) constructed over $ H $ is the symmetrized (or anti-symmetrized) tensor exponential of $ H $, that is, the space
$$ \tag{2 } \Gamma ^ \alpha ( H) \equiv \ \mathop{\rm Exp} _ \alpha H = \oplus \sum _ {n = 0 } ^ \infty ( H ^ {\otimes n } ) _ \alpha ,\ \ \alpha = s, a, $$
where the symbol $ \oplus $ denotes the direct orthogonal sum of Hilbert spaces, $ ( H ^ {\otimes 0 } ) _ \alpha = \mathbf C ^ {1} $, $ ( H ^ {\otimes 1 } ) _ \alpha = H $, and $ ( H ^ {\otimes n } ) _ \alpha $, $ n > 1 $, is for $ \alpha = s $ the symmetrized or for $ \alpha = a $ the anti-symmetrized $ n $- th tensor power of $ H $. In the case $ H = L _ {2} ( \mathbf R ^ \nu , d ^ \nu x) $ definition (2) is equivalent to the definition of a Fock space given at the beginning of the article, if one identifies the spaces $ L _ {2} ^ \alpha (( \mathbf R ^ \nu ) ^ {n} , ( d ^ \nu x) ^ {n} ) $ and $ ( L _ {2} ( \mathbf R ^ \nu , d ^ \nu x)) _ \alpha ^ {\otimes n } $ so that the tensor product
$$ ( f _ {1} \otimes \dots \otimes f _ {n} ) _ \alpha \ \in ( L _ {2} ( \mathbf R ^ \nu , d ^ \nu x)) _ \alpha ^ {\otimes n } $$
of the sequence of functions
$$ f _ {1} \dots f _ {n} \in \ L _ {2} ( \mathbf R ^ \nu , d ^ \nu x) $$
corresponds to the function
$$ \tag{3 } { \frac{1}{\sqrt n! } } \sum _ \sigma ( \pm 1) ^ { \mathop{\rm sign} \sigma } \prod _ {i = 1 } ^ { n } f ( x _ {\sigma ( i) } ) \in \ L _ {2} ^ \alpha (( \mathbf R ^ \nu ) ^ \nu , ( d ^ \nu x) ^ {n} ), $$
where the summation is taken over all permutations $ \sigma $ of the indices $ 1 \dots n $; $ \mathop{\rm sign} \sigma $ is the sign of $ \sigma $, and the sign $ + 1 $ or $ - 1 $ in (3) corresponds to the symmetric or anti-symmetric case.
In quantum mechanics, the Fock spaces $ \Gamma ^ {s} ( H) $ or $ \Gamma ^ {a} ( H) $ serve as the state spaces of quantum-mechanical systems consisting of an arbitrary (but finite) number of identical particles such that the state space of each separate particle is $ H $. Here, depending on which of the Fock spaces — the symmetric $ \Gamma ^ {s} ( H) $ or the anti-symmetric $ \Gamma ^ {a} ( H) $— describes this system, the particles themselves are called bosons or fermions, respectively. For every $ n = 1, 2 \dots $ the subspace $ \Gamma _ {n} ^ \alpha ( H) \equiv ( H ^ {\otimes n } ) _ \alpha \subset \Gamma ^ \alpha ( H) $, $ \alpha = s, a $, is called the $ n $- particle subspace: The vectors in it describe those states in which there are exactly $ n $ particles; the unit vector $ \Omega \in ( H ^ {\otimes 0 } ) _ \alpha \subset \Gamma ^ \alpha ( H) $, $ \alpha = s, a $( in the notation of (1): $ \Omega = \{ 1, 0 \dots 0 ,\dots \} $), called the vacuum vector, describes the state of the system in which there are no particles.
In studying linear operators acting on the Fock spaces $ \Gamma ^ {s} ( H) $ and $ \Gamma ^ {a} ( H) $, one often applies a special formalism called the method of second quantization. It is based on introducing two families of linear operators on each of the spaces $ \Gamma ^ \alpha ( H) $: the so-called annihilation operators $ \{ {a _ \alpha ( f ) } : {f \in H } \} $, $ \alpha = s, a $, and the family of operators adjoint to them $ \{ {a _ \alpha ^ {*} ( f ) } : {f \in H } \} $, called creation operators. The annihilation operators are given as the closures of the operators acting on the vectors
$$ \tag{4 } ( f _ {1} \otimes \dots \otimes f _ {n} ) _ \alpha \ \in \Gamma ^ \alpha ( H),\ \ \alpha = s, a, $$
where $ ( f _ {1} \otimes \dots \otimes f _ {n} ) _ \alpha $ are the symmetrized (for $ \alpha = s $) or anti-symmetrized $ ( \alpha = a) $ tensor products of the sequences of vectors $ f _ {1} \dots f _ {n} \in H $, $ n = 1, 2 \dots $ according to the formulas
$$ a _ \alpha ( f ) ( f _ {1} \otimes \dots \otimes f _ {n} ) _ \alpha = \ \sum _ {i = 1 } ^ { n } (- 1) ^ {g _ \alpha ( i) } ( f _ {i} , f ) \times $$
$$ \times ( f _ {1} \otimes \dots \otimes f _ {i - 1 } \otimes f _ {i + 1 } \otimes \dots \otimes f _ {n} ) _ \alpha , $$
$$ \alpha = s , a,\ a _ \alpha ( f ) \Omega = 0, $$
where $ g _ {s} ( i) = 0 $ and $ g _ {a} ( i) = i - 1 $. The creation operators $ a _ \alpha ^ {*} ( f ) $ act on the vectors (3) according to the formulas
$$ a _ \alpha ^ {*} ( f ) ( f _ {1} \otimes \dots \otimes f _ {n} ) _ \alpha = \ ( f \otimes f _ {1} \otimes \dots \otimes f _ {n} ) _ \alpha , $$
$$ a _ \alpha ^ {*} ( f ) \Omega = f. $$
Here for every $ f \in H $, $ a _ \alpha ( f ) $: $ \Gamma _ {n} ^ \alpha ( H) \rightarrow \Gamma _ {n - 1 } ^ \alpha ( H) $, $ n = 1, 2 \dots $ and $ a _ \alpha ^ {*} ( f ): \Gamma _ {n} ^ \alpha ( H) \rightarrow \Gamma _ {n + 1 } ^ {a} ( H) $, $ n = 0, 1 \dots $ that is, states of the physical system with $ n $ particles are mapped by the annihilation operators $ a _ \alpha ( f ) $ to states with $ ( n - 1) $ particles, and by the creation operators $ a _ \alpha ^ {*} ( f ) $ to states with $ ( n + 1) $ particles. Creation and annihilation operators occur in many cases of a similar system as "generators" in the collection of all operators (bounded and unbounded) acting on Fock spaces. The representation of such operators in the form of a sum (finite or infinite) of operators of the form
$$ a _ \alpha ^ {*} ( f _ {1} ) \dots a _ \alpha ^ {*} ( f _ {n} ) a _ \alpha ( g _ {1} ) \dots a _ \alpha ( g _ {m} ) $$
$$ ( f _ {1} \dots f _ {n} , g _ {1} \dots g _ {m} \in H,\ n, m = 0, 1 ,\dots) $$
— the so-called normal form of an operator — and methods of dealing with operators based on such a representation (computing functions of them, reducing operators to the "simplest" form, various examples of approximation, etc.) also constitute the content of the formalism of second quantization mentioned above (see [2]).
In the case of a symmetric Fock space over a real space $ H $ there is a canonical isomorphism between that space and the Hilbert space of square-integrable functionals in a Gaussian linear random process $ \{ {\xi _ {f} } : {f \in H } \} $ defined on $ H $ such that
$$ M _ {\xi _ {f} } = 0,\ \ M ( \xi _ {f _ {1} } \xi _ {f _ {2} } ) = \ ( f _ {1} , f _ {2} ) _ {H} ,\ \ f, f _ {1} , f _ {2} \in H. $$
This isomorphism, called the Itô–Segal–Wick mapping, is uniquely determined by the condition that for any orthonormal system of elements $ f _ {1} \dots f _ {k} \in H $ and any collection of non-negative integers $ n _ {1} \dots n _ {k} $ the vector
$$ f _ {1} \otimes \dots \otimes f _ {1} \otimes \dots \otimes f _ {k} \otimes \dots \otimes f _ {k} \in \ \Gamma ^ {s} ( H) $$
( $ n _ {1} $ times $ f _ {1} \dots n _ {k} $ times $ f _ {k} $) is mapped to the functional
$$ \prod _ {i = 1 } ^ { k } H _ {n _ {i} } ( \xi _ {f _ {i} } ), $$
where the $ H _ {n} ( \cdot ) $, $ n = 0, 1 \dots $ are the Hermite polynomials with leading coefficient one (see [3], [4]).
References
[1] | V. Fock, Z. Phys. , 75 (1932) pp. 622–647 |
[2] | F.A. Berezin, "The method of second quantization" , Acad. Press (1966) (Translated from Russian) (Revised (augmented) second edition: Kluwer, 1989) |
[3] | R.L. Dobrushin, R.A. Minlos, "Polynomials in linear random functions" Russian Math. Surveys , 32 : 2 (1971) pp. 71–127 Uspekhi Mat. Nauk , 32 : 2 (1977) pp. 67–122 |
[4] | B. Simon, "The Euclidean (quantum) field theory" , Princeton Univ. Press (1974) |
Comments
The number operator $ \sum _ {f} a _ \alpha ^ {*} ( f ) a _ \alpha ( f ) $, $ \alpha = a , s $, where $ f $ runs through an orthonormal basis of $ H $, has as eigen spaces with eigen value $ n $ the spaces $ \Gamma _ {n} ^ \alpha ( H) $. It is interpreted as giving the number of particles.
Fock spaces also play an important role in stochastic integration (including fermionic integration), cf. Stochastic integral, and in white noise analysis.
References
[a1] | N.N. [N.N. Bogolyubov] Bogolubov, A.A. Logunov, I.T. Todorov, "Introduction to axiomatic quantum field theory" , Benjamin (1975) (Translated from Russian) |
[a2] | P.J.M. Bongaarts, "The mathematical structure of free quantum fields. Gaussian systems" E.A. de Kerf (ed.) H.G.J. Pijls (ed.) , Proc. Seminar. Mathematical structures in field theory , CWI, Amsterdam (1984–1986) pp. 1–50 |
Fock space. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Fock_space&oldid=13259