Non-Hermitian interaction representation and its use in relativistic quantum mechanics (1702.08493v2)
Abstract: In quantum mechanics the unitary evolution is most often described in a pre-selected Hilbert space ${\cal H}{(textbook)}$ in which, due to the Stone theorem, the Schr\"odinger-picture Hamiltonian is self-adjoint, $\mathfrak{h}=\mathfrak{h}\dagger$. Via a unitary transformation one can also translate the theory (i.e., usually, differential evolution equations) to the Heisenberg or interaction picture. Once we decide to treat ${\cal H}{(textbook)}$ as a "Dyson's" non-unitary one-to-one image of a new, auxiliary Hilbert space ${\cal H}{(friendlier)}$, the corresponding (i.e., presumably, user-friendlier) avatar $H= \Omega{-1}\mathfrak{h}\Omega$ of the Schr\"odinger-picture Hamiltonian keeps describing the same physics but becomes non-self-adjoint in ${\cal H}{(friendlier)}$. Of course, a completion of the theory requires a Dyson-proposed reinstallation of the Stone theorem in ${\cal H}{(friendlier)}$. This is routinely achieved by an ad hoc redefinition of the inner product, i.e., formally, by a move to the third Hilbert representation space ${\cal H}{(standard)}$. In some detail we show that in the non-stationary Dyson-inspired Heisenberg- and interaction-picture settings the resulting description of the unitary evolution becomes technically more complicated. As an illustration we describe an application to the Klein-Gordon equation with a space- and time-dependent mass term.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.