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Dissipation in Quantum Mechanics. The Harmonic Oscillator

455

Citations

11

References

1960

Year

TLDR

A quantum‑mechanical framework for dissipative systems, relevant to cavity radiation fields, is required. The study adopts a second method that models the interaction between a lossless harmonic oscillator and a loss mechanism. By assuming a loss mechanism with many densely‑spaced energy states, the authors derive a differential equation for the oscillator coordinate operator that resembles a driven damped harmonic oscillator, with the driving term representing the loss mechanism. The solution demonstrates that this driving term produces thermal fluctuations, preserves proper commutation relations, and yields zero‑point fluctuations, with the results expressed only through the dissipation constant and temperature.

Abstract

The need for a quantum-mechanical formalism for systems with dissipation which is applicable to the radiation field of a cavity is discussed. Two methods that have been used in this connection are described. The first, which starts with the classical Newtonian equation of motion for a damped oscillator and applies the conventional formal quantization techniques, leads to an exact solution; but subsequent discussion shows that this method is invalid, the results being unacceptable from a quantum-mechanical viewpoint. The second method, which considers the interaction of two systems, the lossless oscillator and the loss mechanism, is adopted in the present article. No special model is used for the loss mechanism, but this mechanism is assumed to have a large number of densely-spaced energy states.The approximations with respect to the loss mechanism that underlie the concept of dissipation are discussed. These approximations are then applied to the analysis, and a differential equation for a coordinate operator of the harmonic oscillator is obtained which has the formal appearance of the Newtonian equation of motion for a driven damped harmonic oscillator, the driving term being an operator referring to the loss mechanism. The presence of the driving term is responsible for the difference between the present theory and that of the first method mentioned above. A solution of the differential equation for the coordinate operator is given explicitly. An examination of the physical significance of the solution shows that the driving term is responsible not only for the thermal fluctuations which are due to the loss mechanism, but also for the proper commutation relationship of the conjugate coordinates of the oscillator and for its zero-point fluctuations.A generalization of the solution to provide for a classical driving force and coupled atomic systems is given. The results are then restated in a form that refers to the loss mechanism only through the two parameters by which it is usually described---the dissipation constant and the temperature.

References

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