Klein–Gordon equation

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The Klein–Gordon equation (Klein–Fock–Gordon equation or sometimes Klein–Gordon–Fock equation) is a relativistic wave equation, related to the Schrödinger equation. It is second-order in space and time and manifestly Lorentz-covariant. It is a differential equation version of the relativistic energy–momentum relation .

Statement

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The Klein–Gordon equation can be written in different ways. The equation itself usually refers to the position space form, where it can be written in terms of separated space and time components   or by combining them into a four-vector   By Fourier transforming the field into momentum space, the solution is usually written in terms of a superposition of plane waves whose energy and momentum obey the energy-momentum dispersion relation from special relativity. Here, the Klein–Gordon equation is given for both of the two common metric signature conventions  

Klein–Gordon equation in normal units with metric signature  
Position space

 

Fourier transformation

 

Momentum space

 

Separated time and space      
Four-vector form      

Here,   is the wave operator and   is the Laplace operator. The speed of light   and Planck constant   are often seen to clutter the equations, so they are therefore often expressed in natural units where  

Klein–Gordon equation in natural units with metric signature  
Position space

 

Fourier transformation

 

Momentum space

 

Separated

time and space

     
Four-vector form      

Unlike the Schrödinger equation, the Klein–Gordon equation admits two values of ω for each k: One positive and one negative. Only by separating out the positive and negative frequency parts does one obtain an equation describing a relativistic wavefunction. For the time-independent case, the Klein–Gordon equation becomes

 

which is formally the same as the homogeneous screened Poisson equation. In addition, the Klein–Gordon equation can also be represented as:[1]

 

where, the momentum operator is given as:

 

Relevance

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The equation is to be understood first as a classical continuous scalar field equation that can be quantized. The quantization process introduces then a quantum field whose quanta are spinless particles. Its theoretical relevance is similar to that of the Dirac equation.[2] The equation solutions include a scalar or pseudoscalar field[clarification needed]. In the realm of particle physics electromagnetic interactions can be incorporated, forming the topic of scalar electrodynamics, the practical utility for particles like pions is limited.[nb 1][3] There is a second version of the equation for a complex scalar field that is theoretically important being the equation of the Higgs Boson. In the realm of condensed matter it can be used for many approximations of quasi-particles without spin.[4][5][nb 2]

The equation can be put into the form of a Schrödinger equation. In this form it is expressed as two coupled differential equations, each of first order in time.[6] The solutions have two components, reflecting the charge degree of freedom in relativity.[6][7] It admits a conserved quantity, but this is not positive definite. The wave function cannot therefore be interpreted as a probability amplitude. The conserved quantity is instead interpreted as electric charge, and the norm squared of the wave function is interpreted as a charge density. The equation describes all spinless particles with positive, negative, and zero charge.

Any solution of the free Dirac equation is, for each of its four components, a solution of the free Klein–Gordon equation. Despite historically it was invented as a single particle equation the Klein–Gordon equation cannot form the basis of a consistent quantum relativistic one-particle theory, any relativistic theory implies creation and annihilation of particles beyond a certain energy threshold.[8] [nb 3]

Solution for free particle

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Here, the Klein–Gordon equation in natural units,  , with the metric signature   is solved by Fourier transformation. Inserting the Fourier transformation and using orthogonality of the complex exponentials gives the dispersion relation This restricts the momenta to those that lie on shell, giving positive and negative energy solutions For a new set of constants  , the solution then becomes It is common to handle the positive and negative energy solutions by separating out the negative energies and work only with positive  : In the last step,   was renamed. Now we can perform the  -integration, picking up the positive frequency part from the delta function only:

 

This is commonly taken as a general solution to the free Klein–Gordon equation. Note that because the initial Fourier transformation contained Lorentz invariant quantities like   only, the last expression is also a Lorentz invariant solution to the Klein–Gordon equation. If one does not require Lorentz invariance, one can absorb the  -factor into the coefficients   and  .

History

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The equation was named after the physicists Oskar Klein[9] and Walter Gordon,[10] who in 1926 proposed that it describes relativistic electrons. Vladimir Fock also discovered the equation independently in 1926 slightly after Klein's work,[11] in that Klein's paper was received on 28 April 1926, Fock's paper was received on 30 July 1926 and Gordon's paper on 29 September 1926. Other authors making similar claims in that same year include Johann Kudar, Théophile de Donder and Frans-H. van den Dungen, and Louis de Broglie. Although it turned out that modeling the electron's spin required the Dirac equation, the Klein–Gordon equation correctly describes the spinless relativistic composite particles, like the pion. On 4 July 2012, European Organization for Nuclear Research CERN announced the discovery of the Higgs boson. Since the Higgs boson is a spin-zero particle, it is the first observed ostensibly elementary particle to be described by the Klein–Gordon equation. Further experimentation and analysis is required to discern whether the Higgs boson observed is that of the Standard Model or a more exotic, possibly composite, form.

The Klein–Gordon equation was first considered as a quantum wave equation by Erwin Schrödinger in his search for an equation describing de Broglie waves. The equation is found in his notebooks from late 1925, and he appears to have prepared a manuscript applying it to the hydrogen atom. Yet, because it fails to take into account the electron's spin, the equation predicts the hydrogen atom's fine structure incorrectly, including overestimating the overall magnitude of the splitting pattern by a factor of 4n/2n − 1 for the n-th energy level. The Dirac equation relativistic spectrum is, however, easily recovered if the orbital-momentum quantum number l is replaced by total angular-momentum quantum number j.[12] In January 1926, Schrödinger submitted for publication instead his equation, a non-relativistic approximation that predicts the Bohr energy levels of hydrogen without fine structure.

In 1926, soon after the Schrödinger equation was introduced, Vladimir Fock wrote an article about its generalization for the case of magnetic fields, where forces were dependent on velocity, and independently derived this equation. Both Klein and Fock used Kaluza and Klein's method. Fock also determined the gauge theory for the wave equation. The Klein–Gordon equation for a free particle has a simple plane-wave solution.

Derivation

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The non-relativistic equation for the energy of a free particle is

 

By quantizing this, we get the non-relativistic Schrödinger equation for a free particle:

 

where

 

is the momentum operator ( being the del operator), and

 

is the energy operator.

The Schrödinger equation suffers from not being relativistically invariant, meaning that it is inconsistent with special relativity.

It is natural to try to use the identity from special relativity describing the energy:

 

Then, just inserting the quantum-mechanical operators for momentum and energy yields the equation

 

The square root of a differential operator can be defined with the help of Fourier transformations, but due to the asymmetry of space and time derivatives, Dirac found it impossible to include external electromagnetic fields in a relativistically invariant way. So he looked for another equation that can be modified in order to describe the action of electromagnetic forces. In addition, this equation, as it stands, is nonlocal (see also Introduction to nonlocal equations).

Klein and Gordon instead began with the square of the above identity, i.e.

 

which, when quantized, gives

 

which simplifies to

 

Rearranging terms yields

 

Since all reference to imaginary numbers has been eliminated from this equation, it can be applied to fields that are real-valued, as well as those that have complex values.

Rewriting the first two terms using the inverse of the Minkowski metric diag(−c2, 1, 1, 1), and writing the Einstein summation convention explicitly we get

 

Thus the Klein–Gordon equation can be written in a covariant notation. This often means an abbreviation in the form of

 

where

 

and

 

This operator is called the wave operator.

Today this form is interpreted as the relativistic field equation for spin-0 particles.[6] Furthermore, any component of any solution to the free Dirac equation (for a spin-1/2 particle) is automatically a solution to the free Klein–Gordon equation. This generalizes to particles of any spin due to the Bargmann–Wigner equations. Furthermore, in quantum field theory, every component of every quantum field must satisfy the free Klein–Gordon equation,[13] making the equation a generic expression of quantum fields.

Klein–Gordon equation in a potential

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The Klein–Gordon equation can be generalized to describe a field in some potential   as[14]

 

Then the Klein–Gordon equation is the case  .

Another common choice of potential which arises in interacting theories is the   potential for a real scalar field  

 

Higgs sector

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The pure Higgs boson sector of the Standard model is modelled by a Klein–Gordon field with a potential, denoted   for this section. The Standard model is a gauge theory and so while the field transforms trivially under the Lorentz group, it transforms as a  -valued vector under the action of the   part of the gauge group. Therefore, while it is a vector field  , it is still referred to as a scalar field, as scalar describes its transformation (formally, representation) under the Lorentz group. This is also discussed below in the scalar chromodynamics section.

The Higgs field is modelled by a potential

 ,

which can be viewed as a generalization of the   potential, but has an important difference: it has a circle of minima. This observation is an important one in the theory of spontaneous symmetry breaking in the Standard model.

Conserved U(1) current

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The Klein–Gordon equation (and action) for a complex field   admits a   symmetry. That is, under the transformations

 
 

the Klein–Gordon equation is invariant, as is the action (see below). By Noether's theorem for fields, corresponding to this symmetry there is a current   defined as

 

which satisfies the conservation equation   The form of the conserved current can be derived systematically by applying Noether's theorem to the   symmetry. We will not do so here, but simply verify that this current is conserved.

From the Klein–Gordon equation for a complex field   of mass  , written in covariant notation and mostly plus signature,

 

and its complex conjugate

 

Multiplying by the left respectively by   and   (and omitting for brevity the explicit   dependence),

 
 

Subtracting the former from the latter, we obtain

 

or in index notation,

 

Applying this to the derivative of the current   one finds

 

This   symmetry is a global symmetry, but it can also be gauged to create a local or gauge symmetry: see below scalar QED. The name of gauge symmetry is somewhat misleading: it is really a redundancy, while the global symmetry is a genuine symmetry.

Lagrangian formulation

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The Klein–Gordon equation can also be derived by a variational method, arising as the Euler–Lagrange equation of the action

 

In natural units, with signature mostly minus, the actions take the simple form

Klein–Gordon action for a real scalar field

 

for a real scalar field of mass  , and

Klein–Gordon action for a complex scalar field

 

for a complex scalar field of mass  .

Applying the formula for the stress–energy tensor to the Lagrangian density (the quantity inside the integral), we can derive the stress–energy tensor of the scalar field. It is

 

and in natural units,

 

By integration of the time–time component T00 over all space, one may show that both the positive- and negative-frequency plane-wave solutions can be physically associated with particles with positive energy. This is not the case for the Dirac equation and its energy–momentum tensor.[6]

The stress energy tensor is the set of conserved currents corresponding to the invariance of the Klein–Gordon equation under space-time translations  . Therefore, each component is conserved, that is,   (this holds only on-shell, that is, when the Klein–Gordon equations are satisfied). It follows that the integral of   over space is a conserved quantity for each  . These have the physical interpretation of total energy for   and total momentum for   with  .

Non-relativistic limit

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Classical field

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Taking the non-relativistic limit (vc) of a classical Klein–Gordon field ψ(x, t) begins with the ansatz factoring the oscillatory rest mass energy term,

 

Defining the kinetic energy  ,   in the non-relativistic limit  , and hence

 

Applying this yields the non-relativistic limit of the second time derivative of  ,

 
 

Substituting into the free Klein–Gordon equation,  , yields

 

which (by dividing out the exponential and subtracting the mass term) simplifies to

 

This is a classical Schrödinger field.

Quantum field

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The analogous limit of a quantum Klein–Gordon field is complicated by the non-commutativity of the field operator. In the limit vc, the creation and annihilation operators decouple and behave as independent quantum Schrödinger fields.

Scalar electrodynamics

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There is a way to make the complex Klein–Gordon field   interact with electromagnetism in a gauge-invariant way. We can replace the (partial) derivative with the gauge-covariant derivative. Under a local   gauge transformation, the fields transform as

 
 

where   is a function of spacetime, thus making it a local transformation, as opposed to a constant over all of spacetime, which would be a global   transformation. A subtle point is that global transformations can arise as local ones, when the function   is taken to be a constant function.

A well-formulated theory should be invariant under such transformations. Precisely, this means that the equations of motion and action (see below) are invariant. To achieve this, ordinary derivatives   must be replaced by gauge-covariant derivatives  , defined as

 
 

where the 4-potential or gauge field   transforms under a gauge transformation   as

 .

With these definitions, the covariant derivative transforms as

 

In natural units, the Klein–Gordon equation therefore becomes

 

Since an ungauged   symmetry is only present in complex Klein–Gordon theory, this coupling and promotion to a gauged   symmetry is compatible only with complex Klein–Gordon theory and not real Klein–Gordon theory.

In natural units and mostly minus signature we have

Scalar QED action

 

where   is known as the Maxwell tensor, field strength or curvature depending on viewpoint.

This theory is often known as scalar quantum electrodynamics or scalar QED, although all aspects we've discussed here are classical.

Scalar chromodynamics

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It is possible to extend this to a non-abelian gauge theory with a gauge group  , where we couple the scalar Klein–Gordon action to a Yang–Mills Lagrangian. Here, the field is actually vector-valued, but is still described as a scalar field: the scalar describes its transformation under space-time transformations, but not its transformation under the action of the gauge group.

For concreteness we fix   to be  , the special unitary group for some  . Under a gauge transformation  , which can be described as a function   the scalar field   transforms as a   vector

 
 .

The covariant derivative is

 
 

where the gauge field or connection transforms as

 

This field can be seen as a matrix valued field which acts on the vector space  .

Finally defining the chromomagnetic field strength or curvature,

 

we can define the action.

Scalar QCD action

 

Klein–Gordon on curved spacetime

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In general relativity, we include the effect of gravity by replacing partial derivatives with covariant derivatives, and the Klein–Gordon equation becomes (in the mostly pluses signature)[15]

 

or equivalently,

 

where gαβ is the inverse of the metric tensor that is the gravitational potential field, g is the determinant of the metric tensor, μ is the covariant derivative, and Γσμν is the Christoffel symbol that is the gravitational force field.

With natural units this becomes

Klein–Gordon equation on curved spacetime for a real scalar field

 

This also admits an action formulation on a spacetime (Lorentzian) manifold  . Using abstract index notation and in mostly plus signature this is

Klein–Gordon action on curved spacetime for a real scalar field

 

or

Klein–Gordon action on curved spacetime for a complex scalar field

 

See also

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Remarks

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  1. ^ common spinless particles like the pions are unstable and also experience the strong interaction (with unknown interaction term in the Hamiltonian)
  2. ^ The Sine-Gordon equation is an important example of an Integrable system
  3. ^ To reconcile quantum mechanics with special relativity a multiple particle theory and therefore quantum field theory is needed, in which the Klein–Gordon equation reemerges as the equation obeyed by the components of all [clarification needed] free quantum fields.
    Steven Weinberg makes a point about this. He leaves out the treatment of relativistic wave mechanics altogether in his otherwise complete introduction to modern applications of quantum mechanics, explaining: "It seems to me that the way this is usually presented in books on quantum mechanics is profoundly misleading." (From the preface in Lectures on Quantum Mechanics, referring to treatments of the Dirac equation in its original flavor.)
    Others, like Walter Greiner does in his series on theoretical physics, give a full account of the historical development and view of relativistic quantum mechanics before they get to the modern interpretation, with the rationale that it is highly desirable or even necessary from a pedagogical point of view to take the long route. In quantum field theory, the solutions of the free (noninteracting) versions of the original equations still play a role. They are needed to build the Hilbert space (Fock space) and to express quantum fields by using complete sets (spanning sets of Hilbert space) of wave functions.

Notes

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  1. ^ Greiner, Walter (2013-06-29). Relativistic Quantum Mechanics: Wave Equations. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-3-662-03425-5.
  2. ^ Gross 1993.
  3. ^ Greiner & Müller 1994.
  4. ^ Bandyopadhyay, A. K.; Ray, P. C.; Gopalan, Venkatraman (2006). "An approach to the Klein–Gordon equation for a dynamic study in ferroelectric materials". Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter. 18 (16): 4093–4099. doi:10.1088/0953-8984/18/16/016. PMID 21690761.
  5. ^ Varró, Sándor (2014). "A new class of exact solutions of the Klein–Gordon equation of a charged particle interacting with an electromagnetic plane wave in a medium". Laser Physics Letters. 11: 016001. arXiv:1306.0097. doi:10.1088/1612-2011/11/1/016001.
  6. ^ a b c d Greiner 2000, Ch. 1.
  7. ^ Feshbach & Villars 1958.
  8. ^ Weinberg, Steven. "Ch. I & II". The Quantum theory of fields I.
  9. ^ O. Klein, ZS. f. Phys. 37, 895, 1926
  10. ^ W. Gordon, Z. Phys., 40 (1926–1927) pp. 117–133
  11. ^ V. Fock, ZS. f. Phys.39, 226, 1926
  12. ^ See Itzykson, C.; Zuber, J.-B. (1985). Quantum Field Theory. McGraw-Hill. pp. 73–74. ISBN 0-07-032071-3. Eq. 2.87 is identical to eq. 2.86, except that it features j instead of l.
  13. ^ Weinberg 2002, Ch. 5.
  14. ^ Tong, David (2006). "Lectures on Quantum Field Theory, Lecture 1, Section 1.1.1". Retrieved 2012-01-16.
  15. ^ Fulling, S. A. (1996). Aspects of Quantum Field Theory in Curved Space–Time. Cambridge University Press. p. 117. ISBN 0-07-066353-X.

References

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