Quantal time asymmetry: mathematical foundation and physical interpretation
Abstract
For a quantum theory that includes exponentially decaying states and Breit-Wigner resonances, which are related to each other by the lifetime-width relation , where is the lifetime of the decaying state and the width of the resonance, one has to go beyond the Hilbert space and beyond the Schwartz-Rigged Hilbert Space of the Dirac formalism. One has to distinguish between prepared states, using a space , and detected observables, using a space , where refers to analyticity of the energy wave function in the lower (upper) complex energy semiplane. This differentiation is also justified by causality: A state needs to be prepared first, before an observable can be measured in it. The axiom that will lead to the lifetime-width relation is that and are Hardy spaces of the upper and lower semiplane, respectively. Applying this axiom to the relativistic case for the variable leads to semigroup transformations into the forward light cone (Einstein causality) and a precise definition of resonance mass and width.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0803.3233,
title = {Quantal time asymmetry: mathematical foundation and physical interpretation},
author = {A. Bohm and P. Bryant and Y. Sato},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0803.3233},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
Plenary talk at the 5th International Symposium on Quantum Theory and Symmetries, July 22-28, 2007, Valladolid, Spain