English

Quantal time asymmetry: mathematical foundation and physical interpretation

Quantum Physics 2008-11-26 v1

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 τ=Γ\tau=\frac{\hbar}{\Gamma}, where τ\tau is the lifetime of the decaying state and Γ\Gamma the width of the resonance, one has to go beyond the Hilbert space and beyond the Schwartz-Rigged Hilbert Space ΦHΦ×\Phi\subset\mathcal{H}\subset\Phi^\times of the Dirac formalism. One has to distinguish between prepared states, using a space Φ\mathcalH\Phi_-\subset\mat hcal{H}, and detected observables, using a space Φ+H\Phi_+\subset\mathcal{H}, 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 Φ+\Phi_+ and Φ\Phi_- are Hardy spaces of the upper and lower semiplane, respectively. Applying this axiom to the relativistic case for the variable \s=pμpμ\s=p_\mu p^\mu leads to semigroup transformations into the forward light cone (Einstein causality) and a precise definition of resonance mass and width.

Keywords

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

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:23:37.290Z