Commutators
The Uncertainty Principle
Connections to Standard Notation
Implications
Commutators and the uncertainty principle are central to quantum mechanics. Using quaternions in these roles has already been established by others (Horwitz and Biedenharn, Annals of Physics, 157:432, 1984). The first proof of the uncertainty principle I saw relied solely on the properties of complex numbers, not on physics! In this notebook I will repeat that analysis, showing how commutators and an uncertainty principle arise from the properties of quaternions (or their subfield the complex numbers).
Any quaternion can be written in a polar form.
This is identical to Euler's formula except that the imaginary unit vector i is replaced by the normalized 3-vector. The two are equivalent if j = k = 0. Any quaternion could be the limit of the sum of an infinite number of other quaternions expressed in a polar form. I hope to show that such a quaternion mathematically behaves like the wave function of quantum mechanics, even if the notation is different.
To simplify things, use a normalized quaternion, so that q* q = 1. Collect the normalized 3-vector together with I = V/(V* V)^.5.
The angle s/(q* q)^.5 is a real number. Any real number can be viewed as the product of two other real numbers. This seemingly irrelevant observation lends much of the flexibility seen in quantum mechanics :-) Here is the rewrite of q.
The unit vector I could also be viewed as the product of two quaternions.For classical quantum mechanics, this additional complication is unnecessary. It may be required for relativistic quantum mechanics, so this should be kept in mind.
A point of clarification on notation:the same letter will be used 4 distinct ways.There are operators, A hat, which act on a quaternion wave function by multiplying by a quaternion, capital A. If the operator A hat is an observable, then it generates a real number, (a, 0), which commutes with all quaternions, whatever their form. There is also a variable with respect to a component of a quaternion, a_i, that can be used to form a differential operator.
Define a linear operator A hat that multiplies q by the quaternion A.
If the operator A hat is an observable, then the quaternion A is a real number, (a, 0). This will commute with any quaternion. This equation is functionally equivalent to an eigenvalue equation, with A hat as an eigenvector of q and (a, 0) as the eigenvalue. However, all of the components of this equation are quaternions, not separate structures such as an operator belonging to a group and a vector. This might make a subtle but significant difference for the mathematical structure of the theory, a point that will not be investigated here.
Define a linear operator B hat that multiplies q by the quaternion B. If B hat is an observable, then this operator can be defined in terms of the scalar variable a.
Operators A and B are linear.
Calculate the commutator [A, B], which involves the scalar a and the derivative with respect to a.
The commutator acting on a quaternion is equivalent to multiplying that quaternion by the normalized 3-vector I.
Use these operators to construct things that behave like averages (expectation values) and standard deviations.
The scalar a--generated by the observable operator A hat acting on the normalized q--can be calculated using the Euclidean product.
It is hard to shuffle quaternions or their operators around. Real scalars commute with any quaternion and are their own conjugates. Operators that generate such scalars can move around. Look at ways to express the expectation value of A.
Define a new operator A' based on A whose expectation value is always zero.
Define the square of the operator in a way designed to link up with the standard deviation.
An identical set of tools can be defined for B.
In the section on bracket notation, the Schwarz inequality for quaternions was shown.
The Schwarz inequality applies to quaternions, not quaternion operators. If the operators A' and B' are surrounded on both sides by q and q*, then they will behave like scalars.
The left-hand side of the Schwarz inequality can be rearranged to form a commutator.
The right-hand side of the Schwarz inequality can be rearranged to form the square of the standard deviation operators.
Plug both of these back into the Schwarz inequality, stripping the primes and the q's which appear on both sides along the way.
This is the uncertainty principle for complementary observable operators.
This quaternion exercise can be mapped to the standard notation used in physics
One subtlety to note is that a quaternion operator is anti-Hermitian only if the scalar is zero. This is probably the case for classical quantum mechanics, but quantum field theory may require full quaternion operators. The proof of the uncertainty principle shown here is independent of this issue. I do not yet understand the consequence of this point.
To get to the position-momentum uncertainty equation, make these specific maps
The product of the squares of the standard deviation for position and momentum in the x-direction has a lower bound equal to half the expectation value of the commutator of those operators. The proof is in the structure of quaternions.
There are many interpretations of the uncertainty principle. I come away with two strange observations. First, the uncertainty principle is about quaternions of the form q = Exp[a b I]. With this insight, one can see by inspection that a plane wave Exp[((Et - P.X)/hbar I], or wave packets that are superpositions of plane waves, will have four uncertainty relations, one for the scalar Et and another three for the three-part scalar P.X. This perspective should be easy to generalize.
Second, the uncertainty principle and gravity are related to the same mathematical properties. This proof of the uncertainty relation involved the Schwarz inequality. It is fairly straightforward to convert that inequality to the triangle inequality. Finding geodesics with quaternions involves the triangle inequality. If a complete theory of gravity can be built from these geodesics (it hasn't yet been done :-) then the inequalities may open connections where none appeared before.
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