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SU(3) phase operators: some solutions and properties. Hubert de Guise Lakehead University. Collaborators:. Luis Sanchez-Soto Andrei Klimov. Summary. Polar decomposition : can be easily generalized but many “free parameters”
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SU(3) phase operators:some solutions and properties Hubert de Guise Lakehead University
Collaborators: Luis Sanchez-Soto Andrei Klimov
Summary • Polar decomposition: • can be easily generalized but many “free parameters” • Normally yields non-commuting phase operators • Complementarity: • cannot be easily generalized but no “free parameters” • Normally yields commuting phase operators
The origin: the classical harmonic oscillator Classical harmonic oscillator: Use: Quantize:
Two approaches • write operator in polar form: • think of as the exponential of a hermitian phase operator
Two approaches • write operator in polar form: • think of as the exponential of a hermitian phase operator • Use complementarity condition:
What they have in common • Look at rather than
What they have in common • Look at rather than • is assumed unitary: is hermitian
What they have in common • Look at rather than • is assumed unitary: is hermitian • Must fix some “boundary” problems by hand
SU(2) phase operator mod(2j+1)
SU(2) phase operator mod(2j+1) Only one “boundary” condition
An example: j=1 -2=1mod(3)
An example: j=1 -2=1mod(3) -2=1mod(3)
A short course on su(3) • There are eight elements in su(3)
A short course on su(3) • There are eight elements in su(3) • There are now two relative phases
A short course on su(3) • There are eight elements in su(3) • There are now two relative phases • States are of the form
3-dimensional case NOT an su(3) system
Complementaritry The matrices form generalized discrete Weyl pairs, in the sense
Higher-dimensional cases • No commuting solutions • No complementarity
Infinite dimensional limit • The edges are infinitely far • One can find commuting solutions: the phase operator commute, and have common eigenstates of zero uncertainty
Summary • Polar decomposition: • can be easily generalized but many “free parameters” • Normally yields non-commuting phase operators • Complementarity: • cannot be easily generalized but no “free parameters” • Normally yields commuting phase operators