Wick ordering of creation and annihilation operators is of fundamental importance for computing averages and correlations in quantum field theory and, by extension, in the HudsonParthasarathy theory of quantum stochastic processes, quantum mechanics, stochastic processes, and probability. This book develops the unified combinatorial framework behind these examples, starting with the simplest mathematically, and working up to the Fock space setting for quantum fields. Emphasizing ideas from combinatorics such as the role of lattice of partitions for multiple stochastic integrals by WallstromRota and combinatorial species by Joyal, it presents insights coming from quantum probability. It also introduces a 'field calculus' which acts as a succinct alternative to standard Feynman diagrams and formulates quantum field theory (cumulant moments, DysonSchwinger equation, tree expansions, 1-particle irreducibility) in this language. Featuring many worked examples, the book is aimed at mathematical physicists, quantum field theorists, and probabilists, including graduate and advanced undergraduate students.
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Product Details
Weight: 620g
Dimensions: 155 x 234mm
Publication Date: 12 Apr 2018
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781108416764
About Joachim KupschJohn Gough
John Gough is Professor of mathematical and theoretical physics at Aberystwyth University Wales. He works in the field of quantum probability and open systems especially quantum Markovian models that can be described in terms of the HudsonParthasarathy quantum stochastic calculus. His more recent work has been on the general theory of networks of quantum Markovian input-output and their applications to quantum feedback control. Joachim Kupsch is Professor Emeritus of theoretical physics at the Technische Universität Kaiserslautern Germany. His research has focused on scattering theory relativistic S-matrix theory and infinite-dimensional analysis applied to quantum field theory. His publications have examined canonical transformations fermionic integration and superanalysis. His later work looks at open systems and decoherence and he coauthored a book on the subject in 2003.