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In physics, the Heisenberg picture is a formulation of quantum mechanics in which the operators (observables and others) incorporate a dependency on time, but the state vectors are time-independent. It stands in contrast to the Schrödinger picture in which the operators are constant and the states evolve in time. The two models only differ by a basis change with respect to time-dependency, which is the difference between active and passive transformation. The Heisenberg picture is the formulation of matrix mechanics in an arbitrary basis, in which the Hamiltonian is not necessarily diagonal.
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In the Heisenberg picture of quantum mechanics the state vector, , does not change with time, and an observable A satisfies
where H is the Hamiltonian and [·,·] is the commutator of A and H. In some sense, the Heisenberg picture is more natural and fundamental than the Schrödinger picture, especially for relativistic theories. Lorentz invariance is manifest in the Heisenberg picture.
This approach has a similarity to classical physics: by replacing the commutator above by the Poisson bracket, the Heisenberg equation becomes an equation in Hamiltonian mechanics.
By the Stone-von Neumann theorem, the Heisenberg picture and the Schrödinger picture are unitarily equivalent.
The expectation value of an observable A, which is a Hermitian linear operator, for a given state is given by:
In general where is the time evolution operator. For an elementary derivation, we will take Hamiltonian to commute with itself at different times, and further, be independent of time, in which case it simplifies to
where H is the Hamiltonian and ħ is Planck's constant divided by . It follows that
With the definition,
it follows:
(differentiating according to the product rule) noting that is the time derivative of A(t), the transformed operator, not the one we started with.
The last passage is valid since : commutes with H. From this results the Heisenberg equation of motion:
where [X, Y] is the commutator of two operators and defined as [X, Y] := XY − YX.
Now, using the operator identity
one obtains for an observable A:
Due to the relationship between Poisson Bracket and Commutators this relation also holds for classical mechanics.
note: the relationship between Poisson Bracket and Commutators is
in classical mechanics
so you can convince yourself that A(t) equation is the Taylor expansion on t=0
Obviously, commutator relations are quite different than in the Schrödinger picture because of the time dependency of operators. For example, consider the operators and . The time evolution of those operators depends on the Hamiltonian of the system. For the one-dimensional harmonic oscillator
The evolution of the position and momentum operators is given by:
By differentiating both equations one more time and solving them with proper initial conditions
leads to:
Now, we are ready to directly compute the commutator relations:
For , one simply gets the well-known canonical commutation relations.