|
Identical particles, or indistinguishable particles, are particles that cannot be distinguished from one another, even in principle. Species of identical particles include elementary particles such as electrons, as well as composite microscopic particles such as atoms and molecules. There are two main categories of identical particles: bosons, which can share quantum states, and fermions, which are forbidden from sharing quantum states (this property of fermions is known as the Pauli exclusion principle.) Examples of bosons are photons, gluons, phonons, and helium-4 atoms. Examples of fermions are electrons, neutrinos, quarks, protons and neutrons, and helium-3 atoms. The fact that particles can be identical has important consequences in statistical mechanics. Calculations in statistical mechanics rely on probabilistic arguments, which are sensitive to whether or not the objects being studied are identical. As a result, identical particles exhibit markedly different statistical behavior from distinguishable particles. For example, the indistinguishability of particles has been proposed as a solution to Gibb's mixing paradox. Distinguishing between particles There are two ways in which one might distinguish between particles. The first method relies on differences in the particles' intrinsic physical properties, such as mass, electric charge, and spin. If differences exist, we can distinguish between the particles by measuring the relevant properties. However, it is an empirical fact that microscopic particles of the same species have completely equivalent physical properties. For instance, every electron in the universe has exactly the same electric charge; this is why we can speak of such a thing as "the charge of the electron". Even if the particles have equivalent physical properties, there remains a second method for distinguishing between particles, which is to track the trajectory of each particle. As long as we can measure the position of each particle with infinite precision (even when the particles collide), there would be no ambiguity about which particle is which. The problem with this approach is that it contradicts the principles of quantum mechanics. According to quantum theory, the particles do not possess definite positions during the periods between measurements. Instead, they are governed by wavefunctions that give the probability of finding a particle at each position. As time passes, the wavefunctions tend to spread out and overlap. Once this happens, it becomes impossible to determine, in a subsequent measurement, which of the particle positions correspond to those measured earlier. The particles are then said to be indistinguishable. Symmetrical and antisymmetrical states We will now make the above discussion concrete, using the formalism developed in the article on the mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics. For simplicity, consider a system composed of two identical particles. As the particles possess equivalent physical properties, their state vectors occupy mathematically identical Hilbert spaces. If we denote the Hilbert space of a single particle as H, then the Hilbert space of the combined system is formed by the tensor product . Let n denote a complete set of (discrete) quantum numbers for specifying single-particle states (for example, for the particle in a box problem we can take n to be the quantized wave vector of the wavefunction.) Suppose that one particle is in the state n1, and another is in the state n2. What is the quantum state of the system? We might guess that it is ang |n_2 ang which is simply the canonical way of constructing a basis for a tensor product space from the individual spaces. However, this expression implies that we can identify the particle with n1 as "particle 1" and the particle with n2 as "particle 2", which conflicts with the ideas about indistinguishability discussed earlier. Actually, it is an empirical fact that identical particles occupy special types of multi-particle states, called symmetric states and antisymmetric states. Symmetric states have the form ang equiv mbox imes igg( |n_1 ang |n_2 ang + |n_2 ang |n_1 ang igg) Antisymmetric states have the form ang equiv mbox imes igg( |n_1 ang |n_2 ang - |n_2 ang |n_1 ang igg) Note that if n1 and n2 are the same, our equation for the antisymmetric state gives the zero set, which cannot be a state vector as it cannot be normalized. In other words, in an antisymmetric state the particles cannot occupy the same single-particle states. This is known as the Pauli exclusion principle, and it is the fundamental reason behind the chemical properties of atoms and the stability of matter. Exchange symmetry The importance of symmetric and antisymmetric states is ultimately based on empirical evidence. It appears to be a fact of Nature that identical particles do not occupy states of a mixed symmetry, such as ang = mbox imes igg( |n_1 ang |n_2 ang + i |n_2 ang |n_1 ang igg) There is actually an exception to this rule, which we will discuss later. On the other hand, we can show that the symmetric and antisymmetric states are in a sense special, by examining a particular symmetry of the multiple-particle states known as exchange symmetry. Let us define a linear operator P, called the exchange operator. When it acts on a tensor product of two state vectors, it exchanges the values of the state vectors: ang |phi ang igg) equiv |phi ang |psi ang P is both Hermitian and unitary. Because it is unitary, we can regard it as a symmetry operator. We can describe this symmetry as the symmetry under the exchange of labels attached to the particles (i.e., to the single-particle Hilbert spaces). Clearly, P² = 1 (the identity operator), so the eigenvalues of P are +1 and −1. The corresponding eigenvectors are the symmetric and antisymmetric states: ang = + |n_1, n_2; S ang ang = - |n_1, n_2; A ang In other words, symmetric and antisymmetric states are essentially unchanged under the exchange of particle labels: they are only multiplied by a factor of +1 or −1, rather than being "rotated" somewhere else in the Hilbert space. This indicates that the particle labels have no physical meaning, in agreement with our earlier discussion on indistinguishability. We have mentioned that P is Hermitian. As a result, it can be regarded as an observable of the system, which means that we can, in principle, perform a measurement to find out if a state is symmetric or antisymmetric. Furthermore, the equivalence of the particles indicates that the Hamiltonian can be written in a symmetrical form, such as It is possible to show that such Hamiltonians satisfy the commutation relation According to the Heisenberg equation, this means that the value of P is a constant of motion. If the quantum state is initially symmetric (antisymmetric), it will remain symmetric (antisymmetric) as the system evolves. Mathematically, this says that the state vector is confined to one of the two eigenspaces of P, and is not allowed to range over the entire Hilbert space. Thus, we might as well treat that eigenspace as the actual Hilbert space of the system. This is the idea behind the definition of Fock space. Fermions and bosons The choice of symmetry or antisymmetry is determined by the species of particle. For example, we must always use symmetric states when describing photons or helium-4 atoms, and antisymmetric states when describing electrons or protons. Particles which exhibit symmetric states are called bosons. As we will see, the nature of symmetric states has important consequences for the statistical properties of systems composed of many identical bosons. These statistical properties are described as Bose-Einstein statistics. Particles which exhibit antisymmetric states are called fermions. As we have seen, antisymmetry gives rise to the Pauli exclusion principle, which forbids identical fermions from sharing the same quantum state. Systems of many identical fermions are described by Fermi-Dirac statistics. Parastatistics are also possible. In certain two-dimensional systems, mixed symmetry can occur. These exotic particles are known as anyons, and they obey fractional statistics. Experimental evidence for the existence of anyons exists in the fractional quantum Hall effect, a phenomenon observed in the two-dimensional electron gases that form the inversion layer of MOSFETs. There is another type of statistic, known as braid statistics, which are associated with particles known as plektons. The spin-statistics theorem relates the exchange symmetry of identical particles to their spin. It states that bosons have integer spin, and fermions have half-integer spin. Anyons possess fractional spin. N particles The above discussion generalizes readily to the case of N particles. Suppose we have N particles with quantum numbers n1, n2, ..., nN. If the particles are bosons, they occupy a totally symmetric state, which is symmetric under the exchange of any two particle labels: ang = sqrt sum_p |n_ ang |n_ ang cdots |n_ ang Here, the sum is taken over all possible permutations p acting on N elements. The square root on the right hand side is a normalizing constant. The quantity Nj stands for the number of times each of the single-particle states appears in the N-particle state. In the same vein, fermions occupy totally antisymmetric states: ang = rac sum_p mathrm(p) |n_ ang |n_ ang cdots |n_ ang Here, sgn(p) is the signature of each permutation (i.e. +1 if p is composed of an even number of transpositions, and −1 if odd.) Note that we have omitted the ΠjNj term, because each single-particle state can appear only once in a fermionic state. These states have been normalized so that ang = 1, qquad lang n_1 n_2 cdots n_N; A | n_1 n_2 cdots n_N; A ang = 1. Measurements of identical particles Suppose we have a system of N bosons (fermions) in the symmetric (antisymmetric) state ang and we perform a measurement of some other set of discrete observables, m. In general, this would yield some result m1 for one particle, m2 for another particle, and so forth. If the particles are bosons (fermions), the state after the measurement must remain symmetric (antisymmetric), i.e. ang The probability of obtaining a particular result for the m measurement is ightarrow m_1, cdots m_N) equiv igg|lang m_1 cdots m_N; S/A ,|, n_1 cdots n_N; S/A ang igg|^2 We can show that ightarrow m_1, cdots m_N) = 1 which verifies that the total probability is 1. Note that we have to restrict the sum to ordered values of m1, ..., mN to ensure that we do not count each multi-particle state more than once. Wavefunction representation So far, we have worked with discrete observables. We will now extend the discussion to continuous observables, such as the position x. Recall that an eigenstate of a continuous observable represents an infinitesimal range of values of the observable, not a single value as with discrete observables. For instance, if a particle is in a state |ψ>, the probability of finding it in a region of volume d³x surrounding some position x is ang|^2 d^3 x As a result, the continuous eigenstates |x> are normalized to the delta function instead of unity: ang = delta^3 (x - x') We can construct symmetric and antisymmetric multi-particle states out of continuous eigenstates in the same way as before. However, it is customary to use a different normalizing constant: ang = rac sum_p |x_ ang |x_ ang cdots |x_ ang ang = rac sum_p mathrm(p) |x_ ang |x_ ang cdots |x_ ang We can then write a many-body wavefunction, where the single-particle wavefunctions are defined, as usual, by ang The most important property of these wavefunctions is that exchanging any two of the coordinate variables changes the wavefunction by only a plus or minus sign. This is the manifestation of symmetry and antisymmetry in the wavefunction representation: Psi^_ (cdots x_i cdots x_jcdots) = Psi^_ (cdots x_j cdots x_i cdots) Psi^_ (cdots x_i cdots x_jcdots) = - Psi^_ (cdots x_j cdots x_i cdots) The many-body wavefunction has the following significance: if the system is initially in a state with quantum numbers n1, ..., nN, and we perform a position measurement, the probability of finding particles in infinitesimal volumes near x1, x2, ..., xN is ight|^2 d^!x The factor of N! comes from our normalizing constant, which has been chosen so that, by analogy with single-particle wavefunctions, ight|^2 d^3!x_1 d^3!x_2 cdots d^3!x_N = 1 Because each integral runs over all possible values of x, each multi-particle state appears N! times in the integral. In other words, the probability associated with each event is evenly distributed across N! equivalent points in the integral space. Because it is usually more convenient to work with unrestricted integrals than restricted ones, we have chosen our normalizing constant to reflect this. Finally, it is interesting to note that that antisymmetric wavefunction can be written as the determinant of a matrix, known as a Slater determinant:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|
| |