Abstract
In non-relativistic quantum mechanics of N particles in three spatial dimensions, the wave function ψ(q1, …, qN, t) is a function of 3N position coordinates and one time coordinate. It is an obvious idea that in a relativistic setting, such functions should be replaced by ϕ((t1, q1), …, (tN, qN)), a function of N space-time points called a multi-time wave function because it involves N time variables. Its evolution is determined by N Schrödinger equations, one for each time variable; to ensure that simultaneous solutions to these N equations exist, the N Hamiltonians need to satisfy a consistency condition. This condition is automatically satisfied for non-interacting particles, but it is not obvious how to set up consistent multi-time equations with interaction. For example, interaction potentials (such as the Coulomb potential) make the equations inconsistent, except in very special cases. However, there have been recent successes in setting up consistent multi-time equations involving interaction, in two ways: either involving zero-range (δ potential) interaction or involving particle creation and annihilation. The latter equations provide a multi-time formulation of a quantum field theory. The wave function in these equations is a multi-time Fock function, i.e., a family of functions consisting of, for every n = 0, 1, 2, …, an n-particle wave function with n time variables. These wave functions are related to the Tomonaga–Schwinger approach and to quantum field operators, but, as we point out, they have several advantages.
Highlights
Multi-time wave functions arise naturally when considering a particle-position representation of a quantum state in a relativistic setting
Another way of implementing interaction in the multi-time framework is by particle creation and annihilation, i.e., by considering models from quantum field theory
It was elucidated that the consistency of the multi-time evolution is a restrictive condition that excludes the most common mechanism of interaction in non-relativistic quantum mechanics, i.e., potentials
Summary
Multi-time wave functions arise naturally when considering a particle-position representation of a quantum state in a relativistic setting. While our motivation comes from the wish for a manifestly covariant particle-position representation of the quantum state, we mention that Elze [9, 10, 11] has recently used multi-time wave functions for a different purpose in connection with certain discrete action principles called Hamiltonian cellular automata: Elze found that for an N -particle system with N > 1, such action principles for a multi-time wave function can yield a physically more reasonable time evolution (after setting all times equal) than for a single-time wave function Another application of multi-time wave functions finds particular use in multi-time equations without interaction: it concerns detection probabilities on a timelike hypersurface Σ , corresponding to detectors waiting for the particles to arrive.
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