Abstract

This paper is a study of a statistical ensemble of classical harmonic oscillators which is stationary in time, and whose position and momentum distribution functions are those of the corresponding quantum-mechanical oscillator in its ground state. If the oscillating particle is charged, then in order to maintain the distribution stationary a certain random electromagnetic field must be present. The intensity distribution of the radiation field is calculated, and it is found to be identical with the ‘photon vacuum’ of quantum electrodynamics. It is suggested, therefore, that this radiation field, which in quantum field theory is treated entirely formally, might exist in the classical sense. The method is extended to the excited states. It is found that the classical ensembles corresponding to these have probability distributions which may be negative. However, when attention is shifted to the quantum-mechanical ‘mixture’, this is no longer the case. Furthermore, the intensity distribution of the radiation field at temperature T is shown to be simply the sum of the Planck distribution and the previously obtained zero-temperature field. The application of these results to statistical mechanics is discussed. In this paper the treatment is non-relativistic throughout, but radiative corrections of the type which give rise to the Lamb shift are an integral part of the theory.

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