Abstract
In the preceding chapters we have solved a number of specific problems in which electromagnetic fields interact with charges, atoms, or molecules, and these have been approached in several different ways. For example, for the problem of photoelectric detection, which involves short interaction times, we found it convenient to use a perturbative method, whereas the resonance fluorescence problem was treated by solving the Heisenberg equations of motion. In the following sections we shall encounter a number of general methods for tackling interaction problems that can often simplify the problems substantially when they are applicable. We shall illustrate the utility of these methods by recalculating a number of results that were obtained in a different manner before. The quantum regression theorem It was shown by Lax (1963; see also Louisell, 1973, Sec. 6.6) that, with the help of a certain factorization assumption, it is often possible to express multi-time correlation functions of certain quantum mechanical operators in terms of single-time expectations. The result is now known as the regression theorem . As multi-time correlation functions play a rather important role in quantum optics, the theorem is often of great utility, and it can drastically simplify certain calculations. In the following we largely adopt the procedure given by Lax. We consider two coupled quantum systems, to which, for the sake of convenience, we shall refer as the system ( S ) and the reservoir ( R ).
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