Physics:Quantum Klein–Gordon equation: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Relativistic quantum wave equation for spin-0 particles}} | {{Short description|Relativistic quantum wave equation for spin-0 particles}} | ||
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'''Klein-Gordon equation''' is a relativistic wave equation for spin-0 particles and scalar fields. It follows from the relativistic energy-momentum relation by replacing energy and momentum with quantum operators, making it one of the earliest attempts to combine quantum mechanics with special relativity. | |||
Unlike the Schrodinger equation, the Klein-Gordon equation is second order in time. This makes its single-particle probability interpretation difficult, because the natural conserved density is not always positive. In modern physics the equation is most useful as a field equation for scalar quantum fields and as a stepping stone toward the Dirac equation and quantum field theory. | |||
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[[File:Quantum_Klein_Gordon_equation.svg|thumb|280px|Quantum Klein–Gordon equation.]] | |||
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== Mathematical formulation == | == Mathematical formulation == | ||
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* Does not describe spin-<math>\tfrac{1}{2}</math> particles | * Does not describe spin-<math>\tfrac{1}{2}</math> particles | ||
These issues motivated the development of the | These issues motivated the development of the Dirac equation, which is first-order in time and properly describes fermions. | ||
== Role in quantum field theory == | == Role in quantum field theory == | ||
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== Relation to other equations == | == Relation to other equations == | ||
* | * Schrödinger equation → non-relativistic limit | ||
* | * Dirac equation → relativistic spin-<math>\tfrac{1}{2}</math> extension | ||
* | * Weyl equation → massless fermions | ||
The Klein–Gordon equation can be seen as the relativistic starting point from which more advanced quantum field theories are constructed. | The Klein–Gordon equation can be seen as the relativistic starting point from which more advanced quantum field theories are constructed. | ||
Latest revision as of 11:31, 22 May 2026
Klein-Gordon equation is a relativistic wave equation for spin-0 particles and scalar fields. It follows from the relativistic energy-momentum relation by replacing energy and momentum with quantum operators, making it one of the earliest attempts to combine quantum mechanics with special relativity.
Unlike the Schrodinger equation, the Klein-Gordon equation is second order in time. This makes its single-particle probability interpretation difficult, because the natural conserved density is not always positive. In modern physics the equation is most useful as a field equation for scalar quantum fields and as a stepping stone toward the Dirac equation and quantum field theory.
Mathematical formulation
The Klein–Gordon equation is
In covariant form:
where:
- is the d'Alembert operator
- is a scalar field
- is the particle mass
In natural units ():
Origin from relativity
The equation follows directly from the relativistic energy–momentum relation:
By substituting quantum operators:
one obtains the Klein–Gordon equation as a relativistic wave equation.[1]
Physical interpretation
Unlike the Schrödinger equation, the Klein–Gordon equation is second order in time. This creates a key issue:
- The quantity is **not** a positive-definite probability density
Instead, the conserved quantity is a current:
This can take negative values and is interpreted as a **charge density** rather than probability density.[2]
Limitations
The Klein–Gordon equation has several important limitations:
- Second-order time derivative complicates probabilistic interpretation
- Negative-energy solutions arise naturally
- Does not describe spin- particles
These issues motivated the development of the Dirac equation, which is first-order in time and properly describes fermions.
Role in quantum field theory
In modern physics, the Klein–Gordon equation is reinterpreted as a field equation rather than a single-particle wave equation.
It describes scalar quantum fields and forms the basis for:
- Quantum scalar field theory
- Higgs field dynamics
- Relativistic bosonic particles
In this framework, the issues with probability interpretation disappear, and the equation becomes fully consistent.[2]
Relation to other equations
- Schrödinger equation → non-relativistic limit
- Dirac equation → relativistic spin- extension
- Weyl equation → massless fermions
The Klein–Gordon equation can be seen as the relativistic starting point from which more advanced quantum field theories are constructed.
See also
Table of contents (217 articles)
Index
Full contents
References
Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Klein–Gordon equation

