Physics:Quantum collision operator: Difference between revisions
imported>WikiHarold Replace raw Quantum Collection backlink with BT backlink template |
Arrange page top as TOC lead image columns |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|Operator describing collisions in quantum kinetic theory}} | {{Short description|Operator describing collisions in quantum kinetic theory}} | ||
{{Quantum book backlink|Plasma and kinetic methods}} | |||
{{Quantum methods backlink|Plasma and kinetic methods}} | {{Quantum methods backlink|Plasma and kinetic methods}} | ||
<div style="display:flex; gap:24px; align-items:flex-start; max-width:1200px;"> | |||
<div style="width:280px;"> | |||
__TOC__ | |||
</div> | |||
<div style="flex:1; line-height:1.45; color:#006b45; column-count:2; column-gap:32px; column-rule:1px solid #b8d8c8;"> | |||
Quantum collision operator''' is an operator used in [[Physics:Quantum kinetic theory]] to describe how interactions between particles change a quantum distribution function or density matrix over time. It represents the collisional part of a kinetic equation, separating scattering, relaxation, and redistribution processes from free motion and external-field evolution. | |||
In plasma, condensed-matter, and many-body systems, collision operators are used to model effects such as particle scattering, energy exchange, decoherence, damping, and transport. They provide a bridge between microscopic quantum dynamics and macroscopic quantities such as conductivity, diffusion, viscosity, and relaxation rates. | In plasma, condensed-matter, and many-body systems, collision operators are used to model effects such as particle scattering, energy exchange, decoherence, damping, and transport. They provide a bridge between microscopic quantum dynamics and macroscopic quantities such as conductivity, diffusion, viscosity, and relaxation rates. | ||
</div> | |||
<div style="width:300px;"> | |||
[[File:Quantum_field_theory_dependency_map.png|thumb|280px|Quantum collision operator.]] | |||
</div> | |||
</div> | |||
== Role in kinetic equations == | == Role in kinetic equations == | ||
Revision as of 15:50, 17 May 2026
Quantum collision operator is an operator used in Physics:Quantum kinetic theory to describe how interactions between particles change a quantum distribution function or density matrix over time. It represents the collisional part of a kinetic equation, separating scattering, relaxation, and redistribution processes from free motion and external-field evolution.
In plasma, condensed-matter, and many-body systems, collision operators are used to model effects such as particle scattering, energy exchange, decoherence, damping, and transport. They provide a bridge between microscopic quantum dynamics and macroscopic quantities such as conductivity, diffusion, viscosity, and relaxation rates.
Role in kinetic equations
A quantum kinetic equation often separates evolution into a reversible part and a collision part. Schematically,
where is a distribution function and is the collision operator.
The collision operator accounts for interactions that change the occupation of quantum states. Depending on the system, these may include electron-electron collisions, electron-phonon scattering, particle-wave interactions, or collisions between charged particles in a plasma.
Quantum features
Unlike a purely classical collision term, a quantum collision operator may include:
- Pauli blocking for fermions;
- Bose enhancement for bosons;
- transition probabilities from quantum scattering amplitudes;
- coherence and off-diagonal density-matrix effects;
- detailed balance between quantum states.
These features are important when the occupation of states, wave interference, or quantum statistics affect transport and relaxation.
Applications
Quantum collision operators appear in:
- Physics:Quantum kinetic theory;
- Physics:Quantum Vlasov equation;
- Physics:Quantum Transport theory;
- nonequilibrium quantum field theory;
- semiconductor transport;
- dense plasma physics;
- quantum hydrodynamic and many-body models.
They are especially useful when a system is not in thermal equilibrium but still requires a statistical description.
See also
Table of contents (49 articles)
Index
Full contents
References
Source attribution: Collision operator
