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Holstein-Primakoff representation

Let us briefly mention some formal aspects of the above-introduced formalism, which have been discussed in detail by Blaizot and Marshalek [218]. First, it is noted that the both the Schwinger and the Holstein-Primakoff representations are not unitary transformations in the usual sense. Nevertheless, a transformation may be defined in terms of a formal mapping operator acting in the fermionic-bosonic product Hilbert space. Furthermore, the interrelation of the Schwinger representation and the Holstein-Primakoff representation has been investigated in the context of quantization of time-dependent self-consistent fields. It has been shown that the representations are related to each other by a nonunitary transformation. This lack of unitarity is a consequence of the nonexistence of a unitary polar decomposition of the creation and annihilation operators a and at [221] and the resulting difficulties in the definition of a proper phase operator in quantum optics [222]. [Pg.304]

There are a variety of formalisms that allow for a mapping of a discrete quantum system onto a continuous analog (for reviews see Refs. 218 and 219). The most prominent examples are Schwinger s theory of angular momentum [98] and the Holstein-Primakoff transformation [97], both of which allow a continuous representation of spin degrees of freedom. To discuss these two theories, we consider a spin DoF that is described by the spin operators Si,S2,Si with commutation relations... [Pg.302]

In the Schwinger representation the identity operator in the spin Hilbert space is mapped onto the constant of motion a a + a a2. The existence of this constant of motion is utilized by the Holstein-Primakoff transformation to eliminate one boson DoF, thus representing the spin DoF by a single oscillator [97] ... [Pg.303]

The basic idea of the mapping approach is to change from the discrete representation employed in Eq. (53) to a continuous representation. There are several ways to do so, most of them are based on the representation of spin operators by boson operators. Well-known examples of such mappings are the Holstein-Primakoff transformation, which represents a spin system by a single nonlinear boson DoF, and Schwinger s theory of angular momentum,which represents a spin system by two independent boson DoF. [Pg.659]


See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.97 ]




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Holstein-Primakoff

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