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Lecture 3 Exercise

(1) Please show that the right hand side of (2) is Lorentz invariant.

(2)p|q=2Ep×(2π)3δ(3)(pq)

First, we consider the identity for the four-dimensional delta function restricted to the positive-energy mass shell

d4pδ(p2+m2)Θ(p0)f(p)

where p2=(p0)2+p2. Since d4p and the constraints δ(p2+m2) and Θ(p0) are Lorentz invariant, any measure derived from this must also be invariant.

We use the property of the delta function

δ(g(x))=xiδ(xxi)|g(xi)|

Let g(p0)=(p0)2(p2+m2)=(p0)2Ep2. The roots are p0=±Ep, but the Θ(p0) picks only p0=Ep.

Then |g(Ep)|=|2p0|p0=Ep=2Ep. Thus

d4pδ(p2+m2)Θ(p0)=d3pdp0δ(p0Ep)2Ep=d3p2Ep

Since the integration measure d3p2Ep is Lorentz invariant, and we have

|q=d3p|pp|q

So the integration

d3pp|q=d3p2Ep2Epδ3(pq)

must be a Lorentz invariant. Therefore, we can know that

(2)2Ep×(2π)3δ(3)(pq)

is a Lorentz invariant.

(2) Please use the unitarity of the S-matrix to prove the optical theorem in the form of (26).

(26)ImM(p1p2p1p2)=Xfinal states(2π)4δ(4)(p1+p2pX)|M(p1p2X)|2

We take the form

S=1+i(2π)4δ4(p)M

and using unitarity of S matrix, we can know that

SS=(1+i(2π)4δ4(p)M)(1i(2π)4δ4(p)M)=1+i(2π)4δ4(p)(MM)+(2π)8δ4(p)MM=1

Therefore, we can derive that

i(MM)+(2π)4δ4(p)MM=0iψ|MM|ψ+(2π)4δ4(p)ψ|MM|ψ=0

and insert a complete set of states on the right side

iψ|MM|ψ=X(2π)4δ4(p)ψ|M|XX|M|ψ

Notice that ψ|M|ψ=ψ|M|ψ, thus

iψ|MM|ψ=2M(p1p2p1p2)

So we have the optical theorem

ImM(p1p2p1p2)=Xfinal states(2π)4δ(4)(p1+p2pX)|M(p1p2X)|2

(3) Please read through Sec. 1.1-1.3 in Lecture I of [1] (or ask AI directly) and write a short summary of

  1. how does causality imply analyticity in classical physics (no quantum mechanics required)
  1. what is Kramers-Kronig relation and how is it derived.

[You can certainly use AI but please write the summary yourself.]

  1. How causality implies analyticity in classical physics: In classical linear response theory, a system's output x(t) is related to an input signal f(t) via a response function χ(τ): x(t)=χ(tt)f(t)dt. The principle of causality states that the effect cannot precede the cause, meaning χ(τ)=0 for τ<0. When we look at the generalized frequency response χ~(ω)=0χ(τ)eiωτdτ, if we allow ω to be complex (ω=ωR+iωI), the factor eiωτ=eiωRτeωIτ acts as a powerful convergence factor for any ωI>0. Because the integral is only over positive τ (due to causality), χ~(ω) is guaranteed to be a holomorphic (analytic) function in the upper half-plane of the complex frequency space.

  2. The Kramers-Kronig relation and its derivation: The Kramers-Kronig relations relate the real and imaginary parts of a causal response function.

    Derivation: Since χ~(ω) is analytic in the upper half-plane, we apply Cauchy's Integral Formula for a point ω on the real axis, using a contour that travels along the real axis and closes via a large semi-circle in the upper half-plane (assuming χ~ vanishes at infinity).

    By taking the Cauchy Principal Value (P) of the integral:

    χ~(ω)=1iπPχ~(ω)ωωdω

    Splitting χ~ into real and imaginary parts (χ~=Reχ+iImχ) yields:

    Reχ~(ω)=1πPImχ~(ω)ωωdωandImχ~(ω)=1πPReχ~(ω)ωωdω

    This shows that if you know the absorption (imaginary part) of a system across all frequencies, you can calculate its dispersion (real part), and vice versa.

References

[1] S. Mizera, “Physics of the analytic S-matrix,” Phys. Rept. 1047 (2024) 1–92, arXiv:2306.05395 [hep-th].

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