posted on 2015-06-18, 14:23authored byT. R. Robinson, Emmanuel Haven
Historically, quantization has meant turning the dynamical variables
of classical mechanics that are represented by numbers into
their corresponding operators. Thus the relationships between classical
variables determine the relationships between the corresponding
quantum mechanical operators. Here, we take a radically different
approach to this conventional quantization procedure. Our approach
does not rely on any relations based on classical Hamiltonian or Lagrangian
mechanics nor on any canonical quantization relations, nor
even on any preconceptions of particle trajectories in space and time.
Instead we examine the symmetry properties of certain Hermitian operators
with respect to phase changes. This introduces harmonic operators
that can be identified with a variety of cyclic systems, from
clocks to quantum fields. These operators are shown to have the characteristics
of creation and annihilation operators that constitute the
primitive fields of quantum field theory. Such an approach not only
allows us to recover the Hamiltonian equations of classical mechanics
and the Schrodinger wave equation from the fundamental quantization
relations, but also, by freeing the quantum formalism from any physical
connotation, makes it more directly applicable to non-physical,
so-called quantum-like systems. Over the past decade or so, there has been a rapid growth of interest in such applications. These include,
the use of the Schrodinger equation in finance, second quantization
and the number operator in social interactions, population dynamics
and financial trading, and quantum probability models in cognitive
processes and decision-making. In this paper we try to look beyond
physical analogies to provide a foundational underpinning of such applications.
History
Citation
International Journal of Theoretical Physics 2015
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy