Semiclassical physics

Semiclassical physics, or simply semiclassical refers to a theory in which one part of a system is described quantum mechanically whereas the other is treated classically. For example, external fields will be constant, or when changing will be classically described. In general, it incorporates a development in powers of Planck's constant, resulting in the classical physics of power 0, and the first nontrivial approximation to the power of (−1). In this case, there is a clear link between the quantum-mechanical system and the associated semi-classical and classical approximations, as it is similar in appearance to the transition from physical optics to geometric optics.

InstancesEdit

Four examples of a semiclassical approximation include:

  • WKB approximation: electrons in classical external electromagnetic fields.
  • semiclassical gravityquantum field theory within a classical curved gravitational background (see general relativity).
  • quantum chaos; quantization of classical chaotic systems.
  • quantum field theory, only Feynman diagrams with at most a single closed loop (see for example one-loop Feynman diagram) are considered, which corresponds to the powers of Planck's constant.


This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
.