In quantum field theory, if V is a real vector space equipped with a nonsingular real antisymmetric bilinear form (,) (i.e. a symplectic vector space), the unital *-algebra generated by elements of V subject to the relations
- fg - gf = i(f,g)
- f*=f
for any f, g in V is called the canonical commutation relations (CCR) algebra. The uniqueness of the representations of this algebra when V is finite dimensional is discussed in the Stone-von Neumann theorem.
There is also a corresponding unital C*-algebra, often referred to as the Weyl form of the algebra, generated by eif subject to
- eifeig = e - i(f,g)eigeif
- (eif)*=e-if
for real numbers c1, c2.
If V is equipped with a nonsingular real symmetric bilinear form (,) instead, the unital *-algebra generated by the elements of V subject to the relations
- fg + gf = (f,g)
- f*=f
for any f, g in V is called the canonical anticommutation relations (CAR) algebra.
If V is a real Z2-graded vector space equipped with a nonsingular antisymmetric bilinear superform (,) (i.e. (g,f)=-(-1)|f||g|(g,f) ) such that (f,g) is real if either f or g is an even element and imaginary if both of them are odd, the unital *-algebra generated by the elements of V subject to the relations
- fg - ( - 1) | f | | g | gf = i(f,g)
- f*=f, g*=g
for any two pure elements f, g in V is the obvious super generalization which unifies CCRs with CARs.
CCR/CAR algebras only describe free fields, thanks to Haag's theorem.
See also