What is Perturbation theory: Definition and 263 Discussions

In mathematics, physics, and chemistry, perturbation theory comprises mathematical methods for finding an approximate solution to a problem, by starting from the exact solution of a related, simpler problem. A critical feature of the technique is a middle step that breaks the problem into "solvable" and "perturbative" parts. In perturbation theory, the solution is expressed as a power series in a small parameter



ϵ


{\displaystyle \epsilon }
. The first term is the known solution to the solvable problem. Successive terms in the series at higher powers of



ϵ


{\displaystyle \epsilon }
usually become smaller. An approximate 'perturbation solution' is obtained by truncating the series, usually by keeping only the first two terms, the solution to the known problem and the 'first order' perturbation correction.
Perturbation theory is used in a wide range of fields, and reaches its most sophisticated and advanced forms in quantum field theory. Perturbation theory (quantum mechanics) describes the use of this method in quantum mechanics. The field in general remains actively and heavily researched across multiple disciplines.

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  1. Riotto

    I Perturbative versus nonperturbative quantum mechanics

    What is the nonperturbative approach to quantum mechanics as opposed to perturbative one? When does the latter method fail and one has to apply nonperturbative approach? Please keep your discussion confined within non-relativistic quantum mechanics.
  2. Warda Anis

    Perturbation for Yukawa Potential

    Homework Statement The photon is normally assumed to have zero rest mass. If the photon did have a tiny mass, this would alter the potential energy the electron feels in the hydrogen atom (due to the Coulomb interaction with the proton). The potential then becomes yukawa potential...
  3. yeshuamo

    What is the Physical Situation Described by this Unidentified Transition Rate?

    Homework Statement I am identifying equations on the final exam equation sheet for my quantum II class. I've identified them all except this one, what I am guessing is a transition rate for some kind of emission or absorption of radiation case. Please help me identify the physical situation...
  4. Fips

    Atomic Textbook about Perturbation Theory

    Hi I was hoping someone could advise me on a textbook/platform where I can learn more about the perturbation theory applied to helium and the perturbation theory time depedant. Thanks
  5. F

    I Calculating Perturbative Expansion of Metric Inverse in Cosmology

    As I understand it, in the context of cosmological perturbation theory, one expands the metric tensor around a background metric (in this case Minkowski spacetime) as $$g_{\mu\nu}=\eta_{\mu\nu}+\kappa h_{\mu\nu}$$ where ##h_{\mu\nu}## is a metric tensor and ##\kappa <<1##. My question is, how...
  6. L

    Computing the scattering amplitude from the S-matrix

    Homework Statement Consider two real scalar fields \phi,\psi with masses m and \mu respectively interacting via the Hamiltonian \mathcal{H}_{\mathrm{int}}(x)=\dfrac{\lambda}{4}\phi^2(x)\psi^2(x). Using the definition of the S-matrix and Wick's contraction find the O(\lambda) contribution to...
  7. F

    I Higher order terms in perturbation theory (QFT)

    I'm fairly new to QFT and I'm currently trying to understand perturbation theory on this context. As I understand it, when one does a perturbative expansion of the S-matrix and subsequently calculates the transition amplitude between two asymptotic states, each order in the perturbative...
  8. D

    Time-dependent perturbation theory

    Homework Statement The problem consists of 2 parts,the first one(I have done it) is on the following website: https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/transition-probability-from-two-states.804343/ Q1: I calculated the desired result p(t) = sin^2(Ut/h). However,I don't understand why <1,t | 2 >...
  9. V

    Linear perturbation to harmonic oscillator

    Homework Statement Find the first-order corrections to energy and the wavefunction, for a 1D harmonic oscillator which is linearly perturbed by ##H'=ax##. Homework Equations First-order correction to the energy is given by, ##E^{(1)}=\langle n|H'|n\rangle##, while first-order correction to the...
  10. V

    Anharmonic oscillator first-order correction to energy

    Homework Statement I have ##H'=ax^3+bx^4##, and wish to find the general perturbed wave-functions. Homework Equations First-order correction to the wave-function is given by, $$\psi_n^{(1)}=\Sigma_{m\neq n}\frac{\langle\psi_m^{(0)}|H'|\psi_n^{(0)}\rangle}{n-m}|\psi_m^{(0)}\rangle.$$ The...
  11. S

    I Matrix Elements via Feynman Diagrams

    Hello everyone, I am currently trying to understand how we can use feynman diagrams to estimate the matrix element of a process to be used in fermi's golden rule so that we can estimate decay rates. I am trying to learn by going through solved examples, but I am struggling to follow the logic...
  12. Y

    Potential in center of mass for Hydrogen atom

    Homework Statement A Hydrogen atom is interacting with an EM plane wave with vector potential $$\bar A(r,t)=A_0\hat e e^{i(\bar k \cdot \bar r -\omega t)} + c.c.$$ The perurbation to the Hamiltonian can be written considering the proton and electron separately as...
  13. L

    I Why do we need perturbation theory

    Why do we need perturbation theory in quantum mechanics?
  14. P

    Time-Dependent Perturbation Theory

    Note this isn't actually a homework problem, I am working through my textbook making sure I understand the derivation of certain equations and have become stuck on one part of a derivation. 1. Homework Statement I am working through my text (Quantum Mechanics 2nd Edition by B.H Bransden & C.J...
  15. bananabandana

    I Degenerate Perturbation Theory

    I'm struggling to understand degenerate perturbation theory. It's clear that in this case the 'normal' approximation method fails completely seeing as you get a divide by zero. I follow the example for a two state system given in e.g D.J Griffiths "Introduction to Quantum Mechanics" However...
  16. B

    First Order Perturbation Theory - QM

    Homework Statement The ground state energy of the 1D harmonic oscillator with angular frequency ##\omega## is ##E_0 = \frac{\hbar \omega}{2}##. The angular frequency is perturbed by a small amount ##\delta \omega##. Use first order perturbation theory to estimate the ground state energy of the...
  17. A

    How Do You Calculate First Order Correction in a Perturbed Infinite Square Well?

    Homework Statement I have the particle in the infinite square well and need to calculate the first order correction energy and the wave function. L is the width and the potential is: 1/2 mw2x2 in the -L/2 < x < L/2 and infinity in x <= -L/2 and x>=L/2 Homework Equations H'=H-H0[/B] The...
  18. D

    I Time dependent perturbation theory

    Hi. I have been looking at some notes for time dependent perturbation theory. The equation for the transition probability involves the matrix element < f | H | i > where f is the final state , i is the initial state and H is the perturbation switched on at t=0. If H is a constant , ie. just a...
  19. G

    Time-Independent Perturbation Theory

    Homework Statement I am working on a physics project for which I need to use perturbation theory to calculate the first- and second-order corrections to the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of a perturbed matrix. The unperturbed matrix is real and symmetric, and the eigenvalues and eigenvectors are...
  20. ShayanJ

    A Degenerate perturbation theory -- Sakurai

    I'm reading section 5.2 "Time-Independent Perturbation Theory: The Degenerate Case" of the book "Modern Quantum Mechanics" by Sakurai and Napolitano and I have trouble with some parts of the calculations. At firsts he explains that there is a g-dimensional subspace(which he calls D) of...
  21. S

    Change in ground state energy due to perturbation

    Homework Statement Consider a quantum particle of mass m in one dimension in an infinite potential well , i.e V(x) = 0 for -a/2 < x < a/2 , and V(x) =∞ for |x| ≥ a/2 . A small perturbation V'(x) =2ε|x|/a , is added. The change in the ground state energy to O(ε) is: Homework Equations The...
  22. dwdoyle

    Degenerate Perturbation Theory and Matrix elements

    Homework Statement I did poorly on my exam, which I thought was very fair, and am now trying to understand certain aspects of perturbation theory. There are a total of three, semi related problems which i have questions about. They are mainly qualitative in nature and involve an intuitive...
  23. S

    Perturbation theory, Intermediate states, Virtual particles

    The following is taken from page 13 of Peskin and Schroeder. Any relativistic process cannot be assumed to be explained in terms of a single particle, since ##E=mc^{2}## allows for the creation of particle-antiparticle pairs. Even when there is not enough energy for pair creation, multiparticle...
  24. P

    Time independent perturbation theory

    In my course notes for atomic physics, looking at time independent perturbation for the non-degenerate case, we have the following: http://i.imgur.com/ao4ughk.png However I am confused about the equation 5.1.6. We know that < phi n | phi m > = 0 for n =/= m, so shouldn't this mean that < phi n...
  25. S

    Deriving Lorentz transformations using perturbation theory

    Homework Statement Derive the transformations ##x \rightarrow \frac{x+vt}{\sqrt{1-v^{2}}}## and ##t \rightarrow \frac{t+vx}{\sqrt{1-v^{2}}}## in perturbation theory. Start with the Galilean transformation ##x \rightarrow x+vt##. Add a transformation ##t \rightarrow t + \delta t## and solve for...
  26. P

    Ionization of hydrogen atom by sinusoidal electric field

    Homework Statement "Suppose that a hydrogen atom, initially in its ground state, is placed in an oscillating electric field ##\mathcal{E}_0 \cos(\omega t) \mathbf{\hat{z}}##, with ##\hbar \omega \gg -13.6\text{eV}##. Calculate the rate of transitions to the continuum." Homework Equations ##R =...
  27. I

    Time-dependent Perturbation theory -maths problems

    Hey guys, I signed up here because I needed some information on some quantum physics problems. My question is related to quantum physics, and more precisely the derivation of time dependent perturbation theory. First of all, I am not able to understand all the maths structures and formulas...
  28. ShayanJ

    Functional time-dependent perturbation theory

    Today, in my advanced particle physics class, the professor reminded the time-dependent perturbation theory in NRQM and derived the formula: ##\displaystyle \frac{da_m(t)}{dt}=-i \sum_n e^{-i(E_n-E_m)} \int_{\mathbb R^3}d^3 x \phi^*_m (\vec x) V(\vec x,t) \phi_n(\vec x)##. Then he said that...
  29. R

    Multiple-scale analysis for 2D Hamiltonian?

    I came across a technique called "multiple-scale analysis" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple-scale_analysis where the equation of motion involves a small parameter and it is possible to obtain an approximate solution in the time scale of $$\epsilon t$$. I am wondering if it is possible to...
  30. B

    [check exercise] Perturbation theory

    I have solved this exercise, but I'm not sure that it is good. Please, can you check it? A lot of thanks! 1. Homework Statement The hamiltonian is ##H_0=\epsilon |1><1|+5/2 \epsilon (|2><2|+|3><3|)## The perturbation is given by ##\Delta(|2><3|+|3><2|)## Discuss the degeneration of H0. Using...
  31. J

    Are photons really particles or just a misconception?

    Hello everyone, thanks for reading I'll explain my question. At first, light was described as electromagnetic waves, until Einstein proposed the photoelectric effect and thus creating the concept of photon, a particle of light with momentum and energy, but no mass. It could explain why the...
  32. B

    [quantum mechanics] Perturbation theory in a degenerate case

    Homework Statement I'm trying to understand how we can find - at the first order - the energy-shift and the eigenstates in a degenerate case. My notes aren't clear, so I have searched in the Sakurai, but the notation is different, I have read other notes but their notation is different...
  33. H

    Confused about perturbation theory with path integrals

    Homework Statement Hi, I am just trying to wrap my head around using path integrals and there are a few things that are confusing me. Specifically, I have seen examples in which you can use it to calculate the ground state shift in energy levels of a harmonic oscillator but I don't see how you...
  34. A. Neumaier

    Insights Causal Perturbation Theory - Comments

    A. Neumaier submitted a new PF Insights post Causal Perturbation Theory Continue reading the Original PF Insights Post.
  35. J

    Inflation & Pertubative 1st order Cosmology: A timeline?

    Hey there, i have a question regarding basic inflation and structure formation via linear first order perturbation theory in cosmology. I read through different material (Baumann lecture notes, wikipedia articles, Mukhanov, ...), but at this point i am just confused and find it hard to get an...
  36. Runei

    Time-Dependent Perturbation Theory & Completeness

    Hello! I just want to make sure that I have understood the following argument the correct way: For a given quantum system we take the hamiltonian to be a time-independent (and soluble) part, and a time-dependent part. ## \hat{H} = \hat{H_0} + H'(t) ## Now, the solutions to the unperturbed...
  37. gonadas91

    Perturbation theory in strong interaction regime

    In QFT, we can expand the propagator and obtain the diagrammatic expansion to build up the Green's function. If we have a hamiltonian of the type H = H_{0}+V, where V is the perturbation, we can build up the Feynman diagrams,and if we could build up all of them to infinite order, we would...
  38. H

    Feynman rules for nonlinear sigma models

    Nonlinear sigma models are particular field theories in which the fields take values in some nontrivial manifold. In the simplest cases this is equivalent to saying that the fields appearing in the lagrangian are subject to a number of constraints. Since the lagrangian fields are not independent...
  39. Entanglement717

    1D Harmonic Oscillator in a Constant Electric Field

    Homework Statement Hello, I'm just curious as to whether I'm going about solving the following problem correctly... Problem Statement: A particle mass m and charge q is in the ground state of a one -dimensional harmonic oscillator, the oscillator frequency is ω_o. An electric field ε_o is...
  40. C

    Applicability of perturbation theory

    Consider some system in some initial state ##|k^{(0)}\rangle##. The probability that such a state makes a transition to some other state ##|m^{(0)}\rangle## can be computed to various orders in time dependent perturbation theory. E.g the total first order probability that the system has made a...
  41. C

    Time dependent perturbation theory of the harmonic oscilator

    Homework Statement A 1-d harmonic oscillator of charge ##q## is acted upon by a uniform electric field which may be considered to be a perturbation and which has time dependence of the form ##E(t) = \frac{K }{\sqrt{\pi} \tau} \exp (−(t/\tau)^2) ##. Assuming that when ##t = -\infty##, the...
  42. quantatanu0

    Cut-off Regularization of Chiral Perturbation Theory

    I was trying to learn renormalization in the context of ChPT using momentum-space cut-off regularization procedure at one-loop order using order of p^2 Lagrangian. So, 1. There are counter terms in ChPT of order of p^4 when calculating in one-loop order using Lagrangian of order p^2 . 2...
  43. C

    Degenerate perturbation theory for harmonic oscillator

    Homework Statement [/B] The isotropic harmonic oscillator in 2 dimensions is described by the Hamiltonian $$\hat H_0 = \sum_i \left\{\frac{\hat{p_i}^2}{ 2m} + \frac{1}{2} m\omega^2 \hat{q_i}^2 \right\} ,$$ for ##i = 1, 2 ## and has energy eigenvalues ##E_n = (n + 1)\hbar \omega \equiv (n_1 +...
  44. Ahmad Kishki

    Perturbation theory in qm self study

    i am currently self studying qm, and i am trying to plan ahead since i am relatively over with griffiths part1 (which is the theory part) and i was wondering if i should go ahead to part 2 (applications) or should i just keep this for later and attempt to stregnthen my basics in qm from another...
  45. K

    Variance and 2 point function in perturbation theory

    When we try to find the statistical correlation of some perturbation between two positions, we always calculate the quantum 2-point function. Are these two concepts really the same? Also, people say vacuum fluctuation is gaussian. For normalized fields, we always use Bunch-Davies initial...
  46. K

    Question regarding time independent perturbation theory

    Let's say we've a system which can be described by the Hamiltonian: $$H_0 = \dfrac{p^2}{2m} + V(x)$$ Now suppose we introduce a perturbation given by: $$H_1 = \lambda x^2$$ Our total hamiltonian: $$H = H_0 + H_1 = \dfrac{p^2}{2m} + V(x) + \lambda x^2 $$ Normally, the perturbation doesn't...
  47. B

    Time independent perturbation theory

    Homework Statement The following text on the time independent perturbation theory is given in a textbook: \hat{H} = \hat{H}_0 + \alpha \hat{H'} We expand its eigenstates \mid n \rangle in the convenient basis of \mid n \rangle^{(0)} \mid n \rangle = \sum_m c_{nm} \mid m \rangle^{(0)}...
  48. S

    Validity of perturbation theory

    I was wondering why perturbation theory works in quantum mechanics. My lecturer said that no one really bothered why it worked anyway, until they found it gave problems in QFT and came back to non-relativistic quantum mechanics and found why it worked in this domain. Can anybody explain?
  49. P

    Spin-orbit Interaction & Degenerate Perturbation Theory

    Hello! This is my first time posting, so please correct me if I have done anything incorrectly. There's something that I don't understand about the spin-orbit interaction. First of all I know that [\hat{S} \cdot \hat{L}, \hat{L_z}] \ne 0 [\hat{S} \cdot \hat{L}, \hat{S_z}] \ne 0 so this means...
  50. ddd123

    Is Schiff's Quantum Mechanics wrong? Degenerate stationary perturbation theory.

    Homework Statement However incorrect the text seems to me, I suspect there's something I'm missing, since it's a renowned text: Schiff - Quantum Mechanics 3rd edition 1968. The topic is degenerate stationary perturbation theory. In this example there's only two eigenfunctions associated with...
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