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Quantization (physics)
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== Deformation quantization == {{main| Phase space formulation}} {{see also|Weyl quantization|Moyal product|Wigner quasi-probability distribution}} One of the earliest attempts at a natural quantization was Weyl quantization, proposed by Hermann Weyl in 1927.<ref> {{cite journal |last=Weyl |first=H. |year=1927 |title=Quantenmechanik und Gruppentheorie |journal=[[Zeitschrift fΓΌr Physik]] |volume=46 |issue= 1β2|pages=1β46 |bibcode=1927ZPhy...46....1W |doi=10.1007/BF02055756 |s2cid=121036548 }}</ref> Here, an attempt is made to associate a quantum-mechanical observable (a self-adjoint operator on a Hilbert space) with a real-valued function on classical phase space. The position and momentum in this phase space are mapped to the generators of the Heisenberg group, and the Hilbert space appears as a group representation of the Heisenberg group. In 1946, H. J. Groenewold<ref name="Groenewold1946">{{cite journal|last1=Groenewold|first1=H.J.|title=On the principles of elementary quantum mechanics|journal=Physica|volume=12|issue=7|year=1946|pages=405β460|issn=0031-8914|doi=10.1016/S0031-8914(46)80059-4|bibcode=1946Phy....12..405G}}</ref> considered the product of a pair of such observables and asked what the corresponding function would be on the classical phase space. This led him to discover the phase-space star-product of a pair of functions. More generally, this technique leads to deformation quantization, where the β -product is taken to be a deformation of the algebra of functions on a symplectic manifold or Poisson manifold. However, as a natural quantization scheme (a [[functor]]), Weyl's map is not satisfactory. For example, the Weyl map of the classical angular-momentum-squared is not just the quantum angular momentum squared operator, but it further contains a constant term {{sfrac|3Δ§<sup>2</sup>|2}}. (This extra term offset is pedagogically significant, since it accounts for the nonvanishing angular momentum of the ground-state Bohr orbit in the hydrogen atom, even though the standard QM ground state of the atom has vanishing {{mvar|l}}.)<ref name="DahlSchleich2002">{{cite journal|last1=Dahl|first1=Jens Peder|last2=Schleich|first2=Wolfgang P.|title=Concepts of radial and angular kinetic energies|journal=Physical Review A|volume=65|issue=2|year=2002|page=022109|issn=1050-2947|doi=10.1103/PhysRevA.65.022109|arxiv=quant-ph/0110134|bibcode=2002PhRvA..65b2109D|s2cid=39409789}}</ref> As a mere ''representation change'', however, Weyl's map is useful and important, as it underlies the alternate ''equivalent'' [[phase space formulation]] of conventional quantum mechanics.
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