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People often say that the amplitude $K(b,a)$ to go from $a$ to $b$ can be approximated by $$K(b,a) \sim \exp{\left[\frac{\mathrm{i}}{\hbar}S_{\text{cl}}(b,a)\right]},\tag{1}$$ where $S_{\text{cl}}(b,a)$ is the corresponding classical action, and use this to calculate the amplitude (or partition function in some other sense) [1], paying no attention to the possible prefactor. But I want to know, in a general case, what's hidden in the '~' symbol.

In the example of a free particle, the exact path integral can be evaluated [2]: $$ K(b, a)=\left(\frac{m}{2 \pi i \hbar\left(t_b-t_a\right)}\right)^{1 / 2} \exp \left\{\frac{i m\left(x_b-x_a\right)^2}{2 \hbar\left(t_b-t_a\right)}\right\}.\tag{2} $$ Then it's clear that there's a function as a prefactor. Therefore my first question is: How can we just ignore a prefactor which doesn't have to be close to $1$ when we approximate something? What does it actually mean when we use the classical contribution to approximate the amplitude?

Then I think I'll just calculate the contribution from the classical path. But as Feynman said in his book, we have to provide a normalizing factor to let the path integral has a limit, which, in the case of free particle, is $A=\left(\frac{2\pi\mathrm i \hbar\epsilon}{m}\right)^{1/2}$. But what's the normalizing factor when I don't have to integrate over intermediate positions $x_1$, $x_2$, and so on. Or is there some other way to exactly calculate the contribution from the classical path?


References

  1. Liu, H. String Theory and Holographic Duality, Lec22, Eq. (5)
  2. Feynman & Hibbs, Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals.
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    $\begingroup$ This is known as the semi-classical limit (WKB). It’s essentially a $\hbar\to0$ expansion. It is done by a saddle point approximation. The $\sim$ means the dominating order in log scale. In the case of the harmonic oscillator, this checks out since the next term is in $\ln \hbar$ (power prefactor). $\endgroup$
    – LPZ
    Commented Nov 19, 2022 at 9:57

1 Answer 1

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  1. The expansion (1) is the WKB/stationary phase approximation for the semi-classical limit $\hbar\to 0$ (which is just the Wick-rotated version of the formula for the method of steepest descent), see e.g. this related Phys.SE post.

  2. The $1/\sqrt{\hbar}$ in the prefactor (2) in the propagator $$K(x_2,t_2 ; x_1,t_1) =\langle x_2,t_2 | x_1,t_1\rangle$$ is caused by the standard normalization of instantaneous position eigenstates $|x,t\rangle$, cf. e.g. my Phys.SE answer here.

  3. Excluding the downstairs $\hbar$-dependence caused by the choice of normalization, the rest of the prefactor (2) is a 1-loop$^1$ effect from calculating a functional determinant$^2$, which is subleading/subdominant for $\hbar\to 0$ (as compared to the classical contribution).

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$^1$ See the $\hbar$/loop expansion, cf. e.g. my Phys.SE answer here.

$^2$ The functional determinant is perhaps more apparent for the case of a harmonic oscillator, cf. e.g. this Phys.SE post.

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