I am reading Quantum Field Theory for the Gifted Amateur. On page 98, they provide a summary of a basic canonical quantization procedure:
- Step I: Write down a classical Lagrangian density in terms of the field. This is the creative part because there are lots of possible Lagrangians. After this step, everything else is automatic.
- Step II: Calculate the momentum density and work out the Hamiltonian density in terms of fields.
- Step III: Now treat the fields and momentum density as operators. Impose commutation relations on them to make them quantum mechanical.
- Step IV: Expand the field in terms of creation/annihilation operators. This will allow us to use occupation numbers and stay sane.
- Step V: That's it. Congratulations, you are now the proud owner of a working quantum field theory, provided you remember the normal ordering interpretation.
I don't understand what momentum density is or why it comes up at this point in the quantization process. If by momentum, they mean like the operator $\hat{p}$, what about the position operator $\hat{x}$? Why isn't there a position density operator needed too? Everything else in the procedure makes sense to me except Step II. I assume Hamiltonian density is the Hamiltonian counterpart to Lagrangian density.
Can someone explain what momentum density is and why it's needed at this step in the procedure?