Recently I read this paper https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.30.1860 by Hillery and Mlodinow about the (canonical) quantization of electrodynamics in nonlinear dielectric media. They assume that the medium is lossless, nondispersive and uniform and that there are no free sources. As I understand it, by uniform, they mean that the susceptibilities don‘t depend on the spatial coordinates. However, after reading the paper, I still don‘t understand why the assumption of a uniform medium was necessary, as it seems to me that you could do the exact same derivation of the Hamiltonian for susceptibilities that depend on the spacial coordinates.
I also found this https://arxiv.org/abs/0901.3439 article by Hillery where he gives a pedagogical survey of nonlinear quantum optics. In chapter 8.1 he basically presents the aforementioned paper and elaborates on it. There he briefly mentions again that the formalism only works in uniform media and adds that if you do a quantization using the dual vector potential instead, you can drop the requirement of a uniform medium (There was also a paragraph about this different quantization scheme in the appendix of the original paper). Sadly though, he doesn‘t explicitly say why the method employing the dual vector potential works for inhomogeneous media in contrast to the other method using the vector potential. I don‘t see any difference between the two methods concerning inhomogeneities.
I am aware that there are also more general quantization schemes, e.g. presented in https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.42.6845 which can handle inhomogeneous and dispersive media. However, for reasons of simplicity, right now I just want to look at nondispersive media but I still would like to include inhomogeneities so that the model can handle spatially finite nonlinear crystals (which themselves can be homogenous) with vacuum around them. Also I prefer quantization via the vector potential.
To summarize, why does the quantization scheme presented by Hillery and Mlodinow only work for homogenous media? Also where lies the difference between this method and the method using the dual vector potential in that the latter apparently works for inhomogeneous media?
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2024-10-01 20:22 (UTC), posted by SE-user WillHallas