On the interpretation and significance of the fluctuation-dissipation theorem in infrared spectroscopy
Sven Nordebo

TL;DR
This paper revisits the fluctuation-dissipation theorem in infrared spectroscopy using quantum electrodynamics, providing a rigorous derivation, interpretation, and implications for radiative transfer and spectral line analysis.
Contribution
It offers a first-principles QED derivation of the fluctuation-dissipation theorem and clarifies the quantum origins of classical radiative transfer laws.
Findings
QED derivation confirms the fluctuation-dissipation theorem.
Classical Beer-Lambert law arises from absorption and stimulated emission.
Spontaneous emission accounts for the source term in Schwarzschild's equation.
Abstract
In this paper we revisit the classical fluctuation-dissipation theorem with derivations and interpretations based on quantum electrodynamics (QED). As a starting point we take the widely cited semiclassical expression of the theorem connecting the absorption coefficient with the correlation spectra of a radiating molecular dipole. The literature is suggesting how this connection can be derived in terms of quantum mechanical statistical averages, but the corresponding results in terms of QED seems to be very difficult to trace in detail. The problem is therefore addressed here based on first principles. Interestingly, it turns out that the QED approach applied to the aforementioned statistical averages does not only prove the validity of the fluctuation-dissipation theorem, but it also provides a derivation and a quantum mechanical interpretation of Schwarzschild's equation for radiative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect
