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I have read the book on quantum field theory for some time, but I still do not get the physics underline those tedious calculations. The thing confused me most is how quantum mechanics relates to quantum field theory as an approximation in low energy limit. Take a free scalar field $\psi$ for example. It describes free spin 0 boson. And it satisfies Klein-Gordon equation $(\partial_{\mu}\partial^{\mu}+m^2)\psi=0$. In quantum mechanics, the wave function $\psi^{\prime}$ of a free particle without spin should also obey the Klein-Gordon equation or its classical limit Schrodinger equation. So the field operator $\psi$ and the wave function $\psi^{\prime}$ must have some relations. If we take canonical quantization into account, we may assume $\psi(x,t)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}[a(x,t)+a^{\dagger}(x,t)]$ and interpret $a^{\dagger}$ as a creation operator. But I do not know the next step to deduce the Klein-Gordon equation or Schrodinger equation for particle's wave function $\psi^{\prime}$ in quantum mechanics if we start from quantum field theory and take low energy limit.

peterh
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Eric Yang
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    Just to be sure: QM is just 0+1 dimensional QFT, but you're asking if QM can be recovered generally as a low energy limit of the 3+1 QFT, right? – ACuriousMind Sep 23 '15 at 14:17
  • In the view of path integral, quantum mechanics may be just 0+1 dimensional QFT. But here I mainly focus on canonical quantization, and I want to derive Schrodinger equation of particle's wave function if we assume the velocity of particles is low and neglect the creation and annihilation of particles. – Eric Yang Sep 23 '15 at 23:44
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  • More on reduction from QFT to QM: http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/26960/2451 , http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/4156/2451 and links therein. 2. For a connection between Schr. eq. and Klein-Gordon eq, see e.g. A. Zee, QFT in a Nutshell, Chap. III.5, and this Phys.SE post plus links therein.
  • – Qmechanic Sep 25 '15 at 13:58
  • Thanks a lot. And in one of links, I find that the notes of David Tong are very clear on this topic. – Eric Yang Sep 26 '15 at 01:19