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Class 27

The test will cover chapters 3, 4, and sections on the time independent Schrödinger equation. It will include 5 homework-style problems and 5 short problems like multiple choice. Solving the time independent Schrödinger equation yields energy eigenstates of the form ψ(x)e-iEt/ħ that can be used to build any wave function. For a particle in a box between 0 and L, the boundary conditions require ψ(x) to be continuous but not necessarily its derivative, resulting in quantized energy levels.

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Rakib Ahsan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
78 views13 pages

Class 27

The test will cover chapters 3, 4, and sections on the time independent Schrödinger equation. It will include 5 homework-style problems and 5 short problems like multiple choice. Solving the time independent Schrödinger equation yields energy eigenstates of the form ψ(x)e-iEt/ħ that can be used to build any wave function. For a particle in a box between 0 and L, the boundary conditions require ψ(x) to be continuous but not necessarily its derivative, resulting in quantized energy levels.

Uploaded by

Rakib Ahsan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 13

Warning!

Test on Mar 26 (next Monday)


1. 5 homework type problems
2. 5 short problems (multiple choices/ fill in
the blanks etc.)
Materials:
Chapter 3, Chapter 4, and Sections
Time independent Schrödinger equation (Text
5.7)

1. So the energy eigenstate must be of the form


En
-i t
Ψn (x, t) =ψ (x) e h
(or ψ (x) e-iωn t with E n = hωn )
2. ψ(x) is to be determined by U(x) in the Time Independent Schrödinger
Equation: ⎡ h 2 ∂ 2 ⎤
⎢- + U(x)⎥ψ (x) = E nψ (x)
⎣ 2m ∂x
2

3. En is just the eigenvalue of energy.
4. Ψn(x,t) can be used as the building blocks of any wave function (say, f(x,t)):
En
f(x, t) = ∑ A n Ψn (x, t) = ∑ A nψ n (x)e
- t
h

n
5. If the wave function is an eigenstaten of energy, then the system will stay in
this eigenstate forever. If the wave function is a combination of several
eigenstates, the phase factor exp(iωnt) will “mix” the eigenstates over time.
Time independent Schrödinger equation (Text
5.7)

Example: In free space, U(x)=0. Schrödinger equation:


h2 ∂2
- ψ (x) = E nψ (x)
2m ∂x 2

The solution is ψ(x) = Aeikx and the energy eigenvalue is


h2k 2
E=
2m
So the complete energy eigenstate is
i(kx-ωt) h 2k 2
Ψ(x, t) = Ae with E = = hω
2m
In other words, plane waves are the energy eigenstates for a free
particle.

If a particle is described by a plane wave, that plane wave will remain


as a description of that particle forever because it is an energy
eigenstate.
Time independent Schrödinger equation (Text
5.7)

But that DOESN’T mean a wave function has to be an energy eigenstate! For
example, we can construct a wavefunction as:
2 i(k1x -ω1t) 3 i(k2 x -ω2 t)
Ψ(x, t) = e + e
5 5
This wave function is NOT an eigenstate of energy but it obeys the
Schröedinger equation (try it!). To calculate the probability density:
∴ ρ (x, t) = Ψ * ( x, t) Ψ ( x, t)
⎡ 2 -i(k1x -ω1t) 3 -i(k 2 x -ω2 t) ⎤ ⎡ 2 i(k1x -ω1t) 3 i(k 2 x -ω2 t) ⎤
=⎢ e + e ⎥⎢ e + e ⎥
⎣ 5 5 ⎦⎣ 5 5 ⎦
2 2
⎛ 2 ⎞ ⎛ 3 ⎞ ⎛ 2 ⎞⎛ 3 ⎞ i[(k1x -ω1t)-(k 2 x -ω2 t)] -i[(k1x -ω1t)-(k 2 x -ω2 t)]
= ⎜⎜
5
⎟ +⎜ ⎟ ⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟
⎟ ⎜ 5 ⎟ + ⎜ 5 ⎟⎜ 5 ⎟ e [ +e ]
⎝ ⎠ ⎝ ⎠ ⎝ ⎠⎝ ⎠
2 6
= 1+ cos [(k1 - k 2 )x - (ω1 - ω2 )t]
5
Time independent Schrödinger equation (Text
5.7)
When many energy eigenstates (Gaussian spectrum) mix together:

Re(Ψ(x,t)
Im(Ψ(x,t)
|Ψ(x,t)|2

The wavepacket follows Schrödinger equation, but it is not an energy eigenstate.


Time independent Schrödinger equation (Text
5.7)

The following statements mean the same


thing:

Solving Schrödinger equation



Finding all energy eigenvectors and their
corresponding energy eigenvalues

Diagonalization of the Hamiltonian


Time independent Schrödinger equation (Text
5.7)

The “complete” quantum mechanics problem: Beginning level


1. Given a potential, solve Schrödinger equation and obtain a complete
set of eigenfunctions ψn(x).

2. Given the wave function at t=0 (say, f(x)), decompose f(x) as a linear
combination of ψn(x):
f(x) = ∑ a n ψ n (x)
n Later
3. Now we can “predict” how the wave function looks like in the future:
f(x, t) = ∑ a n ψ n (x) e-iωn t
n
Particle in a box (Text 5.8)

The problem:
Solve the Schrödinger equation for a particle
trapped in the region [0, L]
∞ ∞
The particle is trapped by an “infinite
U(x)
potential well”:
⎧∞ x≤0

U(x) = ⎨0 0<x<L
⎪∞ L≤x

0 L
Particle in a box (Text 5.8)

The solution: Within the box :


h2 ∂2
- ψ (x) = Eψ (x)
2m ∂x 2
h 2k 2
⇒ ψ (x) = Ae ikx
+ Be -ikx
with E =
2m

∞ ∞
U(x)

Outside the well: ψ(x)=0 Outside the well: ψ(x)=0

0 L
Particle in a box (Text 5.8)

Difference between solutions of particle in a box and a free particle:

Free particle
eikx

e-ikx

Particle in a box My guess is,


A=B?
Aeikx+Be-ikx
Properties of wave functions (Text 5.1)
E W
5. Mathematical properties of Ψ: I
a. Ψ must be continuous and single-valued everywhere. R EV
b. ∂Ψ/∂x, ∂Ψ/∂y, ∂Ψ/∂z must be continuous and single-valued everywhere.
(There may be exception in some special situations, we will discuss this later.)
c. Ψ must be normalizable. |Ψ|2 must go 0 fast enough as x, y, or z →±∞ so
that ∫ |Ψ|2 dV remains finite.
We are going to because of (c)
ψ(x) Not okay
discuss this NOW!
Not okay because of (b)

Not okay because of (a)

x
Particle in a box (Text 5.8)

Boundary conditions:
Strange thing (“quantization”) occurs when boundary conditions are applied.

∞ ∞
U(x)

Outside the well: ψ(x)=0 Outside the well: ψ(x)=0

0 L We require ψ(x) to be
continuous here!
Particle in a box (Text 5.8)

Boundary conditions:
But continuity for the first derivative ∂Ψ/∂x cannot be satisfied when U(x) =∞.

∞ ∞
U(x)

Outside the well: ψ(x)=0 Outside the well: ψ(x)=0

0 L So dψ/dx is not
continuous here!

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