phy-4600/solutions/chap5/prob2
2016-03-13 20:07:19 -04:00

131 lines
4.8 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Permalink Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

A particle in an infinite square well has an initial state vector, with A a real number and ι the imaginary unit,
❙Ψ(t=0)❭ = A(❙φ₁❭ - ❙φ₂❭ + ι❙φ₃❭).
where ❙φₙ❭ are the energy eigenstates. This also means
❬Ψ(t=0)❙ = A(❬φ₁❙ - ❬φ₂❙ - ι❬φ₃❙)
In the energy basis,
❙φ₁❭ ≐ ⎛1⎞ ❙φ₂❭ ≐ ⎛0⎞ and ❙φ₃❭ ≐ ⎛0⎞
⎜0⎟ ⎜1⎟ ⎜0⎟
⎝0⎠, ⎝0⎠, ⎝1⎠.
So,
❙Ψ(t=0)❭ ≐ ⎛ A ⎞
⎜-A ⎟
ιA ⎠.
(𝐚) The state vector is normalized by taking the quotient of the magnitude.
❙Ψ′(t=0)❭ ≐ __͟A͟__ ⎛ 1 ⎞ = _͟1͟ ⎛ 1 ⎞
√(3A²) ⎜-1 ⎟ √3 ⎜-1 ⎟
ι ⎠ ⎝ ι ⎠.
When the Hamiltonian operates on ❙φₙ❭ with results according to the general eigenvalue equation, with Eₙ the measured energy of state n,
Ĥ❙φₙ❭ = Eₙ❙φₙ❭.
The measured energies for a point particle in an infinite square well are given by, with L the x-width of the well, and m the particle mass,
Eₙ = n͟²͟π͟²͟ħ͟².
2mL²
So,
Ĥ❙Ψ(t=0)❭ = _͟1͟ (E₁❙φ₁❭ - E₂❙φ₂❭ + ιE₃❙φ₃❭).
√3
(𝐛) There is an equal chance of measuring any of the three values, so 𝓟ₙ=1/3. The measured enemies are given by the previous expression.
Energy Probability
π͟²͟ħ͟². 𝓟₁=¹/₃
2mL²
2͟π͟²͟ħ͟². 𝓟₂=¹/₃
mL²
9͟π͟²͟ħ͟². 𝓟₃=¹/₃
2mL²
The average value of the energy, or the expectation value, is given by
│❬Ψ❙Ĥ❙Ψ❭│² = │_͟1͟ (❬φ₁❙ - ❬φ₂❙ - ι❬φ₃❙)_͟1͟ (E₁❙φ₁❭ - E₂❙φ₂❭ + ιE₃❙φ₃❭)│²
│√3 √3 │.
❬Ψ❙Ĥ❙Ψ❭ = _͟1͟ (❬φ₁❙ - ❬φ₂❙ - ι❬φ₃❙)_͟1͟ (E₁❙φ₁❭ - E₂❙φ₂❭ + ιE₃❙φ₃❭)
√3 √3
= ¹/₃ (❬φ₁❙ - ❬φ₂❙ - ι❬φ₃❙)(E₁❙φ₁❭ - E₂❙φ₂❭ + ιE₃❙φ₃❭)
= ¹/₃ (❬φ₁❙E₁❙φ₁❭ - ❬φ₁❙E₂❙φ₂❭ + ❬φ₁❙ιE₃❙φ₃❭) (-❬φ₂❙E₁❙φ₁❭ + ❬φ₂❙E₂❙φ₂❭ - ❬φ₂❙ιE₃❙φ₃❭)
(-ι❬φ₃❙E₁❙φ₁❭ + ι❬φ₃❙E₂❙φ₂❭ - ι❬φ₃❙ιE₃❙φ₃❭).
Orthogonality is a property of the energy eigenstates:
⎧ 0 if n≠m
❬Eₙ❙Eₘ❭ = δₙₘ, where δₙₘ = ⎨ , so
⎩ 1 if n=m
❬Ψ❙Ĥ❙Ψ❭ = ¹/₃ (❬φ₁❙E₁❙φ₁❭) (❬φ₂❙E₂❙φ₂❭) (-ι❬φ₃❙ιE₃❙φ₃❭)
= ¹/₃ E₁ E₂ E₃ = ¹/₃ π͟²͟ħ͟² 4͟π͟²͟ħ͟² 9͟π͟²͟ħ͟² = _͟3͟ ⎛π͟²͟ħ͟²⎞³
2mL² 2mL² 2mL² 2 ⎝ mL²⎠.
(𝐜) Therefore, the energy expectation value
│❬Ψ❙Ĥ❙Ψ❭│² = _͟9͟ ⎛π͟²͟ħ͟²⎞⁶
4 ⎝ mL²⎠.
Because the hamiltonian is time-independent, the state vector progresses timewise according to,
❙Ψ′(t)❭ = exp(-ι͟Ĥ͟t͟ )❙Ψ′(t=0)❭ = _͟1͟ exp(-ι͟Ĥ͟t͟ ) (❙φ₁❭ - ❙φ₂❭ + ι ❙φ₃❭).
ħ √3 ħ
_͟1͟ ⎛exp(-ι͟E͟₁͟t͟ )❙φ₁❭ - exp(-ι͟E͟₂͟t͟ )❙φ₂❭ + ι exp(-ι͟E͟₃͟t͟ )❙φ₃❭⎞
√3 ⎝ ħ ħ ħ ⎠
(𝐝)
= _͟1͟ ⎛exp(-ι π͟²͟ħ͟t͟ )❙φ₁❭ - exp(-ι 2͟π͟²͟ħ͟t͟ )❙φ₂❭ + ι exp(-ι 9͟π͟²͟ħ͟t͟ )❙φ₃❭⎞
√3 ⎝ 2mL² mL² 2L² ⎠.
What are the possible measurements at time t = ħ/E₁?
(𝐞) The same value of energy will be measured for each state. Since there has been no change to the coefficients besides a change in phase, and the phase term goes to 1 under the modulus, the probabilities remain the same.
❙Ψ′(t=ħ/E₁)❭ = _͟1͟ ⎛exp(-ι)❙φ₁❭ - exp(-ι E͟₂͟ )❙φ₂❭ + ι exp(-ι E͟₃͟ )❙φ₃❭⎞
√3 ⎝ E₁ E₁ ⎠
Energy Probability
π͟²͟ħ͟². 𝓟₁=¹/₃
2mL²
2͟π͟²͟ħ͟². 𝓟₂=¹/₃
mL²
9͟π͟²͟ħ͟². 𝓟₃=¹/₃
2mL²