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Homework 8

This document summarizes the key points from a homework assignment on quantum mechanics. It discusses several topics: 1) If |ψ is an eigenvector of anticommuting Hermitian operators A and B, its eigenvalues a and b for those operators must be zero. This is shown for the parity and momentum operators of a particle in 1D. 2) Symmetry properties of the ammonia molecule are discussed. It is shown that applying the unitary operator for a 120° rotation leaves the Hamiltonian unchanged. The allowed eigenvalues of this operator are derived. 3) General properties of symmetries of the Hamiltonian are discussed. It is shown that if an operator commutes or anticommutes with a symmetry, then
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
277 views5 pages

Homework 8

This document summarizes the key points from a homework assignment on quantum mechanics. It discusses several topics: 1) If |ψ is an eigenvector of anticommuting Hermitian operators A and B, its eigenvalues a and b for those operators must be zero. This is shown for the parity and momentum operators of a particle in 1D. 2) Symmetry properties of the ammonia molecule are discussed. It is shown that applying the unitary operator for a 120° rotation leaves the Hamiltonian unchanged. The allowed eigenvalues of this operator are derived. 3) General properties of symmetries of the Hamiltonian are discussed. It is shown that if an operator commutes or anticommutes with a symmetry, then
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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
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Quantum Mechanics - Homework Assignment 8

Alejandro Gomez Espinosa

November 26, 2012


1) If | is a simultaneous eigenvector of Hermitian operators A and B that anticommute, AB+BA = 0,
what can you say about the eigenvalues a and b of |? As an exmaple, discuss the case where the
operators are and P (parity and momentum) for a particle in 1D.
If A and B anticommute, we know that AB + BA = 0. Applying this to the eigenvector of both
operators:
AB| +BA| = bA| +aB| = 0
then, we can know that A| is an eigenvector of B and B| is an eigenvector of A. But, if this
expression vanishes, a or b must be zero.
In the case of and P for a particle in 1D:
P|x +P|x = p|x +P| x = 0
thus, p = 0.
2) An ammonia molecule has its nitrogen nucleus xed at the origin, and three hydrogen nuclei xed
at (a, 0, c), (a/2,

3a/2, c), and (a/2,

3a/2, c), where constatns a and c are appropriately


chosen.
a) Argue, in general terms, that C

3
HC
3
= H, where H is the Hamiltonian for the electrons in this
system, and C
3
is the unitary operator corresponding to a rotation of 120

about the z axis.


If C
3
is the unitary operator corresponding to a rotation of 120

about the z axis, we can dene


it as:
C
3
= U[R(120)] = e

120iLz

then,
C

3
HC
3
= e
120iLz

He

120iLz

= H
that is clear for a system to rotate 120

and then turn back the same angle.


b) What are the allowed eigenvalues of C
3
?
C
3
can be written as the matrix:
C
3
=
_
_
cos 120 sin 120 0
sin 120 cos 120 0
0 0 1
_
_
=
_
_
_

1
2

3
2
0

3
2

1
2
0
0 0 1
_
_
_

[email protected]
1
Then, to calculate the eigenvalues:
det

1
2

3
2
0

3
2

1
2
0
0 0 1

= 0
_

1
2

_
2
(1 ) +
3
4
(1 ) = 0
_
_

1
2

_
2
+
3
4
_
(1 ) = 0
_

1
2
+
i

3
2
__

1
2

i

3
2
_
(1 ) = 0
_
i

3 1
2

__

i

3 1
2
_
(1 ) = 0
Thus, the allowed eigenvalues of C
3
are:
=
i

3 1
2
, 1,
i

3 1
2
c) If | is a non-degenerate eigenvector of H, what can you say about C
3
|
If C

3
HC
3
= H, we know that [C
3
, H] = 0, i.e., C
3
commute with H, then:
HC
3
| = C
3
H| = EC
3
|
where E is the energy associated to H. Therefore, we can say that C
3
| is an eigenvector of
H with eigenvalue E.
3) a) Let W be a symmetry of the Hamiltonian, i.e., W

HW = H. Show that if | is a non-degenerate


eigenstate of H, then |A| = |W

AW|. Why is the caveat about non-degeneracy


needed?
Due to W is a symmetry of the Hamiltonian and | is a non-degenerate eigenstate of H, then
W| is also an eigenvector of H, as explained in part (2c). Therefore:
|A| = |W

AW|
The requeriment of the non-degeneracy state is needed because otherwise W| = |.
b) Show that if W

AW = A, then |A| = 0 for any non-degenerate eigenstate of H.


If W

AW = A, then WA+AW = 0, i.e., A and W anticommute. Then, using the result of


part (1), if A| = a| and W| = w|, a or w must be zero. Therefore:
|A| = 0
c) Use these results to argue that the CO
2
molecule cannot have a dipole moment in its ground
state. (More presicely, assuming that the electronic ground state is non-degenerate and that
the nuclei are xed according to the summetric structure of the CO
2
, show that a measurement
of the dipole moment operator

d = e

X is certain to give a zero value.)


Due to the structure of the CO
2
molecule, the position of the oxigen atoms have parity sim-
metry. Thus,

d =

d. Therefore, any measurement of the dipole moment operator in one


of the oxigen atoms will give us the value of the other oxigen atom, i.e., the value will be zero.
2
Shankar Ex. 12.2.1 Provide the steps linking
U[R]|x, y = |x y
z
, x
z
+y
to
x, y|U[R]| = (x +y
z
, y x
z
)
(Hint: Recall the derivation of equation (11.2.8) from equation (11.2.6)).
Recalling the derivation of equation (11.2.6):
|
U
= U[R]|
= U[R]
_

|x, yx, y|dx dy


=
_

|x y
z
, x
z
+yx, y|dx dy
Making a change in the variables:
x

= x y
z
, y

= x
z
+y
we can found the values of the old variables respect to the new ones:
x =
x

+y

z
1 +
2
z
, y =
y

z
1 +
2
z
where the denominator became one for an innitesimal approach. Replacing this values in the
previous relation:
U[R]| =
_

|x

, y

+y

z
, y

z
|dx

dy

, y

|U[R]| =
_

, y

|x

, y

+y

z
, y

z
|dx

dy

= x

+y

z
, y

z
|
x

, y

|U[R]| =
_
x

+y

z
, y

z
_
Shankar Ex. 12.2.3 Derive
L
z

by doing a coordinate transformation on eq (12.2.10), and also by direct method mentioned above.
Equation (12.2.10) shown the relation:
L
z
= x
_
i

y
_
y
_
i

x
_
= i
_
x

x
y

x
_
(1)
Express the coordinates as x = r cos and y = r sin and, found the partial derivative respect to
:

=
x

x
+
y

y
= r sin

x
+r cos

y
= y

x
+x

y
3
Replacing it in (1):
L
z
= i

Next, by direct method:


_
1 i

L
z
_
(r, ) = (r, )
(r, ) i

L
z
(r, ) = (r, )

+O[()
2
]
i

L
z
(r, ) =

L
z
(r, ) = i

5) a) Review the discussion on p.311 and ll the missing details leading from (12.2.25) to the commu-
tation relations [P
x
, L
z
] = iP
y
and [P
y
, L
z
] = iP
y
.
_
I +
i

z
L
z
__
I +
i

(
x
P
x
+
y
P
y
)
_ _
I
i

z
L
z
__
I
i

(
x
P
x
+
y
P
y
)
_
=
=
_
I +
i

z
L
z
__
I +
i

x
P
x
+
i

y
P
y
_ _
I
i

z
L
z
__
I
i

x
P
x

y
P
y
_
=
_
I +
i

x
P
x
+
i

y
P
y

x
L
z
P
x

2
+
i

z
L
z

y
L
z
P
y

2
_

_
I
i

x
P
x

y
P
y

x
L
z
P
x

2

i

z
L
z

y
L
z
P
y

2
_
= I +

x

z
P
x
L
z

2


x

z
L
z
P
x

2
+

y

z
P
y
L
z

2


y

z
L
z
P
y

2
= I +

x

2
[P
x
, L
z
] +

y

2
[P
y
, L
z
]
where comparing with the RHS of equation (12.2.25), we found that:
[P
x
, L
z
] = iP
y
, [P
y
, L
z
] = iP
y
b) Carry out a corresponding derivation to show that [L
x
, L
y
] = iL
z
.
From Shankar (12.4.1), we know that:
L
x
= Y P
z
ZP
y
L
y
= ZP
x
XP
z
L
z
= XP
y
Y P
x
4
then,
[L
x
, L
y
] = L
x
L
y
L
y
L
x
= (Y P
z
ZP
y
)(ZP
x
XP
z
) (ZP
x
XP
z
)(Y P
z
ZP
y
)
= Y P
z
ZP
x
Y P
z
XP
z
Z
2
P
y
P
x
+ZP
y
XP
z
ZP
x
Y P
z
+Z
2
P
x
P
y
+XP
z
Y P
z
XP
z
ZP
y
= Y P
x
(P
z
Z ZP
z
) +XP
y
(ZP
z
P
z
Z) Z
2
[P
x
, P
y
] +XY [P
z
, P
z
]
= (ZP
z
P
z
Z)(XP
y
Y P
x
)
= [Z, P
z
]L
z
= iL
z
6) Working in 2D, consider the family of rotations by angle about the point (a,0). Find the expression
for the operator G that is the generator for this family of operations.
The unitary operator that represents the rotation can be written as:
U[R()] = e

G
where G is the generator operator for this family of operators. Let us write down the rotation
matrix in 2D:
R() =
_
cos sin
sin cos
_
and the coordinates of the rotation about (a, 0) are: x

= (x + a) cos + y sin and y

= y cos
(x +a) sin . Now, the unitary operator acting on the state |r is given by:

(r) = r|U[R()]| = r|
_
I
i

Gd
_
| = (r)
i

Gd(r) (2)
But also:

(r) = (r)
(r)

d = (r)
_
(r)
x
x


(r)
y
y

_
d
where (r) = (x, y) = (x

cos y

sin a, x

sin +y

cos ), then:

(r) = (r)
_
y
(r)
x
x
(r)
y
_
d (3)
Finally, comparing (2) with (3) we found that:
G = i
_
y
(r)
x
x
(r)
y
_
5

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