Commutators, Eigenvalues and Quantum Mechanics On Surfaces...
Commutators, Eigenvalues and Quantum Mechanics On Surfaces...
eigenvalues,
and
quantum mechanics
on surfaces.
Evans Harrell
Georgia Tech
www.math.gatech.edu/~harrell
• Commutator [A,B] = AB - BA
Dramatis personae
• Commutator [A,B] = AB - BA
• Commutator [A,B] = AB - BA
• Curvature
Eigenvalues
• H uk = λ u k
• Implication:
• Hile-Protter, 1980:
The universal industry after PPW
- ΔLB + q,
• Laboratories by 1990.
Nanoelectronics
• Quantum wires - etched semiconductors,
wires of gold in carbon nanotubes.
Nanoelectronics
• Quantum wires
• Quantum waveguides - macroscopic in two
dimensions, nanoscale in the width
Nanoelectronics
• Quantum wires
• Quantum waveguides
• Designer potentials - STM places individual
atoms on a surface
• Answer #2 (The nanoanswer):
- ΔLB + q
- ΔLB + q,
Principal curvatures
The result:
- ΔLB + q,
Note: q(x) ≥ 0 !
Commutators: [A,B] := AB-BA
Commutators: [A,B] := AB-BA
[Q, P] = i
[Q, P] = i
Represented by Q = x, P = - i d/dx
Canonical commutation is then just
the product rule:
Commutators: [A,B] := AB-BA
2. Eigenvalue gaps are connected to commutators:
H uk = λk uk , H self-adjoint
p2,
but rather
H1/4 := p2 + κ2/4.
That is, the gap for any H is
controlled by an expectation value
of H1/4.
Bound is sharp for the circle:
Gap bounds for (hyper) surfaces
Z(t) := tr(exp(-tH)).
Partition function
which implies