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Operators

The document discusses operators and expectation values in quantum mechanics. It introduces operators as things that transform functions into new functions. Position (x) and momentum (p) are represented as operators. The expectation value of an operator is the average value you would measure if you performed the measurement repeatedly on identical systems. Expectation values are calculated by taking the inner product of the wave function with the operator. Several examples are provided to demonstrate calculating expectation values of x, x2, and p for simple systems. The uncertainty in a measurement is related to how spread out the wave function is.

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Tanmay Saini
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50% found this document useful (2 votes)
3K views8 pages

Operators

The document discusses operators and expectation values in quantum mechanics. It introduces operators as things that transform functions into new functions. Position (x) and momentum (p) are represented as operators. The expectation value of an operator is the average value you would measure if you performed the measurement repeatedly on identical systems. Expectation values are calculated by taking the inner product of the wave function with the operator. Several examples are provided to demonstrate calculating expectation values of x, x2, and p for simple systems. The uncertainty in a measurement is related to how spread out the wave function is.

Uploaded by

Tanmay Saini
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Operators

•A function is something that turns numbers into numbers f  x   sin  kx 


•An operator is something that turns functions into functions
•Example: The derivative operator d
O=
d dx
O f (x ) = f (x ) = d sin (kx) = k cos (kx)
dx dx
•In quantum mechanics, x cannot be the position of a particle
•Particles don’t have a definite position
•Instead, think of x as something you multiply a wave function by to get a new wave
function
•x is an operator, sometimes written as xop or X
xopy (x)= xy (x)
•There are lots of other operators as well, like momentum
 
p k pop 
i x i x
Expectation Values
•Suppose we know the wave function (x) and we measure x.
What answer will we get?
•We only know probability of getting different values
•Let’s find the average value you get
•Recall |(x)|2 tells you the probability density that it is at x
•We want an expectation value
•It is denoted by x 
x  P  x x
x
 
x     x  xdx    *  x  x  x  dx
2

 
•For any operator, we can similarly get an average measurement

O    *  x  O   x  dx


    x 
p    *  x  pop  x  dx    *  x  dx

i  x
exp   12 Ax 2 
A
Sample Problem  0  x  4

m
A particle is in the ground state of a harmonic oscillator. A
What is the expectation value of the operators x, x2, and p?
 
x    * x dx  A   e  Ax2
xdx x 0
 
 
x 2
   * x  dx  A   e
2  Ax2 2
x dx x2  1 2 A
 

  A 
p 0
p   *
x
dx   e  Ax2 2
  Ax  e  Ax 2 2
dx
i  i  

Note: x2  x2    n 1


A  n21
if n is even

n  Ax 2
xe dx   2

More on this later  0 if n is odd

  12    ,   32   12 
Note: Always use normalized wave
functions for expectation values!
The Hamiltonian Operator 2
p
•In classical mechanics, the Hamiltonian is the formula H V  x
for energy in terms of the position x and momentum p 2m
•In quantum, the formula is the same, but x and p are 2

 V  xop 
p
reinterpreted as operators H op

•Schrodinger’s equations rewritten with the 2m


Hamiltonian: E  H 22
  V  xop 
•The expectation value of the Hamiltonian is the 2m x 2

average value you would get if you measure the energy

E H 
i  H
Advanced Physics: t
•The Hamiltonian becomes much more complicated
•More dimensions, Multiple particles, Special Relativity
•But Schrodinger’s Equations in terms of H remain the same
Sample Problem
A particle is trapped in a 1D infinite
square well 0 < x < L with wave function
  x   5  Lx  x 2 
given at right. If we measure the energy, 30
what is the average value we would get? L

 pop
2
 2 L
d 2
E  H    *   V  x   dx     * 2 dx

  2m  2m 0 dx
L 2 L
30 2 2

5   2   5  
d 15
 Lx  x 2
Lx  x 2
dx   Lx  x 2
 2  dx
2mL 0 dx mL 0
30 2 1 2 1 3 L 30 2 1 3 1 3
5 2
Lx  3 x    2 L 3L  
5 2
 5
mL 0 mL mL2
 2 2
4.935 2
•Compare to ground state: E 2

•Often gives excellent approximations 2mL mL2
Tricks for Finding Expectation Values
•We often want expectation values of x or x2 or p or p2
•If our wave function is real, p is trivial

  
d d
p   *
i  dx
dx 
i  dx
 dx 
2i 
d
 dx  2
 dx 
2i
 2 


•To find p , we will use integration by parts


2 p  0
2 
  d 2  d
 
d * d 
p 2
     * 2 dx    *
2
 dx 
 i   dx  dx  
dx dx 


d
2

 
2 2
p dx

dx
Uncertainty
•Recall: x2  x2. Why?
•The difference between these is a measure
of how spread out the wave function is
4 6  46
2
•Define the uncertainty in x: 2 2
 26     25
 x   x  x  2 
2 2
2 2
•We can similarly define the uncertainty in any operator:

 p   p  p  O   O  O
2 2 2 2 2 2

Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle


 x  p   12
exp   12 Ax 2 
A
Sample Problem  0  x  4
 m
A particle is in the ground state of a harmonic
A
oscillator. Find the uncertainty in x and p,
and check that it obeys uncertainty principle
•Much of the work was done five slides ago
x  0 x2  1 2 A p  0
•We even found p, but since  is real, it is trivial anyway
•Now work out p2:
d
2

 
 A  2
p2   dx      
2 2 1 2
Ax exp Ax dx
 dx    2 

 2
A 2
A x e 2  Ax2
dx p2  1
2
2
A

•Now get the uncertainties


1 p  p  p
2 2
 A2
x  x  x
2 2

2A
xp  1
2

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