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author | Robert McIntyre <rlm@mit.edu> |
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date | Fri, 28 Oct 2011 04:56:15 -0700 |
parents | 44d3dc936f6a |
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1 #+TITLE: Bugs in Quantum Mechanics2 #+AUTHOR: Dylan Holmes3 #+SETUPFILE: ../../aurellem/org/setup.org4 #+INCLUDE: ../../aurellem/org/level-0.org7 #Bugs in the Quantum-Mechanical Momentum Operator10 I studied quantum mechanics the same way I study most subjects\mdash{}11 by collecting (and squashing) bugs in my understanding. One of these12 bugs persisted throughout two semesters of13 quantum mechanics coursework until I finally found14 the paper15 [[http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0103153][/Self-adjoint extensions of operators and the teaching of quantum16 mechanics/]], which helped me stamp out the bug entirely. I decided to17 write an article about the problem and its solution for a number of reasons:19 - Although the paper was not unreasonably dense, it was written for20 teachers. I wanted to write an article for students.21 - I wanted to popularize the problem and its solution because other22 explanations are currently too hard to find. (Even Shankar's23 excellent [[http://books.google.com/books/about/Principles_of_quantum_mechanics.html?id=2zypV5EbKuIC][textbook]] doesn't mention it.)24 - I wanted to check that the bug was indeed entirely25 eradicated. Attempting an explanation is my way of making26 sure.28 * COMMENT29 I recommend the30 paper not only for students who are learning31 quantum mechanics, but especially for teachers interested in debugging32 them.34 * COMMENT35 On my first exam in quantum mechanics, my professor asked us to36 describe how certain measurements would affect a particle in a37 box. Many of these measurement questions required routine application38 of skills we had recently learned\mdash{}first, you recall (or39 calculate) the eigenstates of the quantity40 to be measured; second, you write the given state as a linear41 sum of these eigenstates\mdash{} the coefficients on each term give42 the probability amplitude.44 * The infinite square well potential46 There is a particle in a one-dimensional potential well that is47 infinite everywhere except for a well of length \(a\). This means that the48 particle exists in a potential[fn:coords][fn:infinity]51 \(V(x)=\begin{cases}0,&\text{for }\;0< x< a;\\\infty,&\text{for52 }\;x<0\text{ or }x>a.\end{cases}\)54 The Schr\ouml{}dinger equation describes how the particle's state55 \(|\psi\rangle\) will change over time in this system.57 \(\begin{eqnarray}58 i\hbar \frac{\partial}{\partial t}|\psi\rangle &=&59 H |\psi\rangle \equiv\frac{P^2}{2m}|\psi\rangle+V|\psi\rangle \end{eqnarray}\)61 This is a differential equation whose solutions are the physically62 allowed states for the particle in this system. Physically allowed63 states are those that change in physically allowed ways. Like any64 differential equation, the Schr\ouml{}dinger equation can be65 accompanied by /boundary conditions/\mdash{}conditions that66 further restrict which states qualify as physically allowed.68 Whenever possible, physicists impose these boundary conditions:69 - The state should be a /continuous function of/ \(x\). This means70 that if a particle is very likely to be /at/ a particular location,71 it is also very likely to be /near/ that location.72 -74 #; physically allowed states are those that change in physically75 #allowed ways.78 ** Boundary conditions79 Because the potential is infinite everywhere except within the well,80 a realistic particle must be confined to exist only within the81 well\mdash{}its wavefunction must be zero everywhere beyond the walls82 of the well.85 [fn:coords] I chose my coordinate system so that the well extends from86 \(0<x<a\). Others choose a coordinate system so that the well extends from87 \(-\frac{a}{2}<x<\frac{a}{2}\). Although both coordinate systems describe the same physical88 situation, they give different-looking answers.90 [fn:infinity] Of course, infinite potentials are not91 realistic. Instead, they are useful approximations to finite92 potentials when \ldquo{}infinity\rdquo{} and \ldquo{}the actual height93 of the well\rdquo{} are close enough for your own practical94 purposes. Having introduced a physical impossibility into the problem95 already, we don't expect to get physically realistic solutions; we96 just expect to get mathematically consistent ones. The forthcoming97 trouble is that we don't.