Lec. 3
Lec. 3
………(2)
The spectrum of the Hamiltonian, which consists of the entire set of its eigenvalues, is real.
This spectrum can be discrete, continuous, or a mixture of both. In the case of bound states,
the Hamiltonian has a discrete spectrum of values and a continuous spectrum for unbound
states. In the position representation, the time-dependent Schrödinger equation (1) for a
particle of mass “m” moving in a time-dependent potential V(r, t) can be written as follows:
…………(3)
Recall that, according to the probabilistic interpretation of Born, the quantity |ψ(r, t) |2dτ is
the probability of finding the system at time t in the elementary volume surrounding the
point r. Since the total probability is 1, we have 2
………………(4)
• Stationary states: Time-independent potentials
In a large class of problems, the Schrödinger potential V(r,t) has no time dependence and it
is simply a function V(r) of position. In this case the Hamiltonian operator will also be time
independent, and hence the Schrödinger equation will have solutions that are separable, i.e.
solutions that consist of a product of two functions, one depending only on (r) and the other
only on time
…………….. ……(1)
……..(2)
The left side of the above eq. depends only on the variable “”, while the right side depends
only on the variable “t”, since “r” and “t” are independent variable, then both sides must be
equal a quantity which depend on neither “r” nor “t”. Thus, both sides must be equal to the
same separation constant “c”, the right side
………(3)
………(4)
…….(5)
…………………….(6)
…………..(7)
A state described by a wave function (7) in which the spatial and temporal parts are
separable is called stationary state, stationary because physical observables of the state are
actually time independent
• Continuity equation
Consider, three-dimensional time dependent Schrödinger equations both for the wave
function ψ(r,t) , and its complex conjugate function ψ*(r,t) . We have
……….(1)
………..(2)
If we multiply the equation (1) by ψ*(r,t) , the equation (2) by ψ(r,t) and subtract the second
from the first,
……(3)
• ……(4)
……(5)
Which has the familiar form associated with the flow of fluid of density ρ(r,t) and current
density J So, it is reasonable to interpret J as the probability current density, and ρ(r,t) as
the probability density.
Some application to the time-independent Schrödinger equation
• The Potential Step: Unbounded states
An unbound state occurs when the energy is sufficient to take the particle to infinity,
E > V().
fig. 1
Another simple problem consists of a particle that is free everywhere, but beyond a particular
point, say x = 0, the potential increases sharply(i.e. it becomes repulsive or attractive). A
potential of this type is called a potential step as shown in Fig. 2:
Fig.(2)
Two cases:
Case E V0
The particles are free for x 0. Consider a particle of energy E moving in region in which the potential
energy is the step function. What happened when a particle moving from left to right encounters the
step? The classical answer is simple:
All particles with E < Vo will be reflected back.
All particles with E > Vo will be pass through into zone II.
the particle moves with a speed v = √2E/m. As the particles enter the region x 0, where the
potential now is V = V0, they slowdown to momentum 2m(E-V0) ; they will then conserve
this momentum as they travel to the right.
k 2 mE /
2 2
in region of space I 1
( x ) e it Ae i ( k1 x t ) Be i ( k1 x t ) x<0
1
( x, t )
i t i ( k 2 x t )
2 ( x ) e Ce x≥0
To calculate R and T
ψ
dψ i ( x )
i d ( x) k1 A
2
J incident ψ i ( x)
ψ i ( x) i
2m dx dx
m
k1 2 k 2 2
J reflected B , J transmitted C
m m
2 2
B k2 C
R 2
, T 2
A k1 A
A B C, k1 ( A B ) k 2 C ;
k1 k 2 2 k1
B A, C A,
k1 k 2 k1 k 2
( k1 k 2 ) (1 ) 4
2 2
4 k1 k 2
R T
k 1
,
( k1 k 2 ) (1 ) k2
2 2 2 2
1
.(2) Potential step and propagation directions of the incident, reflected, and
transmitted waves, plus their probability densities (x)2 when E V0.
d2
k 2 ( x )
dx 2 2
2 (x ≥ 0)
Where k 2 2 2m(V0 E ) / 2 . This equation’s solution is
2 2
2 ( x ) Ce k x De k x (x ≥ 0)
Since the wave function must be finite everywhere, and
since the term e k2 x diverges when x ⟹ , the constant D
has to be zero. Thus, the complete wave function is
Ae i ( k1 x t ) Be i ( k1 x t )
x < 0,
( x, t )
Ce i ( k 2 x t ) x≥ 0.
Thus , the reflected coefficient is given by
2
B k1 k 2
2 2
R 2 1
k1 k 2
2 2
A
0, x 0,
V ( x ) V0 0 x a,
0, x a.
Case E V0 unbound states(continuum states)
x
0 ɑ
Fig.(3) Potential barrier and propagation directions of the incident, reflected, and transmitted
waves, plus their probability densities (x)2 when E V0
where 𝑘1=(2𝑚𝐸/ℏ2)1/2 and 𝑘2=(2𝑚(𝐸−𝑉𝑜)/ℏ2) 1/2. The constants B, C, D, and E can be
obtained in terms of A from the boundary conditions:
𝜓(𝑥) and (𝑑𝜓(𝑥)/𝑑𝑥)
must be continuous at 𝑥=0 and 𝑥=a, respectively
The transmission coefficient is thus given by
The Case E V0: Tunneling: bound states
Now we consider the situation where classically the particle does not
have enough energy to surmount the potential barrier (figure3).
Classically, we would expect total reflection: every particle that arrives
at the barrier (x = 0) will be reflected back; no particle can penetrate
the barrier, where it would have a negative kinetic energy. Quantum
mechanical predictions differ sharply from their classical counterparts,
for the wave function is not zero beyond the barrier. The solutions of
the Schrödinger equation in the three regions yield expression that are
similar to
( x ) Ae ik1x Be ik1x , x 0,
1
ik 2 x
( x ) 2 ( x ) Ce De
ik 2 x
, 0 x a,
3 ( x ) Ee ik1x , x a,
V(x)
V0
Particle
E
+
x
0 ɑ
Fig.(3) Potential barrier and propagation directions of the incident, reflected, and
transmitted waves, plus their probability densities (x)2 when E V0
2 ( x ) Ce k x De k x
2 2
( x ) Ae ik1x Be ik1x , x 0,
1
k2 x
( x ) 2 ( x ) Ce De
k2 x
, 0 x a,
3 ( x ) Ee ik1x , x a,
V 0
0 a
Example: A typical diameter of a nucleus is about 10-14m. Use the infinite square
well potential to calculate the transition energy from the first excited state to the
ground state for a proton confined to the nucleus.
Solution:
2 2 2 2 2 c 2
En 2
n , E1 2 2
2.0 MeV
2ma 2ma c
The first excited state energy is found to be E2 = 4E1 = 8MeV, and the transition
energy is ΔE =E2 – E1 = 6MeV. This is a reasonable value for proton in the
nucleus.
Zero-point energy
Generally, the lowest energy in a quantum system is called
the zero point energy.
a a
Example (zero point):
The Symmetric Potential Well
What happens if the potential become symmetric?
n even
d2 1 1
k
2 ( x ) 0 - a x a ,
dx 2 2
2 2
2
d2 1
k
2 ( x ) 0 x a ,
dx 2 1
3
2
k2 a
k 2 tan k1 . even parity function
2
Solve these equations to obtain:
nπ
αn (1,2,3,.....)
2
Since αn2 = m𝒂2En / (2h2) we see that we recover the energy
expression for the infinite well
nπ π
2 2
αn En
2
2
n
2 2 ma
Fig.(5) Graphical solutions for the finit sequare well potential: they are given by the intersection of