Use separation of variables in Cartesian coordinates to solve infinite cubical well

V(x,y,z)=0if x,y,z are all between 0 to a;

V(x,y,z)=Otherwise

a) Find the stationary states and the corresponding energies

b) Call the distinct energies E1,E2,E3,..in the order of increasing energy. Findlocalid="1658127758806" E1,E2,E3,E4,E5,E6determine their degeneracies (that is, the number of different states that share the same energy). Comment: In one dimension degenerate bound states do not occur but in three dimensions they are very common.

c) What is the degeneracy of E14 and why is this case interesting?

Short Answer

Expert verified

(a) Ψ(x,y,z)=(2a)32sin(nxπaX)sin(nyπay)sin(nzπaz)E(x,y,z)=π2h22ma2(nx2+ny2+nz2)nx,ny,nz=1,2,3,.......

(b) Distinct energies calculated in the step 3.

(c) E14=4

Step by step solution

01

Define the Schrödinger equation

A differential equation describes matter in quantum mechanics in terms of the wave-like properties of particles in a field. Its answer is related to a particle's probability density in space and time.

02

Determine the corresponding energies

-h22m(2Ψx2+2Ψy2+2Ψz2)=EΨ

Separable solutions:Ψ(x,y,z)=X(x)Y(y)Z(z)

Put this in and divide by XYZ

role="math" localid="1658128747853" -h22m2Ψ+VΨ=EΨ1Xd2xdx2+1Yd2Ydy2+1Zd2Zdz2=-2mh2E

The three terms on the left are functions of x,y,z, so each must be a constant, call the separation constants Kx2,Ky2,Kz2

d2Xdx2=-Kx2X;d2Ydy2=-Ky2Y;d2Zdz2=-Ky2ZX(x)=Axsinkxx+BxcoskxxY(y)=AysinkyY+BycoskyYZ(z)=AzsinkzZ+BzcoskzZX(0)=0,Bx=0;Y(0)=0,By=0Z(0)=0,Bz=0X(a)=0sin(kxa)=0kxa=nττkx=nxττa,ky=nyττa,kz=nzττaψ(x,y,z)=AxAyAzsin(nxττaX)sin(nyττaY)sin(nzττaZ)Ax=AY=Az=2aψ(x,y,z)=(2a)32sin(nxττaX)sin(nyττaY)sin(nzττaZ)E(x,y,z)=π2h22a(nx2+ny2+nz2)

03

Determine the distinct energies

d=1;E1=E111=3π2h22ma2d=2;E2=E211=E121=E112=6π2h22ma2d=3;E3=E221=E212=E122=9π2h22ma2d=3;E4=E311=E131=E113=11π2h22ma2d=1;E5=E222=12π2h22ma2d=1;E6=E123=E231=E312=E132=E213=E321=14π2h22ma2

04

Step 4:Determine the degeneracy

After calculatingE7,E8,.....,E13we find that:

E14=E333=E115, so the degeneracy is 4.

This is called "accidental degeneracy" since (3,3,3)and (1,1,5)conspired to have the same energy eigenvalue 27.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

Show thatΘ=AIn[tan(θ2)]satisfies the θequation (Equation 4.25), for l = m = 0. This is the unacceptable "second solution" -- whats wrong with it?

(a) What isL+Y1I? (No calculation allowed!)

(b) Use the result of (a), together with Equation 4.130 and the fact thatLzY1I=hIYII to determineYII(θ,ϕ) , up to a normalization constant.

(c) Determine the normalization constant by direct integration. Compare your final answer to what you got in Problem 4.5.

What is the most probable value of r, in the ground state of hydrogen? (The answer is not zero!) Hint: First you must figure out the probability that the electron would be found between r and r + dr.

(a) A particle of spin1and a particle of spin 2 are at rest in a configuration such that the total spin is 3, and its z component is . If you measured the z component of the angular momentum of the spin-2particle, what values might you get, and what is the probability of each one?

(b) An electron with spin down is in the stateψ510of the hydrogen atom. If you could measure the total angular momentum squared of the electron alone (not including the proton spin), what values might you get, and what is the probability of each?

Work out the spin matrices for arbitrary spin , generalizing spin (Equations 4.145 and 4.147), spin 1 (Problem 4.31), and spin (Problem 4.52). Answer:

Sz=(s0000s-10000s-200000-s)Sx=2(0bs0000bs0bs-10000bs-10bs-20000bs-200000000b-s+10000b-s+10)Sy=2(0-ibs0000ibs0-ibs-10000-ibs-10-ibs-20000-ibs-200000000-ibs+10000-ibs+10)

where,bj(s+j)(s+1-j)
See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free