As an explicit example of the method developed inProblem 7.15, consider an electron at rest in a uniform magnetic field B=B2kfor which the Hamiltonian is (Equation 4.158):

H=-γB (4.158).

H0=eBzmSz (7.57).

The eigenspinors, xaarelocalid="1655969802629" xb,andthecorrespondingenergies,EaandEb,aregiven in Equation 4.161. Now we turn on a perturbation, in the form of a uniform field in the x direction:

{x+,withenergyE+=-γB0ħ/2x-,withenergyE-=+-γB0ħ/2 (4.161).

H'=eBxmSx (7.58).

(a) Find the matrix elements of H′, and confirm that they have the structure of Equation 7.55. What is h?

(b) Using your result inProblem 7.15(b), find the new ground state energy, in second-order perturbation theory.

(c) Using your result inProblem 7.15(c), find the variation principle bound on the ground state energy.

Short Answer

Expert verified

(a)<xa|H'|xb>=eBxħ2m(01)(0110)(10)=eBxħ2m(01)(01)=eBxħ2m.soh=eBxħ2m.

(b) EgsEa-h2(Eb-Ea)=eħ2m(Bz+Bx22Bz).

(c) Egs=-12(eBzħm)2+4(eBzħm)2=-eħ2mB2z+B2z.

Step by step solution

01

(a)Finding the matrix elements of H'

For the electron, . (Eq. 4.161).

For consistency with Problem 7.15,

soxbx+=10,xa=x-=01,Eb=Ex=eBzħ2m,Ea=E-=-eBzħ2m.

x+,withenergyE+=-γB0ħ/2x-,withenergyE-=+γB0ħ/2

|xaH'xa=ebxmħ201011001=ebxħ2m0110.xbH'xb=ebxħ2m10011010=0,.xbH'xb=ebxħ2m10011001=ebxħ2m101010.xbH'xb=ebxħ2m01011010=ebxħ2m0101=ebxħ2m.andtheconditionsofProblem7.15aremet.

02

(b)Finding the new ground state energy

From Problem 7.15(b),

EgsEa-h2EbEa=-eBxħ2m-eBxħ/2m2(eBxħ/m)=-eħ2mBz+Bx22Bz.

03

(c)Finding the variation principle bound

From Problem 7.15(c),

Egs=12Ea+Ea-Eb-Ea2+4h2,(itsactuallytheexactgroundstate).Egs=12eBzħm2+4eBzħm2=-eħ2mBz2+Bx2.whichwasobviousfromthestart,sincethesquarerootissimplythemagnitudeofthetotalfield).

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Suppose you’re given a two-level quantum system whose (time-independent) Hamiltonian H0admits just two Eigen states, Ψa (with energy Ea ), and Ψb(with energy Eb ). They are orthogonal, normalized, and non-degenerate (assume Ea is the smaller of the two energies). Now we turn on a perturbation H′, with the following matrix elements:

Ψa|H'|Ψa=Ψb|H'|Ψb=0;Ψa|H'|Ψb=Ψb|H'|Ψa (7.74).

where h is some specified constant.

(a) Find the exact Eigen values of the perturbed Hamiltonian.

(b) Estimate the energies of the perturbed system using second-order perturbation theory.

(c) Estimate the ground state energy of the perturbed system using the variation principle, with a trial function of the form

Ψ=(cosϕ)Ψa+(sinϕ)ψb (7.75).

where ϕ is an adjustable parameter. Note: Writing the linear combination in this way is just a neat way to guarantee that ψ is normalized.

(d) Compare your answers to (a), (b), and (c). Why is the variational principle so accurate, in this case?

Find the best bound on Egsfor the one-dimensional harmonic oscillator using a trial wave function of the form role="math" localid="1656044636654" ψ(x)=Ax2+b2.,where A is determined by normalization and b is an adjustable parameter.

The fundamental problem in harnessing nuclear fusion is getting the two particles (say, two deuterons) close enough together for the attractive (but short-range) nuclear force to overcome the Coulomb repulsion. The “bulldozer” method is to heat the particles up to fantastic temperatures and allow the random collisions to bring them together. A more exotic proposal is muon catalysis, in which we construct a “hydrogen molecule ion,” only with deuterons in place of protons, and a muon in place of the electron. Predict the equilibrium separation distance between the deuterons in such a structure, and explain why muons are superior to electrons for this purpose.

a) Use the variational principle to prove that first-order non-degenerate perturbation theory always overestimates (or at any rate never underestimates) the ground state energy.

(b) In view of (a), you would expect that the second-order correction to the ground state is always negative. Confirm that this is indeed the case, by examining Equation 6.15.

Find the best bound on Egsfor the delta-function potentialV(x)=-αδ(x), using a triangular trial function (Equation 7.10, only centered at the origin). This time a is an adjustable parameter.

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