[Home]Schrodinger wave equation

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

Showing revision 12
The Schrödinger equation, found by the Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger in 1925, describes the wave-like behavior of particles in quantum mechanics.

In this theory, the state of a system is described by a wave function, i.e. by an element Ψ of some complex Hilbert space. The wave function encodes the probabilities of measurement outcomes, and in general will depend on the position r and time t, so can be written Ψ = Ψ(r,t). The Schrödinger equation describes how Ψ changes over time and is therefore of central importance in quantum mechanics. The general, time-dependent equation reads

i h d/dt Ψ = H Ψ

where i is the imaginary unit, h equals Plancks constant h divided by 2π, and H is a linear operator on the Hilbert space, known as the Hamilton operator. The Hamilton operator corresponds to the total energy of the system and is therefore typically a sum of two operators, one corresponding to kinetic energy and the other to potential energy. Written out in full,

i h d/dt Ψ = -h2/2m ∇2 Ψ + V Ψ

where V is the potential energy. Many systems can be described by probability distributions which don't change over time. Examples are a confined electron or the hydrogen atom. The states Ψ describing these systems have to be solutions of the time-independent Schrödinger equation

H φ = E φ

where the total energy of the system, E, is constant. Here φ depends only on space, and is related to the full wave function Ψ by

Ψ(r,t) = φ(r') e-iE(t - τ) / h''

Where τ is the phase of the wave. Solutions with different phases differ only be a complex scalar factor of absolute value 1, so describe the same physical solution. We see that the above is an eigenvalue equation for φ and E.

Solutions of the Schrödinger equation

Analytical solutions of the time-independent Schrödinger equation can be obtained for a variety of relatively simple conditions. These solutions provide insight into the nature of Quantum phenomena and sometimes provide a reasonable approximation of the behavior of more complex systems (eg. in Statistical Mechanics molecular vibrations are often approximated as harmonic oscillators). Several of the more common analytical solutions include:


HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
This page is read-only | View other revisions | View current revision
Edited October 17, 2001 9:06 am by Josh Grosse (diff)
Search: