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Questions tagged [wavefunction]

A complex scalar field that describes a quantum mechanical system. The square of the modulus of the wave function gives the probability of the system to be found in a particular state. DO NOT USE THIS TAG for classical waves.

0 votes
2 answers
66 views

Time derivative of complex conjugate wave function [duplicate]

We have $$\frac{\partial \Psi}{\partial t} = \frac{i\hbar}{2m} \frac{\partial^2 \Psi}{\partial x^2} - \frac{i}{\hbar}V\Psi$$$$\frac{\partial \Psi^*}{\partial t} = -\frac{i\hbar}{2m} \frac{\partial^2 \...
John Doe's user avatar
  • 297
3 votes
2 answers
808 views

What Does Feynman Mean When He Says Amplitude and Probabilities?

In Feynman lectures on gravitation section 1.4, he tries to debate over whether one should quantize the gravitation or not. He provides a two-slit diffraction experiment with a gravity detector, which ...
Ting-Kai Hsu's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
182 views

Other than approximating the total energy of the system, what other information does the Hartree-Fock method provide?

In the Hartree-Fock method, one computes the energy of an interacting quantum-many body system, described by $H$, via taking a non-interacting trial ground state, $|\psi_{\mathrm{HF}}\rangle$, and ...
meer23's user avatar
  • 41
-2 votes
0 answers
38 views

If a proton transforms into a neutron by releasing a positron why should this process create more mass? [duplicate]

If waves can interfere and thats why cancel out or add up why we cannot think the same about the natterial feature called mass as in this explained example in the title of this posted question??Thanks ...
Emilija Bradvica's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
104 views

Can the Parity Operator in polar coordinates be defined as $\hat\Pi\psi(r,\theta,\phi) = \psi(r,\theta+\pi,\phi).$?

I was reading about Symmetries & Conservation Laws from Introduction to Quantum Mechanics, David J. Griffiths when I came across this question about the parity operator in three dimensions: ...
Kapil's user avatar
  • 13
4 votes
3 answers
855 views

Is the zero vector necessary to do quantum mechanics?

Textbook quantum mechanics describes systems as Hilbert spaces $\mathcal{H}$, states as unit vectors $\psi \in \mathcal{H}$, and observables as operators $O: \mathcal{H} \to \mathcal{H}$. Ultimately, ...
Silly Goose's user avatar
  • 2,666
-2 votes
1 answer
80 views

Quantum collapse: our invention? [closed]

I'm wondering if a similar scenario has already been proposed, or if this one is somehow valid. I'm a complete layman so be patient.My reasoning goes like this: is the collapse of the wave function a ...
Marco Fabbri's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
491 views

Physical meaning of each term of the square modulus of a wave function

The expression below is the square modulus of the wave function of a harmonic potential ($V=\frac{1}{2}m\omega^2 x^2$) in which it's stated that the probability of finding the particle in the $\psi_0$ ...
zzzzzzzzz's user avatar
1 vote
3 answers
110 views

Has quantum measurement and particle appearance ever been modelled as a resonance effect created by the measuring device on the quantum wave?

Has anyone ever modelled quantum measurement as a resonance effect, that is created by introducing a measuring device into the quantum system? An analogy may explain what I mean: if you take the free ...
Ash90's user avatar
  • 141
2 votes
1 answer
89 views

De Broglie wavelength and how it leads to the wave function

From what I know, de Broglie derived the wavelength equation using Einstein's $E=mc^2$ and the Einstein-Planck equation $E=h\nu$. My teacher explained this by saying an electron literally moves in ...
Darth Nandan's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
26 views

Classical Hamilton’s equations in quantum mechanics [duplicate]

How can one derive what the position operator is in momentum space for a quantum wave function from the classical Hamilton’s equations? Similarly, is a concept of an “angular momentum space” ...
TheorVHP's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
84 views

Can Hartree-Fock determinant WLOG taken to be real?

For a many-electron Hamiltonian $H$, a Hartree-Fock determinant is a Slater determinant $\Psi$ that minimizes the energy $\frac{\langle\Psi,H\Psi\rangle}{\langle\Psi,\Psi\rangle}$. In general, $\Psi$ ...
Rasmus's user avatar
  • 113
0 votes
0 answers
28 views

$\pi$ phase shift upon reflection in quantum wells

Is there a similar phenomenon to the $\pi$ phase shift experienced by light upon reflection from a medium of lower to higher refracted index for particles in different potentials? For instance, does a ...
TheorVHP's user avatar
2 votes
4 answers
204 views

Why are wavefunctions not considered hidden variables?

In the proof of Bell's theorem of 1964, referenced e.g. here, the definition of a hidden variable seems to be any variable from which we can derive the correlation between the detectors, by ...
Davyz2's user avatar
  • 407
0 votes
3 answers
112 views

How is Zig-zag Motion Observable in Quantum Mechanics Given Wave Function Collapse?

I'm puzzled by a concept I read about in a physics text concerning quantum measurement. The text describes the potential to observe a "zig-zag" motion if one could capture images of an ...
CuriousMind's user avatar

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