!main_tags!Time Dependent Schrodinger - quantum-physics | What's Your IQ !main_header!

Introduction

Equation governing quantum state evolution: time dependent Schrödinger equation (TDSE). Defines wavefunction behavior in time and space. Central to non-relativistic quantum mechanics. Determines probability amplitudes and system dynamics. Basis for quantum simulations, spectroscopy, tunneling phenomena. Expresses conservation of probability and unitary evolution.

"The Schrödinger equation is the fundamental equation of motion in quantum mechanics, analogous to Newton's laws in classical mechanics." -- Richard P. Feynman

Historical Background

Origins

Formulated by Erwin Schrödinger in 1925-26. Developed to reconcile wave-particle duality. Inspired by de Broglie's matter waves hypothesis. Provided rigorous mathematical framework for quantum states.

Predecessors

Built on Planck's quantization, Einstein's photon concept. Replaced Bohr's model with wave mechanics. Complemented Heisenberg's matrix mechanics.

Impact

Unified quantum theory. Enabled calculation of atomic spectra, molecular structure. Foundation of quantum chemistry, condensed matter physics.

Formulation of the Equation

General Form

Partial differential equation: iℏ ∂Ψ/∂t = ĤΨ. Ψ(x,t): wavefunction, complex-valued. Ĥ: Hamiltonian operator, total energy. ℏ: reduced Planck constant (h/2π).

Hamiltonian Operator

Ĥ = T + V = kinetic + potential energy operators. Typically Ĥ = - (ℏ²/2m)∇² + V(x,t). Governs system dynamics. Hermitian: ensures real eigenvalues (energies).

Wavefunction Domain

Ψ: function over spatial coordinates and time. Square integrable. Normalizable to unity (probability conservation). Complex-valued, encodes amplitude and phase.

iℏ ∂Ψ(x,t)/∂t = - (ℏ²/2m) ∇²Ψ(x,t) + V(x,t)Ψ(x,t)

Mathematical Properties

Linearity

TDSE is linear in Ψ. Superposition principle applies. Solutions can be summed to form new solutions.

Unitary Evolution

Time evolution operator is unitary: preserves inner products and norm. Ensures total probability remains 1.

Hermiticity

Hamiltonian operator Hermitian: eigenvalues real, eigenfunctions orthogonal. Guarantees observable quantities real-valued.

Physical Interpretation

Wavefunction Meaning

Ψ amplitude squared: probability density of finding particle at position x at time t. Complex phase encodes momentum and energy information.

Probability Conservation

Continuity equation derived from TDSE. Probability current density conserves total probability over time.

Measurement Postulate

Wavefunction collapse upon measurement. Time evolution deterministic, measurement probabilistic.

Solutions and Methods

Separation of Variables

For time-independent potentials: Ψ(x,t)=ψ(x)φ(t). Leads to time-independent Schrödinger equation eigenvalue problem.

Eigenstates and Eigenvalues

Energy eigenstates form basis. Time dependence: φ(t)=exp(-iEt/ℏ). Solutions form complete set for state expansion.

Special Functions

Analytical solutions involve Hermite, Laguerre polynomials (harmonic oscillator, hydrogen atom). Boundary conditions critical.

System Solution Type Key Features
Free Particle Plane waves Continuous spectrum, no potential
Particle in a Box Standing waves Discrete energy levels, boundary confinement
Harmonic Oscillator Hermite polynomials Equidistant energy spectrum, quantized levels

Time Evolution Operator

Definition

Operator U(t,t₀) propagates state Ψ(t₀) to Ψ(t). U(t,t₀) = exp(-iĤ(t-t₀)/ℏ) for time-independent Ĥ.

Properties

Unitary: U†U = I. Invertible: U(t₀,t) = U†(t,t₀). Satisfies composition: U(t₂,t₀) = U(t₂,t₁)U(t₁,t₀).

Time-Ordering

For time-dependent Ĥ, U(t,t₀) requires time-ordered exponential. Dyson series used for expansion.

U(t,t₀) = T exp \left(-\frac{i}{\hbar} \int_{t₀}^{t} \hat{H}(t') dt' \right)

Applications

Quantum Dynamics Simulation

Predicts system time evolution, wavepacket propagation, chemical reaction dynamics.

Spectroscopy

Calculates transition probabilities, absorption/emission spectra using time-dependent perturbations.

Quantum Control

Designs pulses to manipulate quantum states. Relevant for quantum computing, information processing.

Relation to Other Equations

Time-Independent Schrödinger Equation

Obtained via separation of variables from TDSE. Describes stationary states.

Heisenberg Equation of Motion

Equivalent formulation in operator picture. Observables evolve, states fixed.

Dirac Equation

Relativistic generalization incorporating spin and special relativity.

Numerical Approaches

Finite Difference Method

Discretizes space and time. Approximates derivatives. Stable for small time steps.

Split-Operator Method

Separates kinetic and potential evolution. Efficient for time propagation.

Matrix Exponentiation

Uses diagonalization or Krylov subspace methods to compute U(t,t₀).

Ψ(t+Δt) ≈ e^{-iVΔt/2ℏ} e^{-iTΔt/ℏ} e^{-iVΔt/2ℏ} Ψ(t)

Limitations and Extensions

Non-Relativistic Scope

TDSE valid for slow particles, low energies. Fails for relativistic speeds.

Many-Body Systems

Exact solutions intractable. Approximations, mean-field theories used.

Extensions

Relativistic Dirac equation. Open quantum systems modeled by master equations. Quantum field theory for particle creation.

Examples

Free Particle Propagation

Plane wave solutions. Wave packets spread over time.

Particle in a One-Dimensional Box

Discrete energy levels. Sinusoidal stationary states with time-dependent phase.

Harmonic Oscillator Dynamics

Coherent states evolve preserving shape. Energy quantization visible in time evolution.

References

  • E. Schrödinger, "An Undulatory Theory of the Mechanics of Atoms and Molecules," Physical Review, vol. 28, 1926, pp. 1049-1070.
  • D. J. Griffiths, "Introduction to Quantum Mechanics," 2nd ed., Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005, pp. 45-78.
  • L. D. Landau and E. M. Lifshitz, "Quantum Mechanics: Non-Relativistic Theory," 3rd ed., Pergamon Press, 1977, pp. 20-55.
  • C. Cohen-Tannoudji, B. Diu, and F. Laloë, "Quantum Mechanics," Wiley-VCH, 1991, pp. 120-145.
  • S. Gasiorowicz, "Quantum Physics," 3rd ed., Wiley, 2003, pp. 85-110.
!main_footer!