This Quantum World/Serious illnesses/Born: Difference between revisions

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Born

In the same year that Erwin Schrödinger published the equation that now bears his name, the nonrelativistic theory was completed by Max Born's insight that the Schrödinger wave function ψ(𝐫,t) is actually nothing but a tool for calculating probabilities, and that the probability of detecting a particle "described by" ψ(𝐫,t) in a region of space R is given by the volume integral


R|ψ(t,𝐫)|2d3r=Rψ*ψd3r


— provided that the appropriate measurement is made, in this case a test for the particle's presence in R. Since the probability of finding the particle somewhere (no matter where) has to be 1, only a square integrable function can "describe" a particle. This rules out ψ(𝐫)=ei𝐤𝐫, which is not square integrable. In other words, no particle can have a momentum so sharp as to be given by times a wave vector 𝐤, rather than by a genuine probability distribution over different momenta.

Given a probability density function |ψ(x)|2, we can define the expected value


x=|ψ(x)|2xdx=ψ*xψdx


and the standard deviation  Δx=|ψ|2(xx)2

as well as higher moments of |ψ(x)|2. By the same token,


k=ψ*kψdk  and  Δk=|ψ|2(kk)2.

Here is another expression for k:


k=ψ*(x)(iddx)ψ(x)dx.

To check that the two expressions are in fact equal, we plug  ψ(x)=(2π)1/2ψ(k)eikxdk  into the latter expression:


k=12πψ*(x)(iddx)ψ(k)eikxdkdx=12πψ*(x)ψ(k)keikxdkdx.


Next we replace ψ*(x) by (2π)1/2ψ*(k)eikxdk  and shuffle the integrals with the mathematical nonchalance that is common in physics:


k=ψ*(k)kψ(k)[12πei(kk)xdx]dkdk.


The expression in square brackets is a representation of Dirac's delta distribution δ(kk), the defining characteristic of which is  +f(x)δ(x)dx=f(0)  for any continuous function f(x). (In case you didn't notice, this proves what was to be proved.)

Heisenberg

In the same annus mirabilis of quantum mechanics, 1926, Werner Heisenberg proved the so-called "uncertainty" relation


ΔxΔp/2.


Heisenberg spoke of Unschärfe, the literal translation of which is "fuzziness" rather than "uncertainty". Since the relation ΔxΔk1/2 is a consequence of the fact that ψ(x) and ψ(k) are related to each other via a Fourier transformation, we leave the proof to the mathematicians. The fuzziness relation for position and momentum follows via p=k. It says that the fuzziness of a position (as measured by Δx ) and the fuzziness of the corresponding momentum (as measured by Δp=Δk ) must be such that their product equals at least /2.

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