This Quantum World/Feynman route/Schroedinger at last

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Schrรถdinger at last

The Schrรถdinger equation is non-relativistic. We obtain the non-relativistic version of the electromagnetic action differential,

dS=mc2dt1v2/c2qV(t,๐ซ)dt+(q/c)๐€(t,๐ซ)d๐ซ,

by expanding the root and ignoring all but the first two terms:

1v2/c2=112v2c218v4c4112v2c2.

This is obviously justified if vc, which defines the non-relativistic regime.

Writing the potential part of dS as q[V+๐€(t,๐ซ)(๐ฏ/c)]dt makes it clear that in most non-relativistic situations the effects represented by the vector potential ๐€ are small compared to those represented by the scalar potential V. If we ignore them (or assume that ๐€ vanishes), and if we include the charge q in the definition of V (or assume that q=1), we obtain

S[๐’ž]=mc2(tBtA)+๐’ždt[m2v2V(t,๐ซ)]

for the action associated with a spacetime path ๐’ž.

Because the first term is the same for all paths from A to B, it has no effect on the differences between the phases of the amplitudes associated with different paths. By dropping it we change neither the classical phenomena (inasmuch as the extremal path remains the same) nor the quantum phenomena (inasmuch as interference effects only depend on those differences). Thus

B|A=๐’Ÿ๐’že(i/)๐’ždt[(m/2)v2V].

We now introduce the so-called wave function ψ(t,๐ซ) as the amplitude of finding our particle at ๐ซ if the appropriate measurement is made at time t. t,๐ซ|t,๐ซψ(t,๐ซ), accordingly, is the amplitude of finding the particle first at ๐ซ (at time t) and then at ๐ซ (at time t). Integrating over ๐ซ, we obtain the amplitude of finding the particle at ๐ซ (at time t), provided that Rule B applies. The wave function thus satisfies the equation

ψ(t,๐ซ)=d3rt,๐ซ|t,๐ซψ(t,๐ซ).

We again simplify our task by pretending that space is one-dimensional. We further assume that t and t differ by an infinitesimal interval ϵ. Since ϵ is infinitesimal, there is only one path leading from x to x. We can therefore forget about the path integral except for a normalization factor ๐’œ implicit in the integration measure ๐’Ÿ๐’ž, and make the following substitutions:

dt=ϵ,v=xxϵ,V=V(t+ϵ2,x+x2).

This gives us

ψ(t+ϵ,x)=๐’œdxeim(xx)2/2ϵe(iϵ/)V(t+ϵ/2,(x+x)/2)ψ(t,x).

We obtain a further simplification if we introduce η=xx and integrate over η instead of x. (The integration "boundaries" and + are the same for both x and η.) We now have that

ψ(t+ϵ,x)=๐’œdηeimη2/2ϵe(iϵ/)V(t+ϵ/2,x+η/2)ψ(t,x+η).

Since we are interested in the limit ϵ0, we expand all terms to first order in ϵ. To which power in η should we expand? As η increases, the phase mη2/2ϵ increases at an infinite rate (in the limit ϵ0) unless η2 is of the same order as ϵ. In this limit, higher-order contributions to the integral cancel out. Thus the left-hand side expands to

ψ(t+ϵ,x)ψ(t,x)+ψtϵ,

while e(iϵ/)V(t+ϵ/2,x+η/2)ψ(t,x+η) expands to

[1iϵV(t,x)][ψ(t,x)+ψxη+122ψx2η2]=[1iϵV(t,x)]ψ(t,x)+ψxη+2ψx2η22.

The following integrals need to be evaluated:

I1=dηeimη2/2ϵ,I2=dηeimη2/2ϵη,I3=dηeimη2/2ϵη2.

The results are

I1=2πiϵ/m,I2=0,I3=2π3ϵ3/im3.

Putting Humpty Dumpty back together again yields

ψ(t,x)+ψtϵ=๐’œ2πiϵm(1iϵV(t,x))ψ(t,x)+๐’œ22π3ϵ3im32ψx2.

The factor of ψ(t,x) must be the same on both sides, so ๐’œ=m/2πiϵ, which reduces Humpty Dumpty to

ψtϵ=iϵVψ+iϵ2m2ψx2.

Multiplying by i/ϵ and taking the limit ϵ0 (which is trivial since ϵ has dropped out), we arrive at the Schrรถdinger equation for a particle with one degree of freedom subject to a potential V(t,x):

iψt=22m2ψx2+Vψ.

Trumpets please! The transition to three dimensions is straightforward:

iψt=22m(2ψx2+2ψy2+2ψz2)+Vψ.


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