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Why Does Quantum Mechanics Use a Complex Wavefunction? Schrödinger’s equation doesn’t start from mystery. It starts from a very specific bet. The state of a particle is a complex field ψ(x,t), and whatever time-evolution rule we choose has to move ψ forward while preserving total probability. So the basic...

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Lecture 2 on our Quantum Mechanics Series Schrödinger’s equation doesn’t start from mystery. It starts from a very specific bet…the state of a particle is a complex field ψ(x,t), and whatever dynamics we write down must move ψ forward in time in a way that preserves total probability. We ask a basic question…what equation should ψ satisfy so that |ψ|² behaves like a conserved density, the way mass density does in fluid flow? What is ψ? Think of ψ(x,t) as the amplitude assigned to “the particle is at position x at time t”. It’s not a probability. It’s the object you add first, and only at the end do you square p(x,t) = |ψ(x,t)|² Because ψ is complex, it has magnitude and phase. Write it in polar form ψ(x,t) = r(x,t) exp(i θ(x,t)) Then r² = |ψ|² is the density, and θ will end up controlling flow (the probability current). Where does Schrödinger’s equation come from? Start with two empirical inputs about waves and particles: E = ħ ω p = ħ k Here ħ (“h-bar”) is Planck’s constant divided by 2π. It’s the unit conversion factor between the wave description (frequency ω, wavevector k) and the particle description (energy E, momentum p). In units, ħ has units of joule-seconds, so multiplying ω (1/seconds) gives energy (joules), and multiplying k (1/meters) gives momentum (kg·m/s). It’s the number that tells you how much energy or momentum you get per unit frequency or wavenumber. A plane wave with angular frequency ω and wavevector k is ψ(x,t) = A exp(i(k·x − ω t)) Now notice what derivatives do to this wave: ∂ψ/∂t = −i ω ψ ∇ψ = i k ψ ∇²ψ = −|k|² ψ Multiply those identities by ħ: i ħ ∂ψ/∂t = ħ ω ψ = E ψ −i ħ ∇ψ = ħ k ψ = p ψ −ħ² ∇²ψ = ħ² |k|² ψ = p² ψ So for plane waves, the operators Ê = i ħ ∂/∂t p̂ = −i ħ ∇ act like energy and momentum! Now use the classical nonrelativistic energy relation: E = p²/(2m) + V(x) This is bookkeeping for a particle moving slow enough that relativity can be ignored. The term p²/(2m) is kinetic energy. If p = mv, then p²/(2m) = (m²v²)/(2m) = (1/2)mv². The term V(x) is potential energy. It depends on position because forces come from spatially varying energy. A slope in V pushes the particle. Examples: for a charged particle in an electric potential φ(x), V(x) = q φ(x). Near Earth, V(z) = mgz. The point is total energy equals kinetic plus potential. Turn that into an equation for ψ by replacing E and p with the operators above: Ê ψ = (p̂²/(2m) + V) ψ Compute p̂² = (−i ħ ∇)·(−i ħ ∇) = −ħ² ∇², so we get i ħ ∂ψ/∂t = ( −ħ²/(2m) ∇² + V(x) ) ψ That is the time-dependent Schrödinger equation. The derivation here is a controlled heuristic: we matched the plane-wave identities to the measured relations E = ħω and p = ħk, then imposed the same energy bookkeeping as classical mechanics. Why this equation is the right kind of rule If ψ is the state, we need a rule that preserves total probability: ∫ |ψ(x,t)|² dx = 1 Schrödinger evolution does. You can see it by deriving a continuity equation. Let ρ(x,t) = |ψ|² = ψ* ψ. Take a time derivative: ∂ρ/∂t = ψ* ∂ψ/∂t + ψ ∂ψ*/∂t Use Schrödinger and its complex conjugate: ∂ψ/∂t = (1/(i ħ)) ( −ħ²/(2m) ∇²ψ + Vψ ) ∂ψ*/∂t = (−1/(i ħ)) ( −ħ²/(2m) ∇²ψ* + Vψ* ) Plug in. The V terms cancel exactly, and what remains can be rearranged into a divergence: ∂ρ/∂t + ∇·j = 0 where the probability current is j = (ħ/(2mi)) ( ψ* ∇ψ − ψ ∇ψ* ) This is the best way to explain ehat ψ is: |ψ|² behaves like a conserved density, and the phase of ψ is what drives the current j. So in this series, ψ isn’t a slogan. It’s the object whose modulus squared is the density, whose phase generates flow, and whose time evolution is fixed (up to V) by matching wave relations to energy bookkeeping: i ħ ∂ψ/∂t = ( -ħ²/(2m) ∇² + V ) ψ #QuantumMechanics #SchrodingerEquation #WaveFunction #BornRule #Physics #MathematicalPhysics

Mathelirium

40,639 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce

Lecture 3 of our Quantum Mechanics series. Lecture 2 gave us the one clean privilege quantum theory offers: treat ψ(x,t) as the state and ρ(x,t) = |ψ(x,t)|² as probability, because Schrödinger evolution forces ρ to obey a continuity equation. Lecture 3 is what that continuity equation is really telling you. If ρ behaves like a fluid, then the only question that matters is: What is the velocity field? Write ψ(x,t) = r(x,t) exp(i θ(x,t)). The magnitude r sets how much probability is sitting there. The phase θ sets where it tries to go. When you unpack the current j = Im(ψ* ∇ψ), it collapses to j = (ρ/m) ∇θ, which means the flow lines you draw are literally contours of phase geometry. Then the constraint that makes the picture bite: ψ has to be single-valued, so θ can’t wind by an arbitrary amount. Around any closed loop the total phase change must be 2π n, with n an integer. That’s why vortices aren’t features you add...they’re defects the math permits, in quantized units. In the render you see both layers at once...the 3D surface shows |ψ| breathing while the phase skin slides, and the 2D panel exposes the engine...current lines steering around discrete vortex charges. The math breakdown We write the state as a complex field ψ(x,t) on the plane (x in R²). The Born rule defines the probability density ρ(x,t) = |ψ(x,t)|² Schrödinger evolution (ħ = 1 units) is i ∂ψ/∂t = [ −(1/2m) ∇² + V(x,t) ] ψ Now derive conservation of probability. Start with ρ = ψ*ψ: ∂ρ/∂t = ψ* (∂ψ/∂t) + ψ (∂ψ*/∂t) Use Schrödinger and its complex conjugate: ∂ψ/∂t = (1/i) [ −(1/2m) ∇²ψ + Vψ ] ∂ψ*/∂t = (−1/i) [ −(1/2m) ∇²ψ* + Vψ* ] Substitute. The V terms cancel, and the remaining terms rearrange into the continuity equation ∂ρ/∂t + ∇·j = 0 with probability current j = (1/2mi) ( ψ* ∇ψ − ψ ∇ψ* ) = (1/m) Im(ψ* ∇ψ) So "probability density" really behaves like a conserved fluid density with flux j. Now expose the phase mechanism. Write ψ in polar form ψ(x,t) = r(x,t) exp(i θ(x,t)) Compute the gradient ∇ψ = exp(iθ) (∇r + i r ∇θ) Then ψ* ∇ψ = r (∇r + i r ∇θ) Taking the imaginary part gives Im(ψ* ∇ψ) = r² ∇θ = ρ ∇θ So the current becomes j = (ρ/m) ∇θ That’s the steering-wheel statement: Phase gradient sets the flow direction and speed (modulated by density and m). Finally, quantized vortices. Because ψ must be single-valued, going around any closed loop must return the same complex value. That forces the phase winding to be an integer multiple of 2π: ∮ ∇θ · dl = 2π n with n in Z n is the vortex charge. Vortex cores sit where ρ ≈ 0 (phase is undefined), and the current streamlines circulate around them. #QuantumMechanics #Wavefunction #SchrodingerEquation #BornRule #ProbabilityCurrent #ContinuityEquation #Phase #Vortices #TopologicalDefects #ComplexAnalysis #MathematicalPhysics #Mathematics #Physics

Mathelirium

37,998 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce

Quantum Mechanics Series Lecture 4 Lecture 1 established that ρ(x,t) = |ψ(x,t)|² behaves like a conserved probability density. Lecture 2 showed what drives that flow. We also saw that writing ψ = r exp(iθ) makes the probability current proportional to the phase gradient, making it clear that phase geometry literally steers the motion. Lecture 3 then showed that the centroid of that flow can move almost classically when the packet is tight and the external potential is smooth. However, that raises yet another question. If the centroid can look classical, why does the full wave still spread, bend, split, and interfere in ways no classical particle cloud would? This is because the wave is not driven only by the external potential. It is also driven by its own curvature. Write ψ(x,t) = r(x,t) exp(iθ(x,t)) with ρ = r². Then Schrödinger’s equation gives two coupled real equations. One is the continuity equation you already know. The other looks like a Hamilton-Jacobi equation, but with one extra term: Q = −(1/2m) ∇²r / r This is the so-called Quantum Potential. It depends entirely on how the amplitude bends across space. So, the wave is being shaped not only by V(x,t), but also by the geometry of its own envelope. In the animation, the upper surface is still |ψ| and its skin is still colored by arg(ψ). The glowing threads still trace the probability current. But now a second membrane hangs underneath. That lower membrane encodes the quantum potential Q itself. The porcelain bead marks the quantum centroid. The amber bead follows a classical centroid under the same external V. When those paths separate, the lower membrane tells you why. The difference is not magic but the extra term classical mechanics does not have. The math breakdown: Start from Schrödinger evolution in units with ħ = 1: i ∂ψ/∂t = [ −(1/2m) ∇² + V(x,t) ] ψ Write the state in polar form: ψ = r exp(iθ) Then ρ = |ψ|² = r² From the imaginary part, you recover probability conservation: ∂ρ/∂t + ∇·j = 0 with j = (1/m) Im(ψ* ∇ψ) = (ρ/m) ∇θ So the local velocity field is v = j / ρ = ∇θ / m Now take the real part of Schrödinger’s equation. That gives ∂θ/∂t + |∇θ|² / (2m) + V + Q = 0 where Q = −(1/2m) ∇²r / r This is the classical Hamilton-Jacobi equation with one extra term. That extra term is what makes quantum motion locally different from classical motion. Take a gradient of that phase equation and use v = ∇θ / m. Then the flow obeys an Euler-like equation: ∂v/∂t + (v·∇)v = −(1/m) ∇(V + Q) In other words, there are really two forces in the problem. One comes from the external potential V. The other comes from the wave’s own curvature through Q. That is why Ehrenfest is only approximate. The centroid can still satisfy d⟨x⟩/dt = ⟨p⟩/m d⟨p⟩/dt = −⟨∇V⟩ but the internal shape of the packet evolves under the combined influence of V and Q. When the packet stays broad and smooth, Q is gentle and the motion looks more classical. When the packet develops sharp curvature or interference structure, Q becomes strong and the classical picture breaks down. That is what this scene is designed to show live. #QuantumMechanics #Wavefunction #SchrodingerEquation #BornRule #ProbabilityCurrent #ContinuityEquation #Phase #EhrenfestTheorem #QuantumPotential #Madelung #HamiltonJacobi #MathematicalPhysics #Mathematics #Physics

Mathelirium

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