What is Wave function: Definition and 873 Discussions

A wave function in quantum physics is a mathematical description of the quantum state of an isolated quantum system. The wave function is a complex-valued probability amplitude, and the probabilities for the possible results of measurements made on the system can be derived from it. The most common symbols for a wave function are the Greek letters ψ and Ψ (lower-case and capital psi, respectively).
The wave function is a function of the degrees of freedom corresponding to some maximal set of commuting observables. Once such a representation is chosen, the wave function can be derived from the quantum state.
For a given system, the choice of which commuting degrees of freedom to use is not unique, and correspondingly the domain of the wave function is also not unique. For instance, it may be taken to be a function of all the position coordinates of the particles over position space, or the momenta of all the particles over momentum space; the two are related by a Fourier transform. Some particles, like electrons and photons, have nonzero spin, and the wave function for such particles includes spin as an intrinsic, discrete degree of freedom; other discrete variables can also be included, such as isospin. When a system has internal degrees of freedom, the wave function at each point in the continuous degrees of freedom (e.g., a point in space) assigns a complex number for each possible value of the discrete degrees of freedom (e.g., z-component of spin) – these values are often displayed in a column matrix (e.g., a 2 × 1 column vector for a non-relativistic electron with spin 1⁄2).
According to the superposition principle of quantum mechanics, wave functions can be added together and multiplied by complex numbers to form new wave functions and form a Hilbert space. The inner product between two wave functions is a measure of the overlap between the corresponding physical states, and is used in the foundational probabilistic interpretation of quantum mechanics, the Born rule, relating transition probabilities to inner products. The Schrödinger equation determines how wave functions evolve over time, and a wave function behaves qualitatively like other waves, such as water waves or waves on a string, because the Schrödinger equation is mathematically a type of wave equation. This explains the name "wave function", and gives rise to wave–particle duality. However, the wave function in quantum mechanics describes a kind of physical phenomenon, still open to different interpretations, which fundamentally differs from that of classic mechanical waves.In Born's statistical interpretation in non-relativistic quantum mechanics,
the squared modulus of the wave function, |ψ|2, is a real number interpreted as the probability density of measuring a particle as being at a given place – or having a given momentum – at a given time, and possibly having definite values for discrete degrees of freedom. The integral of this quantity, over all the system's degrees of freedom, must be 1 in accordance with the probability interpretation. This general requirement that a wave function must satisfy is called the normalization condition. Since the wave function is complex valued, only its relative phase and relative magnitude can be measured—its value does not, in isolation, tell anything about the magnitudes or directions of measurable observables; one has to apply quantum operators, whose eigenvalues correspond to sets of possible results of measurements, to the wave function ψ and calculate the statistical distributions for measurable quantities.

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  1. Amith2006

    Complex conjugate of wave function

    A wave function(psi) is a mathematical quantity which gives complete information about the state of a system at a particular instant of time. But what information does the complex conjugate of a wave function(psi*) give? Does it represent the same state as psi? Or does it just have a...
  2. M

    Normalizing Wave Function of A Ring

    Homework Statement \psi_{n}(\theta)=A_{n} \exp(\imath n \theta) where n is an integer Calculate the factor A_{n} if the wave function is normalized between \theta = 0 and \theta = 2\pi. Homework Equations NA The Attempt at a Solution 1=\int_0^{2\pi} |\psi_{n}(\theta)|^2...
  3. A

    How do we define a wave function?

    what is a wave function? And how do we define a wave function? How is it related to schrodinger's equation?
  4. W

    Transverse Sinusoidal Wave Function

    A transverse sinusoidal wave on a string has a period of 25 ms and travels in the negative x direction with a speed of 30 m/s. At t=0, a particle on the string at x=0 has a displacement of 2 cm and is traveling downward with a speed of 2 m/s. Find the amplitude, phase constant, and maximum...
  5. B

    Wave Function Spherical Coordinates Probabilities

    Homework Statement A system's wave function has the form \psi(r, \theta, \phi) = f(t, \theta)cos\phi With what probability will measurement of L_z yield the value m = 1? Homework Equations L_z|\ell, m> = m|\ell, m> The Attempt at a Solution I feel like there may be a typo...
  6. CarlB

    PI talk on Feynman Checkerboard Model and the wave function

    The Perimeter Institute has a talk on the Feynman chessboard / checkerboard model scheduled for a few days from now. This will be recorded and you can play it back, sometime after November 18th. Links: Speaker(s): Garnet Ord - Ryerson University Ord's website...
  7. madmike159

    How Does the Wave Function Determine Particle Location Probability?

    I was reading part of a book which was explaining about the probability of finding a particle on a 1d line. \int^{+\infty}_{-\infty}P(x) dx = 1 This sounds right because if the line was infinitely long then the particle must be on it. You can them intergrate between a and b to find the...
  8. B

    Probabilistic interpretation of wave function

    Homework Statement a particle moving in one dimension between rigid walls separated by a distance L has the wave function \Psi(x)=Asin(\Pix/L), since the particle must remain between the walls, what must be the value of A? Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution Ok so I'm...
  9. P

    Electron wave function collapse

    As far as I understand it, an electron exists as a probability cloud around an atom, representing all the possible places it could be. Then when we make an observation the wave function collapses to one point where we see the electron. So what happens if we keep looking at it? Does the elctron...
  10. A

    Partial derivatives with Wave Function

    Homework Statement Knowing: y(x,t) = Acos(kx-ωt) Find the partial derivatives of: 1) dy/dt 2) dy/dx 3) d^2y/dt^2 4) d^2y/dx^2 Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution These are the answers the actual answers: 1) dy/dt = ωAsin(kx-ωt) = v(x,t) of a particle 2) dy/dx =...
  11. W

    What is the Explanation for the Double Slit Experiment in Quantum Mechanics?

    the double slit experiment is explained in QM as the superposition of two wave functions. Each is the wave function for one of the slits. an electron starts out with a wave function that is clustered near the point of emission and then evolves on some way according to the Shroedinger...
  12. M

    Finding Coeff and Probability of a Wave Function

    Homework Statement Hi guys, I'm really confused about how to about solving this problem, any help would be much appreciated. Consider the wave-function: \Psi(x,t)=\left\{\begin{array}{cc}Asin(pi*x)\exp^{-it\omega},&\ -1\leq x\leq 1\\0, & \ elsewhere\end{array}\right{ a) Determine A...
  13. D

    Finding potential for a given wave function

    Here's the sitch: I am given an equation, A*e-a(mx2/h-bar+it) I need to find the value for A that will satisfy normalization, as well as find the Potential of the Schrödinger Equation using this value. What do I do? P.S. I have NOT learned gaussian integration, which is where I run...
  14. F

    Find Wave Function given <x>, sigmax, <p>

    Homework Statement Come up with a wave function Psi[x] that satisfies the given known values: <x>=-1 sigma x = 1 <p> = h bar Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution So far I have this equation, which satisfies <x>, <p>, but not sigma x. 1/[Pi]^(1/4) E^(i (x + 2)) E^(-(1/2)...
  15. N

    QM: Normalizing a wave function

    Homework Statement Hi all. I have a wave function given by \Psi \left( {x,0} \right) = A\frac{x}{a} I have to normalize it, which is OK. But in the solution to this problem, the teacher uses |A|2 when squaring A. Is there any particular reason for this? I mean, if you square the constant...
  16. B

    Units issue when normalizing momentum space wave function

    Homework Statement Check that a given momentum space wave function is normalized. I've done the integral, but the result is not dimensionless. Here is the wave function: \overline{\phi} = \frac{1}{\pi} ( \frac{2 a_{0}}{\bar{h}})^{3/2} \frac{1}{(1+(a_{0} p / \bar{h})^2)^2} The units of this...
  17. C

    Is there any reason the Universe must have a wave function?

    I believe it does, but I'm having a debate with someone and I'm trying to prove why the universe must have a wave function. I was under impression the best equations for describing our universe involve it having it's own wave but he's asserting it doesn't need one. Can anyone help me? Super newb...
  18. C

    Is there any reason the Universe must have a wave function?

    I believe it does, but I'm having a debate with someone and I'm trying to prove why the universe must have a wave function. I was under impression the best equations for describing our universe involve it having it's own wave but he's asserting it doesn't need one. Can anyone help me?
  19. J

    What is a wave function and how does it describe the wave nature of a particle?

    What is exactly a wave function of the system. I have been told that wave function is something that is used to describe the wave nature of a particle but how? I could not understand or rather visualize it. And how can the wave function be a complex number or a negative value? For example if...
  20. Q

    Does Observation Truly Collapse a Wave Function?

    what is it that actually collapses a wave function, an observer? what constitutes an observer? also is it true that everything has a wave function, because if it does who collapsed the universes wave function some may say wave function collapse only works on the quantum level but the universe...
  21. E

    Why can we rewrite the wave function like so:

    Hi, I've been working on writing the wave function in terms of momentum eigenfunctions. The only problem I have with the derivation is the last step, which allows me to write: \Psi(x) = \int^{\infty}_{-\infty} \phi(p)u_{p}(x)dp where u_{p}(x) =...
  22. G

    Wave Function Zero At Infinity?

    Its looking quite simple problem but let me explain properly my question. Wave function as we know is also known as matter wave/field amplitude. Then definitely there is associated a wave with it. Then how can we say that wave amplitude vanished at infinite!
  23. D

    Wave function in terms of Basis Functions

    Problem We have the function g(x)=x(x-a) \cdot e^{ikx}. Express g(x) in the form \sum_{n=1}^\infty a_n \psi_n (x) where \psi_n = \sqrt{\frac{2}{a}} \sin \(\frac{n\pi x}{a}\) Solution I have absolutely no clue as to how to start... I know a bit about Fourier series, but here, the...
  24. L

    Wave Function in Lorent tranform

    how to tranform wave function(x,t) to same coordinate wave function(x',t') with Lorentz Tranformation (please show all the calculus). and why we know the Lorentz tranform can do this function to use in every inertial frames.
  25. A

    What Are the Dimensions of a Wave Function in Various Box Problems?

    Homework Statement Does the wave function have a dimension? If it does, what are the dimensions for 1D and 2D box problems?Can you generalise this to n dimensions? Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution Yes, it does have dimensions. For 1D box it's [tex] m^{-2} [tex]...
  26. D

    Show that a wave function is correctly normalised?

    Hi, could someone please tell me how I would show that a wave function is correctly normalised? I know to integrate the square of the function between infinity and negative infinity, but is the complex conjugate required? Any help is much appreciated :D
  27. M

    Quantum Wave Function: Dependency & Increment Mystery

    Hi everyone, Can anybody solve my simple problems of quantum: Usually we say, that wave function Ψ is dependent on r,θ,Φ .But this is just a coordinate system,or more than that. Imagination to this is qite difficult. Moreover somewhere in a book I have read that if Ψ = f(r,θ) exp(imΦ),then on...
  28. R

    Infinite square well wave function

    Homework Statement A particle of mass m is in the ground state of the infinite square well. Suddenly the well expands to twice its original size, the right wall moving from a to 2a- leaving the wave function (momentarily) undisturbed. The energy of the particle is now measured. What will be the...
  29. D

    Causal Evolution of Wave Function and Gravity

    I read in my textbook that the wavefunction of a particle evolves causally when unobserved. but isn't it constantly being observed or detected in some sense by its gravitational effects?
  30. E

    Nonsinusodial wave function problem

    Homework Statement I am having a problem with an example problem in my physics book. The example goes like so: a.)Show that \psi(x) = Ax + B A, B, constant is a solution of the Schrodinger equation for an E = 0 energy level of a particle in a box. b.) what constraints do the boundary...
  31. D

    Constructing time-independent wave function with given energies

    Does anyone know how to construct a Time-independent wave function with given energies and probability on obtaining energies.
  32. D

    Time-independent wave function formula

    Homework Statement Construct wavefunction with given energies and probabilities of obtaining energies in a 1-D box from 0 to aHomework Equations [b]3. The Attempt at a Solution I know the general form of a time-independent wavefunction but I don't know what to do with the probabilities of...
  33. E

    Constructing Wave Function for Particle in 1D Box: Is it Unique?

    For a particle in a 1-dimensional box confined by 0<x<a. a)Construct a wave function phi(x)=psi(x,t=0) such that when an energy measurement is made on the particle in this state at t=0, the following energy values are obtained with the probabilities shown: Energy E_n Obtained ...
  34. I

    Hartree-Fock wave function for a mixture of two oppositely charged gases

    Hi, Suppose there is half-half a mixture of an electron gas and a gas of some hypothetical particle with the same mass, spin but an opposite charge (like positrons that don't decay). Would anyone be able to tell me how the Slater determinants combine in this case? The HF wave function for just...
  35. L

    Infinite quantum wave function

    Can a quantum wave function be infinite at a point? For example you could have a radially symmetric wavefunction that's infinite at the center, yet the integrated probability is 1. Is this unphysical somehow? Laura
  36. B

    How Do You Determine the Value of A in a Wave Function?

    [SOLVED] Wave Function Solution Homework Statement An electron is found to be in a state given by the wave function http://rogercortesi.com/eqn/tempimagedir/eqn7955.png Find the value of A. Homework Equations The normalization of the wave function...
  37. S

    Probability Current for Free Particle Wave Function

    [SOLVED] Probability Current for Free Particle Wave Function Homework Statement Find the probability current, J for the free particle wave function. Which direction does the probability current flow?Homework Equations J(x,t) = \frac{ih}{4\pi m}\left(\Psi \frac{\partial \Psi^{*}}{\partial x} -...
  38. C

    Does the Phase Factor in Wave Function Matter?

    does a phase factor (that can be represented by an imaginary exponential) in psi (the wave function) really matter? I am doing a problem and getting an answer that looks like sin[n(pi)x/a] when the answer is actually sin[n(pi)x/a-n(pi)]. I am just wondering at all if it makes any defference in...
  39. J

    Is y(t-x/v) a Valid Solution to the Wave Equation?

    Homework Statement Show that y(t-x/v) is a solution of the wave equation without taking any partial derivatives (hint: use your knowledge about f(x-vt)). Homework Equations y(x,t)=y(x-vt) The Attempt at a Solution what exactly is y(t-x/v) means, from dimension analysis, its the...
  40. R

    Help with Normalizing Wave Function Symbol (x) = -Ae^(σx^2/x^2)

    hello I am just starting some revition for my exams and havr come across this wave funchion and i don't no how to normerlise it i really need some help with this. it is the wave function symbol (x) = -Ae^(σx^2/x^2) what i need to know is how to intergrate it to find a value for A to see if...
  41. B

    Eigenfunction, Eigenvalue, Wave Function and collapse

    Reading Sam Treiman's http://books.google.de/books?id=e7fmufgvE-kC" he nicely explains the dependencies between the Schrödinger wave equation, eigenvalues and eigenfunctions (page 86 onwards). In his notation, eigenfunctions are u:R^3\to R and the wavefunction is \Psi:R^4\to R, i.e. in contrast...
  42. S

    Particle in a box wave function problem

    I have a wave function problem that I need to figure out... I have a really borderline grade, so it could mean the difference between an 'A' and a 'B' in my graduate Modern Physics class. Basically, I have to figure out the wave function and the transmission and reflection coefficients. My...
  43. B

    Probablities from wave function

    Homework Statement P = \int_a^b \, \left| \psi(x) \right|^2 \, dx If the particle in the box is in the second excited state (i.e., n=3), what is the probability P that it is between x=L/3 and x=L? To find this probability, you will need to evaluate the integral: \int_{L/3}^L...
  44. R

    Graph of a wave function and how to work out velocity from it.

    Homework Statement Open Question 2.bmp Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution Open Answer 2.bmp I really struggled with this one, my answer is nothing more than an incomplete educated guess.
  45. L

    How to find eigenfunctions given the wave function?

    Hi all, How do we find the eigenfunctions if we are given the wavefunction? I have a wave function at time = 0 and it is of a *free* particle and I need to find the wave function at a later time t. I did : \Psi(x,t)=\Psi(x,0)*e^{-iHt/hbar} then \Psi(x,t)=\sum_{n}(<\phi_{n}|\Psi(x,0)>...
  46. L

    Normalization of wave function in x, y and z

    Hello, How do I find the normalization constant for psi(x,y,z) = N exp -(x/2+y/2+z/2) ?? I did the following: \int(psi^* psi)dx dy dz = 1 the integral bounds are from -infinity to infinity and the * means the complex conjugate.The integral is so weird that I couldn't find N. I used...
  47. C

    Given the initial state, Ican find the time evolution wave function right?

    Homework Statement At t=0, the particle is in the eigenstate S_x , which corresponds to the eigenvalues -\hbar \over 2 The particle is in a magnetic field and its Hamiltonian is H=\frac{eB}{mc}S_z . Find the state at t>0. Homework Equations Eigenstate of the Sx is...
  48. R

    Finding the Momentum-Space Wave Function for a Harmonic Oscillator Ground State

    Homework Statement Find the momentum-space wave function, \Phi (p,t), for a particle in the ground state of the harmonic oscillator. What is the probability (to 2 significant digits) that a measurement of p on a particle in this state would yield a value outside the classical range (for the...
  49. W

    Normalization of a wave function with cosine

    I need to normalize the following wave function: psi= Cexp(-abs(x))exp(-iwt)cos(pix) I know that when squaring it, the time dependent part drops out, which is good, but what I seem to be left with is Psi^2=C^2exp(-2abs(x))cos^2(pix) Which seems like a fairly complicated integral to...
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