Eigenfunctions of Operators with Continuous Sprectra

In summary: Konttinen provides a good summary of the article:Tom Stoeger's article discusses the fact that the eigenfunctions of operators with continuous spectra are not normalizable. This claim is made on page 100 of Griffith's Intro to Quantum Mechanics, and it is not immediately clear why this is the case. For discrete quantities, the Kronecker delta is either one or zero. The Dirac delta function used here has to be something more like an infinite weight, in the handwaving way we tend to talk about these things. As it's neither a function, nor a number, there's no sense in which we can just divide by \delta(0) to make the "norm
  • #1
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I'm self-studying Griffith's Intro to Quantum Mechanics, and on page 100 he makes the claim that the eigenfunctions of operators with continuous spectra are not normalizable. I can't see why this is necessarily true. Hopefully I am not missing something basic.

Thanks in advance.
 
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  • #2
The problem comes when you try and work out the meaning of "orthogonality". Say x and y are position eigenstates. Then we want
[tex]\langle x | y\rangle =\delta(x-y)[/tex]
For discrete quantities, the Kronecker delta is either one or zero. The Dirac delta function used here has to be something more like an infinite weight, in the handwaving way we tend to talk about these things. As it's neither a function, nor a number, there's no sense in which we can just divide by [itex]\delta(0)[/itex] to make the "norm" of such a state one.

Hope that helps.
 
  • #3
Momentum eigenfunctions have a similar problem. Consider the function g defined by g(x)=A exp(ipx) for all x. This is a momentum "eigenfunction". If we plug it into the usual formula for the norm of a wavefunction, we get
$$\|g\|^2=\int(Ae^{ipx})^*(Ae^{ipx})dx=|A|^2\int dx.$$ There's clearly no choice of A that makes the right-hand side =1, since ##\int dx=\infty##.

Note that the space of wavefunctions is the semi-inner product space of square-integrable ##\mathbb C##-valued functions on ##\mathbb R##. What I did above shows that a momentum "eigenfunction" isn't square-integrable. This means that it's not actually a member of that semi-inner product space. So it's actually more appropriate to say that the momentum operator doesn't have any eigenfunctions. These functions are a kind of generalized eigenfunctions.
 
  • #4
I understand that these two examples (which he provides) are not normalizable, but it almost seems as if it just happened that way. How do we know that, for any arbitrary operator with a continuous spectra, it's eigenfunctions are not normalizable?
 
  • #5
For any continuous spectra, your "sum" over eigenstates will have to be an integral. This necessarily implies that the states will have a delta function norm.
If this isn't clear, think about some totally arbitrary continuum of values f, and think about how the identity operator acts on one specific eigenstate with eigenvalue [itex]f_0[/itex]:
[tex]|f_0\rangle=\int df \langle f|f_0\rangle |f\rangle [/tex]
 
  • #6

Related to Eigenfunctions of Operators with Continuous Sprectra

1. What are eigenfunctions?

Eigenfunctions are special types of functions that satisfy certain mathematical properties when operated on by an operator. In other words, they are the functions that remain unchanged (except for a scaling factor) when operated on by a specific mathematical operator.

2. What is an operator with continuous spectrum?

An operator is said to have continuous spectrum if its eigenvalues (the values that the operator outputs when operated on an eigenfunction) form a continuous set. In other words, there is no finite or countable set of eigenvalues, but rather an infinite and uncountable set.

3. How are eigenfunctions and eigenvalues related?

Eigenfunctions and eigenvalues are closely related, as an eigenfunction is a function that, when operated on by an operator, yields an eigenvalue. In other words, an eigenfunction is a solution to the equation Ax = λx, where A is the operator, λ is the eigenvalue, and x is the eigenfunction.

4. How do eigenfunctions and eigenvalues play a role in physics?

In physics, eigenfunctions and eigenvalues are used to describe the possible states of a physical system. In quantum mechanics, the wave functions that describe the behavior of particles are eigenfunctions of certain operators, and the corresponding eigenvalues represent the possible energy levels of the system.

5. Can an operator have both discrete and continuous spectrum?

Yes, an operator can have both discrete and continuous spectrum. This means that it has both eigenvalues that form a discrete set and those that form a continuous set. An example of this is the Hamiltonian operator in quantum mechanics, which has both discrete energy levels and a continuous energy spectrum.

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