I love this guy. I love when you can tell how much a professor loves a subject.
@shibanisahani10334 жыл бұрын
Yes it shows in his face. I love him too 💜
@CARLOSROMERO-MathFermat9 жыл бұрын
Solution of the Schrödinger Equation of the Quantum Harmonic Oscillator begins at: 25:30
@brno3228 жыл бұрын
+CARLOS ROMERO thanks. And if you're already familiar with some of the relationships then it's at 34:04
@dhoonygo5 жыл бұрын
You guys save my time. THX.
@mehmoonarubab20645 жыл бұрын
Thank you sir😂
@saptarshidas45153 жыл бұрын
And I am watching this comment at 25:27...ugh..
@aldenphillip7653 жыл бұрын
dunno if anyone gives a damn but if you guys are bored like me during the covid times then you can stream all of the new movies on InstaFlixxer. Have been binge watching with my brother recently =)
@drummerboy9189310 жыл бұрын
ughhh gosh this is so good. my prof never goes through the mathematical steps like this one does. this one gives you mathematical insight and reasonable physical arguments. my prof treats us like we're physicists!
@chandus24969 жыл бұрын
AMEN!!! We should be thankful to MIT for doing this for free.
@anugrahmathewprasad1725 жыл бұрын
This is so good.. He explained quantisation so well! Prof. Adams set it up so well in the last lecture and here it just became so clear
@okotray45775 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the online lectures from MIT, especially this professor.
@everlastinGamer4 жыл бұрын
When the lecture is so good that KZbin viewers clap alongside the live student audience. Awesome, thanks so much.
@owen76664 жыл бұрын
KZbin needs a clap button. Giving a like is too mainstream
@saskiavanhoutert31904 жыл бұрын
@@owen7666 Fine that you like it, kind regards
@chinonsougwumadu93404 жыл бұрын
This is the only professor that makes quantum physics seem like some classical music... sometimes I just watch his lectures lying on my bed.
@revanth36 Жыл бұрын
Right now I'm doing that😅😂
@orsozapata Жыл бұрын
I always watch science lectures lying in bed :)
@charlesnathansmith Жыл бұрын
I started watching this lecture series a few years ago and was so enamored with Adams' teaching style and personality that I wasn't giving the ones Zweibach filled in on as much attention. Rewatching I keep realizing just how unfair I was being. He has an insane passion for conveying information, and can immediately respond to any question no matter how tangential or based on a misunderstanding that ties it back into what he's covering in a way that gives some crazy new insight. That's how science communication is supposed to work and I'm fully here for it even if I'm a bit late to the party
@robertsalazar27702 жыл бұрын
Hey! I'm retired and watching these lectures for fun! I agree, the instructor's energy should be part of schodingers equation.😁
@smrt-e Жыл бұрын
Haha - I watch these lectures for fun in the background while I'm at work (wfh data scientist/software engineer - so I feel like I actually understand when they are talking about linear alg or probability related things). Def good fun.
@PrabandhamSriniketan2 ай бұрын
Watching this a day before the exam, wish me luck!!!
@Dr.Sortospino7 жыл бұрын
This professor speak so clear (nevertheless the spanish accent) that you can gain time putting the speed 1.5x :D
@flatisland5 жыл бұрын
that was a fantastic suggestion! it's cool he doesn't speak like Mickey Mouse when you speed it up. And if you set it to 1.75 he almost sounds like Allan Adams :-)
@adrianlowenberg4 жыл бұрын
I am watching this content as a mathematics student, which is interested in physics. I guess this will be the topic of the everywhere announced 8.05, but the quantization follows generally as the Eigenvectors of a Hermitian operator, like E here, are orthogonal to each other, and the Hilbert Space where the Wavefunctions live in is of course separable, so there are only countably many different Eigenvalues, therefore possible energy measurements. This also explains why the Eigenfunctions are a class of orthogonal ploynomials. The physical argument given here is that the Wavefunction must be normalizable, but mathematically this only means that it is in the Hilbert Space, or that it is integrable. What I find most interesting here is the techniques used to gain intuition about the differential equation, and therefore solve it explicitly. I think however that a bigger mathematical background would help many students to know which "rough" solutions are okay and which cannot be. I am very grateful however to see this very different teaching style to the one I am used to for free!
@davidherrera48373 жыл бұрын
Eigenvectors do not necessary exist for general Hermitian operators on an infinite dimensional Hilbert space. For instance, the multiplication operator by x in L^2([0,1]) has spectrum [0,1] with no eigenvectors. Being Hermitian, just as in the case of matrices, implies that the eigenvectors are orthogonal. You calculate the inner product (f | g) of two eigenvectors f and g and use some algebra to show that E_1(f | g) = (E_1 f | g) = (P f | g) = ( f | P g) = E_2(f | g). So, (E_1 - E_2) (f | g) = 0. The existence is more subtle. On finite intervals, one can use en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectral_theory_of_ordinary_differential_equations#Spectral_theorem You can find a nice exposition of this in Haim Brezis' textbook "Functional Analysis, Sobolev Spaces and Partial Differential Equations" For unbounded intervals, you have to be more careful and many related topics is the subject of mathematical physics / functional analysis research. For instance, see this undergraduate summary for multiple dimensions: www.math.uchicago.edu/~may/VIGRE/VIGRE2009/REUPapers/Emberton.pdf Effectively, the second derivative (Laplacian in multiple dimensions) term is an unbounded self-adjoint operator. The potential there can be given conditions (like we saw in the previous lecture) so that the differential operator has a compact inverse. A compact operator is a limit of matrices where the "infinite part" gets smaller in contribution ("norm") as the matrices gets larger in dimension. Compact operators have complete spectrum made of discrete eigenvalues, the eigenvalues converging to 0. So, the inverse has discrete eigenvalues going to infinity.
@general_paul3 ай бұрын
I hope that you didn't break your computer or worse still, had a heart attack after seeing the way we derive mathematical formulae 😅
@DrBouwman4 жыл бұрын
Wow. Just wow. i wish I could give classes like that
@kalj76 жыл бұрын
Very nice and understandable derivation. Thank you!
@saskiavanhoutert31904 жыл бұрын
Quantum physics is somehow good explained and interesting by this physician, thanks.
@patrickwang6714 жыл бұрын
physician is a doctor, he's a physicist ;)
@saskiavanhoutert31904 жыл бұрын
@@patrickwang671 Somehow it's the same, perhaps he say's that because he doesn't like to be ill and has to go to a docter. And he does his job and you are present, don't go to a pub but make your homework please. kind regards and have a good life. And that is also a song, perhaps you know the singer. I Know him again James Brown.
@Godakuri3 жыл бұрын
@@saskiavanhoutert3190 wtf did I just read
@stefkakannenberg5154Ай бұрын
Yes. One has to take the solution for the ground state energy level at T=0K from Stochastic Elektrodynamics in order the differential equation to have reasonable solutions. Right. Why not to just calculate with Stochastic Elektrodynamics from the beginning.
@pirate0bloodyskull2 жыл бұрын
Holy cow, this guy is so good.
@flyingbirds6794 Жыл бұрын
This video is an excellent video!! I want to thank the lecturer a lot because he made the topic very easy and told in a very beutiful way. Especially the coefficients and exp(u^2) comparison was very very clever and an excellent explanation. Thank MIT ocw very much!!
@darinpeev582015 күн бұрын
Very impressive! He's got a style!
@flatisland5 жыл бұрын
36:01 1:05:44 1:13:26 he just swallows it I like this series! :-)
@61gopalprabhulsm705 жыл бұрын
With your observational skills, I hope you must have swallowed each and every bit of information he threw at us! XD
@qpkwsxcb82774 жыл бұрын
You should have more likes. I am here for more than a few times your comment makes me laugh every time.😂
@itsanki2 жыл бұрын
just becuase a polynomial has infinite terms doesnt mean it will blow up at infinity. A simple examle is series expansion of 1/(1+x) for x>=0 has form a0 + a1*x + a2*x^2 + a3*x^3 + ...... but this doesnt blow up at infinity, rather it goes to zero. So it really depends upon the coefficients of the series obtained. We need further analysis to show that the series obtained in this lecture(hermite equation) actually blows up. The result of analysis would be that both of the series grow like e^(y^2) . And the overall solution psi = h*u grows like e^(y^2 / 2 ) . That is non normalisable . So the only way out is that the series terminate.
@ArnoldSommerfeld Жыл бұрын
Expecting rigor from Zwiebach is asking rather a lot. LOL.
@oogaboogaman00462 жыл бұрын
I woke up to this playing on my tv
@ranjeetsingh-fw1ij5 жыл бұрын
Thanks mit . It really helps.
@indiaview94142 жыл бұрын
After so many approximation finally solution of harmonic oscillator land up on the Harmite Polynomial series...
@thesingingtown9 ай бұрын
I don't understand any of the math, but it's so soothing to listen to 😂❤️
@rafaelmera38652 жыл бұрын
Wow, I love this chanel and this university. I am from Ecuador and I want to study in this university
@rubensverstappen34583 жыл бұрын
wonderful discussion. thank you, MIT!
@sunnypala70985 жыл бұрын
Explained very awesomely sr.veryyyyyyy helpful.thank you so much
@sanketdeshpande3456 жыл бұрын
lecture was intense
@MuhammadAsif-nt7zv8 ай бұрын
Professor Barton❤❤❤ form Pakistan for nice explainations.
@saskiavanhoutert31904 жыл бұрын
The point sight images are correctly to be seen, just a guess of psi , thanks and kind regards. Very important for designing corners. Thanks and kind regards.
@jamesgarcia-in2vm8 жыл бұрын
infiniti equals infinity pi pi negative square infiniti equal positive infiniti square square square infiniti pi square.-N.A.S.A.
@1_adityasingh4 жыл бұрын
What do you mean?
@DxPain Жыл бұрын
shouldn't it be sin(n) piex/a instead of sin(n+1) piex/a??
@ravitrivedi86546 ай бұрын
Really wonderful explanations......
@dhoonygo5 жыл бұрын
Why does a(n) in h(u) can be written in 2^n?? a(n) could be anything?
@buzzlightyear72385 жыл бұрын
Because those constants are related by steps of two. i hope this reply isn't too late lol.
@MardukNHR Жыл бұрын
A round of applause for the camera operator too.
@meetghelani5222 Жыл бұрын
Love this series.
@standardcoder1184 Жыл бұрын
Dem This is good stuff Even Griffiths' did a bad bad job in explaining this
@ricomajestic9 жыл бұрын
Anyone know of great lectures on special relativity or General Relativity? I am looking for something similar to these lectures on QM from Adams/Zweibach which I feel are the best on KZbin. Lectures where the instructor tries to develop the student's physical intuition, enhances his conceptual understanding, and also gives the student mathematical insight of the subject.
@Gooselabs9 жыл бұрын
Leonard Susskind's lectures are a good introduction. Not as rigorous perhaps, but great for developing a physicist's intuition.
@fjanoos9 жыл бұрын
+ricomajestic check out Prof. Shankar's lectures on special relativity on the yale-courses feed.
@jetpaq8 жыл бұрын
+ricomajestic Leonard Susskind has a few great ones on youtube . search him my friend!
@8cec6 жыл бұрын
Shankar's lectures are just amazing.
@alkagupta41304 жыл бұрын
Thanks @fugdus...
@mindfreak9329 жыл бұрын
So this goes to show that if the harmonic oscillator will have only of energy E=hw(n+0.5) only or have the energy stated to be in a quantum mechanical behavior?
@blueman69-x2o9 жыл бұрын
+Uday Patel The solution to the differential equation for h(u) diverges if energy is not quantized. There was no assumption made.
@ignaciomartinalliati62935 жыл бұрын
23:42 as a physicist proof, can you just say that a wavefunction with more nodes has a shorter wavelength and thus more energy? Or the association of wavelength and energy is too sloppy in this context?
@ey37963 жыл бұрын
The wavefunction wont look like the infinite square well, rather itll be some complicated mess of wavelengths so we cant give this reason.
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
Qualitatively, yes.
@productivelb6 жыл бұрын
Beautiful lecture!
@smrt-e Жыл бұрын
I don't think I ever saw any undergraduate class applaud a professor in my biology course at UCONN. When you have a professor flowing out quantum mechanics mathematics like this... I reckon thats worth an applause. lol Barton Zwiebach - I wish I'd had you as a professor. But you would have thought I was a complete idiot. :P
@siulapwa3 жыл бұрын
Differential equations can be painful
@pawelperkowski1971 Жыл бұрын
I wonder if the length parameter "a" introduced at 32:00 posses any name or any physical interpretation? In my opinion, the parameter "a" seems to be the width of the space classically available for a particle in a harmonic field, when the particle exists in the lowest possible state, with the energy E=1/2*h-dashed omega. Could anyone comment on it?
@athul_c13753 жыл бұрын
1:01:02 I only wish if Griffith explaind this
@dhoonygo5 жыл бұрын
How is En related to temperature? I mean, are there any specific relationship between En and temperature of molecule with some equations?
@durgeshgaikwad7415 жыл бұрын
Temperature is the average kinetic energy of molecules
@FPSIreland24 жыл бұрын
(probably) the energy eigenvalues En describe the energy of an oscillation and temperature is as mentioned the average energy of all of the oscillations within the lattice (I aasume youre talking about a partivle in a lattice structure)
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
No. Temp relates to distribution of energy in allowed states. Allowed states are not funtions of temperature.
@timetraveler51283 жыл бұрын
I don't understand why the whole wavefunction is zero if the wavefunction and the slope vanishes at a single point. Anyone please explain.
@emmygaming68953 жыл бұрын
The answer lies right there in the blackboard at 1:56. Differentiating the time-independent schrodinger eq. with respect to x allows you to find third derivative of psi in terms of psi and its first derivative. If both of these are zero at x0 then the third derivative is also zero at this point. You can keep on differentiating the equation and express the nth derivative of psi in terms of psi and its lower derivatives. This will show that all the derivatives of psi vanish at x0. This means that if you were to try to expand psi about x0 using Taylor series, you will find that psi is identically equal to zero. This is how I try to make sense out of it. I might be wrong though.
@vjfperez Жыл бұрын
The claim is that a solution for the stationary equation (energy eigen state) cannot have zero derivative at a node. If you notice the solution satisfies a linear second order ordinary differential equation. For this kind of equation if you specify its value and its derivative at one point you have a unique solution. So if both are zero at one point, you know a solution (zero everywhere), so the unique must be zero everywhere. But zero is not a valid wavefunction, since the norm must be 1 (postulate of QM). Hence you can't accept energy eigenstates with vanishing derivatives at nodes. For a general wave function (i.e. one that is not an energy eigenstate) this does not apply, as you can have any well behaved C2 function that is normalized as a valid state, it won't be a stationary one though.
@phillip768 жыл бұрын
fine lecture
@proexcel1238 жыл бұрын
can someone please explain to me or show me how did he get d/dx = (1/a)(d/du) from x=au?
@psharmacgk8 жыл бұрын
u=x/a. Letting it act on a function y, dy/dx = (dy/du)(du/dx) by chain rule. As an operator this is just (d/du)(du/dx) = (1/a)(d/du) since du/dx is a constant 1/a.
@proexcel1238 жыл бұрын
@P Sharma thanks for explaining it plainly to me! It's a great help!
@psharmacgk8 жыл бұрын
:)
@johnhobson21067 жыл бұрын
Thanks very much for this...I would have been totally lost otherwise. Greatly appreciated!
@abc993115 жыл бұрын
58:18 -if he can start the dummy index from j=2 for second derivative of h, then,why can't he take the dummy index from j=1, for 1st derivative.further,on replacing j by j'+1 will make the coefficient different . Please someone explain this.
@OcctySun4 жыл бұрын
S K I believe it is because there is no need to in the first place, for what we are aiming to do here is collect the common u^j factors so as to elucidate a recursive relationship between a_j and a_(j+2) for all integer values of j from 0 to infinity. Here, the -2u factor multiplied with dh/du gives the aforementioned u^j, hence not requiring any change of the dummy index j. If I remember correctly from my Mathematical Methods course, this is a standard way of solving second-order ordinary differential equations.
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
Shri, infinite series have the property that they are infinite. So there is no highest order term to account for as in a finite series. If that is your confusion then review Taylor series of 1/(1-x).
@LydellAaron3 жыл бұрын
He asks what we've done so far? 54:30 my interpretation is that he has cleverly used multiple substitution methods (as used in differential equations) in order to clean up the differential equation? 57:52 is a power series but there are many types of power series. I have found a prime series most helpful if you want to design and build a working quantum computer (e.g. series must terminate 1:13:38). 1:16:36 "Hermite" functions. Not sure that the representation at 1:20:37 is accurate pictoral representation.
@bryanortiz20984 жыл бұрын
Psi_n(x) has n nodes? Could someone explain to me? Thanks
@jamesgarcia-in2vm8 жыл бұрын
infiniti equals infinity pi pi negative square infiniti equal positive infiniti square square square infiniti pi square.
@neelmanichaturvedi79012 жыл бұрын
Can someone please tell me what is the significance of 'u' here , why it is taken in this case?
@neotixx.6 ай бұрын
Even me as a 13 year old can understand this! Love this guy:)
@prachiargulewar24094 жыл бұрын
What are smooth potentials ?
@thecaptainindia97903 жыл бұрын
if 2j+1 =e for some j but it will not terminate the other half coefficients
@xiaoqilu13536 жыл бұрын
With Chrome extension you can watch this with 2.50x speed.
@sumitparida79936 жыл бұрын
I don't understand why did he choose the complicated way to solve the differential equation
@vedantdhawale48124 жыл бұрын
Because this was the method through which the Harmonic osscialltor eqn was derived first time. It was difficult but it convinced the Physicists. Later Operator method confirmed the results
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
To provide physical insight and to have students believe the solution to be correct, and to connect Hermite polynomials and their properties to HO problem's. Solution. HO is the fundament on which field theories and string theories rely. It pervades physics, very important.
@rebekahshtayfman19678 жыл бұрын
I'm a little confused. He went back to the postulate that says ψ(a) = 0, ψ'(a) = 0, then ψ(x) = 0... and he made the argument in the "physics" proof saying that you can't obtain a node because of this postulate. If you did, hypothetically, obtain a node out of nowhere (which obviously can't happen), you would have ψ(a) = 0, and ψ'(b) = 0. In other words, they would be at different points, so this doesn't say that the wave function has to be zero. He used this in the proof as if this would be occurring at the same point, and clearly it wouldn't.
@smoothtriston62037 жыл бұрын
As the screened potential is expanded, in order for the ground state to transform continuously and form a node, phi(a) and phi'(a) would both have to be zero at the same time somewhere during the transformation. Because of this, it can be said that any state for any potential (of that general shape) will have as many nodes as it did for the infinite well. Which for the ground state is zero.
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
Rebekah you confused his reasoning. The point he made is that if ψ(a) = 0, and ψ'(a) = 0, that is the value and first derivative *** at one point location in space*** is zero, then that requires ψ(x) = 0 everywhere in order to satisfy the differential equation. Node at x=a means the value of ψ(a) = 0. That says nothing about the first derivative ψ'(x) at x=b.
@timetraveler51283 жыл бұрын
I don't understand why the whole wavefunction is zero if the wavefunction and the slope vanishes at a single point.
@DevangLiya6 жыл бұрын
Watch it at 1.25x. You're welcom!
@chymoney15 жыл бұрын
Devang Liya *2.00
@hurtcolor8 ай бұрын
9:42 11:00 nodes
@piyushgalav64834 жыл бұрын
20:56 only the slope is 0 at turning point not the wavefunction then why that is not possible.
@SuperSvx4 жыл бұрын
i had the same doubt
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
No one said "that" was not possible. The reasoning relied only upon the conclusion that if both slope and value were zero then the only solution to the dif eq is the function is zero at all values of x.
@nickanna88579 жыл бұрын
what happens to the u^j on the end @1:04:04? Why must it be zero? I feel like the answer probably involves the phrase "linear independency" but it's not immediately apparent.
@joeybf9 жыл бұрын
Nick Anna The equation is an equation of power series in u, so it simply means that the RHS is equal to the zero power series, i.e. the power series with all coefficients 0. Equality between power series only means that their coefficients are equal everywhere, the same way that two vectors (x_1, x_2) and (y_1, y_2) are equal if and only if x_i = y_i for all meaningful i.
@LydellAaron3 жыл бұрын
My understanding of why it is set to zero is because these are types of "harmonic functions" because these functions help describe stable systems that oscillate back and forth (made up of vibrations).
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
Nick, no one said Uj is zero. Instead, the coefficient of Uj, which is a sub j, is zero for specific energy values. Only those specific energy values result in a cofficient being zero. From the coefficient relations all higher order coefficients also vanish.
@xinzeng-iq7zv6 ай бұрын
no idea what equation represent that line
@not_amanullah3 ай бұрын
This is helpful ❤️🤍
@bobjones58694 жыл бұрын
he forgot a pi^2 at 10:02
@saadibnasaadhusain9 жыл бұрын
Ladder operators are so much simpler!
@AlexHandle3558 жыл бұрын
Amén haha Totaly agree
@txominpenasantacruz24722 жыл бұрын
I invite you to consult (simple atomic oscillator) and (Atomos de Santa Cruz)
@pedropuglia26504 жыл бұрын
1:14:30 where did u^(j-1) go?
@robinsonjunior76414 жыл бұрын
1:10:05 he changed variables from n running on the naturals to j running on the evens. I thinks that’s why there is no j-1
@anmolsharma80027 жыл бұрын
Sir, You have said that ¥1(psi 1) has one node. But in psi 1, there are only 2 end points, no in between. So, how did you say that? i didnt get. Please explain!
@anmolsharma80027 жыл бұрын
..
@priyanksharma11247 жыл бұрын
that is psi _0 with two end points and no nodes.psi_1 has one node
@TORMENTUMM8 жыл бұрын
i dont understand... why the edges of psi_0 at the infinite potential aren't nodes?
@rubbeldiekatz858 жыл бұрын
can you post the time stamp?
@telelight8 жыл бұрын
+TORMENTUMM They aren't nodes by definition. The meaning of node here is slightly different then the meaning of nodes on a vibrating string. The "nodes" or points of zero amplitude on the boundary are not considered quantum mechanical nodes, its just simply the way the meaning was chosen for the word. Of course the reason its done is this way to is correspond nicely to the nth energy eigenstate e.g. the nth energy eigenstate has n nodes.
@thenateman278 жыл бұрын
+TORMENTUMM If you're referring to the part at 9:40 when he says it's not technically a node, notice that a node crosses the axis and has the property that it has a defined, non-negative derivative. At the edges, it is actually not differentiable, and it doesn't cross the x-axis, so it's not technically a node. True, it touches the x-axis, but it doesn't continue as it's derivative (from the side within the well) would indicate, and the derivative from outside the well is zero since Psi is just zero outside of the well. As a side note, Psi is almost always differentiable EXCEPT for infinite potentials.
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
Tormentum, another way to look at the problem is that the "infinite" square well is really not physical. It is instead the limit of a square well potential is on the height of the potential outside the V=0 region continuously increases to infinite. In the corresponding physical system having a finite height potential walls, the stationary state solutions (of the wave functions for each allowed energy value) have tails (exponentially decaying values) that extend beyond the walls and therefore the wave function does not in fact a "zero" value at the potential energy wall. Physics has to do with reality and not the mathematical absolutes, such as the mathematical solutions to the non physical "infinite" square well potential.
@ДенисМайфат-ш6ю2 жыл бұрын
10.47 there is no pi in energy
@Breaker23618 жыл бұрын
Does the term 'bound state' just mean a normalisable wavefunction?
@ether54638 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure if I'm correct on this, I'm just an undergrad student, but I think that answer to you're question is no. I'm pretty sure a free particle can have a wave-function that still decays to zero and is therefore normalizable. A bound state is one in which the energy is less than the potential energy *at both ends*, consequently the energy levels are quantized.
@psharmacgk8 жыл бұрын
A completely free particle shouldn't have a wavefunction that decays to 0 though because there's no potential to make that happen, right? The only free particle wavefunctions I know of are delta functions in either position space or momentum space. These are normalizable of course, but I can't see a wavefunction in a system with no potential having any reason to decay at infinity without some outside influence.
@libere10018 жыл бұрын
P Sharma -- Those are the free particle eigenfunctions. But you can put together a bunch of free particle eigenfunctions into a fourier series and make a lot of different kinds of things. Importantly, you can make a little lump sort of thing that looks like a particle and that travels around with some velocity. Check this out: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_particle#/media/File:Quantum_mechanics_travelling_wavefunctions.svg
@psharmacgk8 жыл бұрын
I'm aware of this lol, I was just answering the free particle question. Thanks anyway though :)
@smoothtriston62037 жыл бұрын
A bound state is a quantum state where some potential in the system has bound a particle to a certain region or regions of space.
@atithi88 жыл бұрын
At 56:50 , how does (e-1)psi pop up , i am getting no -1 term
@psharmacgk8 жыл бұрын
Be careful with your signs, simplifying your second derivative with the u^2 term should yield: -h''+uh'+h+uh'-eh=0 -> h''-2uh'-h+eh=0 -> h''-2uh'+(e-1)h=0 hope that helps :)
@g1grace8 жыл бұрын
I am having the same result.
@psharmacgk8 жыл бұрын
are you getting to the first equation in my previous comment?
@myreneario72168 жыл бұрын
We start with -ψ' ' + u^2 *ψ = ϵ * ψ which we can rewrite as: ψ' ' - u^2 *ψ + ϵ * ψ = 0 We calculate ψ' ': ψ' ' = (h*e^(-u^2 /2))' ' = (h' * e^(-u^2 /2) - h * u * e^(-u^2 /2)) ' = = h' ' * e^(-u^2/2) - h' * u * e^(-u^2 /2) - h' * u * e^(-u^2 /2) - h * 1 * e^(-u^2 / 2) + h * u^2 * e^(-u^2 /2) If we divide that by e^(-u^2/2) we get: ψ' ' / e^(-u^2 /2) = h' ' - 2h'*u - h + h*u^2 So if we divide our previous equation by e^(-u^2/2) we get: h' ' - 2h'*u - h + h*u^2 - h*u^2 + ϵ * h = 0 which can be simplified to: h' ' - 2h'*u + (ϵ-1) * h = 0 If you don´t get the -1 term, then you probably made a mistake when calculating ψ' '. Maybe you should first try to calculate (e^(-u^2 /2))' ' , because if you do it correctly you´ll see where the -1 term comes from.
@IliaToli8 жыл бұрын
At 43:19, how did you ignore epsilon*psi?
@BArdekani8 жыл бұрын
Because we are talking about very large u's, so the term u^2*psi dominates epsilon*psi since epsilon is expected to be a constant.
@vedantdhawale48124 жыл бұрын
The Epsilon*psi is fixed quantity So in diff eqn at infinity u^2 tends to infinity so (Epsilon -u^2) ≈ -u^2
@robertwest57468 жыл бұрын
Nice lecture, but I'm not satisfied with the explanation in the beginning about the nodes. You expand the well and the energy becomes lower, why should we then assume the wavefn will morph into one that represents an excited state which has higher energy? It seems to be quite an assumption to wave your hands and state that the slope of the grnd fn decreases and eventually flips on one side to look like the 1st excited state. There seems to be no motivation for assuming that.
@anmolsharma80027 жыл бұрын
Robert West , well i didnt satisfied with the way he explained nodes
@tobyhardcastle68307 жыл бұрын
He states the opposite doesn’t he? He says it can’t create more nodes if you start with a ground state wave. He only talks about how it would be created to show that it’s impossible for it to do so
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
He did not state that "wavefn will morph into one that represents an excited state which has higher energy" and in fact stated the opposite. And in fact, as the walls of the potential well are move farther apart, each stationary state (allowed energy level with no time dependence) solution will retain its number of nodes and its spacial dependence will slowly spread its oscillations in the classically allowed region to longer oscillations. But the number of nodes for each stationary state will remain the same.
@MeadowBrook20004 жыл бұрын
I literally broke my headset unintentionally while trying to understand this LoL! But great video as always
@not_amanullah3 ай бұрын
Thanks 🤍❤️
@shivamgakkhar95374 жыл бұрын
Can anyone answer, why a node appear everytime when we jump to one energy level to another????
@santiagoarce56723 жыл бұрын
it's not that a node appears when we jump to another energy level, more like the fact that energy levels with more nodes have more energy. The reason they're all sine waves with a certain number of nodes is because that is what solutions to the schrödinger equation look like for the infinite square well.
@shivamgakkhar95373 жыл бұрын
@@santiagoarce5672 sir, this is good to explain by mathematical point of view. But just assume that there is a student who doesn't want to deal with the mathematical part (I know quantum mechanics cannot be imagined without mathematics...but still let's assume) how you are gonna explain to him that why there are some certain points in higher energy level which our particle can never access...
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
Shivam, because the wave function must vanish at infinity for any bound state. (To conserve probability and to recover the classical limit.) As explained in prior lectures, that only occurs for special wave functions, specifically wave function that have a value and a slope at the classical turning point that allows smooth and continuous match to exponentially decaying functions outside the classical turning point.
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
And that can only occur for one wave function within the classical turning point that has a specified number of node.
@xinzeng-iq7zv6 ай бұрын
one slip up can cause u to drop the class
@joansans92633 жыл бұрын
I am a little confused by the way the professor calls the expression for the energy of the system. At 26:10 he calls the expression of energy "Energy operator" while in 29:10 he referes to is as the Hamiltonian. By energy operator I understand something like Eop = ih_d/dt (h_ refers to reduced Plank constant) that would operate on the wave function while the expression on the blackboard is what I would expect to be called the system Hamiltonian. Any clue why he does this? or it is because the energy operator, acting on a wave function brings you the Hamiltonian of the system? Thanks!
@TheBob52603 жыл бұрын
If you’re still wondering, that expression is still an operator in the same way what you wrote is. Apply each term in the E-hat operator on an arbitrary wavefn. The p-hat^2 term involves derivatives in x. The second term just gives you what you see multiplied by the wavefn. In the end, it’s still an operator. This energy operator is a Hamiltonian because it gives you the kinetic energy and potential energy terms for the system (essentially).
@atamertaydn4703 Жыл бұрын
Awesome! Algebra and mathematicians are upset after this lesson :)
@anabilkanungoe17285 жыл бұрын
Is this an undergrad or a graduate course ??
@mitocw5 жыл бұрын
This is an undergraduate course. See the course on MIT OpenCourseWare at: ocw.mit.edu/8-04S13 for more information.
@pandiatonizm4 жыл бұрын
This is primary school stuff in China
@TupacMakaveli19964 жыл бұрын
@@pandiatonizm low key Einstein was Chinese so was Planck. They disguised as western to counter racism.
@ilanle2 ай бұрын
Gotta love this accent :-)
@kartikanand53742 ай бұрын
Art
@xelth5 ай бұрын
If you use ‘eigen’ then it is best to write ‘Schrödinger’ ;)
@xinzeng-iq7zv6 ай бұрын
unfortnately, i need a physics degree to get a physics degree
@eloymartinsuarez39462 жыл бұрын
te amo
@dianadimitrova9182 жыл бұрын
Is the 1.25 speed the original one? xd
@jeremygong94106 жыл бұрын
don't really think you need to solve it in such manner, and again, the manner of solving this equation wasn't even analytical, wasted 20 mins on the last part of this lecture :( I'm looking forward to the lecture 9, and hopefully there are some practical means to solve it. P.S: ALWAYS HATED INFINITE SUMS!!!!
@mikedelmonaco61937 жыл бұрын
Are these precise results? These seem like insane approximations where we just throw terms away and stuff. This really doesn't seem ok to me, but I've only taken high school physics that didn't use calculus so I don't really know what I'm talking about. I'm used to calculating everything exactly so all of this estimation seems crazy. Are these kinds of approximations normal? Do they just happen to coincide with real, rigorous calculations, but there just isn't enough time to do things rigorously so they just estimate? I can't imagine a physicist saying "forget about these" and proceeding in an actual calculation.
@galvinng19977 жыл бұрын
I can see why Prof Barton chose to drop off the remaining terms. 1) it speeds up the computation because you don't have to worry about the not important terms 2)in a way, it's neater, the non-important terms need not worry you as you do the workings, allowing you to focus on the essential terms to get your result! :)
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
Yes. They are precise.
@meetghelani5222 Жыл бұрын
Barton ❤️👏🫡
@lachlangray81203 жыл бұрын
Why am I paying my university thousands of dollars when I can watch this???
@schmetterling44773 жыл бұрын
Because they will give you a title that will allow you to get high paying jobs. Watching this won't.
@willemesterhuyse2547 Жыл бұрын
He set j =j' + 2, then in the next step he set j = j'. This is inconsistent. (Timestamp 1:01:13).
@chanchalsharma27383 жыл бұрын
Where is part 2
@mitocw3 жыл бұрын
Part two is lecture 9 (but is not titled as such): kzbin.info/www/bejne/oHu7kGSwiZxmi5I. Best wishes on your studies!
@chanchalsharma27383 жыл бұрын
Thanku ❤️
@bruceabbott25178 жыл бұрын
The ground state has no nose? Sounds like Firesign Theater.
@proexcel1238 жыл бұрын
no nose...... Voldermort?
@raphaelmonteiro82916 жыл бұрын
26:19 he forgot the hat on X
@richardneifeld77973 жыл бұрын
No one's perfect.
@marcomoraschi353711 ай бұрын
Soooo boring, and same time so interesting and beatiful and useful . No one can view THE ELEGANT SOLUTION, usually we have to meke guest, and struggle.
@CHistrue9 жыл бұрын
Quantum joke for you: Question) Why did Richard Nixon deny the existence of neutron stars? Answer) Too much degenerate matter!
@CrushOfSiel9 жыл бұрын
CHistrue :D. I was told kind of a good one by someone showing up a bit late to a tutoring session. He said, "Sorry I couldn't find my keys this morning, I knew too much about their momentum."
@CHistrue9 жыл бұрын
CrushOfSiel There is also a probability that his brainwaves lost coherence. It happens to the best of us, at least with enough interference.
@edgarvardanyan25818 жыл бұрын
Q)Why is Heisengerg such a bad lover? A)Because if he knows the right place, he can't find the right momentum, if he knows the momentum, he can't find the right place
@CHistrue8 жыл бұрын
Edgar Vardanian I thought it was because his wave amplitude stopped expanding the minute one photo of light would shine on it? Oh, well, I learned something today!