University Physics with Modern Physics, Volume 2 (Chs. 21-37); Mastering Physics with Pearson eText -- ValuePack Access Card (14th Edition)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780134265414
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: PEARSON
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Question
Chapter 40, Problem 40.15E
(a)
To determine
What does it mean for the wave function of a particle moving in one dimension along
(b)
To determine
Whether the wave function
(c)
To determine
the value of
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Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
A particle of mass 1.60 x 10-28 kg is confined to a one-dimensional box of length 1.90 x 10-10 m. For n = 1, answer the following.
(a) What is the wavelength (in m) of the wave function for the particle?
m
(b) What is its ground-state energy (in eV)?
eV
(c) What If? Suppose there is a second box. What would be the length L (in m) for this box if the energy for a particle in the n = 5 state of this box
is the same as the ground-state energy found for the first box in part (b)?
m
(d) What would be the wavelength (in m) of the wave function for the particle in that case?
m
A particle with mass m is moving in three-dimensions under the potential energy U(r), where
r is the radial distance from the origin. The state of the particle is given by the time-independent
wavefunction,
Y(r) = Ce-kr.
Because it is in three dimensions, it is the solution of the following time-independent
Schrodinger equation
dıp
r2
+ U(r)µ(r).
dr
h2 d
EÞ(r) =
2mr2 dr
In addition,
00
1 =
| 4ar?y? (r)dr,
(A(r)) = | 4r²p²(r)A(r)dr.
a. Using the fact that the particle has to be somewhere in space, determine C. Express your
answer in terms of k.
b. Remembering that E is a constant, and the fact that p(r) must satisfy the time-independent
wave equation, what is the energy E of the particle and the potential energy U(r). (As
usual, E and U(r) will be determined up to a constant.) Express your answer in terms of
m, k, and ħ.
Problem 3. Consider the two example systems from quantum mechanics. First, for a
particle in a box of length 1 we have the equation
h² d²v
EV,
2m dx²
with boundary conditions (0) = 0 and V(1) = 0.
Second, the Quantum Harmonic Oscillator (QHO)
=
h² d²
+kr²V = EV
2m dg²+ka²
1/ k2²) v
(a) Write down the states for both systems. What are their similarities and differences?
(b) Write down the energy eigenvalues for both systems. What are their similarities
and differences?
(c) Plot the first three states of the QHO along with the potential for the system.
(d) Explain why you can observe a particle outside of the "classically allowed region".
Hint: you can use any state and compute an integral to determine a probability of
a particle being in a given region.
Chapter 40 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics, Volume 2 (Chs. 21-37); Mastering Physics with Pearson eText -- ValuePack Access Card (14th Edition)
Ch. 40.1 - Does a wave packet given by Eq. (40.19) represent...Ch. 40.2 - Prob. 40.2TYUCh. 40.3 - Prob. 40.3TYUCh. 40.4 - Prob. 40.4TYUCh. 40.5 - Prob. 40.5TYUCh. 40.6 - Prob. 40.6TYUCh. 40 - Prob. 40.1DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.2DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.3DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.4DQ
Ch. 40 - If a panicle is in a stationary state, does that...Ch. 40 - Prob. 40.6DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.7DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.8DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.9DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.10DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.11DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.12DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.13DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.14DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.15DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.16DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.17DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.18DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.19DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.20DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.21DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.22DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.23DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.24DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.25DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.26DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.27DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.1ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.2ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.3ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.4ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.5ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.6ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.7ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.8ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.9ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.10ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.11ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.12ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.13ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.14ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.15ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.16ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.17ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.18ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.19ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.20ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.21ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.22ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.23ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.24ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.25ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.26ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.27ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.28ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.29ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.30ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.31ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.32ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.33ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.34ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.35ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.36ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.37ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.38ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.39ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.40ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.41ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.42PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.43PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.44PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.45PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.46PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.47PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.48PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.49PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.50PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.51PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.52PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.53PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.54PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.55PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.56PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.57PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.58PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.59PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.60PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.61PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.62PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.63PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.64CPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.65CPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.66CPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.67PPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.68PPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.69PPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.70PP
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