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This popular undergraduate quantum mechanics textbook is now available in a more affordable printing from Cambridge University Press. Unlike many other books on quantum mechanics, this text begins by examining experimental quantum phenomena such as the Stern-Gerlach experiment and spin measurements, using them as the basis for developing the theoretical principles of quantum mechanics. Dirac notation is developed from the outset, offering an intuitive and powerful mathematical toolset for calculation, and familiarizing students with this important notational system. This non-traditional approach is designed to deepen students' conceptual understanding of the subject, and has been extensively class tested. Suitable for undergraduate physics students, worked examples are included throughout and end of chapter problems act to reinforce and extend important concepts. Additional activities for students are provided online, including interactive simulations of Stern-Gerlach experiments, and a fully worked solutions manual is available for instructors.
This original and innovative textbook takes the unique perspective of introducing and solving problems in quantum mechanics using linear algebra methods, to equip readers with a deeper and more practical understanding of this fundamental pillar of contemporary physics. Extensive motivation for the properties of quantum mechanics, Hilbert space, and the Schrödinger equation is provided through analysis of the derivative, while standard topics like the harmonic oscillator, rotations, and the hydrogen atom are covered from within the context of operator methods. Advanced topics forming the basis of modern physics research are also included, such as the density matrix, entropy, and measures of entanglement. Written for an undergraduate audience, this book offers a unique and mathematically self-contained treatment of this hugely important topic. Students are guided gently through the text by the author's engaging writing style, with an extensive glossary provided for reference and numerous homework problems to expand and develop key concepts. Online resources for instructors include a fully worked solutions manual and lecture slides.
Written for a two-semester graduate course in Quantum Mechanics, this comprehensive text helps develop the tools and formalism of Quantum Mechanics and its applications to physical systems. It suits students who have taken some introductory Quantum Mechanics and Modern Physics courses at undergraduate level, but it is self-contained and does not assume any specific background knowledge beyond appropriate fluency in mathematics. The text takes a modern logical approach rather than a historical one and it covers standard material, such as the hydrogen atom and the harmonic oscillator, the WKB approximations and Bohr-Sommerfeld quantization. Important modern topics and examples are also described, including Berry phase, quantum information, complexity and chaos, decoherence and thermalization, nonstandard statistics, as well as more advanced material such as path integrals, scattering theory, multiparticles and Fock space. Readers will gain a broad overview of Quantum Mechanics, as solid preparation for further study or research.
Starting in this chapter, and in the following two chapters, we will take all of the abstractness of quantum mechanics that we have developed and make it concrete in actual examples. Our goal for these examples will be to solve the time-independent eigenvalue problem for the Hamiltonian
Welcome to the world of quantum mechanics! I’ll be your guide through this fascinating, counterintuitive, and extremely rich subject. Quantum mechanics underlies nearly all of contemporary physics research; from the inner workings of atoms, to properties of materials, to the physics of neutron stars, to what happens at a black hole. Additionally, quantum mechanics and its consequences are exploited in modern technology and are beginning to produce major breakthroughs in computing. In this book, we will introduce the formalism, axioms, and a new way of thinking quantum mechanically that will require a re-interpretation of the classical physics you have learned.
In this chapter, we will study the quantumwhich, just as in classical mechanics, will be our “canonical” quantum system and one which we can apply to a huge variety of systems. Unlike the infinite square well, we will find that the harmonic oscillator is not most naturally expressed in position space. This new formulation of the harmonic oscillator’s Hamiltonian will demonstrate the power of exploiting commutation relations in quantum mechanics and will be a foundation for analyses in future chapters. Eigenstates of the harmonic oscillator, especially its lowest-energy state, have a deep connection to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle and open the door to studying a whole class of states that bridge the chasm between quantum wavefunctions and classical particles.
Our study of linear algebra in the previous chapter suggested some interesting features of a deeper structure. First, as a study of the derivative operator suggested, we will consider a complex vector space, spanned by some set of orthonormal vectors , where orthonormality is defined by
In this chapter, we are going to step back from the exact solutions of the Schrödinger equation (i.e., diagonalization of the Hamiltonian) and introduce methods for approximation. We have nearly exhausted those problems for which there exists a known, exact, analytic solution to the Schrödinger equation, and much of modern research on quantum mechanics and its generalizations focuses around approaches to approximating the eigenvalues of the Hamiltonian. We will just barely scratch the surface of techniques for approximation in this chapter, focusing on four different methods. The techniques we introduce here are general techniques for determining approximations to eigenvalues of linear operators or matrices, but applied to the problem of solving a quantum system, namely, diagonalization of its Hamiltonian.
Up until this point, we have essentially exclusively studied the quantum mechanics of individual particles. In this chapter, we will consider ensembles of quantum mechanical particles and attempt to understand their collective dynamics (or at least provide a brief introduction). By “ensemble,” I mean that we are considering a quantum system with more than one particle in it. So, instead of, say, one spin-1/2 particle, we will consider a collection of N spin-1/2 particles, or N particles in the infinite square well, or something like that. With this set-up, we can immediately see that the quantum description of states on a Hilbert space is insufficient and incomplete for describing this collection of particles.
With scattering and its formalism in the previous chapter, we pivot to studying quantum mechanics in more than one dimension. In this and the next chapter, we will work to generalize our formulation of quantum mechanics to be more realistic (i.e., actually account for the multiple spatial dimensions that we experience in our universe). In this chapter, we will introduce a profound consequence of living in multiple spatial dimensions and a study of angular momentum in quantum mechanics. We will start by setting the stage for describing rotations and later, construct the complete theory of angular momentum, at least as much as we need here.