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Some trajectories of a particle in a box according to Newton's laws of classical mechanics (A), and according to the Schrödinger equation of quantum mechanics (B–F). In (B–F), the horizontal axis is position, and the vertical axis is the real part (blue) and imaginary part (red) of the wave function.
In quantum mechanics, the expectation value is the probabilistic expected value of the result (measurement) of an experiment. It can be thought of as an average of all the possible outcomes of a measurement as weighted by their likelihood, and as such it is not the most probable value of a measurement; indeed the expectation value may have zero probability of occurring (e.g. measurements which ...
1.8 Particle in a box. ... rule for position q and momentum p variables of a particle, 1927. pq ... as time for which the expectation value of the ...
The solution for a particle with momentum p or wave vector k, ... The expectation value of the momentum p for the complex plane wave is ... Particle in a box;
The Ehrenfest theorem, named after Austrian theoretical physicist Paul Ehrenfest, relates the time derivative of the expectation values of the position and momentum operators x and p to the expectation value of the force = ′ on a massive particle moving in a scalar potential (), [1]
For a particle moving on a cone under the influence of 1/r and r 2 potentials, centred at the tip of the cone, the conserved quantities corresponding to accidental symmetry will be two components of an equivalent of the Runge-Lenz vector, in addition to one component of the angular momentum vector.
In the general time-independent case, the dynamics of a particle in a spherically symmetric potential are governed by a Hamiltonian of the following form: ^ = ^ + Here, is the mass of the particle, ^ is the momentum operator, and the potential () depends only on the vector magnitude of the position vector, that is, the radial distance from the ...
This provides us with a method for calculating the expected values of many microscopic quantities. We add the quantity artificially to the microstate energies (or, in the language of quantum mechanics, to the Hamiltonian), calculate the new partition function and expected value, and then set λ to zero in the final expression.