The Harmonic Oscillator
The Harmonic Oscillator
107
108 LECTURE 12. THE HARMONIC OSCILLATOR
12.1 Introduction
In this chapter, we are going to find explicitly the eigenfunctions and eigenvalues for the
time-independent Schrödinger equation for the one-dimensional harmonic oscillator. We
have already described the solutions in Chap. 3.
Recall that the tise for the 1-dimensional quantum harmonic oscillator is
� �
P̂ 2
+ 1 mω 2 X̂ 2 un (x) = En un (x) ,
2m 2
Ĥ |n� = En |n� .
P̂ 2 1
Ĥ = + mω 2 X̂ 2 . (12.1)
2m 2
Let us factor out �ω, and rewrite the Hamiltonian as:
� �
P̂ 2 mω 2
Ĥ = �ω + X̂ . (12.2)
2m�ω 2�
Checking the dimensions of the constants, you can readily verify that:
� �
2 2�
[�ω] = energy, [2mω�] = momentum , = length2 . (12.3)
mω
The operators ξˆ and η̂ are simply the position and the momentum operators rescaled by
some real constants; therefore both of them are Hermitean. Their commutation relation can
be easily computed using the canonical commutation relations:
� � � �
ˆ η̂ = 1 X̂, P̂ = i .
ξ, (12.7)
2� 2
If ξˆ and η̂ were commuting variables, we would be tempted to factorize the Hamiltonian
as: � �� �
Ĥ = �ω ξˆ + iη̂ ξˆ − iη̂ . (12.8)
We must be careful here, because the operators do not commute. So let us introduce:
�
â = ξˆ + iη̂ ,
(12.9)
↠= ξˆ − iη̂ ;
�ω � † �
Ĥ = ââ + ↠â (12.12)
2
Subtracting the same two equations yields the commutation relation between â and ↠:
� �
â, ↠= 1 . (12.13)
This commutation relations plays an important role in the rest of this chapter.
An alternative, and more useful, expression for Ĥ is
� �
Ĥ = ↠â + 12 �ω . (12.14)
110 LECTURE 12. THE HARMONIC OSCILLATOR
Now
[↠â, â] = ↠ââ − â↠â = [↠, â]â = −â ,
so that we obtain
[Ĥ, â] = −�ωâ . (12.15)
Similarly � �
[Ĥ, ↠] = [ ↠â + 12 �ω, ↠] = �ω[↠â, ↠] since [ 12 , ↠] = 0 ,
and
[↠â, ↠] = ↠â↠− ↠↠â = ↠[â, ↠] = ↠,
so that we obtain
[Ĥ, ↠] = �ω↠. (12.16)
Let us now compute:
� � � �
ˆĤ|n� + Ĥ, â |n� ,
Ĥ â|n� = â (12.17)
= En â|n� − �ωâ|n� , (12.18)
� �
= (En − �ω) â|n� . (12.19)
which says that ↠|n� is an eigenfunction of Ĥ belonging to the eigenvalue (En + �ω), unless
↠|n� ≡ 0. We say that the operator ↠is a raising operator ; its action on an energy
eigenstate is to turn it into another energy eigenstate of higher energy. It is also called an
creation operator, because it adds one quantum of energy �ω to the system.
12.4. EIGENSYSTEM 111
12.4 Eigensystem
12.4.1 Eigenvalues
It should be clear that repeated application of the lowering operator, â, generates states of
successively lower energy ad infinitum unless there is a state of lowest energy; application of
the operator to such a state must yield zero identically (because otherwise we would be able
to generate another state of lower energy still, a contradiction).
Is there such a state? The answer is yes because the Hamiltonian can only have positive
eigenvalues. Consider the expectation value of Ĥ in an arbitrary state |Ψ�:
p̂2
�Ĥ� = � � + � 12 mω 2 x2 � ,
2m
and both terms on the right hand side are non-negative. Thus there cannot be any states of
negative energy.
We denote the state of lowest energy, or ground state, by |0�. Then since there cannot
be a state of lower energy,
â |0� = 0 .
Thus we have found the ground state energy: E0 = 12 �ω. Application of the raising operator
to the ground state generates the state |1� with energy E1 = 32 �ω, whilst n applications of
the raising operator generates the state |n� with energy (n + 12 )�ω, so that
En = (n + 12 )�ω n = 0, 1, 2, 3, . . . ,
which is the previously quoted result for the energy eigenvalues of the 1-dimensional oscillator!
112 LECTURE 12. THE HARMONIC OSCILLATOR
Hence:
� �
d 2mω mω
u0 (x) = − xu0 (x) (12.24)
dx � 2�
mω
=− xu0 (x) (12.25)
�
= −α2 xu0 (x) , (12.26)
where α2 = mω/�. The solution of the equation above is the Gaussian that we have already
seen in Chap. 3:
u0 (x) = C0 exp[−α2 x2 /2] . (12.27)
Every other eigenfunctions is obtained by repeatedly applying the creation operator â†
to ground state:
1 � † �n
un (x) = √ â u0 (x) . (12.28)
n!
Remember that ↠is just a differential operator acting on wave functions. Check that you
can reproduce the wave functions for the first and second excited states of the harmonic
oscillator.
12.5 Summary
As usual, we summarize the main concepts introduced in this lecture.
• Existence of the ground states, construction and normalization of the excited states.
Eigenvalues of the Hamiltonian.