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luisgml_2000
Apr27-10, 09:40 PM
Hello!

From the ordinary courses in QM it is known that the momentum kets satisfy the completeness relation

\int d^3 p \mid p \rangle \langle p \mid = 1

Knowing this, how can you calculate

\int d^3 p \mid p \rangle p \langle p \mid

?

Thanks a lot!

tom.stoer
Apr28-10, 12:58 AM
What do you want to calculate? It's an operator you can apply to bras and kets

I prefer

\int d^3p |p\rangle\langle p| p

nnnm4
Apr28-10, 01:02 AM
What is the p outside the bra/ket exactly? Do you want it to be a momentum operator? or an eigenvalue for the p-ket? If it's the former I think you have an illegal product so there is no such thing as calculating it. If it's a eigenvalue (ie a real number) then it's just the identity operator multiplied by the scalar p.

tom.stoer
Apr28-10, 01:06 AM
That's why I prefer

\int d^3p |p\rangle\langle p| \hat{p}^\dagger = \int d^3p |p\rangle\langle p| p

ansgar
Apr28-10, 01:51 AM
operator times operator

luisgml_2000
Apr28-10, 02:36 PM
What is the p outside the bra/ket exactly? Do you want it to be a momentum operator?

That p stands for the momentum operator. That's why I'm not sure about how to calculate it. I think the result has something to do with a delta function.

tom.stoer
Apr29-10, 12:23 AM
your p cannot be an operator as it is in the wrong position, whereas my p (with the hat on top) is an operator; in the second step it is replaced by the eigenvalue as it acts (to the left) on the state vector