View Full Version : Eigenvalues and -functions
broegger
Mar8-05, 05:01 AM
I having trouble finding the eigenvalues and eigenfunctions for the operator
\hat{Q} = \frac{d^2}{d\phi^2},
where \phi is the azimuthal angle. The eigenfunctions are periodical,
f(\phi) = f(\phi + 2\pi),
which I think should put some restrictions on the eigenvalues.
I think that the eigenfunctions are complex exponentials, and that the eigenvalues are 0,-1,-2,..., but I am not sure if this is correct. Also I have to determine if the spectrum is degenerate, that is, if two (or more) distinct eigenfunctions correspond to the same eigenvalue.
Kane O'Donnell
Mar8-05, 05:27 AM
You're right about the complex exponentials and wrong about the eigenvalues, but finding the e-values isn't hard, just substitute a complex exponential into the equation and see what happens. :smile:
Those numbers ...-1, 0, 1, 2, ... do parametrize the equation - they turn out to be quantum numbers, not eigenvalues. Make sure you understand why they have to be integers.
Degeneracy should follow from what the eigenvalues look like, so calculate them first.
Kane
\frac{d^2 f}{d\phi^2} = Af
Where A is an eigenvalue. Now solve this diff equation and make a clear distinction between A positive and negative. Also keep in mind that the eigenfunctions need to be periodical.
marlon
dextercioby
Mar8-05, 06:43 AM
Okay.Better solve the ODE and then impose the periodicity condition.
Daniel.
broegger
Mar8-05, 01:39 PM
This is my solution-attempt:
For negative eigenvalues we have:
f(\phi) = e^{-iq\phi}
This correspond to eigenvalues \lambda = -q^2. Since f(\phi) is 2\pi-periodical we have:
1 = e^{-iq2\pi}.
This implies that q = 0, \pm1, \pm2, \ldots, which again implies that the eigenvalues are \lambda = 0, -1, -4, -9, \ldots. There are no positive eigenvalues.
dextercioby
Mar8-05, 01:54 PM
Are u sure...?
\frac{d^{2}f(\varphi)}{d\varphi^{2}}=\lambda f(\varphi)
I'm getting some square roots...
Daniel.
broegger
Mar8-05, 02:16 PM
Are u sure...?
No, I'm not sure, not at all :biggrin:
From where do you get the square roots? If you differentiate twice you get (-iq)^2 = -q^2?
dextercioby
Mar8-05, 02:23 PM
??Well,the characteristic equation is
r^{2}=\lambda
,with the solutions:
r_{1,2}=\pm \sqrt\lambda
Daniel.
broegger
Mar8-05, 02:56 PM
I don't get it :( What do you get for the eigenvalues exactly?
The eigenvalues need not be real a a priori, but the periodicity implies it.
Since at first the eigenvalue lambda can be anything at all, best let \lambda = -m^2, where m can be any complex number.
broegger
Mar8-05, 03:48 PM
\hat{Q} is hermitian, so the eigenvalues must be real - isn't that correct? If we apply the condition \lambda = -m^2, we get the eigenvalues 0, 1, 4, 9,... since the periodicity implies that m = 0, \pm1, \pm2,... Right?
\hat{Q} is hermitian, so the eigenvalues must be real - isn't that correct? If we apply the condition \lambda = -m^2, we get the eigenvalues 0, 1, 4, 9,... since the periodicity implies that m = 0, \pm1, \pm2,... Right?
Yeah, I overlooked the Hermiticity.
The eigenvalues are nonnegative as you said, so you get 0,-1,-4 etc.
broegger
Mar8-05, 04:04 PM
Thank you, Galileo. And the rest of you too :)
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