Particle in superposition of energy eigenstates and conservation of energy.

In summary: You're right but I'm not sure about the "does not change the coherent state" statement, it seems strange that an interaction that involves energy-exchange changes one of the subsystems but not the other. A photon should be absorbed from...
  • #1
amirhdrz
2
0
When a particle is in superposition of energy eigenstates and has a probability of being found in either state, what does that say about the energy of the particle and conservation of energy.
What I mean is, since the energy eigenstates have different energy values, where's the rest of the energy of the particle, if it is found to be in the lower energy eigenstate?

Let's say [itex]|\psi> = c_1 |E_1> + c_2 |E_2>[/itex]

Take the system to be a free particle in a box where [itex]\hat{H} = \frac{\hat{p}^2}{2m} + V(\hat{x})[/itex] and

[itex]V(x)=\{
\begin{array}{1 1}
0 \quad |x|<a/2\\
V_0 \quad |x|>a/2
\end{array}[/itex]

I guess my questions could be rephrased as, how do you calculate the total energy of a quantum particle?
 
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  • #2
The energy is uncertain. If you measure it, you have probability |c1|^2 to get E1, and probability |c2|^2 to get E2. These probabilities do not change with time. This is what it means for energy to be conserved in QM.
 
  • #3
Thanks for your reply.
I was just expecting quantum mechanics to always give me definite answer for the total energy of the system.
 
  • #4
A conservation law in quantum mechanics is usually formulated in terms of an operator algebra. In the Heisenberg picture which corresponds to the Hamiltonian framework in classical mechanics the time-dependence is shifted from the states to the operators; the state vectors are time-independent, therefore there is no conservation law on the level of the states (trivial). The conservation law (time-independence) of a certain observable Q is formulated in terms of its commutator with the Hamiltonian H, i.e. [H,Q] = 0 which corresponds to the Heisenberg equations of motion for a conserved quantity Q with dQ/dt = 0. Here I always assume that we start with time-indep. Hamiltonian operator in the Schrödinger picture. In that case the time-independence of the Hamiltonian in the Heisenberg piucture is trivial: [H,H] = 0
 
  • #5
I think you should also take into account that your particle has to enter the superposition state in some way. If you start with an excited atom, for example, after a while the atom will be in a superposition of being excited or not. But the full superpositon state has a photon taking up the energy in one case and not in the other, so in any case the total energy is conserved.

Thsi leads to a follow-up question which I cannot answer: Is there any way to prepare a particle in an energy superposition state that does not involve entanglement with another system that is in a complementary superposition?
 
  • #6
Sonderval said:
Thsi leads to a follow-up question which I cannot answer: Is there any way to prepare a particle in an energy superposition state that does not involve entanglement with another system that is in a complementary superposition?
That's a very interesting question, i have thought about it as well but i cannot answer it either.. Although my intuition tells me that it cannot be done.
 
  • #7
Sonderval said:
Thsi leads to a follow-up question which I cannot answer: Is there any way to prepare a particle in an energy superposition state that does not involve entanglement with another system that is in a complementary superposition?
Yes there is. See e.g.
L. E. Ballentine, Quantum Mechanics: A Modern Development
Sec. 12.4 Quantum Beats
 
  • #8
Demystifier said:
Yes there is. See e.g.
L. E. Ballentine, Quantum Mechanics: A Modern Development
Sec. 12.4 Quantum Beats
At the cited section the magnetic field is treated classicaly and that's how the superposition is achieved. It's like exciting an atom with a classical electromagnetic field. However if you treat the E/M field quantum mechanically, the atomic states are entangled with the field and total energy is exactly conserved.
 
  • #9
JK423 said:
At the cited section the magnetic field is treated classicaly and that's how the superposition is achieved. It's like exciting an atom with a classical electromagnetic field. However if you treat the E/M field quantum mechanically, the atomic states are entangled with the field and total energy is exactly conserved.

The states of the electromagnetic field which behave the most classical are coherent states which are themselves not energy eigenstates and neither contain a definite number of photons.
Exciting an atom with these states leaves it in a superposition of energy eigenstates and does not change the coherent state, so there is also no entanglement created.
 
  • #10
DrDu said:
The states of the electromagnetic field which behave the most classical are coherent states which are themselves not energy eigenstates and neither contain a definite number of photons.
Exciting an atom with these states leaves it in a superposition of energy eigenstates and does not change the coherent state, so there is also no entanglement created.
You're right but I'm not sure about the "does not change the coherent state" statement, it seems strange that an interaction that involves energy-exchange changes one of the subsystems but not the other. A photon should be absorbed from somewhere..
 
  • #11
Yes, but the coherent states are eigenstates of the photon anihilation operator. So the removal of a photon does not change the coherent state.
 
  • #12
Correct, and that's because a coherent state involves an infinite number of photons in superposition. However such a coherent state is unnatural. In reality you can find approximate coherent states that involve a very large number of photons in superposition, but still it's a finite number and a subtraction of a photon makes a (small to negligible) difference.
Coherent states are created by lasers, and the process of their creation exactly preserves the total energy. So we are always 'tracing back' to find the closed system that includes all the subsystem involved.
I think that the correct assertion would be: In a closed system with well defined energy, all its subsystems that interact with each other unitarily are entangled. Each subsystem is in a superposition of eigenstates, but the overall energy is conserved. If you assume the universe to be closed and with well defined total energy (that's a big assertion to make!:P ) and described by QM then energy is always exactly conserved.
 
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  • #13
@JK423 &others
Thanks - that's what I always assumed, but I've never found it discussed anywhere.
 
  • #14
JK423 said:
Coherent states are created by lasers, and the process of their creation exactly preserves the total energy. So we are always 'tracing back' to find the closed system that includes all the subsystem involved.
Nobody doubts that energy is exactly conserved. The question is about the correlations generated.
I always find the assumption that the whole universe is a closed quantum system quite dubious.
The - even approximate - construction of closed systems is de facto impossible and they are much more unnatural than coherent states.
All measurements are ultimately performed with instruments that are classically or arbitrarily closely so. These systems can swallow and delete any kind of correlation. The coherent states show how this becomes possible in the limit of large system size.
 
  • #15
As long as a closed system (e.g., the whole Universe) evolves unitarily, an energy eigen-state must necessarily evolve into an energy-eigenstate. This seems to imply that creation of coherent superpositions of different energies is impossible. But for such a system the state does not change with time, so where does the dependence on time come from?

The catch is that in all interpretations of QM, the system as a whole does NOT evolve unitarily. (For example, the wave function collapse is not unitary.) The only exception is many-world interpretation, but even there the physical time needs to be identified with some clock-configuration variable, which again leads to an effective non-unitary "evolution" with respect to the clock time. As a consequence, creation of coherent energy superpositions is possible, in all interpretations.

For more details see also Appendix A of
http://arxiv.org/abs/1209.5196
 
  • #16
DrDu said:
I always find the assumption that the whole universe is a closed quantum system quite dubious.
Why? If it is not closed then it interacts with something else, but if there is something else to interact with, then the "whole" universe was not really whole in the first place.. In other words, by DEFINITION, the whole universe must be closed.
 
  • #17
Sonderval said:
... but I've never found it discussed anywhere.
See the link in post #15.
 
  • #18
Demystifier said:
As long as a closed system (e.g., the whole Universe) evolves unitarily, an energy eigen-state must necessarily evolve into an energy-eigenstate. This seems to imply that creation of coherent superpositions of different energies is impossible. But for such a system the state does not change with time, so where does the dependence on time come from?

The catch is that in all interpretations of QM, the system as a whole does NOT evolve unitarily. (For example, the wave function collapse is not unitary.) The only exception is many-world interpretation, but even there the physical time needs to be identified with some clock-configuration variable, which again leads to an effective non-unitary "evolution" with respect to the clock time. As a consequence, creation of coherent energy superpositions is possible, in all interpretations.
Incorrect. Hamiltonian of the closed universe includes all the measurements in said universe. That means if you are in an eigen state of Hamiltonian, the measurement won't change that either. It's only when you are considering sub-systems that distinction is relevant.

The only way you can have dynamics in the universe is if universe is not in an eigen state of the Hamiltonian. And why should it be in an eigen state? There are infinitely more states than there are eigen states.

So we don't need to discuss collapse here. The universe is in some super-position of eigen states, and that's enough.

Note that regardless of what kind of superposition you have, [H, H] = 0. So expectation value of energy does not change in time. Yes, energy of the universe is not an eigen energy. But it's always the same, so there are no issues with conservation laws.
 
  • #19
@Demystifier
Thanks for that, but I'm still mystified ;-)

Consider an isolated H-atom in an excited state (for example 2p).
This is an energy eigenstate and stationary.

However, we know that the H-atom can emit a photon and go to the ground state. The total energy of the system does not change. So can the system evolve from being excited into a superpositon of excited + (ground state +photon)?

If not, is the actual photon emission of an excited atom due to some external disturbance? An interaction with the vacuum state of the photon field?
 
  • #20
Sonderval said:
However, we know that the H-atom can emit a photon and go to the ground state. The total energy of the system does not change. So can the system evolve from being excited into a superpositon of excited + (ground state +photon)?
It's not a closed system. In a perfect closed system, an atom in 2p state stays in 2p state. It will never decay. It takes a small perturbation from outside, plus the electromagnetic field to get the decay started. If you place an atom in a perfectly closed box, even if you "nudge" it to decay, it will eventually return into an excited state again. It's only in an open system that decay is irreversible.
 
  • #21
@K^2
Thanks, but I'm still not 100% sure I understand what's going on:
Let's assume I "nudge" the system somehow by a quantum process - then it would be in a superposition state. Am I right in assuming that the "nudge-system" itself cannot be in an energy-eigenstate, otherwise it could not change its state and do the nudge?
 
  • #22
referring to the whole universe and its Hamiltonian may be dangerous b/c (as we know from GR and several QG proposals) energy can neither be defined canonically nor via Noether theorem in general; the problem of the construction of a diff. inv. Dirac observable is - afaik - not yet solved; we have H ~ 0 i.e. H does neither correspond to an energy operator, nor to a time-evolution operator
 
  • #23
Demystifier said:
Why? If it is not closed then it interacts with something else, but if there is something else to interact with, then the "whole" universe was not really whole in the first place.. In other words, by DEFINITION, the whole universe must be closed.

Usually we define a quantum system by its interaction with a classical surrounding.
What is the classical surrounding of the whole universe?
 
  • #24
@tom.stoer Agreed. Unfortunately, we don't really have a better description yet. We can talk what happens if we can treat universe as a closed system with a definite Hamiltonian, under assumption that such a field theory even exists. Whether it does exist is a separate question.

But yes, this is why all the real work is not being done on true closed systems. They are done on partially isolated sub-systems. Hence the golden rule and pretty much the entire stat mech.
Sonderval said:
Let's assume I "nudge" the system somehow by a quantum process - then it would be in a superposition state. Am I right in assuming that the "nudge-system" itself cannot be in an energy-eigenstate, otherwise it could not change its state and do the nudge?
Right. In this case, the "nudge" has to be external to the sub-system.
 
  • #25
Demystifier said:
As a consequence, creation of coherent energy superpositions is possible, in all interpretations.
Are you talking about exact coherent states, involving an infinite (and not finite) number of photons? If that's the case then we would be able to draw infinite energy from such a state by subtracting single photons each time.. wouldn't we?
 
  • #26
JK423 said:
Are you talking about exact coherent states, involving an infinite (and not finite) number of photons?
No, by "coherent superposition" I meant a pure state, as opposed to a mixed state.
 
  • #27
DrDu said:
Usually we define a quantum system by its interaction with a classical surrounding.
I don't think that it is how we usually define a quantum system, although I admit that some pragmatic physicists do prefer to define quantum systems in that way.
DrDu said:
What is the classical surrounding of the whole universe?
Nothing, of course.
 
  • #28
Sonderval said:
Consider an isolated H-atom in an excited state (for example 2p).
This is an energy eigenstate and stationary.

However, we know that the H-atom can emit a photon and go to the ground state. The total energy of the system does not change.
H-atom in an excited state is an energy eigenstate of the free-atom Hamiltonian. However, it is not an energy eigenstate of the total Hamiltonian including the interaction with quantum electromagnetic field. This is why this system is unstable.
 
  • #29
K^2 said:
Incorrect. Hamiltonian of the closed universe includes all the measurements in said universe. That means if you are in an eigen state of Hamiltonian, the measurement won't change that either. It's only when you are considering sub-systems that distinction is relevant.

The only way you can have dynamics in the universe is if universe is not in an eigen state of the Hamiltonian. And why should it be in an eigen state? There are infinitely more states than there are eigen states.

So we don't need to discuss collapse here. The universe is in some super-position of eigen states, and that's enough.
So where (or when) do we need to discuss collapse, if not here? And can collapse ever transform an eigenstate of Hamiltonian into a non-eigenstate of Hamiltonian?
 
  • #30
Demystifier said:
I don't think that it is how we usually define a quantum system, although I admit that some pragmatic physicists do prefer to define quantum systems in that way.
If you are talking about pure vs mixed states, that is exactly how you are defining your system. The distinction is only relevant statistically, and that implies an external system.
H-atom in an excited state is an energy eigenstate of the free-atom Hamiltonian. However, it is not an energy eigenstate of the total Hamiltonian including the interaction with quantum electromagnetic field. This is why this system is unstable.
Excited atom + ground state EM vacuum is still an eigen state of such a system.

But stability is a separate issue. 2p is unstable even in basic Hydrogen atom Hamiltonian. 2p + ε 1s already has dipole moment and will radiate. So a small perturbation will result in decay. That's the definition of instability.
 
  • #31
K^2 said:
If you are talking about pure vs mixed states, that is exactly how you are defining your system. The distinction is only relevant statistically, and that implies an external system.
DrDu was talking about a CLASSICAL surrounding, while what you say above refers to a QUANTUM surrounding.

K^2 said:
Excited atom + ground state EM vacuum is still an eigen state of such a system.
It would be so if there was no interaction term in the Hamiltonian describing atom and EM field. But the interaction term is there, so what you say above is not correct.
 
  • #32
The notion of a closed universe is quite interesting. Demystifier to expand on what you are saying, if energy eigenstates, so the different superpositions of a particle, must evolve into a coherent state, where does all this excess energy from these states go? Our universe,in accordance with things such as Pauli Exclusion can only have on outcome of a solution, and the physical existence of a particle in two different states seems impossible. Could it be that many worlds theory holds valid in that all these different energy eigenstates come together to form an infinite number of possibly universes, each branching from another, as a wave function collapses and the other superpositions become irrelevant to our world?
 

1. What is a particle in superposition of energy eigenstates?

A particle in superposition of energy eigenstates is a quantum mechanical concept that describes a particle as existing in multiple energy states simultaneously. This means that the particle has a probability of being in any one of these energy states, and only when it is measured or observed does it collapse into a single energy state.

2. How does a particle in superposition of energy eigenstates violate the conservation of energy?

A particle in superposition of energy eigenstates does not actually violate the conservation of energy. This concept is often misunderstood because it seems like the particle is in multiple energy states at the same time. However, the total energy of the particle remains constant, it is just distributed among the different energy states until it is measured.

3. What is the significance of a particle being in superposition of energy eigenstates?

The concept of a particle in superposition of energy eigenstates is significant because it demonstrates the probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics. It also plays a crucial role in various quantum phenomena, such as quantum entanglement and quantum computing.

4. How is a particle's energy state determined when it is in superposition?

The energy state of a particle in superposition is determined through a process called measurement or observation. When a measurement is made, the particle's wavefunction collapses into a single energy state, and the exact energy state that is observed is determined by the probabilities described by the wavefunction.

5. Can a particle be in superposition of energy eigenstates for an extended period of time?

Yes, a particle can remain in superposition of energy eigenstates for an extended period of time, as long as it is not measured or observed. This is known as quantum coherence and is a crucial aspect of quantum computing. However, any interaction with the environment can cause the particle's wavefunction to collapse, and it will then be in a single energy state.

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