Transition probabilities (basic concepts no math)

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SUMMARY

This discussion centers on the concept of transition probabilities in quantum mechanics, specifically regarding systems transitioning from a ground state to a higher energy state. It emphasizes that once a perturbation is applied to a system, the probability of finding the system in its previous states becomes irrelevant. The discussion references time-dependent perturbation theory and highlights the significance of adiabatic perturbations, where a slowly changing Hamiltonian allows the system to remain in its ground state. The complexities of eigenstates in perturbed Hamiltonians and the implications of the time-energy uncertainty relation are also addressed.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of quantum mechanics principles
  • Familiarity with Hamiltonian mechanics
  • Knowledge of time-dependent perturbation theory
  • Concept of eigenstates and eigenvectors in quantum systems
NEXT STEPS
  • Study time-dependent perturbation theory in detail
  • Explore adiabatic perturbations and their implications in quantum mechanics
  • Research the time-energy uncertainty principle and its applications
  • Examine the mathematical formulation of Hamiltonians and their eigenstates
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Quantum physicists, graduate students in physics, and researchers interested in the dynamics of quantum systems and transition probabilities.

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Does it make sense to speak of the probability of finding a system which was once in the ground state in a higher state after a certain time? Since the Hamiltonian depends on time, once you collapse the wavefunction at that time, the energy you get can't be one of the values of the unperturbed system, but rather the allowed values for the Hamiltonian at the moment you collapse the wavefunction.

For example, take beta decay, where the nucleus gets an extra positive charge and an electron flies out. Because this process happens so quick, the state of a orbital electron in the ground state remains there, but that doesn't mean it has that energy, but instead one has to write the ground state of the unperturbed system as a linear combination of the energy eigenstates for a positive ion nucleus?
 
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Well,not really.Once a perturbation is applied,the system's quantum states will undergo a change and it will not make any sense to speak about the probability of finding the system in one of the previous states.The number given by (time-dependent) perturbation theory will not be the amplitude of probability of finding the system in the quantum state [itex]|\psi\rangle[/itex],but the amplitude of probability of TRANSITION from the quantum state [itex]|\psi_{0}\rangle[/itex] to the [itex]|\psi\rangle[/itex]

Daniel.

P.S.We cannot fing the eigenstates of the perturbed Hamiltonian...
 
Say the system starts in the ground state at time zero. For adiabatic perturbations, where the Hamiltonian changes slowly over a long period of time, then the system will be found in the ground state of the Hamiltonian at that later time, the ground state of H(t). I guess this has something to do with the time energy uncertainty relation, which I don't understand, as it has nothing to do with the general uncertainty relations for two Hermitian operators. But that's fine I asked a question about the energy-time relationship long ago and didn't understand the answer. We can always find eigenvectors of any operator, whether time is included and not, and the Hilbert is still spanned by these vectors, so any state can be expressed as a linear combo of these vectors. Whether the state collapses into these vectors is physics not maths and I guess depends on the postulates, so that with a time-Hamiltonian you can't find the eigenstates must be something in the postulates.
 

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