Calculating Commutator [H,U(m,n)] with Homework Statement

Berny
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Homework Statement


|phi (n)> being eigen states of hermitian operator H ( H could be for example the hamiltonian
of anyone physical system ). The states |phi (n)> form an orthonormal discrete basis.
The operator U(m,n) is defined by:

U(m,n)= |phi(m)><phi(n)|
Calculate the commutator:
[H,U(m,n)]

( this is part of the first problem in Cohen, Tannoudji, Diu, Laloe textbook in quantum mechanics.)

The Attempt at a Solution

\

[HU-UH] (ψ) = H|phi(m)><phi (n)|ψ> - |phi (m)><phi(n)| H| ψ>

= <phi(n)|ψ> H |phi (m>) - |phi (m><phi(n)| <ψ | H

and then ? i did not find symbol phi.
 
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Note that the operator ##H## can be written as ##H=\sum\limits_{k}E_{k}\left|\phi(k)\right>\left<\phi(k)\right|##, where the ##E_{k}## are its eigenvalues. Also, note that the vectors ##\left|\phi(k)\right>## form an orthonormal set.
 
you should use an eigenstate of the Hamiltonian instead of \psi (if you ask how you can do that, you can expand \psi as a superposition of the Hamiltonian's eigenstates)
Then in general, following correct paths you will reach the desired result/
 
Berny said:

Homework Statement


|phi (n)> being eigen states of hermitian operator H ( H could be for example the hamiltonian
of anyone physical system ). The states |phi (n)> form an orthonormal discrete basis.
The operator U(m,n) is defined by:

U(m,n)= |phi(m)><phi(n)|
Calculate the commutator:
[H,U(m,n)]

( this is part of the first problem in Cohen, Tannoudji, Diu, Laloe textbook in quantum mechanics.)

The Attempt at a Solution

\

[HU-UH] (ψ) = H|phi(m)><phi (n)|ψ> - |phi (m)><phi(n)| H| ψ>

= <phi(n)|ψ> H |phi (m>) - |phi (m><phi(n)| <ψ | H

and then ? i did not find symbol phi.

many thanks for help. I find a commutator value depending upon the system energy :

commutator = E(m) U(m,n) if E= E(m) and - E(n) U(m,n) if E=E(n).

in other cases it's zero.
Is this correct ?
 
I got something like [H,U(m,n)] = (E(m)-E(n))U(m,n). The commutator does not depend on what state the quantum system is in.
 
Berny said:

Homework Statement


|phi (n)> being eigen states of hermitian operator H ( H could be for example the hamiltonian
of anyone physical system ). The states |phi (n)> form an orthonormal discrete basis.
The operator U(m,n) is defined by:

U(m,n)= |phi(m)><phi(n)|
Calculate the commutator:
[H,U(m,n)]

( this is part of the first problem in Cohen, Tannoudji, Diu, Laloe textbook in quantum mechanics.)

The Attempt at a Solution

\

[HU-UH] (ψ) = H|phi(m)><phi (n)|ψ> - |phi (m)><phi(n)| H| ψ>

= <phi(n)|ψ> H |phi (m>) - |phi (m><phi(n)| <ψ | H
You can say that ##\hat{H}\lvert \phi_m \rangle \langle \phi_n \vert \psi \rangle = \langle \phi_n \vert \psi \rangle \hat{H}\lvert \phi_m \rangle## because ##\langle \phi_n \vert \psi \rangle## is a number, though it doesn't really help you in this case. What you can't do is say ##\lvert \phi_m \rangle \langle \phi_n \lvert \hat{H} \rvert \psi \rangle## equals ##\lvert \phi_m \rangle \langle \phi_n \lvert \langle \psi \rvert \hat{H}## because ##\hat{H}\lvert \psi \rangle## and ##\langle \psi \rvert \hat{H}## aren't the same. One's a bra; the other, a ket. You need to be a bit more precise with your notation, otherwise you're invariably going to make errors.

You have, so far,
\begin{align*}
[\hat{H},\hat{U}] &= \hat{H}\hat{U} - \hat{U}\hat{H} \\
&= \hat{H}\lvert \phi_m\rangle\langle\phi_n\rvert - \lvert \phi_m\rangle\langle\phi_n\rvert\hat{H}
\end{align*} Now in the first term, apply ##\hat{H}## to the ket ##\lvert \phi_m \rangle##. What do you get? Similarly, in the second term, what do you get when ##\hat{H}## acts on the bra ##\langle \phi_n \rvert##?
 
Hi, I had an exam and I completely messed up a problem. Especially one part which was necessary for the rest of the problem. Basically, I have a wormhole metric: $$(ds)^2 = -(dt)^2 + (dr)^2 + (r^2 + b^2)( (d\theta)^2 + sin^2 \theta (d\phi)^2 )$$ Where ##b=1## with an orbit only in the equatorial plane. We also know from the question that the orbit must satisfy this relationship: $$\varepsilon = \frac{1}{2} (\frac{dr}{d\tau})^2 + V_{eff}(r)$$ Ultimately, I was tasked to find the initial...
The value of H equals ## 10^{3}## in natural units, According to : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_units, ## t \sim 10^{-21} sec = 10^{21} Hz ##, and since ## \text{GeV} \sim 10^{24} \text{Hz } ##, ## GeV \sim 10^{24} \times 10^{-21} = 10^3 ## in natural units. So is this conversion correct? Also in the above formula, can I convert H to that natural units , since it’s a constant, while keeping k in Hz ?
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