rlduncan
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Could some comment on conservative or nonconservative systems in the context of the hydrogen atom and the total energy E, as given in Schrodinger's equation.
Although not conserved separately, I am sure you realize.rlduncan said:It appears that a fundamental condition of Schrodinger's equation is that the total energy of the system remains constant. This then implies that the kinetic energy and potential energy must be constant, a conservative system.
Where does this equation come from? It's not a wave equation in the usual sense (unless you mean that x is a time variable). It certainly doesn't have anything to do with a hydrogen atom. Or am I misinterpreting and is supposed to be the wavefunction? (If so, it's not a regular solution to the hydrogen atom.)In the wave equation y=Asin(kx), k is constant and is not a function of the x variable (lets assume one dimension).
However, k=2*pi/lambda and if lambda is the debroglie wave and varies as a function of x, how is it possible to take a simple derivative as if k is a constant. Also for the h-atom the total energy varies with the kinetic energy and potential energy, a nonconservative system.
rlduncan said:Could some comment on conservative or nonconservative systems in the context of the hydrogen atom and the total energy E, as given in Schrodinger's equation.
rlduncan said:Looking at the total energies of the hydrogen atom as given buy Bohr's equation which I assume are valid. For example, for n=1:KE=13.6, PE=-27.2, and E, the total energy sums to -13.6ev. For n=2:KE=3.4, PE=-6.8, and E=-3.4ev. The sum of the initial KE and PE does not equal the sum of the final KE and PE which I assume should be the same for a conservative system.
rlduncan said:I agree, but this seems to suggest a nonconservative system.
rlduncan said:I agree and that is my point. In Schrodinger's equation the total energy is the sum of KE and PE and when solved the total energy is assumed to to be a constant. The KE =E-V(r). However, according to Bohr equations it is not mathematically a constant unless you included the photon energy.
rlduncan said:It appears that a fundamental condition of Schrodinger's equation is that the total energy of the system remains constant. This then implies that the kinetic energy and potential energy must be constant, a conservative system. In the wave equation y=Asin(kx), k is constant and is not a function of the x variable (lets assume one dimension). However, k=2*pi/lambda and if lambda is the debroglie wave and varies as a function of x, how is it possible to take a simple derivative as if k is a constant. Also for the h-atom the total energy varies with the kinetic energy and potential energy, a nonconservative system.