Hey,
Sorry I disappeared for so long. So Rap, your post #30 makes perfect sense except it's uncertain what units we get rid of. Do you have any suggestions. Also
Rap said:
Lets get rid of the second. Now time is measured in kg m^2/planck. The original equation becomes \frac d{dt} U = -i H U where U is in Planck^2/kg/m^2 (energy) and H is in kg m^2/planck (time). Multiply U by hbar^2 (Joule-sec/planck)^2 and you will have U in Joules.
I agree that time is kg m^2/planck, but then would H be Planck/(kg m^2)? Just because if we solve the equation, we would get U = exp(-iHt) and if t has units kg m^2/planck wouldn't that force H to be the reciprocal?
On the other hand, I wonder if we could apply what DaleSpam found in the paper I linked. Since J has units of hertz and we can write exp(H/J) then H has units of 1/time. Does this then force us into your regime of "getting rid of the meter"? If we've gotten rid of the metre though, does this imply there's no need to change anything with time, since it hasn't been scaled?
Alternatively, if we do the "plug constants back in until things work out dimensionally" approach this is what I get. I'll try to be as rigorous as possible so there are no confusions.
Firstly, we know that the operator U(t) is a time-propogator. That means that given an initial state |\psi_0 \rangle evolving under the same Hamiltonian, we can get to an arbitrary time |\psi(t) \rangle by
|\psi(t) \rangle = U(t) |\psi_0 \rangle
Since |\psi(t)\rangle and |\psi_0 \rangle must have the same units, this implies that U(t) must be unitless.
Okay, so in the equation
i\hbar \frac{d}{dt} U(t) = H(t) U(t)
we know that \hbar has units of energy seconds, we'll say E^1 T^1 ( you can make that into ML^2T^{-1} if you want but I don't think it's necessary). Furthermore, we expect H(t), the Hamiltonian, to have units of energy E. Therefore this equation is dimensionally correct because the left hand side is E^1 T^1 T^{-1} = E^1 which agrees with the right hand side.
Okay. Now in the "plug constants in until it works out" we assume that everything has its normal units and insert hbars and c's until everything is correct right? So
\frac{d}{dt} U(t) = -i H(t) U(t)
has units of 1/time on the LHS, and Energy on the RHS. To fix this all we do is insert a \frac1\hbar on the RHS or a \hbar on the LHS. But is this not equivalent to what I had said earlier about just rescaling?
Alternatively, the solution is U(t) = \exp\left[ -i H t \right]U(0) where I have assume H is time independent for simplicity. In the "plug stuff in until it works" regime, the exponential argument currently has units Energy-seconds. To make it unitless, I would just add a factor of \frac1\hbar into the argument. Again, is this not equivalent to my scaling above?