Eigenfunction of momentum and operators

Philip Land
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Homework Statement


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Homework Equations


##\hat{P}= -ih d/dx##

The Attempt at a Solution



To actually obtain ##\psi_{p_0}## I guess one can apply the momentum operator on the spatial wavefunction. If we consider a free particle (V=0) we can easily get obtain ##\psi = e^{\pm i kx}##, where ##k= \sqrt{2mE/ \hbar}##.

By now applying momentum operator we get ##\hat{P} \psi= -ih \cdot \pm i \sqrt{2mE/ \hbar} ##. This is as far as I get, how do I actually get the eigenfunction of momentum on the required form?

And 2:
How do I show that the completeness relation is satisfied for that 'specific' expression? I know that we can express ##|x> = \int dp |p><p|x>,##take ##-i \hbar \frac{d}{d_x} f_p(x) = p f_p(x)## and turn into a Fourier transformation (including k in the kernel) and get ##p' \tilde{f_p(p')}## which can be solved picking p=p' and any function of p can be converted into an eigenfunction if we transform back to x s.t ##f_p(x) = \int dp e^{ipx \hbar} \tilde{f_p(p)}##, but I have no idea how to use this to confirm the completeness relation for the above expression...
 

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1) You do not need to derive the eigenfunction. Just show that the given function is the eigenfunction.

2) You need to show that ##\int |p\rangle \langle p| dp## is the identity operator, i.e., that acting on any state with it gives back the same state.
 
Ahh okey, that made the first part very easy.

Orodruin said:
2) You need to show that ∫|p⟩⟨p|dp∫|p⟩⟨p|dp\int |p\rangle \langle p| dp is the identity operator, i.e., that acting on any state with it gives back the same state.

And on 2) what exactly is p in that equation?
 
It is just a parameter labelling the momentum eigenstates.
 
Orodruin said:
It is just a parameter labelling the momentum eigenstates.
Okey, so I'm a bit confused about the state vs ##\psi_{p_0}## which is a function. Could I rewrite the function as a state somehow?
 
Philip Land said:
Okey, so I'm a bit confused about the state vs ##\psi_{p_0}## which is a function. Could I rewrite the function as a state somehow?
Because plugging in ##\psi## in the equation returns ##p_0^2 / \hbar \cdot \int dp. ##
 
The wave function ##\psi(x)## for any state ##|\psi\rangle## is defined as ##\psi(x) = \langle x|\psi\rangle##.
 
Oki I see. Are there way to get p for this specific case which I ultimately can plug into the completeness theorem?
 
There is no specific p. The ##p## in the completeness relation is an integration variable.
 
  • #10
Orodruin said:
There is no specific p. The ##p## in the completeness relation is an integration variable.
If there's no specific, p, how can I check it for a specific case?
 
  • #11
You should not be checking it for a specific case. You should show that it is always the identity operator.
 
  • #12
Orodruin said:
You should not be checking it for a specific case. You should show that it is always the identity operator.
"Show that the expression above satisfies it"
 
  • #13
Philip Land said:
"Show that the expression above satisfies it"
Yes? You are still not understanding the question correctly. The wavefunction you are given is the wavefunction corresponding to the state ##|p_0\rangle##. You need to show that the states with this type of wavefunction lead to the states satisfying the completeness relation.
 
  • #14
Orodruin said:
Yes? You are still not understanding the question correctly. The wavefunction you are given is the wavefunction corresponding to the state ##|p_0\rangle##. You need to show that the states with this type of wavefunction lead to the states satisfying the completeness relation.
Cheers. Yes the reason I ask is that I obviously don't understand it.
 
  • #15
That the wavefunction of the momentum states is ##\psi_{p_0}(x) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\hbar}} e^{ip_0x/\hbar}## by definition means that
$$
\langle x|p_0\rangle = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\hbar}} e^{ip_0x/\hbar}.
$$
From this and the completeness relation for ##|x\rangle##, i.e.,
$$
\int |x\rangle \langle x| dx = 1,
$$
you should be able to show the states ##|p\rangle## with the above wavefunction satisfy the completeness relation. You can do this by showing that
$$
\langle x|\psi\rangle = \int \langle x|p \rangle \langle p |\psi \rangle dp
$$
for any state ##|\psi\rangle##.
 
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