Find the possible outcomes of ]##L^2## and ##L_{z}##

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on finding the possible outcomes of the angular momentum operators L² and Lz for an electron in a hydrogen atom described by the wave function ψ(r) = ze^(-αr). Participants analyze the wave function's structure, noting that it can be expressed as a product of a radial function and a spherical harmonic, leading to quantum numbers n=2 and l=1. However, the presence of the parameter α complicates the determination of stationary states, suggesting that the state may be a linear combination of stationary states rather than a single one. Ultimately, it is concluded that the only outcomes for L² and Lz are 2ħ² and 0, respectively, both with a probability of 1, due to the specific form of the spherical harmonic involved. The discussion emphasizes the importance of correctly identifying the eigenstates to accurately calculate probabilities for angular momentum outcomes.
keyzan
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TL;DR Summary: Find the possible outcomes of ]##L^2## and ##L_{z}## and their respective probabilities of an electron of an idrogen athom with function:
##\psi(r) = ze^{-\alpha r}##

Hi guys, I have a problem with this exercise.

The electron of a hydrogen atom is found with direct spin along the z axis in a state with an orbital wave function:

##\psi(r) = ze^{-\alpha r}##

with alpha greater than zero. The first exercise asks: find the possible outcomes of ]##L^2## and ##L_{z}## and their respective probabilities.

My solution:
First of all I have to write the function as the product of a radius function multiplied by a spherical harmonic. So I have:

##\psi(r) = r \cos{\theta} \text{ } e^{-\alpha r} = \sqrt{\frac{8 \pi}{3}} \Upsilon^{0}_{1} \text{ } \frac{1}{2\sqrt{\alpha^{3}}} \varphi_{2,1}##

Here I deduced that the radial part has quantum numbers ##n=2## and ##l=1##, because the coefficient is a power of ##1## and starts from ##r^{1}## and therefore ##n=2## and ##l=1##, but in reality this would be if we had a stationary state, but it is not since we have an ##\alpha## in the argument of the exponential. Can I still write this function with these quantum numbers or is it an error and should I consider a linear combination of radial functions? Any kind of help will be appreciated
 
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keyzan said:
this would be if we had a stationary state, but it is not since we have an ##\alpha## in the argument of the exponential
Why would that make the state not stationary?
 
PeterDonis said:
It is already a function of ##r## only so what you have is a function of ##r## multiplied by a spherical harmonic function of ##1## (which is not the spherical harmonic you wrote down). What quantum numbers does that correspond to? (They're not the ones you wrote down.)
The original wave function has a factor of ##z##.
 
vela said:
The original wave function has a factor of ##z##.
What is ##z##?
 
PeterDonis said:
What is ##z##?
Given the context, I would assume it's the standard cartesian coordinate, which in terms of spherical coordinates is ##z=r\cos\theta##. What did you take it to mean?
 
vela said:
Given the context, I would assume it's the standard cartesian coordinate, which in terms of spherical coordinates is ##z=r\cos\theta##.
Ah, ok. I had been thinking of atomic number. Normally spherical coordinates are used in these kinds of problems, not cylindrical coordinates, so I wasn't expecting ##z## to be a coordinate.
 
PeterDonis said:
Why would that make the state not stationary?
It is a steady state just in case ##\alpha = \frac{1}{n a}## Where ##a## is the Bohr radius and in this case ##n=2##. So is a steady state only if ##\alpha = \frac{1}{2a}## In all other cases it is a combination of stationary states.
 
Would that affect your answers to the questions asked?
 
  • #10
vela said:
Would that affect your answers to the questions asked?
Yes, but now how do I find the outcomes of ##L^2## and the probabilities? That is, if I have to write as a linear combination, then I should have as outcomes ##\hbar^2 l (l+1)## for the values ##l=1,2,3,4,..##. But at this point the probabilities are impossible (or very difficult) to find
 
  • #11
Does anyone know how to solve the problem?
 
  • #12
keyzan said:
Yes, but now how do I find the outcomes of ##L^2## and the probabilities? That is, if I have to write as a linear combination, then I should have as outcomes ##\hbar^2 l (l+1)## for the values ##l=1,2,3,4,..##. But at this point the probabilities are impossible (or very difficult) to find
Why would the probabilities be difficult to find? Do you know what it means to write a state as a linear combination of eigenstates of an operator?
 
  • #13
According to my intuition I would write the function in terms of the radial eigenfunctions:

##\psi(r) = \frac{\sqrt{8\pi}}{3}\Upsilon^{0}_{1} \hspace{0.5cm} 2\sqrt{\alpha^{3}} \sum_{n=2}^{\infty} \sum_{l=-n}^{l=n} \varphi_{n,l} (r)##

where I first normalized the radial part. The summation starts from ##n=2##, because each eigenstate is multiplied by a coefficient that minimum starts from ##r## due to the multiplication factor ##r## in the starting ##\psi(r)##. So since the eigenstates are multiplied by polynomials of degree ##n-1## starting from the power ##r^l##, ##n## must start from ##2##.
At this point the stationary states corresponding to the different values of ##L^2## and ##L_{2}## are:

##\phi(r)_{n,l,m} = \Upsilon_{l}^{m} \varphi_{n,l}##

To know the probabilities we should project:

##|\langle \phi_{n,l,m} | \psi(r) \rangle |^2##

From here I deduce that only the terms with ##l=1## and ##m=0## remain due to the spherical harmonic which leads to the probability for all other values of l and m being canceled out. So we have that the only outcomes are ##2\hbar^2## for ##L^2## and ##0## for ##L_{z}## both with probability ##1##. The wave function becomes:

##\psi(r) = \frac{\sqrt{8\pi}}{3}\Upsilon^{0}_{1} \hspace{0.5cm} 2\sqrt{\alpha^{3}} \sum_{n=2}^{\infty} \varphi_{n,1} (r)##

The spherical harmonica saved my life ahahahaah. Does this seem like correct reasoning to you?
 
  • #14
keyzan said:
According to my intuition I would write the function in terms of the radial eigenfunctions
What are you measuring? If you're measuring ##L^2##, you need to write the state in terms of eigenfunctions of ##L^2##. Not just "radial" eigenfunctions, but overall eigenfunctions of that operator. In general those won't just be functions of ##r##.
 
  • #15
PeterDonis said:
What are you measuring? If you're measuring ##L^2##, you need to write the state in terms of eigenfunctions of ##L^2##. Not just "radial" eigenfunctions, but overall eigenfunctions of that operator. In general those won't just be functions of ##r##.
ye it was a writing error, in fact as you can see I wrote the ##\psi(r)## in terms of both the angular and radial parts.
 
  • #16
keyzan said:
From here I deduce that only the terms with ##l=1## and ##m=0## remain
This is inconsistent with your earlier post that, except for certain special values of ##\alpha##, the state will be a linear combination of stationary states.
 
  • #17
keyzan said:
ye it was a writing error, in fact as you can see I wrote the ##\psi(r)## in terms of both the angular and radial parts.
I think that thanks to the presence of the spherical harmonic it was simple to find the probabilities of the outcomes of ##L^2## and ##L_{z}##, but imagine if he had asked me the probabilities of the energy outcomes, it would have been a mess. Right?
 
  • #18
keyzan said:
I think that thanks to the presence of the spherical harmonic it was simple to find the probabilities of the outcomes of ##L^2## and ##L_{z}##, but imagine if he had asked me the probabilities of the energy outcomes, it would have been a mess. Right?
No. Stationary states are also eigenstates of ##L^2## and ##L_z## since those operators commute with the Hamiltonian. So a linear combination of stationary states should also be a linear combination of eigenstates of ##L^2## and ##L_z##.
 
  • #19
PeterDonis said:
This is inconsistent with your earlier post that, except for certain special values of ##\alpha##, the state will be a linear combination of stationary states.
I know, but this result is not due to ##\alpha##, but is due to the presence of that spherical harmonic. Despite this, the radial part can still be a linear combination of eigenfunctions with ##l=1## but different values of ##n##, right?
 
  • #20
PeterDonis said:
No. Stationary states are also eigenstates of ##L^2## and ##L_z## since those operators commute with the Hamiltonian. So a linear combination of stationary states should also be a linear combination of eigenstates of ##L^2## and ##L_z##.
Yes but, we have a degeneracy, so we can have different values of n, where the angular part does not change
 
  • #21
So i guess i'm right lol
 
  • #22
keyzan said:
the radial part can still be a linear combination of eigenfunctions with ##l=1## but different values of ##n##, right?
Yes, in principle it can. The question is whether the ##l = 1##, ##m = 0## spherical harmonic is really the only one that can produce a factor ##\cos \theta##--in other words, that there is no way to form a linear combination of other spherical harmonics with different values of ##l## and/or ##m## that results in ##\cos \theta##. If you can establish that, then I think your solution is correct. Otherwise you might need to reconsider.
 
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