camron_m21
- 8
- 1
Homework Statement
Griffiths Intro to Quantum, problem 2.38:
A particle of mass m is in the ground state of the infinite square well. Suddenly the well expands to twice its original size: the right wall moving from a to 2a, leaving the wave function (momentarily) undisturbed. The energy of the particle is now measured.
Homework Equations
c_{n} = \sqrt{\frac{2}{a}}\int^{a}_{0} sin(\frac{n\pi}{a} x) \Psi (x,0) dx
The Attempt at a Solution
Since the particle starts out in the ground state in a well of length a, at t=0 (right when the well expands) the wave function should be
\Psi (x,0) = \sqrt{\frac{2}{a}} sin\left( \frac{\pi x}{a} \right)
I know this can be written as a sum of the new wave functions,
\Psi(x,0) = \sum c_{n} \psi_{n} (x)
The problem wants the most probable result of measuring the energy, as well as the next most probable. For this, I was thinking of using |c_{n}|^{2} as the probability of getting an energy. However, when I do this, I get pi times an integer as the argument for the sine in the answer, which gives me zero.
I'm mostly just at a loss on how to start on this, so any help would be appreciated. I'm not sure what I need to calculate to find the most and next most probable energies.