pivoxa15 said:
What is a minimum state in QM? A state being a state vector. I know observables can have an average uncertainty value attached to it but a whole state?
What would it mean in QM for a state to achieve minimum uncertainty?
Every quantum mode represented by a wave-function or "state"-vector is minimally uncertain i.e. maximally specified. We call this a sharp mode.
In order to express less than maximal modes i.e. less than minimal uncertainty one must use a density operator.
For a sharp mode: \psi
The corresponding density operator is: \rho=\psi\otimes\psi^\dag
More generally the density operator is a weighted sum of such sharp operators. These weights are "classical probabilities".
There is then an entropy (Von Neumann entropy) which is a good measurement of the level of uncertainty above minimal:
E_{VN} = -k_B \mathop{Tr}(\rho \ln \rho )
It is indeed zero for the sharp modes.
Now I think you are thinking of uncertainties in terms of some specific observables namely p and x. Keep in mind that every mode ("state") minimizes the uncertainty of some set of observables.
If you are thinking in terms of some specific observable then the eigen-modes minimize the uncertainty of that observable. If you are thinking of some pair of observables then the mode with with minimum magnitude of its expectation value for the commutator of those observables will minimize the product of uncertainties in the two observables.
If you are thinking in some other terms you'll have to get specific in what you are asking.
Regards,
James Baugh