Normalization of a wave function question

shahramj
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A wave function (psi) equals A(exp(ix)+exp(-ix) in the region -pi<x<pi and zero elsewhere.
Normalize the wave function and find the probability of the particle being between x=0 and pi/8


Equation is : the integral of psi*(x,t)psi(x,t)=1 for normalization
 
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so should I integrate the (psi*)(psi) between 0 and pi/8 or first -infinity to infinity and then plug the 0 and pi/8, and how can I integrate this?
so the integral becomes: integrate(A(e^ix)+(e^-ix)) ??
 
Integration need only be taken over regions where a function is non-zero.

Also- cos(x)=(e^ix+e^-ix)/2
 
shahramj said:
so should I integrate the (psi*)(psi) between 0 and pi/8 or first -infinity to infinity and then plug the 0 and pi/8, and how can I integrate this?
so the integral becomes: integrate(A(e^ix)+(e^-ix)) ??

And that's not psi*psi in your 'integrate', it's just psi. psi*psi will be real.
 
ok, but I didn't understand the cos(x), could you please be more specific about that, I'm new in modern physics, thanx
 
shahramj said:
ok, but I didn't understand the cos(x), could you please be more specific about that, I'm new in modern physics, thanx

It's just an identity that might - or might not - come in handy. exp(ix)=cos(x)+isin(x). So exp(ix)+exp(-ix)=2*cos(x). Nothing to do with modern physics exactly.
 
You can replace e^{ix}+e^{-ix} = 2 cos(x)

Just makes the integration easier.
 
Thanx, very useful hint
 
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