Particle in 3D Box: Degeneracy of E14 & Why Interesting?

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Hi,
This comes from Griffiths Intro to Quantum Mechanics Prob. 4.2

We're asked to solve an infinite cubical well, which I have no problem with. The next part asks you to call the distinct energy levels E1, E2, E3... etc. in order of increasing energy and determine their degeneracies.

It then asks what the degeneracy of E14 is and why is this case interesting.

I think the degeneracy of E14 is 6, however I don't see why this case is interesting.
 
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eep said:
Hi,
This comes from Griffiths Intro to Quantum Mechanics Prob. 4.2

We're asked to solve an infinite cubical well, which I have no problem with. The next part asks you to call the distinct energy levels E1, E2, E3... etc. in order of increasing energy and determine their degeneracies.

It then asks what the degeneracy of E14 is and why is this case interesting.

I think the degeneracy of E14 is 6, however I don't see why this case is interesting.

I seem to recall something special about that level. What are the possible values of the quantum numbers giving that energy?

If two of the three quantum numbers of a certain state are eqaul to one another but different from the third, one expects a 3-fold degeneracy (like 112, 121, 211). If the three quantum numbers are different, one expects a 6-fold degeneracy (123, 132, 213, 231, 321, 312). But there was something special about that state. (Does E14 means that n_x^2 + n_y^2 +n_z^2 = 14? or is it the 14th energy level?)

Patrick
 
It's the 14th energy level. I have the quantum numbers as (4,3,1).
 
eep said:
It's the 14th energy level. I have the quantum numbers as (4,3,1).

I tried to verify that this was the 14th energy level but this seemed to be the 12th one to me...But I might have missed a couple. There is nothing special about that one, no.

Pat
 
nrqed said:
I tried to verify that this was the 14th energy level but this seemed to be the 12th one to me...But I might have missed a couple. There is nothing special about that one, no.

Pat

oops, I find that it's the 13th...

I probably missed one


111

211 plus permutations

221 plus perms..

222

311

321

322

331

332

411

421

422

431
 
eep said:
Hi,
This comes from Griffiths Intro to Quantum Mechanics Prob. 4.2

We're asked to solve an infinite cubical well, which I have no problem with. The next part asks you to call the distinct energy levels E1, E2, E3... etc. in order of increasing energy and determine their degeneracies.

It then asks what the degeneracy of E14 is and why is this case interesting.

I think the degeneracy of E14 is 6, however I don't see why this case is interesting.

You know what, if it was the *next* level, the 14th... then it would be either 333 or 511, so it would have a 4 -fold degeneracy, which is special
 
Oops, I wasn't putting the levels in order. So I have the quantum numbers as (3,3,3) then but I still don't see what's special about this state besides that it has a degeneracy of 1...

EDIT: Ah, I just saw your post. Okay, now I see why that's interesting.
 
hello,

i didn't understand why 333 or 551 would be 4 fold degenerate. can you please explain it to me.

thanks
 
Know this thread is old, but I want to "end" it.

333 AND 511 do indeed make up energy lvl 14, as both give a value of 27. Thus, it has a degenerancy of 1 + 3 = 4
 
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