haitao23
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xepma said:What you proved is that the expectation value of the commutator with respect to some spherical symmetric eigenstate of L_z is zero. But this is always the case, namely, suppose if:
[A,B] = C
For some hermitian operators A, B and a third operator C. Now take an eigenstate of the operator B, let's name it |b\rangle, such that B|b\rangle = b|b\rangle. Then:
\langle b|[A,B]|b\rangle = \langle b|AB|b\rangle - \langle b|BA|b\rangle <br /> =b\langle b|A|b\rangle - b\langle b|A|b\rangle = 0
Which is precisely what you showed, and I haven't even defined the operators yet. The fact is that we cannot conclude that the commutator is zero, because we have only considered a very particular set of expecation values. For instance, consider the following (b and b' correspond to different states):
\langle b'|[A,B]|b\rangle = b'\langle b'|A|b\rangle - b\langle b|A|b\rangle
In general, this will not be identical to zero.
haitao23 said:How is the wavefunction in spherical coordinate defined? Is it defined with phi belonging to [0,2pi) or is it defined by imposing the condition f(phi+2pi)=f(phi)? And please give me a book (where it is to referred to also... I did not find a definition even in the dictionary like Cohen-Tannoudji book)
What I am wondering is that if the wavefunction is indeed defined with phi belonging to [0,2pi) (which in my humble opinion sounds far more natural to associate each point in space with a single point in the function) then the periodity problem of phi operator really dosen't matter as we would never get out of the 2pi domain...
haitao23 said:Hey weejee! You are really astute! I think You pinpointed the problem that has been bothering me for a month!
haitao23 said:How is the wavefunction in spherical coordinate defined? Is it defined with phi belonging to [0,2pi) or is it defined by imposing the condition f(phi+2pi)=f(phi)?
jensa said:The base manifold (space on which function is defined) is a circle, i.e. the points phi and phi+2pi are the same points, so it does not really make sense to say that the wave-function is defined outside [0,2pi). The topological constraint imposes the periodicity of the wave-functions, and any operator on this (reduced)Hilbert space must transform a periodic function to another periodic function. This is not satisfied by phi as pointed out by weejee, so it must be made periodic.
haitao23 said:So do u mean by what u said in red that the wavefunction is NOT defined outside [0,2pi)? Or from what u said in blue u seems to be defining the wavefunction outside [0,2pi) by imposing periodicity?
So after all is the wavefunction defined outside [0,2pi) ?