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The discussion revolves around the peculiarities of the commutator involving the operator \(\phi\) in quantum mechanics, particularly in the context of wavefunctions defined on a periodic domain. Participants explore the implications of periodicity for operators and wavefunctions, as well as the mathematical rigor involved in defining these concepts within the Hilbert space framework.
Participants express differing views on the definition and implications of the operator \(\phi\) and the periodicity of wavefunctions. There is no consensus on whether the wavefunction is defined outside the interval \([0,2\pi)\), and the discussion remains unresolved regarding the implications of these definitions on the commutator.
Participants note that the mathematical rigor in defining operators and wavefunctions is crucial, and there are unresolved questions regarding the implications of periodicity and the behavior of operators in the context of quantum mechanics.
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 doesn'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) ?