QM - Position/Momentum representation problem

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Homework Statement



Write down the time independant Schrodinger eqn in the momentum representation for a particle with mass m when the potential is given by V(x) = \frac{1}{2} \gamma x^2
Given that a possible solution is given by \Phi(p) = e^{\frac{-Bp^2}{2}}

determine B and the corresponding energy eigenvalue.


Homework Equations



position / momentum

x \rightarrow i\hbar \frac{d}{dp}
-i\hbar \frac{d}{dx} \rightarrow p



The Attempt at a Solution



in position representation the full time independant schrodinger eqn is:

- \frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\frac{d^2}{dx^2} \Psi(x) + \frac{1}{2}\gamma x^2 \Psi(x) = E\Psi(x)

becomes

\frac{p^2}{2m}\Phi(p) - \frac{\hbar^2 \gamma}{2}\frac{d^2}{dp^2}\Phi(p) = E\Phi(p)
in the momentum representation, where Phi is the FT of Psi.

After plugging in the Trial Solution I get:

E = \frac{p^2}{2m} - \frac{\hbar^2 \gamma}{2}\left( B^2 p^2 - B\right)

Not sure what to do after this bit, I tried to normalise the wavefunction A = \left(\frac{B}{\pi}\right)^{\frac{1}{4}}

But I don't think that helps.

Any ideas on where i could get a second equation to find B and E?

Thanks
 
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The energy E needs to be a constant, so it can't depend on p. For what value of B will the dependence of E on p vanish?
 
ok, the only way i can see of doing this is, first rearrange to get:

p^2 \left(\frac{1}{2m} - \frac{B^2 \hbar^2 \gamma}{2}\right) + \frac{B\hbar^2 \gamma}{2} = E

choose B such that:

B^2 \frac{\hbar^2 \gamma}{2} = \frac{1}{2m}

which gives:

B = \frac{1}{\hbar}\sqrt{\frac{1}{\gamma m}}

So the energy eigenvalue would be:

\frac{\hbar}{2}\sqrt{\frac{\gamma}{m}}
 
Looks good.
 
thanks very much
 
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