Relationship between several operators and their eigenvectors.

aop12
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Homework Statement


operators: K=LM and [L,M]=1

α is an eigenvector of K with eigenvalue λ.

Show that x=Lα and y=Mα are also eigenvectors of K and also find their eigenvalues.


Homework Equations


K=LM
[L,M]=1
Kα=λα


The Attempt at a Solution


I tried, but its not even worth putting up here.
 
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You have to show that x eigenvector of K which means Kx=λ'x for some λ'.

Kx=KLα = LMLα
Try to modify that equation (using [L,M]=1) until you can use Kα=λα and simplify.
 
So, am I doing this right?
Starting with: Kx=λ'x where x=Lα

Kx=KLα=LMLα ===> using K=LM

=L(LM-1)α=LLMα-Lα ===>using [L,M]=1

=LKα-Lα
Now going back to Kx=λ'x
LKα-Lα=λ'Lα

LKα=(λ'+1)Lα

Finally,

Kα=L-1(λ'+1)Lα

since λ'+1 is a constant,

Kα=(λ'+1)L-1
Kα=(λ'+1)α

so λ'=λ-1.

is that correct?
 
Last edited:
aop12 said:
So, am I doing this right?
Starting with: Kx=λ'x where x=Lα

Kx=KLα=LMLα ===> using K=LM

=L(LM-1)α=LLMα-Lα ===>using [L,M]=1

=LKα-Lα
...

Good start! And correct finish!

But I would have continued like this:

= Lλα - Lα since Kα = λα.

= (λ - 1)Lα since λ commutes with the operator L.

Hence K(Lα) = (λ - 1)Lα, showing that Lα is an eigenvector of operator K with eigenvalue (λ - 1).
 
To solve this, I first used the units to work out that a= m* a/m, i.e. t=z/λ. This would allow you to determine the time duration within an interval section by section and then add this to the previous ones to obtain the age of the respective layer. However, this would require a constant thickness per year for each interval. However, since this is most likely not the case, my next consideration was that the age must be the integral of a 1/λ(z) function, which I cannot model.
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