Solutions to Schrodinger's Wave Equation

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Homework Statement


Assume that \psi_{1}(x,t) and \psi_{2}(x,t) are solutions of the one-dimensional time-dependent Schrodinger's wave equations.
(a) Show that \psi_{1} + \psi_{2} is a solution.

(b) Is \psi_{1} \cdot \psi_{2} a solution of the Schrodinger's equation in general?



Homework Equations


Is this the "One-Dimensional Time-Dependent Schodinger's Wave Equation":
\eta = \imath \hbar \cdot \frac{1}{\phi(t)} \cdot \frac{\partial \phi(t)}{ \partial t}

If so, it says in my book that the solution is \phi(t) = e^{- \imath (\frac{E}{\hbar})t



The Attempt at a Solution


I have a feeling that all I have to do is show that these solutions are linear, then use the superposition technique.
 
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Your relevant equation is *half* of the time-dependent Schrodinger equation in the special case that there is no potential energy, and *after* separation of variables has been performed in x and t. (The other half involves x, and not t.)

Yes, linearity and superposition is the key point.
 
So I don't really even need to know what the solutions are? All I need to do is some sort of "proof" that the sum of the two solutions to the linear P.D.E. is also a solution?

If that is the case, do you think you could help me get started with working that out?
 
Could you please write the full time-dependent schodinger equation?
 
Anyone?
 
In one space dimension, the full time-dependent Schrodinger equation is

i\hbar{\partial\over\partial t}\psi(x,t) = \left[-{\hbar^2\over2m}{\partial^2\over\partial x^2}+V(x)\right]\psi(x,t)

Edit: the derivative on the right-hand side is wrt x, now fixed and correct.
 
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So how do I show that \psi_{1}(x,t) and \psi_{2}(x,t) have linearity and superposition can be used to create a third solution?
 
You know that \psi_{1}(x,t) and \psi_{2}(x,t) obey this equation. You want to show that \psi_{1}(x,t) + \psi_{2}(x,t) does as well. So, plug \psi_{1}(x,t) + \psi_{2}(x,t) into the equation. Can you used what you know to show that the result is true?
 
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