Solving Schrodinger Equation: xav, (x2)av, Δx

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Homework Statement


Use the ground-state wave function of the simple harmonic oscillator to find xav, (x2)av, and \Delta x. Use the normalization constant A=(\frac{m\omega _0}{\overline{h} \pi })^{1/4}

Homework Equations


\psi (x) = Asin(kx)
(f(x))_{av} = \int ^{\infty }_{-\infty } \left| \psi (x) \right| ^2 f(x) dx

The Attempt at a Solution


I calculated out x_{av} as
x_{av} = \int ^{\infty }_{-\infty } \left| \psi (x) \right| ^2 x dx
x_{av} = A \int ^{\infty }_{-\infty } xsin^2 (kx) dx
x_{av} = A (x^2/4 - (cos(2kx))/(8k^2) - (xsin(2kx))/(4k))\right| ^{\infty}_{-\infty}
x_{av} = 0

I think that is right...but I am having trouble calculating (x^2)_{av}
(x^2)_{av} = \int ^{\infty }_{-\infty } \left| \psi (x) \right| ^2 x^2 dx
(x^2)_{av} = A \int ^{\infty }_{-\infty } x^2 sin^2 (kx) dx
(x^2)_{av} = A (x^3/6 - (xcos(2kx))/(4k^2) - ((-1+2k^2x^2)sin(2kx))/(8k^2))\right| ^{\infty}_{-\infty}
But this says (x^2)_{av} = \infty

which I don't think is correct...
 
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Wrong wave function; that's not the ground state of a harmonic oscillator.

Also, cos(kx) as x\rightarrow \pm \infty is undefined; so a plane wave wave function isn't normalizable over infinite space. That's an important result too, though.
 
alxm said:
Wrong wave function; that's not the ground state of a harmonic oscillator.

Also, cos(kx) as x\rightarrow \pm \infty is undefined; so a plane wave wave function isn't normalizable over infinite space. That's an important result too, though.

Is this this correct ground state?
\psi (x) = (\frac{m\omega }{\pi \overline{h}})^{1/4}e^{\frac{-m\omega}{2\overline{h}}x}
 
That is not the wave function for the ground state, you should use the hermite polynomials.
 
Dorilian said:
That is not the wave function for the ground state, you should use the hermite polynomials.

The first Hermite polynomial equals 1. So yes, it's correct.
 
CornMuffin said:
Is this this correct ground state?
\psi (x) = (\frac{m\omega }{\pi \overline{h}})^{1/4}e^{\frac{-m\omega}{2\overline{h}}x}

You forgot a square in the argument of the exponential, it's \exp(-m\omega/(2 \hbar) x^2).
(and for the LaTeX: it's \hbar, not \overline h)
 
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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