Sphereically Symmetric potential well

gronke
Messages
2
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


A particle that movies in three dimensions is trapped in a deep spherically symmetric potential V(r):

V(r) = 0 at r < r_{}0
--> ∞ at r ≥ r_{}0

where r_{}0 is a positive constant. The ground state wave function is spherically symmetric, so the radial wave function u(r) satisfies the one-dimensional Schroedinger energy eigenvalue equation (6.17) with the boundary condition u(0) = 0 (eq. 6.18).

Using the known boundary conditions on the radial wave function u(r) at r = 0 and r = r_{}0, find the ground state energy of the particle in this potential well.


Homework Equations


6.17
-\hbar^{2}/2m d^{2}/dr^{2}u(r) + V(r)u(r) = Eu(r)

6.18
u(r) = rψ(r)

The Attempt at a Solution


I know that there is no potential V(r) to deal with, since it is zero inside the well and infinite outside.

I also know that ψ is zero at r_{}0 and finite at zero.

So, that leaves me with finding a solution to

-\hbar^{2}/2m d^{2}/dr^{2}u(r) = Eu(r)

which I am a bit confounded with. Even then, how do I go from a solution to that to finding the ground state energy?

Thanks.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
This is a differential equation that should hopefully be familiar to you from your basic DiffEq class. It may help to eliminate some of the constants to clean it up a bit:

\frac{\partial^2}{\partial r^2} u(r) = -A^2 u(r)

Where A = \sqrt{2mE/\hbar^2}. See if you can work out the basic type of function that will satisfy this equation (hint: what function yields minus itself when differentiated twice?)
 
Hello everyone, I’m considering a point charge q that oscillates harmonically about the origin along the z-axis, e.g. $$z_{q}(t)= A\sin(wt)$$ In a strongly simplified / quasi-instantaneous approximation I ignore retardation and take the electric field at the position ##r=(x,y,z)## simply to be the “Coulomb field at the charge’s instantaneous position”: $$E(r,t)=\frac{q}{4\pi\varepsilon_{0}}\frac{r-r_{q}(t)}{||r-r_{q}(t)||^{3}}$$ with $$r_{q}(t)=(0,0,z_{q}(t))$$ (I’m aware this isn’t...
Hi, I had an exam and I completely messed up a problem. Especially one part which was necessary for the rest of the problem. Basically, I have a wormhole metric: $$(ds)^2 = -(dt)^2 + (dr)^2 + (r^2 + b^2)( (d\theta)^2 + sin^2 \theta (d\phi)^2 )$$ Where ##b=1## with an orbit only in the equatorial plane. We also know from the question that the orbit must satisfy this relationship: $$\varepsilon = \frac{1}{2} (\frac{dr}{d\tau})^2 + V_{eff}(r)$$ Ultimately, I was tasked to find the initial...
Back
Top