youngurlee
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for a 1D free particle with initial wave function \phi(x') square shaped(e.g. \phi(x')=1,x'\in [a,b],otherwise it vanishes),
my question is: how does it evolve with time t?
if we deal with it in P basis, it is easily solved, using the propagator U(t)=∫|p'><p'|e^{-\frac{ip'^2 t}{2m\hbar}}dp';
but if we directly solve SE in X basis, where P must be written as -i\frac{∂}{∂x'}, the initial wavefunction is not continous, so the equation becomes improper at the ends of the interval[a,b],
so why dose the SE equation seems so distinct in these 2 representations? what goes wrong in X representation?
my question is: how does it evolve with time t?
if we deal with it in P basis, it is easily solved, using the propagator U(t)=∫|p'><p'|e^{-\frac{ip'^2 t}{2m\hbar}}dp';
but if we directly solve SE in X basis, where P must be written as -i\frac{∂}{∂x'}, the initial wavefunction is not continous, so the equation becomes improper at the ends of the interval[a,b],
so why dose the SE equation seems so distinct in these 2 representations? what goes wrong in X representation?