Sudden Perturbation of Potential Well

unscientific
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Homework Statement



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Part (a): Particle originally sits in well V(x) = 0 for 0 < x < a, V = ∞ elsewhere. The well suddenly doubles in length to 2a. What's the probability of the particle staying in its ground state?

Part (b): What is the duration of time that the change occur, for the particle to most likely remain in ground state?

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



Part (a)

For a well of length a, eigenfunction is:

u = \sqrt{\frac{2}{a}} sin \left(\frac{\pi x}{a}\right)

For a well of length 2a, eigenfunction is:

v = \frac{1}{\sqrt a} sin \left(\frac{\pi x}{2a}\right)

For probability amplitude, overlap these 2:

\frac{1}{2} \frac{\sqrt 2}{a} \int_0^{2a} 2 sin (\frac{\pi x}{a}) sin (\frac{\pi x}{2a}) dx

\frac{1}{2} \frac{\sqrt 2}{a} \int_0^{2a} cos (\frac{3\pi x}{2a}) - cos (\frac{\pi x}{2a}) dx

which goes to zero.

Part (b)

Am I supposed to use time evolution: ## |\psi_t> = U^{-i\frac{E}{\hbar}t}## ? Doesn't seem to help..
 
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unscientific said:
\frac{1}{2} \frac{\sqrt 2}{a} \int_0^{2a} 2 sin (\frac{\pi x}{a}) sin (\frac{\pi x}{2a}) dx

\frac{1}{2} \frac{\sqrt 2}{a} \int_0^{2a} cos (\frac{3\pi x}{2a}) - cos (\frac{\pi x}{2a}) dx

What is the initial wavefunction in the region a&lt;x&lt;2a?
 
king vitamin said:
What is the initial wavefunction in the region a&lt;x&lt;2a?

It is 0 before the change in the potential, since it is a forbidden region.
 
unscientific said:
It is 0 before the change in the potential, since it is a forbidden region.

Right. Do you see how that affects your overlap integral? It might help to explicitly sketch your before and after wavefunctions.
 
king vitamin said:
Right. Do you see how that affects your overlap integral? It might help to explicitly sketch your before and after wavefunctions.

So for a < x < 2a: the overlap is zero. While for 0 < x < a, the overlap is usual - so the limits are from 0 to a, and not from 0 to 2a.

\frac{1}{2} \frac{\sqrt 2}{a} \int_0^{a} cos (\frac{3\pi x}{2a}) - cos (\frac{\pi x}{2a}) dx

= - \frac{8}{3\pi \sqrt 2}

So the probability = ##\frac{32}{9\pi^2}##, which is less than 1, reassuringly.But for part (b), I haven't got a clue.
 
Do I need to use adiabatic approximation for part (b)?
 
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