The Parity Operator: Find the average value of the parity.

latnoa
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Homework Statement


A particle of mass m moves in the potential energy V(x)= \frac{1}{2} mω2x2
. The ground-state wave function is
\psi0(x)=(\frac{a}{π})1/4e-ax2/2
and the first excited-state wave function is
\psi1(x)=(\frac{4a^3}{π})1/4e-ax2/2
where a = mω/\hbar

What is the average value of the parity for the state

ψ(x)=\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}\psi0(x)+ \frac{1-i}{2\sqrt{2}}\psi1(x)

Homework Equations



∏\psi(x)=\psi(-x)
∏\psiλ(x) = \psiλ(x)

The Attempt at a Solution



First off I'm extremely confused on how to approach this to the point of where I don't know what I'm solving for so I'm someone can help me understand the problem and what it's asking me to do.

I just finished reading the parity operator section and all I understand was that ∏ inverts the coordinates of the wave function. I also got that ∏^2 is the identity vector which means that the eigenvalues have to be ±1 and that an even eigenfunction corresponds to 1 while an odd function corresponds to -1 and The eigenfunction of the parity operator form a complete set. That's it from the book but it shows no examples or anything remotely close to what this questions asks.

Am I trying to solve for ∏? Why are the ground state and first state included in this problem? Please help. Anything will be helpful.
 
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latnoa said:

Homework Statement


A particle of mass m moves in the potential energy V(x)= \frac{1}{2} mω2x2
. The ground-state wave function is
\psi0(x)=(\frac{a}{π})1/4e-ax2/2
and the first excited-state wave function is
\psi1(x)=(\frac{4a^3}{π})1/4e-ax2/2
where a = mω/\hbar

What is the average value of the parity for the state

ψ(x)=\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}\psi0(x)+ \frac{1-i}{2\sqrt{2}}\psi1(x)
Your expression for ##\psi_1(x)## is incorrect. There should be a factor of x in there.

First off I'm extremely confused on how to approach this to the point of where I don't know what I'm solving for so I'm someone can help me understand the problem and what it's asking me to do.

I just finished reading the parity operator section and all I understand was that ∏ inverts the coordinates of the wave function. I also got that ∏^2 is the identity vector which means that the eigenvalues have to be ±1 and that an even eigenfunction corresponds to 1 while an odd function corresponds to -1 and The eigenfunction of the parity operator form a complete set. That's it from the book but it shows no examples or anything remotely close to what this questions asks.

Am I trying to solve for ∏? Why are the ground state and first state included in this problem? Please help. Anything will be helpful.
You're being asked to find ##\langle \psi | \hat{\Pi} | \psi \rangle ##.

Think about how you'd calculate the average energy ##\langle \psi | \hat{H} | \psi \rangle ## of the state. You're being asked to do the same sort of calculation except this time with the parity operator instead of the Hamiltonian.

Hint: The energy eigenstates of the harmonic oscillator are also parity eigenstates.
 
Use Expansion Coefficients

First off, ##\psi##0 and ##\psi##1 are eigenfunctions of \Psi. You can see their expansion coefficients given in the equation for \Psi, I will refer to these as cn

The average value of the parity, or <\Pi> will be Ʃ|cn|2an, where the a's are the eigenvalues of the given eigenfunctions.

To find the eigenvalues use \prod\psi = a\psi

This should simplify the problem quite a bit -- it's actually very straightforward if you approach it this way, and you don't have to deal with any messy integrals.
 
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