hokhani said:
My problem is with the essence of incoming or outgoing particle. A particle Incoming (left to right) is one which at a time, say t=0, is at x but by passing the time, t>0, is at y>x. For a quantum particle whose wave function is spread throughout the system all the time, how do you consider coming from left to right or vice versa?
You can't, if you're just looking at the energy eigenstates you find by solving the time-independent Schrodinger equation; the expectation value of the position is a constant with respect to time so there's no motion going on. All that proves is that the state of a moving particle is not an energy eigenstate.
Nugatory said:
I will provide a more detailed explanation in another post in a moment, but it won't be a substitute for understanding how eigenfunctions of differential equations are used in general.
OK, here we go...
Suppose that ##\psi_E(x)## is an eigenfunction of the time-independent Schrodinger equation with eigenvalue ##E##. There are, of course, many such eigenfunctions corresponding to different values of ##E##.
You can verify by substitution that ##\Psi_E(x,t)=e^{-iEt/\hbar}\psi_E(x)## is a solution to the time-dependent Schrodinger equation (as long as the potential is independent of time, as it is here). Note also that ##\Psi_E(x,0)=\psi(x)## so we can interpret ##\psi_E(x)## as the state of a particle in that energy eigenstate at time zero.
You can also verify by substitution that any linear combination of these solutions to the time-dependent equation is also a solution of the time-dependent equation. You will have to take my word for it (or take my advice about reviewing differential equations in general) that not only is every such linear combination a solution, but also that every solution can be written as such a linear combination. Thus, once we know the eigenfunctions of the time-dependent equation, we can construct all the solutions of the time-dependent equation.
A moving particle isn't in an energy eigenstate, but you can write its state ##\Psi(x,t)## as a sum of the various ##\Psi_E(x,t)## for various values of ##E##. Pick the right ones with the right amplitudes and the sum will give you a Gaussian-looking wave packet, the center of which is moving with time and being reflected and transmitted when it reaches the barriers. Furthermore, the initial state of that wave packet can be written as a sum of the ##\psi_E(x)## solutions to the time-independent equation; once we do that we have the complete time-dependent wave function of the moving particle.
Thus, the eigenvalues of the time-independent equation tell us what the possible energies are; and the eigenfunctions tell us how to build the solution to the time-dependent equation.