kahoomann said:
But what does Schrodinger equation mean?
We know what Newton's equation (F=ma) means
I'll pretend that space is one-dimensional here, just to simplify the notation.
What Newton's second law really says is that position as a function of time satisfies a differential equation that's nice enough to guarantee that there exists a unique solution for each initial condition. This means that we if we know the position and velocity at one time, we can calculate position as a function of time, and that function tells us the position and velocity at
all times. So we can think of the pair of numbers (x
0,v
0) in the initial condition x(t
0)=x
0, x'(t
0)=v
0 as representing the "state" of the system, and the differential equation as describing the time evolution of that state.
What quantum mechanics tells us is that a state can't be represented by a pair of numbers (x
0,v
0). Instead it's represented by a function \psi:\mathbb R^2\rightarrow\mathbb C. The time evolution of that function is given by the Schrödinger equation.
When you solve it, you find that the solutions are of the form exp(-iEt+ipx). This is an eigenfunction of id/dt with eigenvalue E, and an eigenfunction of -id/dx with eigenvalue p. The identification of this E and p with energy and momentum comes from the fact that if you substitute the energy and momentum in the classical non-relativistic equation E=p
2/2m+V(x) with those derivative operators, then the result is the Schrödinger equation.
So the Schrödinger equation can be thought of as the quantum version of E=p
2/2m+V(x) because it expresses the relationship between energy and momentum, but it can also be thought of as the quantum version of F=ma, since it tells us the time evolution of the mathematical quantity that represents the state of the system.