NOTE: The
measuring device referred to below is one which can be used to perform a "measurement" of a
nondegenerate observable whose spectrum is
discrete.
ce124 said:
Can anyone give me a physical interpretation of what orthogonal eigenfunctions are please?
The
physical measuring device (see "NOTE" above) has an
orthonormal basis of eigenfunctions associated with it (call this basis {|n> ; n = 1,2,...[finite or infinite]}). Whenever this device is used to perform a "measurement", one of these eigenfunctions is, so to speak, "selected" as the "result" of the "measurement".
I understand the mathematical idea, the overlap integral ...
Suppose that the quantum system is in the state |f> at the time
just before the "measurement" occurs. Then, the
probability that the "selected result" will be the eigenfunction |n> is given by the
modulus-square of the
overlap integral between |n> and |f>, namely,
P(n) = |<n|f>|^2 .
... but I'm not clear about what it implies for the different states.
If the initial state |f> of the quantum system
already happens to be
one of those
special eigenfunctions associated with the device, say |f> = |m>, then the probability P(n) above equals
zero for n
different from m, and equals
unity for n = m. Physically, this means:
If the quantum system is
already in an
eigenstate of the observable just before the "measurement" occurs, then
that eigenstate will be "selected" as the "result" with
certainty.
Does this help?