Degrees of Freedom
A state ∣ψ⟩∈H of a is a vector in complex .
Generally a particle has multiple degrees of freedom
H=Hspace⊗Hspin⊗...
Hspace has continuous degrees of freedom -> infinite-dimensional
Hspin has discrete degrees of freedom -> finite-dimensional
E.g., electron in space or confined in a box or a quantum well
Finite Dimension Hilbert Space
Example
Hspin only has {±2ℏ} or {+ℏ,0,−ℏ}
The spin can be described by
∣ψspin⟩=n=0∑d−1ψn∣n⟩∈Cd
Note that ψn here is a Wave function
Inner product
Note the use of Cases
⟨n∣m⟩=δnm={01n=mn=m
⟨ϕspin∣ψspin⟩=n=0∑d−1∣ψn∣2
Normalization
1=⟨ψspin∣ψspin⟩=n=0∑d−1∣ψn∣2
Measurement probability: Born rule
Pr(n)=∣ψn∣2
Infinite Dimension Hilbert Space
See Non Denumerable Basis
Example
Hspace has x∈Rd
∣ψspace⟩=k=−N∑Nψk∣k⟩=k=−N∑NΔxψkΔx∣k⟩Δx
=xk=−L∑Lψ(xk)∣xk⟩Δx
Using Riemann sums from Integration
1=k∑∣ψk∣2=k∑∣ψ(xk)∣2ΔxΔx→0∫∣ψ(x)∣2dx
Note this is called a Wave function
It's like a function that outputs the eigen"values" of the output
inner product
⟨ϕspace∣ψspace⟩=∫ϕ∗(x)ψ(x)dx
normalization
1=⟨ψspace∣ψspace⟩=∫∣ψ(x)∣2dx
Measurement probability
Pr(x∈[a,b])=∫ab∣ψ(x)∣2dx
See Probability Density
Note
Note that
∣x⟩=x
LHS: infinity dimension H state vector
RHS: finite-dim R H state vector
∣αx⟩=α∣x⟩
∣−x⟩=−∣x⟩