Momentum Operator

It is a Continuous Operator that represents the position of a particle. In the position basis:

(p^ψ)(x)=iddxψ(x)(\hat{p}\psi)(x)=-i\hbar \frac{d}{dx}\psi(x)

Note that

p^=pppdp\hat{p}=\int p\ket{p}\bra{p}dp

Which is just like Position Operator but acts on a different basis.

Proof

Let's say we have two bases for the same Hilbert space: position {x}\{\ket{x}\} and momentum {p}\{\ket{p}\}. We need to see the transition amplitude (i.e., the overlap xp\braket{x|p}).

See de Broglie first

Constant CC is fixed as such:

pp=pIp\braket{p|p'}=\bra{p}I\ket{p'}

Expand out II as continuous spectral decomposition. See Continuous Identity.

=p(xxdx)p=\bra{p}\left(\int\ket{x}\bra{x}dx\right)\ket{p'}

To normalize it we do

pp=C2ei(ppx)/dx\braket{p|p'}=|C|^2\int_{-\infty}^\infty e^{i(p'-px)/\hbar}dx

We Set it to itself so that we can find CC that makes it Normal. Note the Fourier Transform representation of the Dirac Delta.

δ(z)=12π(1)eiyzdy\delta(z)=\frac{1}{2\pi}\int_{-\infty}^\infty (1)e^{iyz}dy

Substitute it in to get

δ(pp)=C22πδ(pp)\delta (p-p')= |C|^2 \cdot \hbar \cdot 2\pi \, \delta(p' - p)

This forces

C2=1/(2π)C=1/2π\boxed{|C|^2=1/(2\pi\hbar)\quad\Leftrightarrow \quad C=1/\sqrt{2\pi\hbar}}

Compute pψ\braket{p|\psi}

pψ=pxxψdx=12πeipx/ψ(x)dx\braket{p|\psi} = \int \braket{p|x}\braket{x|\psi} \, dx = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2\pi\hbar}} \int e^{-ipx/\hbar} \, \psi(x) \, dx

we compare it to the CTFT we wrote earlier

ψ~(k)=12πeikxψ(x)dx\tilde\psi(k) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2\pi}} \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} e^{-ikx} \, \psi(x) \, dx

so

pψ=ψˉ(p)=1ψ~(k=p/)\braket{p|\psi}=\bar{\psi}(p)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{\hbar}} \tilde\psi(k = p/\hbar)

Note that

p^p=pp\hat{p}\ket{p}=p\ket{p}

take Hermitian adjoint of both sides. Because p^\hat{p} is Hermitian and real,

pp^=pppp^=pp\bra{p}\hat{p}^\dagger = p^* \bra{p} \Longrightarrow \bra{p}\hat{p} = p\bra{p}

Because we want to evaluate p^ψ\hat{p}\ket{\psi} in p-basis, we take pp^ψ\bra{p}\hat{p}\ket{\psi}

pp^ψ=ppψ=pψˉ(p)\braket{p|\hat{p}|\psi} = p \braket{p|\psi} = p \, \bar\psi(p)

In the p representation

(p^ψˉ)(p)=pψˉ(p)(\hat{p}\bar\psi)(p) = p \, \bar\psi(p)

In the k representation

(p^ψ~)(k)=kψ~(k)(\hat{p}\tilde\psi)(k) = \hbar k \, \tilde\psi(k)

In the x representation? Let's find out p^ψ\hat{p}\ket{\psi} in the x-basis, we take xp^ψ\bra{x}\hat{p}\ket{\psi}

xp^ψ=pxppψdp\braket{x|\hat{p}|\psi} = \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} p \braket{x|p}\braket{p|\psi}\,dp

Since we know pp is just the change of xx i.e., x\frac{\partial}{\partial x}

=(ixxp)pψdp= \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} \left(\frac{\hbar}{i}\frac{\partial}{\partial x}\braket{x|p}\right)\braket{p|\psi}\,dp =ixxppψdp= \frac{\hbar}{i}\frac{\partial}{\partial x} \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} \braket{x|p}\braket{p|\psi}\,dp

Recall from Continuous Operator

=ixxψ= \frac{\hbar}{i}\frac{\partial}{\partial x}\braket{x|\psi} =ixψ(x)= \frac{\hbar}{i}\frac{\partial}{\partial x}\psi(x)

Hence

(p^ψ)(x)=ixψ(x)(\hat{p} \psi)(x) = \frac{\hbar}{i}\frac{\partial}{\partial x}\psi(x) (p^ψ)(x)=ixψ(x)\boxed{(\hat{p} \psi)(x) = -i\hbar \frac{\partial}{\partial x}\psi(x)}