Quantum harmonic oscillator
The quantum harmonic oscillator is a quantum mechanical analogue of the classical harmonic oscillator. It is one of the most important problems in quantum mechanics, because (i) a simple exact solution exists, and (ii) a wide variety of physical situations can be reduced to this. In particular, a system near an equilibrium configuration can often be described in terms of one or more harmonic oscillators.The following discussion of the quantum harmonic oscillator relies on the article Mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics.
One-dimensional Harmonic Oscillator
Hamiltonian and energy eigenstates
In the one-dimensional harmonic oscillator problem, a particle of mass m is subject to a potential V(x) = (1/2)mω2 x2. The Hamiltonian of the particle is:
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The probability densities of the energy eigenstates are shown below, beginning with the ground state (n = 0) at the bottom of the picture and increasing in energy toward the top of the picture. The horizontal axis corresponds to the position x, and brighter colors represent higher probability densities.
Note that the ground state probability density is concentrated at the origin. This means the particle spends most of its time at the bottom of the potential well, as we would expect for a state with little energy. As the energy increases, the probability density becomes concentrated at the "classical turning points", where the state's energy coincides with the potential energy. This is consistent with the classical harmonic oscillator, in which the particle spends most of its time (and is therefore most likely to be found) at the turning points, where it is the slowest. The correspondence principle is thus satisfied.
Ladder operator method
The power series solution, though straightforward, is rather tedious. The "ladder operator" method, due to Paul Dirac, allows us to extract the energy eigenvalues without directly solving the differential equation. Furthermore, it is readily generalizable to more complicated problems, notably in quantum field theory. Following this approach, we define the operator
The x and p operators obey the following identity, known as the canonical commutation relation:
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Using the above identities, we can now show that the commutation relations of a and a† with H are:
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Given any energy eigenstate, we can act on it with the lowering operator, a, to produce another eigenstate with ℏω less energy. By repeated application of the lowering operator, it seems that we can produce energy eigenstates down to E = -∞. However, this would contradict our earlier requirement that E ≥ (ℏω / 2). Therefore, there must be a ground-state energy eigenstate, which we label |0〉 (not to be confused with the zero ket), such that
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Natural length and energy scales
The quantum harmonic oscillator possesses natural scales for length and energy, which can be used to simplify the problem. If we measure energy in units of ℏω and distance in units of (ℏ/(mω))1/2, then the Schrödinger equation becomes:
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N-dimensional Harmonic Oscillator
The one-dimensional harmonic oscillator is readily generalizable to N dimensions, where N=1,2,3,... . In one dimension, the position of the particle was specified by a single coordinate, x. In N dimensions, this is replaced by N position coordinates, which we label x1,...xN. Corresponding to each position coordinate is a momentum; we label these p1,...pN. The canonical commutation relations between these operators are
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This observation makes the solution straightforward. In the ladder operator method, we define N sets of ladder operators,
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Related problems
The quantum harmonic oscillator can be extended in many interesting ways. We will briefly discuss two of the more important extensions, the anharmonic oscillator and coupled harmonic oscillators.
Anharmonic oscillator
As mentioned in the introduction, a system residing "near" the minimum of some potential may be treated as a harmonic oscillator. In this approximation, we Taylor expand the potential energy around the minimum and discard terms of third or higher order, resulting in an approximate quadratic potential. Once we have studied the system in this approximation, we may wish to investigate the corrections due to the discarded higher-order terms, particularly the third-order term.
The anharmonic oscillator Hamiltonian is the harmonic oscillator Hamiltonian with an additional x3 potential:
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Coupled Harmonic Oscillators
In this problem, we consider N equal masses which are connected to their neighbors by springs, in the limit of large N. The masses form a linear chain in one dimension, or a regular lattice in two or three dimensions.
As in the previous section, we denote the positions of the masses by x1,x2,..., as measured from their equilibrium positions (i.e. xk = 0 if particle k is at its equilibrium position.) In two or more dimensions, the x's are are vector quantities. The Hamiltonian of the total system is
Remarkably, there exists a coordinate transformation to turn this problem into a set of independent harmonic oscillators, each of which corresponds to a particular collective distortion of the lattice. These distortions display some particle-like properties, and are called phonons. Phonons occur in the ionic lattices of many solids, and are extremely important for understanding many of the phenomena studied in solid state physics.
