Name _________________ Test 3 November 9, 2015 This test consists of three parts. Please note that in parts II and III, you can skip one question of those offered. Some possibly useful formulas can be found below. h 6.626 1034 J s 4.136 1015 eV s 1.055 1034 J s 6.582 1016 eV s 1 eV 1.602 1019 J Reflection off a step: E E V 0 R E E V0 1 Barrier penetration: E E T 16 1 e 2 L V0 V0 2 if E V0 if E V0 Hydrogen En 2m V0 E 13.6 eV Z 2 n2 1D square well: 2 2 n2 En 2mL2 2 nx n x sin L L n 1, 2,3, Harmonic Osc. En n 12 n 0,1, 2, Part I: Multiple Choice [20 points] For each question, choose the best answer (2 points each) 1. Which of the following functions might represent a plane wave x, t in quantum mechanics? A) cos kx t B) sin kx t C) eikx it D) Ne Ax 2 2 E) 2 L sin nx L 2. In the harmonic oscillator, the difference in energy between the n = 100th state and the n = 101st state is A) 0 B) 12 C) D) 100.5 E) 101.5 3. In experiments where you take a single photon and use half-silvered mirrors to split it in half, which observation indicates that the single photon apparently goes both ways? A) Occasionally you can actually observe two photons created from the single photon B) The two pieces can be recombined, and the resulting interference demonstrates the effect C) The momentum transferred to subsequent collisions can be measured, demonstrating that half of the momentum went each way D) Detectors can see the quantum wave passing by on each of the two paths E) The probability of the photon coming out on each path is 50%, proving it went both ways 4. Suppose you have a barrier potential with a finite but large width L but height V0 > E, the energy. On the other side of the barrier, what does the wave look like? A) There is no wave at all, because the barrier is too high to get across B) The wave always penetrates the barrier, so it has the same magnitude as it had before C) The wave continues as a wave, but the magnitude is slightly reduced D) The wave damps exponentially, falling off to zero eventually E) The wave has a very small chance of penetrating, coming out as a much smaller amplitude wave 5. When calculating the reflection of a wave off a step potential, which of the following must be done? A) Match the wave function at the boundary (only) B) Match the derivative of the wave function at the boundary (only) C) Eliminate the portion of the wave that is non-physical, as it represents a wave coming in from the wrong direction (only) D) All of the above E) None of the above 6. If a hydrogen atom has an electron in n = 4, l = 2, and m = 1, which of the following is the equation for the wave function? A) R42Y21 B) R41Y21 C) R42Y41 D) R21Y41 E) R21Y42 7. Which of the following is impossible for the orbital angular momentum Lz of an electron in an atom? A) 0 B) C) D) 2 E) 12 8. A particle is in a bound state if its energy is A) Larger than the potential at infinity B) Smaller than the potential at infinity C) Equal to the potential at infinity D) Larger than the potential at zero E) Smaller than the potential at zero 9. Which of the following is the equivalent of the momentum operator in one dimension? p2 A) V x B) i C) x D) E) None of these i x 2m t 10. The graviton is a hypothetical particle with spin s = 2. The operator S2 then has value A) 2 2 B) 4 2 C) 5 2 D) 6 2 E) none of these Part II: Short answer [20 points] Choose two of the following three questions and give a short answer (2-4 sentences) (10 points each). 11. When solving the infinite square well, the solutions we found for an allowed region 0 x L are given by n x 2 L sin nx L . Explain (i) why sin is used instead of cos, (ii) Why we have sin nx L rather than some other value sin kx is there, and (iii) why the factor of 2 L is there. 12. Explain qualitatively what the Hamiltonian is (give a formula), and what use the expectation value of the Hamiltonian H has for a general wave function; that is, what measurement it would correspond to. 13. For Manganese (Z = 25), give the complete electron configuration (1s2 …). Assume the conventional rules work. Part III: Calculation: [60 points] Choose three of the following four questions and perform the indicated calculations (20 points each). 14. A proton consists of three quarks each of mass m = 5.58 10–28 kg (or m = 313 MeV/c2), which can be thought of as trapped inside a proton, (treat as a 1D infinite square well) which has a size of about L= 1.754 fm (1.754 10–15 m). (a) What is the energy of one quark in this infinite square well in the ground state in MeV? What is the energy of all three quarks? What fraction is this of rest energy of the proton, mpc2 = 938 MeV? (b) Suppose one of the three quarks is excited to the first excited state of this infinite square well, while the others are still in the ground state. What is the energy now? What fraction is this of the excited nucleon energy mN c 2 1440 MeV ? 15. The harmonic oscillator for a particle of mass m has potential V x 12 m 2 x 2 (a) Write down the one-dimensional time-independent Schrödinger equation for this potential. 2 (b) Show explicitly that the wave function x e Ax 2 satisfies this equation if A m , and that the energy is the right value for the ground state. 30 a 5 ax x 2 for 0 x a , . 16. A particle has normalized wave function given by x 0 otherwise. This wave function is already normalized. Some possibly useful integrals appear below. It has expectation values x 2 72 a 2 and p 2 10 2 a 2 . (a) Find the expectation values x and p for this wave function. (b) What are the uncertainties x and p for this wave function? (c) Check that it satisfies the uncertainty relation. a a 2 a n 3 2a n 5 Useful integrals: x n ax x 2 dx , x n ax x 2 dx . n 2 n 3 0 n 3 n 4 n 5 0 17. An electron in hydrogen has l = 2. (a) What is the value of L2? (b) What are the possible values of m, and the corresponding possible values for Lz? (c) What are the possible values for ms, and the corresponding possible values for Sz? (d) What are the possible values for the principal quantum number n? What is the lowest (most negative) energy possible for this electron? (e) For a single value of n, and l = 2, how many total quantum states are possible?