Gaussian State Spread A measurement device which can be represented by a 1D quantum system (with ca

Summer Bradford

Summer Bradford

Answered question

2022-06-14

Gaussian State Spread
A measurement device which can be represented by a 1D quantum system (with canonical observables X and P) 'is prepared in a Gaussian state with spread s'
| ψ = 1 ( π 2 s 2 ) 1 / 4 exp [ x 2 2 s 2 ] d x | x
Can somebody tell me what it means that its canonical variables are X and P?

Answer & Explanation

pheniankang

pheniankang

Beginner2022-06-15Added 22 answers

To have canonical observables x ^ and p ^ means that the eigenvalues of these operators are what you measure (denotes x , p), and the operators satisfy the "canonical commutation relation"
[ x ^ , p ^ ] x ^ p ^ p ^ x ^ = i
To prepare a system in an initial state | ψ means smily that this is the state of the system at t = 0; it is usually denoted as | ψ ( 0 )
Now, your initial state is given by
ψ ( 0 ) = ( π 2 s 2 ) 1 / 4 d x   e x 2 2 s 2 x .
Aside: A probability distribution given by f ( x ) = ( π 2 s 2 ) 1 / 4 e x 2 2 σ 2 is said to be a Gaussian with spread σ, where σ is the usual standard deviation from the center of the bell curve.
End Aside
Therefore, the meaning of
ψ ( 0 ) = ( π 2 s 2 ) 1 / 4 d x   e x 2 2 s 2 x .
is that your system at t = 0 is in a superposition of "position eigenstates" | x (i.e. eigenvectors of x ^ ), weighted by a gaussian distribution. That is, your system isn't just in any old superposition of position eigenstates, but that the ones near x = 0 are most likely and as you move away from the origin the probability of the system being in that state decreases like e x 2 2 s 2
If you are familiar with wave functions, recall that the definition of x | Ψ Ψ ( x ). Then you can get something a bit more useful. Namely, that
x | ψ ( 0 ) = ( π 2 s 2 ) 1 / 4 d x   e x 2 2 s 2 x | x = ( π 2 s 2 ) 1 / 4 d x   e x 2 2 s 2 δ ( x x ) = ( π 2 s 2 ) 1 / 4 e x 2 2 s 2
where I changed the variable of integration to x to make things clearer.
At any rate, what this means is that your initial wave function is given by
Ψ ( x , t = 0 ) = ( π 2 s 2 ) 1 / 4 e x 2 2 s 2 .
Where to go from here with whatever you're doing should be familiar at this point (i.e. after finding the initial wave function).

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