QuantumPhysics.dvi
wang
(Wang)
#1
5.9.3 Example 3: One-dimensional Dirac-like operator in a box
A lesson we have learned from Example 2 is that the momentum operator corresponds to
a quantum system of left-movers only, (and no right-movers), a situation that vitiates the
possibility of imposing any reflecting boundary conditions. We may double the number of
degrees of freedom, however, and include one left-moving and oneright-moving degree of
freedom. Thus, we consider doublets of wave functionsψ 1 andψ 2 ,
ψ≡
(
ψ 1
ψ 2
)
φ≡
(
φ 1
φ 2
)
(5.132)
with Hermitean inner product,
(ψ,φ) =
∫ℓ
0
dx(ψ∗ 1 φ 1 +ψ∗ 2 φ 2 ) (x) (5.133)
and Hamiltonian (here we use the standard notation∂x≡∂/∂x),
H 3 = ̄hc
(
0 ∂x
−∂x 0
)
(5.134)
It is straightforward to evaluate the combinations,
(H 3 ψ,φ) = ̄hc
∫ℓ
0
dx
(
∂xψ 2 ∗φ 1 −∂xψ∗ 1 φ 2
)
(x)
(ψ,H 3 φ) = ̄hc
∫ℓ
0
dx
(
ψ 1 ∗∂xφ 2 −ψ∗ 2 ∂xφ 1
)
(x) (5.135)
and
(H 3 ψ,φ)−(ψ,H 3 φ) = ̄hc
(
ψ 2 φ 1 (ℓ)−ψ∗ 1 φ 2 (ℓ)−ψ 2 φ 1 (0) +ψ 1 ∗φ 2 (0)
)
(5.136)
Self-adjointness ofH 3 requires this combination to vanish. This may be achieved by imposing,
for example, theMIT bag boundary conditions (which were introduced to model quarks
confined to nucleons),
φ 2 (ℓ) =λℓφ 1 (ℓ) φ 2 (0) =λ 0 φ 1 (0)
ψ 2 (ℓ) =λℓψ 1 (ℓ) ψ 2 (0) =λ 0 ψ 1 (0) (5.137)
for two real independent constants λ 0 andλℓ. The spectrum ofH 3 is now real, but does
depend uponλ 0 andλℓ.