8.4 Eigenfunctions and Vector Space
Wavefunctions are analogous to vectors in 3D space. The unit vectors of our vector space are
eigenstates.
Innormal 3D space, we represent a vector by its components.
~r=xxˆ+yˆy+zzˆ=∑^3
i=1riuˆiThe unit vectors ˆuiare orthonormal,
ˆui·ˆuj=δij
whereδijis the usual Kroneker delta, equal to 1 ifi=jand otherwise equal to zero.
Eigenfunctions – the unit vectors of our space– are orthonormal.
〈ψi|ψj〉=δijWe represent ourwavefunctions – the vectors in our space– as linear combinations of the
eigenstates (unit vectors).
ψ=∑∞
i=1αiψiφ=∑∞
j=1βjψjIn normal 3D space, we can compute thedot product between two vectorsusing the components.
~r 1 ·~r 2 =x 1 x 2 +y 1 y 2 +z 1 z 2In our vector space, wedefine the dot productto be
〈ψ|φ〉 = 〈∑∞
i=1αiψi|∑∞
j=1βjψj〉=∑∞
i=1∑∞
j=1α∗iβj〈ψi|ψj〉=
∑∞
i=1∑∞
j=1α∗iβjδij=∑∞
i=1α∗iβiWe also can compute the dot product from the components of the vectors. Our vector space is a
little bit different because of the complex conjugate involved in the definition of our dot product.
From a more mathematical point of view, the square integrable functions form a (vector) Hilbert
Space. The scalar product is defined as above.
〈φ|ψ〉=∫∞
−∞d^3 rφ∗ψThe properties of the scalar product are easy to derive from the integral.
〈φ|ψ〉=〈ψ|φ〉∗