172 3 Quantum Mechanics – II
The solutions are
u 1 (r)=Asinkr+Bcoskr;r<R (11)
u 2 (r)=Ce−γr+Deγr;r>R (12)
Boundary conditions: asr→ 0 ,u 1 → 0
and asr→∞,u 2 must be finite. This means thatB=D=0.
Therefore the physically accepted solutions are
u 1 =Asinkr (13)
u 2 =Ce−γr (14)
At the boundary,r=R,u 1 =u 2 and their first derivatives
(
du 1
dr
)
r=R
=
(
du 2
dr
)
r=R
These lead to
AsinkR=Ce−γr (15)
AkcoskR=−γCe−γr (16)
Dividing the two equations
kcotkR=−γ (17)
Or
cotkR=−
γ
k
(18)
NowV 0 W, so cotkRis a small negative quantity. ThereforekR ≈
π/ 2 k^2 R^2 =
(π
2
) 2
Or
M(V 0 −W)R^2
^2
=
π^2
4
Again neglectingWcompared toV 0
V 0 R^2 ≈
π^2 ^2
4 M
3.20 The inside wave function is of the formu=Asinkr. BecauseV(r)=0for
r>R, we need to consider contribution to
=
∫R
0
u∗(−V 0 )udr=−V 0 A^2
∫R
0
sin^2 krdr
=
(
−
V 0 A^2
2
)∫ R
0
(1−cos 2kr)dr
=−V 0 A^2
[
R
2
−
sin 2kR
4 k