Quantum Bound State
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Usage Stats Overall Period: Updated 04 Dec, 2008 Users: 198 Jobs: 1211 Avg. exec. time: 43 mins Reviews & Citations Google/IEEE Avg. Review: Citations: 0
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- 1 (published)
| Version | 1 - published on 17 May, 2007 |
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| Contributor(s) | Alexander Gavrilenko, Heng Li Norfolk State University |
| At a glance | Particle in a box - The particle in a box (or the infinite potential well) is a simple idealized system that is completely solved within quantum mechanics. The infinite potential well is a finite sized region in space (the box) with an infinite potential at its boundaries (the walls). A particle experiences no forces while inside the box, but as the walls are 'infinitely high', it is constrained to remain in the box. Simple Harmonic Oscillator - One of the most important model system in ... |
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| Description | Particle in a box - The particle in a box (or the infinite potential well) is a simple idealized system that is completely solved within quantum mechanics. The infinite potential well is a finite sized region in space (the box) with an infinite potential at its boundaries (the walls). A particle experiences no forces while inside the box, but as the walls are 'infinitely high', it is constrained to remain in the box. Simple Harmonic Oscillator - One of the most important model system in quantum mechanics because a wide variety of physical situations can be reduced to it either exactly or approximately. In particular, a system near an equilibrium configuration can often be described in terms of one or more harmonic oscillators. Furthermore, it is one of the few quantum mechanical systems for which a simple exact solution is known.
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| Credits | Thanks to Mikhail Noginov and Vladimir Gavrilenko for helping with the theory. Center for Materials Science, Norfolk State University. |
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