Navigate back to the activity.
Estimated Time: 20 minutes
Students are asked to create states of the infinite potential well, composed both of single energy eigenstates and linear combinations of energy eigenstates, and animate the probability densities ${\left| {\psi \left( {x,t} \right)} \right|^2}$ to see how they change with time.
We provide students with a Mathematica template that has useful commands (animate, complex conjugate, plot etc.,) but it has no information about physics. We ask students to generate these animations from scratch, to encourage them to think about it means to superpose and whether the amplitudes or intensities should add. But here is an example that shows a typical result (more elaborate than what students would produce in the class).
In a brief mini-lecture, we remind students that the solutions of the (time-dependent) Schrödinger equation are linear combinations of energy eigenstates with an complex exponential coefficient that contains all the time dependence. We also remind then that each term in the superposition gets a coefficient that corresponds to the eigen-energy of that state. Our students have seen this result derived in the Spins paradigm, three weeks prior.
The wrap-up for this activity is typically short, with groups briefly reporting their findings in general terms.
The time evolution of two state systems can lead into a nice discussion of phenomena, like spontaneous emission/absorption (see Chapter 9 of Griffith's “Introduction to Quantum Mechanics”, 2nd Ed.)