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Quantum harmonic oscillator

The quantum harmonic oscillator is the quantum-mechanical analog of the classical harmonic oscillator. Because an arbitrary smooth potential can usually be approximated as a harmonic potential at the vicinity of a stable equilibrium point, it is one of the most important model systems in quantum mechanics. Furthermore, it is one of the few quantum-mechanical systems for which an exact, analytical solution is known.[1][2][3]

Some trajectories of a harmonic oscillator according to Newton's laws of classical mechanics (A–B), and according to the Schrödinger equation of quantum mechanics (C–H). In A–B, the particle (represented as a ball attached to a spring) oscillates back and forth. In C–H, some solutions to the Schrödinger Equation are shown, where the horizontal axis is position, and the vertical axis is the real part (blue) or imaginary part (red) of the wavefunction. C, D, E, F, but not G, H, are energy eigenstates. H is a coherent state—a quantum state that approximates the classical trajectory.

One-dimensional harmonic oscillator

Hamiltonian and energy eigenstates

 
Wavefunction representations for the first eight bound eigenstates, n = 0 to 7. The horizontal axis shows the position x.
 
Corresponding probability densities.

The Hamiltonian of the particle is:

 
where m is the particle's mass, k is the force constant,   is the angular frequency of the oscillator,   is the position operator (given by x in the coordinate basis), and   is the momentum operator (given by   in the coordinate basis). The first term in the Hamiltonian represents the kinetic energy of the particle, and the second term represents its potential energy, as in Hooke's law.

One may write the time-independent Schrödinger equation,

 
where E denotes a to-be-determined real number that will specify a time-independent energy level, or eigenvalue, and the solution |ψ denotes that level's energy eigenstate.

One may solve the differential equation representing this eigenvalue problem in the coordinate basis, for the wave function x|ψ⟩ = ψ(x), using a spectral method. It turns out that there is a family of solutions. In this basis, they amount to Hermite functions,

 

The functions Hn are the physicists' Hermite polynomials,

 

The corresponding energy levels are

 

This energy spectrum is noteworthy for three reasons. First, the energies are quantized, meaning that only discrete energy values (integer-plus-half multiples of ħω) are possible; this is a general feature of quantum-mechanical systems when a particle is confined. Second, these discrete energy levels are equally spaced, unlike in the Bohr model of the atom, or the particle in a box. Third, the lowest achievable energy (the energy of the n = 0 state, called the ground state) is not equal to the minimum of the potential well, but ħω/2 above it; this is called zero-point energy. Because of the zero-point energy, the position and momentum of the oscillator in the ground state are not fixed (as they would be in a classical oscillator), but have a small range of variance, in accordance with the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.

The ground state probability density is concentrated at the origin, which means the particle spends most of its time at the bottom of the potential well, as one would expect for a state with little energy. As the energy increases, the probability density peaks at the classical "turning points", where the state's energy coincides with the potential energy. (See the discussion below of the highly excited states.) This is consistent with the classical harmonic oscillator, in which the particle spends more of its time (and is therefore more likely to be found) near the turning points, where it is moving the slowest. The correspondence principle is thus satisfied. Moreover, special nondispersive wave packets, with minimum uncertainty, called coherent states oscillate very much like classical objects, as illustrated in the figure; they are not eigenstates of the Hamiltonian.

Ladder operator method

 
Probability densities |ψn(x)|2 for the bound eigenstates, starting with the ground states (n = 0) at the bottom and increasing in energy toward the top. The horizontal axis shows the position x, and brighter colors represent higher probability densities.

The "ladder operator" method, developed by Paul Dirac, allows extraction of the energy eigenvalues without directly solving the differential equation. It is generalizable to more complicated problems, notably in quantum field theory. Following this approach, we define the operators a and its adjoint a,

 
Note these operators classically are exactly the generators of normalized rotation in the phase space of   and  , i.e they describe the forwards and backwards evolution in time of a classical harmonic oscillator.

These operators lead to the useful representation of   and  ,

 

The operator a is not Hermitian, since itself and its adjoint a are not equal. The energy eigenstates |n (also known as Fock states), when operated on by these ladder operators, give

 

It is then evident that a, in essence, appends a single quantum of energy to the oscillator, while a removes a quantum. For this reason, they are sometimes referred to as "creation" and "annihilation" operators.

From the relations above, we can also define a number operator N, which has the following property:

 

The following commutators can be easily obtained by substituting the canonical commutation relation,

 

And the Hamilton operator can be expressed as

 

so the eigenstate of N is also the eigenstate of energy.

The commutation property yields

 

and similarly,

 

This means that a acts on |n to produce, up to a multiplicative constant, |n–1⟩, and a acts on |n to produce |n+1⟩. For this reason, a is called a annihilation operator ("lowering operator"), and a a creation operator ("raising operator"). The two operators together are called ladder operators. In quantum field theory, a and a are alternatively called "annihilation" and "creation" operators because they destroy and create particles, which correspond to our quanta of energy.

Given any energy eigenstate, we can act on it with the lowering operator, a, to produce another eigenstate with ħω less energy. By repeated application of the lowering operator, it seems that we can produce energy eigenstates down to E = −∞. However, since

 

the smallest eigen-number is 0, and

 

In this case, subsequent applications of the lowering operator will just produce zero kets, instead of additional energy eigenstates. Furthermore, we have shown above that

 

Finally, by acting on |0⟩ with the raising operator and multiplying by suitable normalization factors, we can produce an infinite set of energy eigenstates

 

such that

 
which matches the energy spectrum given in the preceding section.

Arbitrary eigenstates can be expressed in terms of |0⟩,

 
Proof
 

Analytical questions

The preceding analysis is algebraic, using only the commutation relations between the raising and lowering operators. Once the algebraic analysis is complete, one should turn to analytical questions. First, one should find the ground state, that is, the solution of the equation  . In the position representation, this is the first-order differential equation

 
whose solution is easily found to be the Gaussian[4]
 
Conceptually, it is important that there is only one solution of this equation; if there were, say, two linearly independent ground states, we would get two independent chains of eigenvectors for the harmonic oscillator. Once the ground state is computed, one can show inductively that the excited states are Hermite polynomials times the Gaussian ground state, using the explicit form of the raising operator in the position representation. One can also prove that, as expected from the uniqueness of the ground state, the Hermite functions energy eigenstates   constructed by the ladder method form a complete orthonormal set of functions.[5]

Explicitly connecting with the previous section, the ground state |0⟩ in the position representation is determined by  ,

 
 
hence
 
so that  , and so on.

Natural length and energy scales

The quantum harmonic oscillator possesses natural scales for length and energy, which can be used to simplify the problem. These can be found by nondimensionalization.

The result is that, if energy is measured in units of ħω and distance in units of ħ/(), then the Hamiltonian simplifies to

 
while the energy eigenfunctions and eigenvalues simplify to Hermite functions and integers offset by a half,
 
 
where Hn(x) are the Hermite polynomials.

To avoid confusion, these "natural units" will mostly not be adopted in this article. However, they frequently come in handy when performing calculations, by bypassing clutter.

For example, the fundamental solution (propagator) of Hi∂t, the time-dependent Schrödinger operator for this oscillator, simply boils down to the Mehler kernel,[6][7]

 
where K(x,y;0) = δ(xy). The most general solution for a given initial configuration ψ(x,0) then is simply
 

Coherent states

 
Time evolution of the probability distribution (and phase, shown as color) of a coherent state with |α|=3.

The coherent states (also known as Glauber states) of the harmonic oscillator are special nondispersive wave packets, with minimum uncertainty σx σp = 2, whose observables' expectation values evolve like a classical system. They are eigenvectors of the annihilation operator, not the Hamiltonian, and form an overcomplete basis which consequentially lacks orthogonality.

The coherent states are indexed by αC and expressed in the |n basis as

 

Because   and via the Kermack-McCrae identity, the last form is equivalent to a unitary displacement operator acting on the ground state:  . The position space wave functions are

 

Since coherent states are not energy eigenstates, their time evolution is not a simple shift in wavefunction phase. The time-evolved states are, however, also coherent states but with phase-shifting parameter α instead:  .

Highly excited states

 
 
Wavefunction (top) and probability density (bottom) for the n = 30 excited state of the quantum harmonic oscillator. Vertical dashed lines indicate the classical turning points, while the dotted line represents the classical probability density.

When n is large, the eigenstates are localized into the classical allowed region, that is, the region in which a classical particle with energy En can move. The eigenstates are peaked near the turning points: the points at the ends of the classically allowed region where the classical particle changes direction. This phenomenon can be verified through asymptotics of the Hermite polynomials, and also through the WKB approximation.

The frequency of oscillation at x is proportional to the momentum p(x) of a classical particle of energy En and position x. Furthermore, the square of the amplitude (determining the probability density) is inversely proportional to p(x), reflecting the length of time the classical particle spends near x. The system behavior in a small neighborhood of the turning point does not have a simple classical explanation, but can be modeled using an Airy function. Using properties of the Airy function, one may estimate the probability of finding the particle outside the classically allowed region, to be approximately

 
This is also given, asymptotically, by the integral
 

Phase space solutions

In the phase space formulation of quantum mechanics, eigenstates of the quantum harmonic oscillator in several different representations of the quasiprobability distribution can be written in closed form. The most widely used of these is for the Wigner quasiprobability distribution.

The Wigner quasiprobability distribution for the energy eigenstate |n is, in the natural units described above,[citation needed]

 
where Ln are the Laguerre polynomials. This example illustrates how the Hermite and Laguerre polynomials are linked through the Wigner map.

Meanwhile, the Husimi Q function of the harmonic oscillator eigenstates have an even simpler form. If we work in the natural units described above, we have

 
This claim can be verified using the Segal–Bargmann transform. Specifically, since the raising operator in the Segal–Bargmann representation is simply multiplication by   and the ground state is the constant function 1, the normalized harmonic oscillator states in this representation are simply   . At this point, we can appeal to the formula for the Husimi Q function in terms of the Segal–Bargmann transform.

N-dimensional isotropic harmonic oscillator

The one-dimensional harmonic oscillator is readily generalizable to N dimensions, where N = 1, 2, 3, …. In one dimension, the position of the particle was specified by a single coordinate, x. In N dimensions, this is replaced by N position coordinates, which we label x1, …, xN. Corresponding to each position coordinate is a momentum; we label these p1, …, pN. The canonical commutation relations between these operators are

 

The Hamiltonian for this system is

 

As the form of this Hamiltonian makes clear, the N-dimensional harmonic oscillator is exactly analogous to N independent one-dimensional harmonic oscillators with the same mass and spring constant. In this case, the quantities x1, ..., xN would refer to the positions of each of the N particles. This is a convenient property of the r2 potential, which allows the potential energy to be separated into terms depending on one coordinate each.

This observation makes the solution straightforward. For a particular set of quantum numbers   the energy eigenfunctions for the N-dimensional oscillator are expressed in terms of the 1-dimensional eigenfunctions as:

 

In the ladder operator method, we define N sets of ladder operators,

 

By an analogous procedure to the one-dimensional case, we can then show that each of the ai and ai operators lower and raise the energy by ℏω respectively. The Hamiltonian is

 
This Hamiltonian is invariant under the dynamic symmetry group U(N) (the unitary group in N dimensions), defined by
 
where   is an element in the defining matrix representation of U(N).

The energy levels of the system are

 
 

As in the one-dimensional case, the energy is quantized. The ground state energy is N times the one-dimensional ground energy, as we would expect using the analogy to N independent one-dimensional oscillators. There is one further difference: in the one-dimensional case, each energy level corresponds to a unique quantum state. In N-dimensions, except for the ground state, the energy levels are degenerate, meaning there are several states with the same energy.

The degeneracy can be calculated relatively easily. As an example, consider the 3-dimensional case: Define n = n1 + n2 + n3. All states with the same n will have the same energy. For a given n, we choose a particular n1. Then n2 + n3 = nn1. There are nn1 + 1 possible pairs {n2, n3}. n2 can take on the values 0 to nn1, and for each n2 the value of n3 is fixed. The degree of degeneracy therefore is:

 
Formula for general N and n [gn being the dimension of the symmetric irreducible n-th power representation of the unitary group U(N)]:
 
The special case N = 3, given above, follows directly from this general equation. This is however, only true for distinguishable particles, or one particle in N dimensions (as dimensions are distinguishable). For the case of N bosons in a one-dimension harmonic trap, the degeneracy scales as the number of ways to partition an integer n using integers less than or equal to N.
 

This arises due to the constraint of putting N quanta into a state ket where   and  , which are the same constraints as in integer partition.

Example: 3D isotropic harmonic oscillator

 
Schrödinger 3D spherical harmonic orbital solutions in 2D density plots; the Mathematica source code that used for generating the plots is at the top

The Schrödinger equation for a particle in a spherically-symmetric three-dimensional harmonic oscillator can be solved explicitly by separation of variables; see this article for the present case. This procedure is analogous to the separation performed in the hydrogen-like atom problem, but with a different spherically symmetric potential

 
where μ is the mass of the particle. Because m will be used below for the magnetic quantum number, mass is indicated by μ, instead of m, as earlier in this article.

The solution reads[8]

 
where
  is a normalization constant;  ;
 

are generalized Laguerre polynomials; The order k of the polynomial is a non-negative integer;

The energy eigenvalue is

 
The energy is usually described by the single quantum number
 

Because k is a non-negative integer, for every even n we have = 0, 2, …, n − 2, n and for every odd n we have = 1, 3, …, n − 2, n . The magnetic quantum number m is an integer satisfying m, so for every n and there are 2 + 1 different quantum states, labeled by m . Thus, the degeneracy at level n is

 
where the sum starts from 0 or 1, according to whether n is even or odd. This result is in accordance with the dimension formula above, and amounts to the dimensionality of a symmetric representation of SU(3),[9] the relevant degeneracy group.

Applications

Harmonic oscillators lattice: phonons

We can extend the notion of a harmonic oscillator to a one-dimensional lattice of many particles. Consider a one-dimensional quantum mechanical harmonic chain of N identical atoms. This is the simplest quantum mechanical model of a lattice, and we will see how phonons arise from it. The formalism that we will develop for this model is readily generalizable to two and three dimensions.

As in the previous section, we denote the positions of the masses by x1, x2, …, as measured from their equilibrium positions (i.e. xi = 0 if the particle i is at its equilibrium position). In two or more dimensions, the xi are vector quantities. The Hamiltonian for this system is

 
where m is the (assumed uniform) mass of each atom, and xi and pi are the position and momentum operators for the i th atom and the sum is made over the nearest neighbors (nn). However, it is customary to rewrite the Hamiltonian in terms of the normal modes of the wavevector rather than in terms of the particle coordinates so that one can work in the more convenient Fourier space.
 
Superposition of three oscillating dipoles- illustrate the time propagation of the common wave function for different n,l,m

We introduce, then, a set of N "normal coordinates" Qk, defined as the discrete Fourier transforms of the xs, and N "conjugate momenta" Π defined as the Fourier transforms of the ps,

 
 

The quantity kn will turn out to be the wave number of the phonon, i.e. 2π divided by the wavelength. It takes on quantized values, because the number of atoms is finite.

This preserves the desired commutation relations in either real space or wave vector space

 
Another illustration of the time propagation of the common wave function for three different atoms emphasizes the effect of the angular momentum on the distribution behavior
 

From the general result

 
it is easy to show, through elementary trigonometry, that the potential energy term is
 
where
 

The Hamiltonian may be written in wave vector space as

 

Note that the couplings between the position variables have been transformed away; if the Qs and Πs were hermitian (which they are not), the transformed Hamiltonian would describe N uncoupled harmonic oscillators.

The form of the quantization depends on the choice of boundary conditions; for simplicity, we impose periodic boundary conditions, defining the (N + 1)-th atom as equivalent to the first atom. Physically, this corresponds to joining the chain at its ends. The resulting quantization is

 

The upper bound to n comes from the minimum wavelength, which is twice the lattice spacing a, as discussed above.

The harmonic oscillator eigenvalues or energy levels for the mode ωk are

 

If we ignore the zero-point energy then the levels are evenly spaced at

 

So an exact amount of energy ħω, must be supplied to the harmonic oscillator lattice to push it to the next energy level. In analogy to the photon case when the electromagnetic field is quantised, the quantum of vibrational energy is called a phonon.

All quantum systems show wave-like and particle-like properties. The particle-like properties of the phonon are best understood using the methods of second quantization and operator techniques described elsewhere.[10]

In the continuum limit, a → 0, N → ∞, while Na is held fixed. The canonical coordinates Qk devolve to the decoupled momentum modes of a scalar field,  , whilst the location index i (not the displacement dynamical variable) becomes the parameter x argument of the scalar field,  .

Molecular vibrations

  • The vibrations of a diatomic molecule are an example of a two-body version of the quantum harmonic oscillator. In this case, the angular frequency is given by
     
    where   is the reduced mass and   and   are the masses of the two atoms.[11]
  • The Hooke's atom is a simple model of the helium atom using the quantum harmonic oscillator.
  • Modelling phonons, as discussed above.
  • A charge   with mass   in a uniform magnetic field   is an example of a one-dimensional quantum harmonic oscillator: Landau quantization.

See also

References

  1. ^ Griffiths, David J. (2004). Introduction to Quantum Mechanics (2nd ed.). Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-805326-0.
  2. ^ Liboff, Richard L. (2002). Introductory Quantum Mechanics. Addison–Wesley. ISBN 978-0-8053-8714-8.
  3. ^ Rashid, Muneer A. (2006). "Transition amplitude for time-dependent linear harmonic oscillator with Linear time-dependent terms added to the Hamiltonian" (PDF-Microsoft PowerPoint). M.A. Rashid – Center for Advanced Mathematics and Physics. National Center for Physics. Retrieved 19 October 2010.
  4. ^ The normalization constant is  , and satisfies the normalization condition  .
  5. ^ See Theorem 11.4 in Hall, Brian C. (2013), Quantum Theory for Mathematicians, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 267, Springer, ISBN 978-1461471158
  6. ^ Pauli, W. (2000), Wave Mechanics: Volume 5 of Pauli Lectures on Physics (Dover Books on Physics). ISBN 978-0486414621 ; Section 44.
  7. ^ Condon, E. U. (1937). "Immersion of the Fourier transform in a continuous group of functional transformations", Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 23, 158–164. online
  8. ^ Albert Messiah, Quantum Mechanics, 1967, North-Holland, Ch XII,  § 15, p 456.online
  9. ^ Fradkin, D. M. "Three-dimensional isotropic harmonic oscillator and SU3." American Journal of Physics 33 (3) (1965) 207–211.
  10. ^ Mahan, GD (1981). Many particle physics. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-0306463389.
  11. ^ "Quantum Harmonic Oscillator". Hyperphysics. Retrieved 24 September 2009.

External links

  • Quantum Harmonic Oscillator
  • Rationale for choosing the ladder operators
  • Live 3D intensity plots of quantum harmonic oscillator
  • Driven and damped quantum harmonic oscillator (lecture notes of course "quantum optics in electric circuits")

quantum, harmonic, oscillator, redirects, here, also, iata, airport, code, airports, houston, area, quantum, harmonic, oscillator, quantum, mechanical, analog, classical, harmonic, oscillator, because, arbitrary, smooth, potential, usually, approximated, harmo. QHO redirects here It is also the IATA airport code for all airports in the Houston area The quantum harmonic oscillator is the quantum mechanical analog of the classical harmonic oscillator Because an arbitrary smooth potential can usually be approximated as a harmonic potential at the vicinity of a stable equilibrium point it is one of the most important model systems in quantum mechanics Furthermore it is one of the few quantum mechanical systems for which an exact analytical solution is known 1 2 3 Some trajectories of a harmonic oscillator according to Newton s laws of classical mechanics A B and according to the Schrodinger equation of quantum mechanics C H In A B the particle represented as a ball attached to a spring oscillates back and forth In C H some solutions to the Schrodinger Equation are shown where the horizontal axis is position and the vertical axis is the real part blue or imaginary part red of the wavefunction C D E F but not G H are energy eigenstates H is a coherent state a quantum state that approximates the classical trajectory Contents 1 One dimensional harmonic oscillator 1 1 Hamiltonian and energy eigenstates 1 2 Ladder operator method 1 2 1 Analytical questions 1 3 Natural length and energy scales 1 4 Coherent states 1 5 Highly excited states 1 6 Phase space solutions 2 N dimensional isotropic harmonic oscillator 2 1 Example 3D isotropic harmonic oscillator 3 Applications 3 1 Harmonic oscillators lattice phonons 3 2 Molecular vibrations 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksOne dimensional harmonic oscillator EditHamiltonian and energy eigenstates Edit Wavefunction representations for the first eight bound eigenstates n 0 to 7 The horizontal axis shows the position x Corresponding probability densities The Hamiltonian of the particle is H p 2 2 m 1 2 k x 2 p 2 2 m 1 2 m w 2 x 2 displaystyle hat H frac hat p 2 2m frac 1 2 k hat x 2 frac hat p 2 2m frac 1 2 m omega 2 hat x 2 where m is the particle s mass k is the force constant w k m textstyle omega sqrt k m is the angular frequency of the oscillator x displaystyle hat x is the position operator given by x in the coordinate basis and p displaystyle hat p is the momentum operator given by p i ℏ x displaystyle hat p i hbar partial partial x in the coordinate basis The first term in the Hamiltonian represents the kinetic energy of the particle and the second term represents its potential energy as in Hooke s law One may write the time independent Schrodinger equation H ps E ps displaystyle hat H left psi right rangle E left psi right rangle where E denotes a to be determined real number that will specify a time independent energy level or eigenvalue and the solution ps denotes that level s energy eigenstate One may solve the differential equation representing this eigenvalue problem in the coordinate basis for the wave function x ps ps x using a spectral method It turns out that there is a family of solutions In this basis they amount to Hermite functions ps n x 1 2 n n m w p ℏ 1 4 e m w x 2 2 ℏ H n m w ℏ x n 0 1 2 displaystyle psi n x frac 1 sqrt 2 n n left frac m omega pi hbar right 1 4 e frac m omega x 2 2 hbar H n left sqrt frac m omega hbar x right qquad n 0 1 2 ldots The functions Hn are the physicists Hermite polynomials H n z 1 n e z 2 d n d z n e z 2 displaystyle H n z 1 n e z 2 frac d n dz n left e z 2 right The corresponding energy levels areE n ℏ w n 1 2 2 n 1 ℏ 2 w displaystyle E n hbar omega bigl n tfrac 1 2 bigr 2n 1 hbar over 2 omega This energy spectrum is noteworthy for three reasons First the energies are quantized meaning that only discrete energy values integer plus half multiples of ħw are possible this is a general feature of quantum mechanical systems when a particle is confined Second these discrete energy levels are equally spaced unlike in the Bohr model of the atom or the particle in a box Third the lowest achievable energy the energy of the n 0 state called the ground state is not equal to the minimum of the potential well but ħw 2 above it this is called zero point energy Because of the zero point energy the position and momentum of the oscillator in the ground state are not fixed as they would be in a classical oscillator but have a small range of variance in accordance with the Heisenberg uncertainty principle The ground state probability density is concentrated at the origin which means the particle spends most of its time at the bottom of the potential well as one would expect for a state with little energy As the energy increases the probability density peaks at the classical turning points where the state s energy coincides with the potential energy See the discussion below of the highly excited states This is consistent with the classical harmonic oscillator in which the particle spends more of its time and is therefore more likely to be found near the turning points where it is moving the slowest The correspondence principle is thus satisfied Moreover special nondispersive wave packets with minimum uncertainty called coherent states oscillate very much like classical objects as illustrated in the figure they are not eigenstates of the Hamiltonian Ladder operator method Edit Probability densities psn x 2 for the bound eigenstates starting with the ground states n 0 at the bottom and increasing in energy toward the top The horizontal axis shows the position x and brighter colors represent higher probability densities The ladder operator method developed by Paul Dirac allows extraction of the energy eigenvalues without directly solving the differential equation It is generalizable to more complicated problems notably in quantum field theory Following this approach we define the operators a and its adjoint a a m w 2 ℏ x i m w p a m w 2 ℏ x i m w p displaystyle begin aligned a amp sqrt m omega over 2 hbar left hat x i over m omega hat p right a dagger amp sqrt m omega over 2 hbar left hat x i over m omega hat p right end aligned Note these operators classically are exactly the generators of normalized rotation in the phase space of x displaystyle x and m d x d t displaystyle m frac dx dt i e they describe the forwards and backwards evolution in time of a classical harmonic oscillator These operators lead to the useful representation of x displaystyle hat x and p displaystyle hat p x ℏ 2 m w a a p i ℏ m w 2 a a displaystyle begin aligned hat x amp sqrt frac hbar 2m omega a dagger a hat p amp i sqrt frac hbar m omega 2 a dagger a end aligned The operator a is not Hermitian since itself and its adjoint a are not equal The energy eigenstates n also known as Fock states when operated on by these ladder operators givea n n 1 n 1 a n n n 1 displaystyle begin aligned a dagger n rangle amp sqrt n 1 n 1 rangle a n rangle amp sqrt n n 1 rangle end aligned It is then evident that a in essence appends a single quantum of energy to the oscillator while a removes a quantum For this reason they are sometimes referred to as creation and annihilation operators From the relations above we can also define a number operator N which has the following property N a a N n n n displaystyle begin aligned N amp a dagger a N left n right rangle amp n left n right rangle end aligned The following commutators can be easily obtained by substituting the canonical commutation relation a a 1 N a a N a a displaystyle a a dagger 1 qquad N a dagger a dagger qquad N a a And the Hamilton operator can be expressed asH ℏ w N 1 2 displaystyle hat H hbar omega left N frac 1 2 right so the eigenstate of N is also the eigenstate of energy The commutation property yieldsN a n a N N a n a N a n n 1 a n displaystyle begin aligned Na dagger n rangle amp left a dagger N N a dagger right n rangle amp left a dagger N a dagger right n rangle amp n 1 a dagger n rangle end aligned and similarly N a n n 1 a n displaystyle Na n rangle n 1 a n rangle This means that a acts on n to produce up to a multiplicative constant n 1 and a acts on n to produce n 1 For this reason a is called a annihilation operator lowering operator and a a creation operator raising operator The two operators together are called ladder operators In quantum field theory a and a are alternatively called annihilation and creation operators because they destroy and create particles which correspond to our quanta of energy Given any energy eigenstate we can act on it with the lowering operator a to produce another eigenstate with ħw less energy By repeated application of the lowering operator it seems that we can produce energy eigenstates down to E However sincen n N n n a a n a n a n 0 displaystyle n langle n N n rangle langle n a dagger a n rangle Bigl a n rangle Bigr dagger a n rangle geqslant 0 the smallest eigen number is 0 anda 0 0 displaystyle a left 0 right rangle 0 In this case subsequent applications of the lowering operator will just produce zero kets instead of additional energy eigenstates Furthermore we have shown above thatH 0 ℏ w 2 0 displaystyle hat H left 0 right rangle frac hbar omega 2 left 0 right rangle Finally by acting on 0 with the raising operator and multiplying by suitable normalization factors we can produce an infinite set of energy eigenstates 0 1 2 n displaystyle left left 0 right rangle left 1 right rangle left 2 right rangle ldots left n right rangle ldots right such thatH n ℏ w n 1 2 n displaystyle hat H left n right rangle hbar omega left n frac 1 2 right left n right rangle which matches the energy spectrum given in the preceding section Arbitrary eigenstates can be expressed in terms of 0 n a n n 0 displaystyle n rangle frac a dagger n sqrt n 0 rangle Proof n a a n n a a a a n n N 1 n n 1 a n n 1 n 1 n a n n 1 a 2 n n 1 n 2 a n n 0 displaystyle begin aligned langle n aa dagger n rangle amp langle n left a a dagger a dagger a right n rangle langle n N 1 n rangle n 1 Rightarrow a dagger n rangle amp sqrt n 1 n 1 rangle Rightarrow n rangle amp frac a dagger sqrt n n 1 rangle frac a dagger 2 sqrt n n 1 n 2 rangle cdots frac a dagger n sqrt n 0 rangle end aligned Analytical questions Edit The preceding analysis is algebraic using only the commutation relations between the raising and lowering operators Once the algebraic analysis is complete one should turn to analytical questions First one should find the ground state that is the solution of the equation a ps 0 0 displaystyle a psi 0 0 In the position representation this is the first order differential equation x ℏ m w d d x ps 0 0 displaystyle left x frac hbar m omega frac d dx right psi 0 0 whose solution is easily found to be the Gaussian 4 ps 0 x C e m w x 2 2 ℏ displaystyle psi 0 x Ce frac m omega x 2 2 hbar Conceptually it is important that there is only one solution of this equation if there were say two linearly independent ground states we would get two independent chains of eigenvectors for the harmonic oscillator Once the ground state is computed one can show inductively that the excited states are Hermite polynomials times the Gaussian ground state using the explicit form of the raising operator in the position representation One can also prove that as expected from the uniqueness of the ground state the Hermite functions energy eigenstates ps n displaystyle psi n constructed by the ladder method form a complete orthonormal set of functions 5 Explicitly connecting with the previous section the ground state 0 in the position representation is determined by a 0 0 displaystyle a 0 rangle 0 x a 0 0 x ℏ m w d d x x 0 0 displaystyle left langle x mid a mid 0 right rangle 0 qquad Rightarrow left x frac hbar m omega frac d dx right left langle x mid 0 right rangle 0 qquad Rightarrow x 0 m w p ℏ 1 4 exp m w 2 ℏ x 2 ps 0 displaystyle left langle x mid 0 right rangle left frac m omega pi hbar right frac 1 4 exp left frac m omega 2 hbar x 2 right psi 0 hence x a 0 ps 1 x displaystyle langle x mid a dagger mid 0 rangle psi 1 x so that ps 1 x t x e 3 i w t 2 a 0 displaystyle psi 1 x t langle x mid e 3i omega t 2 a dagger mid 0 rangle and so on Natural length and energy scales Edit The quantum harmonic oscillator possesses natural scales for length and energy which can be used to simplify the problem These can be found by nondimensionalization The result is that if energy is measured in units of ħw and distance in units of ħ mw then the Hamiltonian simplifies toH 1 2 d 2 d x 2 1 2 x 2 displaystyle H frac 1 2 d 2 over dx 2 frac 1 2 x 2 while the energy eigenfunctions and eigenvalues simplify to Hermite functions and integers offset by a half ps n x x n 1 2 n n p 1 4 exp x 2 2 H n x displaystyle psi n x left langle x mid n right rangle 1 over sqrt 2 n n pi 1 4 exp x 2 2 H n x E n n 1 2 displaystyle E n n tfrac 1 2 where Hn x are the Hermite polynomials To avoid confusion these natural units will mostly not be adopted in this article However they frequently come in handy when performing calculations by bypassing clutter For example the fundamental solution propagator of H i t the time dependent Schrodinger operator for this oscillator simply boils down to the Mehler kernel 6 7 x exp i t H y K x y t 1 2 p i sin t exp i 2 sin t x 2 y 2 cos t 2 x y displaystyle langle x mid exp itH mid y rangle equiv K x y t frac 1 sqrt 2 pi i sin t exp left frac i 2 sin t left x 2 y 2 cos t 2xy right right where K x y 0 d x y The most general solution for a given initial configuration ps x 0 then is simply ps x t d y K x y t ps y 0 displaystyle psi x t int dy K x y t psi y 0 See also Path integral formulation Simple harmonic oscillator Coherent states Edit Main article Coherent state Time evolution of the probability distribution and phase shown as color of a coherent state with a 3 The coherent states also known as Glauber states of the harmonic oscillator are special nondispersive wave packets with minimum uncertainty sx sp ℏ 2 whose observables expectation values evolve like a classical system They are eigenvectors of the annihilation operator not the Hamiltonian and form an overcomplete basis which consequentially lacks orthogonality The coherent states are indexed by a C and expressed in the n basis as a n 0 n n a e 1 2 a 2 n 0 a n n n e 1 2 a 2 e a a e a a 0 displaystyle alpha rangle sum n 0 infty n rangle langle n alpha rangle e frac 1 2 alpha 2 sum n 0 infty frac alpha n sqrt n n rangle e frac 1 2 alpha 2 e alpha a dagger e alpha a 0 rangle Because a 0 0 displaystyle a left 0 right rangle 0 and via the Kermack McCrae identity the last form is equivalent to a unitary displacement operator acting on the ground state a e a a a a 0 D a 0 displaystyle alpha rangle e alpha hat a dagger alpha hat a 0 rangle D alpha 0 rangle The position space wave functions areps a x m w p ℏ 1 4 e i ℏ p a x m w 2 ℏ x x a 2 displaystyle psi alpha x left frac m omega pi hbar right frac 1 4 e frac i hbar langle hat p rangle alpha x frac m omega 2 hbar x langle hat x rangle alpha 2 Since coherent states are not energy eigenstates their time evolution is not a simple shift in wavefunction phase The time evolved states are however also coherent states but with phase shifting parameter a instead a t a 0 e i w t displaystyle alpha t alpha 0 e i omega t Highly excited states Edit Wavefunction top and probability density bottom for the n 30 excited state of the quantum harmonic oscillator Vertical dashed lines indicate the classical turning points while the dotted line represents the classical probability density When n is large the eigenstates are localized into the classical allowed region that is the region in which a classical particle with energy En can move The eigenstates are peaked near the turning points the points at the ends of the classically allowed region where the classical particle changes direction This phenomenon can be verified through asymptotics of the Hermite polynomials and also through the WKB approximation The frequency of oscillation at x is proportional to the momentum p x of a classical particle of energy En and position x Furthermore the square of the amplitude determining the probability density is inversely proportional to p x reflecting the length of time the classical particle spends near x The system behavior in a small neighborhood of the turning point does not have a simple classical explanation but can be modeled using an Airy function Using properties of the Airy function one may estimate the probability of finding the particle outside the classically allowed region to be approximately2 n 1 3 3 2 3 G 2 1 3 1 n 1 3 7 46408092658 displaystyle frac 2 n 1 3 3 2 3 Gamma 2 tfrac 1 3 frac 1 n 1 3 cdot 7 46408092658 This is also given asymptotically by the integral 1 2 p 0 e 2 n 1 x 1 2 sinh 2 x d x displaystyle frac 1 2 pi int 0 infty e 2n 1 left x tfrac 1 2 sinh 2x right dx Phase space solutions Edit In the phase space formulation of quantum mechanics eigenstates of the quantum harmonic oscillator in several different representations of the quasiprobability distribution can be written in closed form The most widely used of these is for the Wigner quasiprobability distribution The Wigner quasiprobability distribution for the energy eigenstate n is in the natural units described above citation needed F n x p 1 n p ℏ L n 2 x 2 p 2 e x 2 p 2 displaystyle F n x p frac 1 n pi hbar L n left 2 x 2 p 2 right e x 2 p 2 where Ln are the Laguerre polynomials This example illustrates how the Hermite and Laguerre polynomials are linked through the Wigner map Meanwhile the Husimi Q function of the harmonic oscillator eigenstates have an even simpler form If we work in the natural units described above we haveQ n x p x 2 p 2 n n e x 2 p 2 p displaystyle Q n x p frac x 2 p 2 n n frac e x 2 p 2 pi This claim can be verified using the Segal Bargmann transform Specifically since the raising operator in the Segal Bargmann representation is simply multiplication by z x i p displaystyle z x ip and the ground state is the constant function 1 the normalized harmonic oscillator states in this representation are simply z n n displaystyle z n sqrt n At this point we can appeal to the formula for the Husimi Q function in terms of the Segal Bargmann transform N dimensional isotropic harmonic oscillator EditThe one dimensional harmonic oscillator is readily generalizable to N dimensions where N 1 2 3 In one dimension the position of the particle was specified by a single coordinate x In N dimensions this is replaced by N position coordinates which we label x1 xN Corresponding to each position coordinate is a momentum we label these p1 pN The canonical commutation relations between these operators are x i p j i ℏ d i j x i x j 0 p i p j 0 displaystyle begin aligned x i p j amp i hbar delta i j x i x j amp 0 p i p j amp 0 end aligned The Hamiltonian for this system isH i 1 N p i 2 2 m 1 2 m w 2 x i 2 displaystyle H sum i 1 N left p i 2 over 2m 1 over 2 m omega 2 x i 2 right As the form of this Hamiltonian makes clear the N dimensional harmonic oscillator is exactly analogous to N independent one dimensional harmonic oscillators with the same mass and spring constant In this case the quantities x1 xN would refer to the positions of each of the N particles This is a convenient property of the r2 potential which allows the potential energy to be separated into terms depending on one coordinate each This observation makes the solution straightforward For a particular set of quantum numbers n n 1 n 2 n N displaystyle n equiv n 1 n 2 dots n N the energy eigenfunctions for the N dimensional oscillator are expressed in terms of the 1 dimensional eigenfunctions as x ps n i 1 N x i ps n i displaystyle langle mathbf x psi n rangle prod i 1 N langle x i mid psi n i rangle In the ladder operator method we define N sets of ladder operators a i m w 2 ℏ x i i m w p i a i m w 2 ℏ x i i m w p i displaystyle begin aligned a i amp sqrt m omega over 2 hbar left x i i over m omega p i right a i dagger amp sqrt m omega over 2 hbar left x i i over m omega p i right end aligned By an analogous procedure to the one dimensional case we can then show that each of the ai and a i operators lower and raise the energy by ℏw respectively The Hamiltonian isH ℏ w i 1 N a i a i 1 2 displaystyle H hbar omega sum i 1 N left a i dagger a i frac 1 2 right This Hamiltonian is invariant under the dynamic symmetry group U N the unitary group in N dimensions defined by U a i U j 1 N a j U j i for all U U N displaystyle U a i dagger U dagger sum j 1 N a j dagger U ji quad text for all quad U in U N where U j i displaystyle U ji is an element in the defining matrix representation of U N The energy levels of the system areE ℏ w n 1 n N N 2 displaystyle E hbar omega left n 1 cdots n N N over 2 right n i 0 1 2 the energy level in dimension i displaystyle n i 0 1 2 dots quad text the energy level in dimension i As in the one dimensional case the energy is quantized The ground state energy is N times the one dimensional ground energy as we would expect using the analogy to N independent one dimensional oscillators There is one further difference in the one dimensional case each energy level corresponds to a unique quantum state In N dimensions except for the ground state the energy levels are degenerate meaning there are several states with the same energy The degeneracy can be calculated relatively easily As an example consider the 3 dimensional case Define n n1 n2 n3 All states with the same n will have the same energy For a given n we choose a particular n1 Then n2 n3 n n1 There are n n1 1 possible pairs n2 n3 n2 can take on the values 0 to n n1 and for each n2 the value of n3 is fixed The degree of degeneracy therefore is g n n 1 0 n n n 1 1 n 1 n 2 2 displaystyle g n sum n 1 0 n n n 1 1 frac n 1 n 2 2 Formula for general N and n gn being the dimension of the symmetric irreducible n th power representation of the unitary group U N g n N n 1 n displaystyle g n binom N n 1 n The special case N 3 given above follows directly from this general equation This is however only true for distinguishable particles or one particle in N dimensions as dimensions are distinguishable For the case of N bosons in a one dimension harmonic trap the degeneracy scales as the number of ways to partition an integer n using integers less than or equal to N g n p N n displaystyle g n p N n This arises due to the constraint of putting N quanta into a state ket where k 0 k n k n textstyle sum k 0 infty kn k n and k 0 n k N textstyle sum k 0 infty n k N which are the same constraints as in integer partition Example 3D isotropic harmonic oscillator Edit Schrodinger 3D spherical harmonic orbital solutions in 2D density plots the Mathematica source code that used for generating the plots is at the top The Schrodinger equation for a particle in a spherically symmetric three dimensional harmonic oscillator can be solved explicitly by separation of variables see this article for the present case This procedure is analogous to the separation performed in the hydrogen like atom problem but with a different spherically symmetric potentialV r 1 2 m w 2 r 2 displaystyle V r 1 over 2 mu omega 2 r 2 where m is the mass of the particle Because m will be used below for the magnetic quantum number mass is indicated by m instead of m as earlier in this article The solution reads 8 ps k l m r 8 ϕ N k l r l e n r 2 L k l 1 2 2 n r 2 Y l m 8 ϕ displaystyle psi klm r theta phi N kl r l e nu r 2 L k left l 1 over 2 right 2 nu r 2 Y lm theta phi where N k l 2 n 3 p 2 k 2 l 3 k n l 2 k 2 l 1 displaystyle N kl sqrt sqrt frac 2 nu 3 pi frac 2 k 2l 3 k nu l 2k 2l 1 is a normalization constant n m w 2 ℏ displaystyle nu equiv mu omega over 2 hbar L k l 1 2 2 n r 2 displaystyle L k l 1 over 2 2 nu r 2 are generalized Laguerre polynomials The order k of the polynomial is a non negative integer Y l m 8 ϕ displaystyle Y lm theta phi is a spherical harmonic function ħ is the reduced Planck constant ℏ h 2 p displaystyle hbar equiv frac h 2 pi The energy eigenvalue isE ℏ w 2 k l 3 2 displaystyle E hbar omega left 2k l frac 3 2 right The energy is usually described by the single quantum number n 2 k l displaystyle n equiv 2k l Because k is a non negative integer for every even n we have ℓ 0 2 n 2 n and for every odd n we have ℓ 1 3 n 2 n The magnetic quantum number m is an integer satisfying ℓ m ℓ so for every n and ℓ there are 2ℓ 1 different quantum states labeled by m Thus the degeneracy at level n is l n 2 n 2 l 1 n 1 n 2 2 displaystyle sum l ldots n 2 n 2l 1 n 1 n 2 over 2 where the sum starts from 0 or 1 according to whether n is even or odd This result is in accordance with the dimension formula above and amounts to the dimensionality of a symmetric representation of SU 3 9 the relevant degeneracy group Applications EditHarmonic oscillators lattice phonons Edit See also Canonical quantization We can extend the notion of a harmonic oscillator to a one dimensional lattice of many particles Consider a one dimensional quantum mechanical harmonic chain of N identical atoms This is the simplest quantum mechanical model of a lattice and we will see how phonons arise from it The formalism that we will develop for this model is readily generalizable to two and three dimensions As in the previous section we denote the positions of the masses by x1 x2 as measured from their equilibrium positions i e xi 0 if the particle i is at its equilibrium position In two or more dimensions the xi are vector quantities The Hamiltonian for this system isH i 1 N p i 2 2 m 1 2 m w 2 i j n n x i x j 2 displaystyle mathbf H sum i 1 N p i 2 over 2m 1 over 2 m omega 2 sum ij nn x i x j 2 where m is the assumed uniform mass of each atom and xi and pi are the position and momentum operators for the i th atom and the sum is made over the nearest neighbors nn However it is customary to rewrite the Hamiltonian in terms of the normal modes of the wavevector rather than in terms of the particle coordinates so that one can work in the more convenient Fourier space Superposition of three oscillating dipoles illustrate the time propagation of the common wave function for different n l m We introduce then a set of N normal coordinates Qk defined as the discrete Fourier transforms of the x s and N conjugate momenta P defined as the Fourier transforms of the p s Q k 1 N l e i k a l x l displaystyle Q k 1 over sqrt N sum l e ikal x l P k 1 N l e i k a l p l displaystyle Pi k 1 over sqrt N sum l e ikal p l The quantity kn will turn out to be the wave number of the phonon i e 2p divided by the wavelength It takes on quantized values because the number of atoms is finite This preserves the desired commutation relations in either real space or wave vector space Another illustration of the time propagation of the common wave function for three different atoms emphasizes the effect of the angular momentum on the distribution behavior x l p m i ℏ d l m Q k P k 1 N l m e i k a l e i k a m x l p m i ℏ N m e i a m k k i ℏ d k k Q k Q k P k P k 0 displaystyle begin aligned left x l p m right amp i hbar delta l m left Q k Pi k right amp 1 over N sum l m e ikal e ik am x l p m amp i hbar over N sum m e iam k k i hbar delta k k left Q k Q k right amp left Pi k Pi k right 0 end aligned From the general result l x l x l m 1 N k k Q k Q k l e i a l k k e i a m k k Q k Q k e i a m k l p l 2 k P k P k displaystyle begin aligned sum l x l x l m amp 1 over N sum kk Q k Q k sum l e ial left k k right e iamk sum k Q k Q k e iamk sum l p l 2 amp sum k Pi k Pi k end aligned it is easy to show through elementary trigonometry that the potential energy term is 1 2 m w 2 j x j x j 1 2 1 2 m w 2 k Q k Q k 2 e i k a e i k a 1 2 m k w k 2 Q k Q k displaystyle 1 over 2 m omega 2 sum j x j x j 1 2 1 over 2 m omega 2 sum k Q k Q k 2 e ika e ika 1 over 2 m sum k omega k 2 Q k Q k where w k 2 w 2 1 cos k a displaystyle omega k sqrt 2 omega 2 1 cos ka The Hamiltonian may be written in wave vector space asH 1 2 m k P k P k m 2 w k 2 Q k Q k displaystyle mathbf H 1 over 2m sum k left Pi k Pi k m 2 omega k 2 Q k Q k right Note that the couplings between the position variables have been transformed away if the Q s and P s were hermitian which they are not the transformed Hamiltonian would describe N uncoupled harmonic oscillators The form of the quantization depends on the choice of boundary conditions for simplicity we impose periodic boundary conditions defining the N 1 th atom as equivalent to the first atom Physically this corresponds to joining the chain at its ends The resulting quantization isk k n 2 n p N a for n 0 1 2 N 2 displaystyle k k n 2n pi over Na quad hbox for n 0 pm 1 pm 2 ldots pm N over 2 The upper bound to n comes from the minimum wavelength which is twice the lattice spacing a as discussed above The harmonic oscillator eigenvalues or energy levels for the mode wk areE n 1 2 n ℏ w k for n 0 1 2 3 displaystyle E n left 1 over 2 n right hbar omega k quad hbox for quad n 0 1 2 3 ldots If we ignore the zero point energy then the levels are evenly spaced atℏ w 2 ℏ w 3 ℏ w displaystyle hbar omega 2 hbar omega 3 hbar omega ldots So an exact amount of energy ħw must be supplied to the harmonic oscillator lattice to push it to the next energy level In analogy to the photon case when the electromagnetic field is quantised the quantum of vibrational energy is called a phonon All quantum systems show wave like and particle like properties The particle like properties of the phonon are best understood using the methods of second quantization and operator techniques described elsewhere 10 In the continuum limit a 0 N while Na is held fixed The canonical coordinates Qk devolve to the decoupled momentum modes of a scalar field ϕ k displaystyle phi k whilst the location index i not the displacement dynamical variable becomes the parameter x argument of the scalar field ϕ x t displaystyle phi x t Molecular vibrations Edit Main article Molecular vibration The vibrations of a diatomic molecule are an example of a two body version of the quantum harmonic oscillator In this case the angular frequency is given by w k m displaystyle omega sqrt frac k mu where m m 1 m 2 m 1 m 2 displaystyle mu frac m 1 m 2 m 1 m 2 is the reduced mass and m 1 displaystyle m 1 and m 2 displaystyle m 2 are the masses of the two atoms 11 The Hooke s atom is a simple model of the helium atom using the quantum harmonic oscillator Modelling phonons as discussed above A charge q displaystyle q with mass m displaystyle m in a uniform magnetic field B displaystyle mathbf B is an example of a one dimensional quantum harmonic oscillator Landau quantization See also EditQuantum pendulum Quantum machine Gas in a harmonic trap Creation and annihilation operators Coherent state Morse potential Bertrand s theorem Mehler kernel Molecular vibrationReferences Edit Griffiths David J 2004 Introduction to Quantum Mechanics 2nd ed Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 805326 0 Liboff Richard L 2002 Introductory Quantum Mechanics Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 8053 8714 8 Rashid Muneer A 2006 Transition amplitude for time dependent linear harmonic oscillator with Linear time dependent terms added to the Hamiltonian PDF Microsoft PowerPoint M A Rashid Center for Advanced Mathematics and Physics National Center for Physics Retrieved 19 October 2010 The normalization constant is C m w p ℏ 1 4 displaystyle C left frac m omega pi hbar right frac 1 4 and satisfies the normalization condition ps 0 x ps 0 x d x 1 displaystyle int infty infty psi 0 x psi 0 x dx 1 See Theorem 11 4 in Hall Brian C 2013 Quantum Theory for Mathematicians Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 267 Springer ISBN 978 1461471158 Pauli W 2000 Wave Mechanics Volume 5 of Pauli Lectures on Physics Dover Books on Physics ISBN 978 0486414621 Section 44 Condon E U 1937 Immersion of the Fourier transform in a continuous group of functional transformations Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 23 158 164 online Albert Messiah Quantum Mechanics 1967 North Holland Ch XII 15 p 456 online Fradkin D M Three dimensional isotropic harmonic oscillator and SU3 American Journal of Physics 33 3 1965 207 211 Mahan GD 1981 Many particle physics New York Springer ISBN 978 0306463389 Quantum Harmonic Oscillator Hyperphysics Retrieved 24 September 2009 External links EditQuantum Harmonic Oscillator Rationale for choosing the ladder operators Live 3D intensity plots of quantum harmonic oscillator Driven and damped quantum harmonic oscillator lecture notes of course quantum optics in electric circuits Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quantum harmonic oscillator amp oldid 1135128800, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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