8

For a free particle of mass $m$, with Hamiltonian

$$\hat{H} = \frac {\hat{P}^2} {2m},$$

where $$\hat{P} = -i \hbar \frac{\partial} {\partial x}.$$

The commutative relation is given by

$$[\hat{X}, \hat{H}] = \frac {i\hbar} {m} \hat{P}\tag{1}$$

In the common eigenstate of $\hat{H}$ and $\hat{P}$, $|e, p\rangle$, can we do the following?

$$\langle e, p| [\hat{X}, \,\hat{H}] |e, p\rangle = \langle e, p|\hat{X} (\hat{H}|e, p\rangle) - (\langle e, p|\hat{H}) \hat{X}|e, p\rangle \\ = \langle e, p|\hat{X} (e|e, p\rangle) - (\langle e, p|e) \hat{X}|e, p\rangle \\ = e( \langle e, p|\hat{X}|e, p\rangle - \langle e, p|\hat{X}|e, p\rangle ) \\ = 0 $$

Since the $\hat{H}$ is Hermitian, the above derivation doesn't seem to show any flaw. Given the commutative relation, Eq (1), we know the result is wrong. What's wrong with the above derivation?

[EDIT]

Following the comment by Luboš Motl, I have worked out the solution and would like to share it here. The link provided by Qmechanic had the solution closely related to this question.

$$ \langle e', p'| [\hat{X}, \,\hat{H}] |e, p\rangle \\ = \langle e', p'|\hat{X} (\hat{H}|e, p\rangle) - (\langle e', p'|\hat{H}) \hat{X}|e, p\rangle \\ = (e - e') \langle e', p'|\hat{X}|e, p\rangle $$

Note that:

$$ e - e' = \frac{p^2}{2m} - \frac{p'^2}{2m} = \frac{(p+p')(p-p')}{2m} $$

$$ \langle e', p'|\hat{X}|e, p\rangle = -i\hbar \delta'(p - p') $$

where $\delta'(\cdot)$ is the derivative of the Dirac function, with respect to $p$.

Then we get

$$ (e - e') \langle e', p'|\hat{X}|e, p\rangle \\ = -i\hbar \frac{(p+p')}{2m} \cdot (p - p')\delta'(p - p') \\ = - \frac{i\hbar (p+p')}{2m} \cdot (-\delta(p - p')) \\ = \frac{i\hbar (p+p')}{2m} \delta(p - p') $$

As we take the limit $p \rightarrow p'$:

$$ lim_{p \rightarrow p'} \frac{i\hbar(p+p')}{2m} \delta(p - p') \\ \rightarrow \frac{i\hbar}{m} p \delta(p - p') $$

Qmechanic
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user36125
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2 Answers2

7

As is customary in such question, I will point to this paper, which excellently discusses the problems the Dirac formalism has.

Now, in your concrete example, the problem lies in the energy/momentum states $| p_0 \rangle$ themselves, which are non-normalizable, since the wave function associated is the Fourier transform of $\delta(p-p_0)$, which means that $\psi_{|p_0\rangle}(x) = \mathrm{e}^{-\frac{ixp_0}{\hbar}}$. If you now try to calculate the inner product, you find: $$\langle p_0 | p_0 \rangle = \int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\psi_{|p_0\rangle}(x)\bar{\psi}_{|p_0\rangle}(x) \mathrm{d}x = \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} \mathrm{e}^{-\frac{ixp_0}{\hbar}} \mathrm{e}^{\frac{ixp_0}{\hbar}}\mathrm{d}x = \int_{-\infty}^\infty 1 \mathrm{d}x $$

Thus, momentum eigenstates are non-normalizable, and writing things like $\langle p_0 |X |p_0\rangle - \langle p_0 |X |p_0\rangle$ is really non-sensical, because you are subtracting two infinities. In particular, it is not $0$.

ACuriousMind
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1

A tricky question, really. Apart from the fact that your $\lvert e,p\rangle$ vector does not belong to $L^2$ (hence you cannot take scalar products of it), I don't see any other flaw. That, in my opinion, means you have a nice argument to prove the following mathematical statement:

Let $\mathscr{H}$ be a separable Hilbert space, $0\neq z\in\mathbb{C}$. There are no self-adjoint operators $A$ and $B$ with non-empty discrete spectrum different from zero such that $[A,B]=z$.

Closely related to that fact, the following result of Von Neumann: up to multiplicity and unitary equivalence, the relations $[A,B]=i$ (in their exponentiated form) are uniquely realized by $A=x$ (multiplication operator) and $B=-i\nabla_x$, that indeed have no discrete spectrum.

EDITED (in reply to the comment, also the statement above has been edited slightly, to be more precise):

A number $\lambda\in \mathbb{R}$ is in the discrete spectrum of $A$ ( called $\sigma_{disc}(A)$ ) if there exists at least one $\psi_{\lambda}\in \mathscr{H}$ ( the Hilbert space, usually $L^2(\mathbb{R}^d)$ ) such that $$A\psi_\lambda=\lambda\psi_\lambda\; .$$ Suppose there exist $A$ and $B$ self-adjoint such that $0\neq \lambda \in \sigma_{disc}(B)$ and $[A,B]=z$ (on a suitable dense domain). Now it follows that (on another suitable domain) $$[A,B^2]=2zB\; .$$ Let $\psi_\lambda\in \mathscr{H}$ be one of the eigenfunctions of $B$ associated to $\lambda$. On one hand, $$2z\langle\psi_\lambda, B\, \psi_\lambda\rangle_{\mathscr{H}}=2z\lambda \lVert \psi_\lambda \rVert^2_{\mathscr{H}}\; ;$$ on the other $$\langle\psi_\lambda, AB^2\, \psi_\lambda\rangle_{\mathscr{H}}- \langle\psi_\lambda, B^2A\, \psi_\lambda\rangle_{\mathscr{H}}=0$$ as you suggested. That is absurd, since $z$, $\lambda$ and $\lVert \psi_\lambda \rVert^2_{\mathscr{H}}$ are different from zero.

It follows that you cannot have two self-adjoint operators such that $[A,B]=z$ and $\sigma_{disc}(B)\neq \{0\},\emptyset$. The reasoning above does not work if there is no eigenfunction $\psi_\lambda\in \mathscr{H}$ (because with formal eigenfunctions you are not allowed to take scalar products or norms: they are not finite).

yuggib
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