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Latest revision as of 11:32, 22 May 2026

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Wavefunction quantum wavefunction is a mathematical function that fully describes the quantum state of a physical system, encoding the probability amplitude for all measurable properties of the system. The time evolution of the wavefunction is governed by the Schrödinger equation: This equation determines how quantum states evolve over time. The wavefunction must be normalized so that the total probability equals one: The wavefunction itself is generally complex-valued and not directly observable. The fundamental physical meaning is given by the Born rule: The time evolution of the wavefunction is governed by the Schrödinger equation: This equation determines how quantum states evolve over time. The wavefunction must be normalized so that the total probability equals one:

Quantum Wavefunction.

Mathematical definition

The wavefunction is typically denoted by ψ(x,t), where:

  • x represents position
  • t represents time

The fundamental physical meaning is given by the Born rule:

|ψ(x,t)|2=ρ(x,t)

where ρ(x,t) is the probability density of finding the particle at position x at time t.[1]

Schrödinger equation

The time evolution of the wavefunction is governed by the Schrödinger equation:

iψt=H^ψ

where:

  • is the reduced Planck constant
  • H^ is the Hamiltonian operator

This equation determines how quantum states evolve over time.[2]

Normalization

The wavefunction must be normalized so that the total probability equals one:

|ψ(x,t)|2dx=1

This ensures a consistent probabilistic interpretation.[3]

Physical interpretation

The wavefunction itself is generally complex-valued and not directly observable. Instead:

  • |ψ|2 gives measurable probabilities
  • The phase of ψ influences interference effects
  • Superposition of wavefunctions leads to quantum interference

This interpretation distinguishes quantum mechanics from classical physics.[4]

Wavefunctions and boundary conditions

Wavefunctions must satisfy physical constraints:

  • Continuity of ψ
  • Continuity of its derivative (except at singular potentials)
  • Boundary conditions determined by the system (e.g., particle in a box)

These conditions lead to quantization of allowed energy levels.[5]

Applications

Wavefunctions are central to all areas of quantum physics:

  • Atomic and molecular structure
  • Quantum tunneling
  • Semiconductor physics
  • Quantum computing

They provide the fundamental link between mathematical formalism and experimental observations.[6]

See also

Table of contents (217 articles)

Index

Full contents

References

Author: Harold Foppele


Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Wavefunction