Abstract

Certain superposition states of the 1-D infinite square well have transient zeros at locations other than the nodes of the eigenstates that comprise them. It is shown that if an infinite potential barrier is suddenly raised at some or all of these zeros, the well can be split into multiple adjacent infinite square wells without affecting the wavefunction. This effects a change of the energy eigenbasis of the state to a basis that does not commute with the original, and a subsequent measurement of the energy now reveals a completely different spectrum, which we call the {interference energy spectrum} of the state. This name is appropriate because the same splitting procedure applied at the stationary nodes of any eigenstate does not change the measurable energy of the state. Of particular interest, this procedure can result in measurable energies that are greater than the energy of the highest mode in the original superposition, raising questions about the conservation of energy akin to those that have been raised in the study of superoscillations. An analytic derivation is given for the interference spectrum of a given wavefunction $\Psi(x,t)$ with $N$ known zeros located at points $s_i = (x_i, t_i)$. Numerical simulations were used to verify that a barrier can be rapidly raised at a zero of the wavefunction without significantly affecting it. The interpretation of this result with respect to the conservation of energy and the energy-time uncertainty relation is discussed, and the idea of alternate energy eigenbases is fleshed out. The question of whether or not a preferred discrete energy spectrum is an inherent feature of a particle's quantum state is examined.

Highlights

  • The origin of this idea goes back to the study of superoscillations initiated by Aharonov et al, who first raised the question about extracting a particle from a superposition state with an energy greater than that of its highest mode [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]

  • We propose that all we have done through this two-stage process is to effect a measurement in an energy eigenbasis that does not commute with the original energy eigenbasis of the state

  • We have explored the idea, and verified through simulation, that the energy eigenbasis of a state of the infinite square well can be altered through the addition of sudden potential barriers without a change to the state or its average energy

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Summary

Introduction

The purpose of this letter is to show that it is possible, in principle, to measure alternate energy eigenbases of a given superposition state of the infinite square well and that the highest energy eigenstate in a given superposition may have a different energy in different bases. Entropy 2016, 18, 149 is suddenly raised at the location of a zero, which has the effect of dividing the original infinite square well into two adjacent infinite square wells, while causing virtually no perturbation to the wavefunction (a similar process is discussed in [15], with quite a different purpose, and an analysis of perturbation theory with singular potentials is given in [16]) This division results in a superposition state of the particle being on one side of the barrier or the other and, a superposition of the energy levels of each individual well. In the Appendix, we discuss the numerical simulations of the time-dependent Schrödinger equation that we conducted in order to characterize the effect of rapidly raising a Gaussian barrier

The Simple Case
Raising the Barrier
Proposed Experiment
The Interference Energy Spectrum
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
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