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Category Archives: Blog
An Unintuitive Result on 1D Scattering
The purpose of this post is to prove a simple but somewhat unintuitive result in nonrelativistic \(1\)D scattering of quantum particles. Specifically, consider a potential energy landscape \(V(x)\) that decays asymptotically to \(\lim_{|x|\to\infty}V(x)=0\) at \(|x|\to\infty\) which may be asymmetric so … Continue reading
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Intuition For the Density Operator
Given a mixed ensemble \(\{(|\psi_n\rangle, p_n)\}\) of pure quantum states \(|\psi_n\rangle\in\mathcal H\) with statistical probabilities \(p_n\in[0,1]\), the Hermitian, positive semi-definite, unit trace density operator \(\rho_{\{(|\psi_n\rangle, p_n)\}}:\mathcal H\to\mathcal H\) of that mixed ensemble is defined by the formula: \[\rho_{\{(|\psi_n\rangle, p_n)\}}:=\sum_np_n|\psi_n\rangle\langle\psi_n|\] In … Continue reading
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The Stern-Gerlach Experiment
The purpose of this post is to flesh out some of the subtleties of the Stern-Gerlach experiment which historically was a demonstration of angular momentum quantization in quantum mechanics. Problem #\(1\): What should the charge \(Q\) of the particles used … Continue reading
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Discrete Symmetries in Quantum Mechanics
Parity Classically, if one takes a trajectory \(\textbf x(t)\) and reflects it about the origin to obtain the reflected trajectory \(\textbf x'(t)=-\textbf x(t)\), then the momentum of the particle \(\textbf p=m\dot{\textbf x}\) is correspondingly reflected \(\textbf p’=m\dot{\textbf x’}=-m\dot{\textbf x}=-\textbf p\). … Continue reading
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A Quick Proof of Schur’s Lemma (“Fundamental Theorem of Representation Theory”)
In number theory, the fundamental theorem of arithmetic clarifies why prime numbers are so important, namely that they form a “multiplicative basis” with which one can uniquely factorize any positive integer \(n\in \textbf Z^+\). In the same spirit, Schur’s lemma … Continue reading
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What is Pontryagin Duality?
Given any Hausdorff, locally compact, abelian topological group \(G\), define a character \(\chi:G\to U(1)\) on \(G\) to be any continuous group homomorphism from \(G\) to \(U(1)\), that is for all \(g_1,g_2\in G\), \(\chi(g_1\cdot g_2)=\chi(g_1)\chi(g_2)\) (of course the notation here for … Continue reading
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Gross, Fine & Hyperfine Structures of Hydrogenic Atoms
Gross Structure of Hydrogenic Atoms In non-relativistic quantum mechanics, the gross structure Hamiltonian \(H_{\text{gross}}\) for a hydrogenic atom \(N^{Z+}\cup e^-\) consisting of a single electron \(e^-\) in a bound state with an atomic nucleus \(N^{Z+}\) of nuclear charge \(Z\in\textbf Z^+\) … Continue reading
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A Curious Nonlinear Dynamical System
Consider the following \(2\)D dynamical system expressed in plane polar coordinates \((\rho,\phi)\): \[\dot{\rho}=\alpha\rho+\rho^3-\rho^5\] \[\dot{\phi}=\omega+\beta\rho^2\] with \(3\) real parameters \(\alpha,\omega,\beta\in\textbf R\). Since \(\rho\) is decoupled from \(\phi\) (but not vice versa) one can analyze \(\rho\) on its own. A simple calculation … Continue reading
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Localization of Fast Radio Bursts with a Log-Periodic Dipole Array
As a \(2024\) summer intern in the University of Toronto’s Summer Undergraduate Research Program, I will be working with Dr. Nina Gusinskaia and Dr. Rik van Lieshout (both postdoctoral researchers working jointly at the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics (CITA) … Continue reading
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Convolution vs. Cross-Correlation
Given two real-valued analog signals \(f(t), g(t)\), there are two very similar but distinct bilinear signal processing operations that are commonly performed in the field of analog signal processing on \(f\) and \(g\) to obtain a new function. The first … Continue reading
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