The goal of this section is to show that the uncertainties
and
, of any pair of hermitian operators
and
, satisfy the uncertainty relation:R3(437)
![]() |
(7) |
In particular, when
and
, we obtain the
Heisenberg
uncertainty relation:
![]() |
(8) |
Proof:
| (9) |
This condition implies that
Exercise 8:
Compute
,
,
and
for the particle in the box in its minimum energy state and verify that
and
satisfy the uncertainty relation given by Eq. (8)?
With the exception of a few concepts (e.g., the Exclusion Principle that is introduced later in these lectures), the previous sections have already introduced most of Quantum Theory. Furthermore, we have shown how to solve the equations introduced by Quantum Theory for the simplest possible problem, which is the particle in the box. There are a few other problems that can also be solved analytically (e.g., the harmonic-oscillator and the rigid-rotor described later in these lectures). However, most of the problems of interest in Chemistry have equations that are too complicated to be solved analytically. This observation has been stated by Paul Dirac as follows: The underlying physical laws necessary for the mathematical theory of a large part of Physics and the whole of Chemistry are thus completed and the difficulty is only that exact application of these laws leads to the equations much too complicated to be soluble. It is, therefore, essential, to introduce approximate methods (e.g., perturbation methods and variational methods).