Course description
Angular momentum and symmetries in quantum mechanics from group theory viewpoint; time-independent and time-dependent perturbation theory; path integral formulation; scattering theory; identical particles; applications.
Possible principal texts:
- Cohen-Tannoudji, Diu and Laloe, Quantum Mechanics- 2 vols. (Wiley-Interscience)
- Shankar, Principles of Quantum Mechanics(Springer)
- Greiner, Müller, Quantum Mechanics: Symmetries (Springer)
Other texts to consider:
- Sakurai, Modern Quantum Mechanics(Addison-Wesley)
- Merzbacher, Quantum Mechanics (Wiley, 3rd edition)
Prerequisites
The prerequisite is at least one semester of a Quantum Mechanics course at the level of R. Shankar's textbook.
In Duke Physics, there is an undergraduate "Quantum Mechanics I" course (PHY 211), with the synopsis:
Experimental foundation of quantum mechanics; wave-particle duality; the single-particle Schrodinger equation and the physical meaning of the wave function; methods for studying the single-particle Schrodinger equation; analytical solutions of the harmonic oscillator and hydrogen atom and experimental tests of these solutions; angular momentum and spin systems; and finally the many-particle Schrodinger equation and consequences of identical particles existing in nature.
Syllabus
- Time-independent perturbation theory.
- The “real” hydrogen atom.
- Identical particles, exchange interaction, helium atom.
- Many-body states, Slater determinant, Hartree-Fock approximation.
- Variational method: hydrogen molecule, chemical binding.
- Periodic potential, Bloch waves, band structure.
- Time-dependent perturbation theory, Fermi’s Golden Rule.
- Application to two-state system (e.g., spin rotations, NMR).
- Elementary two-state systems: neutral kaons or neutrino oscillations.
- Continuous symmetries, Noether’s theorem, rotation group SO(3).
- Addition of angular momenta, Clebsch-Gordon coefficients.
- Tensor operators, Wigner-Eckart theorem.
- SU(2) and its relationship to SO(3), isospin (weak & strong).
- Path integral formulation of QM: Principles, free particle, semiclassical limit, particle on a circle, Berry’s phase.
- WKB approximation.
- Scattering theory: cross section, S-matrix, T-matrix, unitarity, Born approximation, partial waves, optical theorem.
Choice of special topics: quantum information theory, renormalization group, etc.