Can These Equations Be Represented in Bloch Form?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around whether the given equations, sin(Πx/a)e6Πix/Na and e2Πi/a(7/N+4)x, can be expressed in Bloch form, defined as Ψ(x) = u(x)eikx. Participants clarify that to represent these functions in Bloch form, one must identify the wave vector k and the periodic part u(x). There is uncertainty about the imaginary components and the dimensionality of the equations. The conversation emphasizes the need to rewrite the functions appropriately to fit the Bloch wave format. Ultimately, the focus is on transforming the original equations into the specified Bloch form.
jbowers9
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Homework Statement


Given: sin(Πx/a)e6Πix/Na
and e2Πi/a(7/N+4)x
can these equations be represented in Bloch form?[/B]

Homework Equations


Given that Bloch form can be represented as:
Ψ(x) = u(x) eikx[/B]

The Attempt at a Solution


sin(Πx/a)eikx w/n = 3
and eikxe8Πix/a w/n = 7
[/B]
 
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Hi,

Wy do you come with equations instead of Bloch forms ?
 
The course I'm taking identifies "Bloch form" as Ψ(x) = u(x) eikx.
I'm not sure I understand your question. My first answer I believe fills the bill, but the second one has u(x) in imaginary form and I'm not sure about it.
 
k = 2Πn/Na
 
A Bloch wave is of the form you give, so if you want to write the funtions given in the problem statement in such manner, you are supposed to identify ##\vec k## and ##u(\vec r)##. For the first function, ##\psi(\vec r) = \sin({\pi x\over a})\; e^{i {6\pi \over Na} x} ##, what would be ##\vec k## ? and ##u(\vec r)## ?
 
##\vec k## is a vector, but I think you almost got it !
 
jbowers9 said:
I'm not sure I understand your question
Well, sin(Πx/a)eikx w/n = 3 looks like an equation to me, not a ##\psi(\vec r)##
 
It's in one dimension. Why r vector? And what is k vector?
 
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