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Hi
I have just been looking at the derivation of the uncertainty relationship for non-commutating operators. I have come across the following quote in Quantum Mechanics by Mandl regarding the time-energy relationship. "Time is not an operator ; it is an ordinary parameter which commutes with all observables of a system ; in particular with the energy operator ; ie. the Hamiltonian of the system. Energy , momentum etc. are properties ie. observables of a system ; time is not. We can measure the position or momentum of a particle ; we do not measure the time of a particle. Rather , time is a parameter which identifies the instant at which we specify a property of a system. I have a few questions regarding this quote
1 - If we use the energy operator as iħ(∂/∂t) then t does not commute with that operator. So what is happening there ?
2 - If we set t=0 then surely we can measure t at a later time ? Similar to setting x=0 and then measuring x
3 - If we have a wavefunction Ψ ( x , t ) then are not both x and t independent variables which means they can both be measured ?
4 - This is not from the quote but is related ; the time-energy relationship is given as δEδt and the inequality is given slightly different forms in different book and i have yet to find a rigorous derivation as with the non-commutating observables. It is mostly derived by "hand-wavy" arguements. Does it have a rigorous derivation and an exact form ?
Thanks
I have just been looking at the derivation of the uncertainty relationship for non-commutating operators. I have come across the following quote in Quantum Mechanics by Mandl regarding the time-energy relationship. "Time is not an operator ; it is an ordinary parameter which commutes with all observables of a system ; in particular with the energy operator ; ie. the Hamiltonian of the system. Energy , momentum etc. are properties ie. observables of a system ; time is not. We can measure the position or momentum of a particle ; we do not measure the time of a particle. Rather , time is a parameter which identifies the instant at which we specify a property of a system. I have a few questions regarding this quote
1 - If we use the energy operator as iħ(∂/∂t) then t does not commute with that operator. So what is happening there ?
2 - If we set t=0 then surely we can measure t at a later time ? Similar to setting x=0 and then measuring x
3 - If we have a wavefunction Ψ ( x , t ) then are not both x and t independent variables which means they can both be measured ?
4 - This is not from the quote but is related ; the time-energy relationship is given as δEδt and the inequality is given slightly different forms in different book and i have yet to find a rigorous derivation as with the non-commutating observables. It is mostly derived by "hand-wavy" arguements. Does it have a rigorous derivation and an exact form ?
Thanks