What is the meaning of En^+ or En^-

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I see in a lot of places things like

En+

where E stands for the energy, but I don't get what that upperscript + could be. I see both + and - in the upperscript.

Thanks
 
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Without the proper context... Maybe they are energies of propagating waves in positive and negative direction (different waveguided modes)?
 
Bob_for_short said:
Without the proper context... Maybe they are energies of propagating waves in positive and negative direction (different waveguided modes)?

The exercise is the following(note that I am not asking for a solution to the exercise, I just want to know what the + stands for!):

"An operator U is said to be unitary if U^+ U = U^- U = 1. Prove that if H is hermitian, then exp(iH) is unitary"

(Can't find at the moment something involving the En^+..that's because I saw it as a resolution to an exercise, not in the problem itself.
 
The + (usually dagger) in that context is the Hermitian conjugate, which, for a matrix, is the complex conjugate of the transpose of a matrix. A matrix is Hermitian if H = H^\dagger and unitary if U^{-1} = U^\dagger.
 
kanato said:
The + (usually dagger) in that context is the Hermitian conjugate, which, for a matrix, is the complex conjugate of the transpose of a matrix. A matrix is Hermitian if H = H^\dagger and unitary if U^{-1} = U^\dagger.

I had thought of that, but I can swear it is not a dagger, it is a +!. Although looking in the resolution of the exercise I'd say that in that case it is indeed a dagger. I'll give you another one:

"Calculate the probability that an energy measurement yields the ground state energy; the energy of the first excited state"

The resolution then starts with:

Minimum energy -> n = 1

P(n=1) = P1 = |A1|
P1+=|A1+|2, P1-=|A1-|2

\Psi(x,t) = \sumAn+Un+(x)Exp(-i/h * En+t) + \sumAn-Un-(x)Exp(-i/h * En-t)

Un+=\sqrt{2/a} Cos(2n-1)PI x / a), Un-=\sqrt{2/a} Cos(2n)PI x / a)
 
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