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Topic: vector space and functions  (Read 2757 times)

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Offline xir

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vector space and functions
« on: February 18, 2010, 10:23:34 AM »
Hi everyone, my chemical mind is having a hard time with a concept of quantum formalism


Could anyone help me understand the relationship between functions and vectors.

i.e if you have a function describing a p orbital and you evaluate it using the vector maths inherent to quantum mechanics how do they link.


Specifically I'm trying to link a function (which i visualise as a line) used to represent the shape of an orbital with vectors (which I visualise as a series of specific numbers). The two concepts don't appear to be comparable as far as I can comprehend.




Any and all help is welcome


Cheers

Offline renge ishyo

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Re: vector space and functions
« Reply #1 on: February 20, 2010, 09:54:11 PM »
You probably don't need vectors to describe behavior along a one-dimensional line (scalars will do just fine for that), but if you are going to handle multi-dimensional objects then you are going to need to use vector math to track the given values along each separate axis. For example, for a p-orbital, you have to specify values along each of three spatial dimensions to describe its spatial relationships accurately (since a p-orbital manifests itself as a three dimensional object when visualized).

There are basic quantum mechanical problems used to introduce the topic that avoid vector math, such as the one dimensional particle in a box problem, but these problems lack reality. To get a more complete description of a p-orbital the mathematics are necessarily more complicated.

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