How do you use spherical Bessel functions of the first and second kind to solve the following ordinary differential equation?

(d^2R(r))/(dr^2) + 2/r (dR(r))/(dr) + [(2mE)/(ℏ^2) - (l(l+1))/(r^2)]R(r) = 0

where R(r) is to be a radial wave function that vanishes at the boundary r = R.

This is the differential equation I solved for when I was working with an infinite spherically symmetric well with a bound electron. By multiplying through by r^2, this is a spherical Bessel differential equation:

r^2(d^2R(r))/(dr^2) + 2r (dR(r))/(dr) + [(2mE)/(ℏ^2)r^2 - l(l+1)]R(r) = 0

with k^2 = (2mE)/(ℏ^2).

Another reference is:
http://farside.ph.utexas.edu/teaching/qmech/Quantum/node81.html

1 Answer
Jan 16, 2018

Using the substitution that k^2 = (2mE)/(ℏ^2), the common way to solve this seems to be to let rho = kr, so that:

  • (rho/k)^2(d^2R(r))/(d(rho//k)^2) = rho^2(d^2R(r))/(drho^2)

  • 2(rho/k) (dR(r))/(d(rho//k)) = 2rho (dR(r))/(drho)

This would then lead to

r^2 (d^2R(r))/(dr^2) + 2r(dR(r))/(dr) + [(2mE)/(ℏ^2)r^2 - l(l+1)]R(r) = 0

becoming:

rho^2(d^2R(rho))/(drho^2) + 2rho (dR(r))/(drho) + [rho^2 - l(l+1)]R(r) = 0

or

(d^2R(rho))/(drho^2) + 2/rho (dR(r))/(drho) + [1 - (l(l+1))/rho^2]R(r) = 0

From the second reference, the solutions to this are some linear combination of spherical Bessel functions of the first and second kind, j_l(rho) and y_l(rho), where l is the angular momentum of the state.

These are given by:

j_l(rho) = rho^l (-1/rho d/(drho))^l ((sin rho)/rho)

y_l(rho) = -rho^l (-1/rho d/(drho))^l ((cos rho)/rho)

However, y_l(rho) is not square-integrable at rho = 0:

graph{(cosx)/x [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

So, we can choose only j_l(rho). In this case, I was asked to only look for s states, so l = 0 and the unnormalized wave function is:

j_0(rho) = rho^0 (-1/rho d/(drho))^0 ((sin rho)/rho)

= (sin rho)/rho

Applying the boundary condition that R(r) = 0 at r = R (the sphere radius),

j_0(kR) = (sin (kR))/(kR) = 0

and this is only true when kR -= rho_(nl) = npi, where n = 1, 2, 3, . . . .

So, rho_(nl) = npi = sqrt((2mE)/ℏ^2)R. This allows us to solve for the energies of the 1s, 2s, 3s, . . . states in terms of the roots of j_0(rho):

color(blue)(E_(n0) = (ℏ^2rho_(nl)^2)/(2mR^2))

This also leads to the unnormalized radial wave function:

R(r) = (sin (npir//R))/(npir//R)

Normalizing this in spherical coordinates, one finds:

1 = N^2 int_(0)^(2pi) 1^2 d phi int_(0)^(pi) sintheta d theta int_(0)^(R) R^"*"(r) R(r) r^2 dr

1 = N^2 int_(0)^(2pi) d phi int_(0)^(pi) sintheta d theta int_(0)^(R) (sin^2 (npir//R))/(npir//R)^2r^2dr

= 4pi N^2 int_(0)^(R) (sin^2 (npir//R))/(n^2pi^2//R^2cancel(r^2))cancel(r^2)dr

= (4piR^2)/(n^2pi^2) cdot N^2 int_(0)^(R) sin^2 (npir//R)dr

Using the identity sin^2u = 1/2(1 - cos2u), one would get:

= (4piR^2)/(2n^2pi^2) cdot N^2 (R - cancel(R/(2npi)sin((2npiR)/R))^(0))

Therefore:

N = sqrt((2n^2pi^2)/(4piR^3))

= 1/sqrt(4pi)sqrt(2/R)(npi)/R

= 1/sqrt(2piR)(npi)/R

As a result, the normalized wave function would be:

color(blue)(R(r)) = 1/sqrt(2piR) cancel((npi)/R) sin(npir//R)/(cancel(npi)r//cancel(R))

= color(blue)(1/sqrt(2piR) sin(npir//R)/r)

And this looks something like this:

graph{sin(x)/x [-0.5, 20, -1, 1.2]}