SCHRODINGER WAVE EQUATION DERIVATION:
Schrödinger's equation follows very naturally earlier developments:
-
-
, where
is the wavelength of the wave and p the momentum of the particle.
De Broglie showed that this was consistent with Einstein's formula and
special relativity so that
-
still holds, but now this is hypothesized to hold for all particles, not just photons anymore.
-
and
-
where we have expressed p and k as
vectors.
-
and to realize that since
-
then
-
and similarly since:
-
then
-
and hence:
-
so that, again for a plane wave, he got:
-
-
(simply the sum of the kinetic energy and potential energy; the plane wave model assumed V = 0)
he got his famed equation for a single particle in the 3-dimensional case in the presence of a potential:
-
The Schrödinger equation defines the behaviour of

, but does not interpret what
is. Schrödinger tried unsuccessfully to interpret it as a charge density. In 1926
Max Born, just a few days after Schrödinger's fourth and final paper was published, successfully interpreted

as a
probability amplitude, although Schrödinger was never reconciled to this
statistical or probabilistic approach.
In the
mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics, a physical system is associated with a
complex Hilbert space such that each instantaneous state of the system is described by a ray in that space. The nonzero elements of a Hilbert space are by definition normalizable and it is convenient, although not necessary, to represent a state by an element of the ray which is normalized to unity. This vector is often somewhat loosely referred to as
wave function, although in a more rigorous formulation of quantum mechanics a wave function is a special case of a state vector. (In fact, a wave function is a state in the position representation, see below). A state vector encodes the probabilities for the outcomes of all possible measurements applied to the system. It contains all information of the system that is knowable in a quantum mechanical sense. As the state of a system generally changes over time, the state vector is a function of time. The Schrödinger equation provides a quantitative description of the rate of change of the state vector.
In
Dirac's bra-ket notation at time
t the state is given by the
ket 
. The time-dependent Schrödinger equation, giving the time evolution of the ket, is:
where
i is the
imaginary unit,
t is time,
d / dt is the
derivative with respect to
t,

is the
reduced Planck's constant (Planck's constant divided by

),

is the time dependent state vector, and
H(t) is the
Hamiltonian (a
self-adjoint operator acting on the
state space). If one assumes a certain representation for

, for instance position or momentum representation, the state vector is assumed to depend on more variables than time alone, and the time derivative must be replaced by the partial derivative

The Hamiltonian describes the total
energy of the system. As with the
force occurring in Newton's second law, its form is not provided by the Schrödinger equation, but must be independently determined from the physical properties of the system.