Lesson 308: Transcendental Equations for Energy

Introduction: Equations You Can't Solve Exactly

Matching boundary conditions for the finite well leads to transcendental equations—equations mixing algebraic and trigonometric functions that must be solved graphically or numerically.

The Matching Conditions

Continuity of \(\psi\) and \(\psi'\) at \(x = a\) gives:

Even states: \(k\tan(ka) = \kappa\)

Odd states: \(-k\cot(ka) = \kappa\)

where \(k^2 + \kappa^2 = 2mV_0/\hbar^2\)

Graphical Solution

Define \(z = ka\) and \(z_0 = a\sqrt{2mV_0}/\hbar\). Then:

Plot \(\sqrt{z_0^2 - z^2}\) (circle) and \(z\tan z\) (for even) or \(-z\cot z\) (for odd)

Intersections give allowed energies.

Worked Example

For \(z_0 = \pi\) (moderately deep well):

The Quantum Connection

Transcendental equations appear throughout quantum mechanics. They can't be solved in "closed form" but numerical methods handle them easily. The number of bound states increases with \(z_0\)—deeper or wider wells hold more states. A shallow well (\(z_0 < \pi/2\)) has exactly one bound state.