Lesson 281: Ehrenfest's Theorem: Quantum to Classical Bridge

Introduction: Classical Mechanics Hiding in Quantum

Ehrenfest's theorem shows that quantum expectation values obey equations that look like classical mechanics. It's the bridge between the quantum and classical worlds.

The Time Evolution of Expectation Values

For any operator \(\hat{A}\):

\[\frac{d\langle\hat{A}\rangle}{dt} = \frac{1}{i\hbar}\langle[\hat{A}, \hat{H}]\rangle + \left\langle\frac{\partial\hat{A}}{\partial t}\right\rangle\]

Ehrenfest's Results

Applying this to position and momentum:

\[\frac{d\langle x\rangle}{dt} = \frac{\langle p\rangle}{m}\] \[\frac{d\langle p\rangle}{dt} = -\left\langle\frac{\partial V}{\partial x}\right\rangle\]

These look exactly like Newton's laws for the averages!

Worked Examples

Example 1: Free Particle

With \(V = 0\): \(\frac{d\langle p\rangle}{dt} = 0\), so \(\langle p\rangle\) is constant.

\(\langle x(t)\rangle = \langle x(0)\rangle + \frac{\langle p\rangle}{m}t\) — uniform motion!

Example 2: Harmonic Oscillator

With \(V = \frac{1}{2}m\omega^2 x^2\):

\[\frac{d\langle p\rangle}{dt} = -m\omega^2\langle x\rangle\]

Combined with the first equation, \(\langle x\rangle\) oscillates sinusoidally.

The Quantum Connection

Ehrenfest's theorem explains why classical mechanics works for macroscopic objects. When wavepackets are narrow, \(\langle V'(x)\rangle \approx V'(\langle x\rangle)\), and the equations become exactly classical. Quantum mechanics contains classical mechanics as a limiting case.