Lesson 287: Degeneracy: Multiple States, Same Energy

Introduction: When Eigenvalues Repeat

Degeneracy occurs when multiple linearly independent states share the same eigenvalue. It's usually a sign of symmetry—the more symmetric the system, the more degeneracy.

Definition

An eigenvalue is \(g\)-fold degenerate if there are \(g\) linearly independent eigenvectors with that eigenvalue. The degenerate eigenvectors span a degenerate subspace.

Sources of Degeneracy

Worked Examples

Example 1: 2D Harmonic Oscillator

With \(E_{n_x,n_y} = \hbar\omega(n_x + n_y + 1)\), the first excited level has \(n_x + n_y = 1\):

States: \(|1,0\rangle\) and \(|0,1\rangle\) — 2-fold degenerate

Example 2: Hydrogen Atom

Energy depends only on \(n\): \(E_n = -13.6/n^2\) eV

For each \(n\), there are \(n^2\) states (including spin: \(2n^2\))

\(n = 2\): degeneracy = 4 (states \(2s, 2p_x, 2p_y, 2p_z\))

Example 3: Lifting Degeneracy

Adding a perturbation that breaks symmetry "splits" degenerate levels. A magnetic field splits hydrogen's \(m\)-degeneracy (Zeeman effect).

The Quantum Connection

Degeneracy is physically important: within a degenerate subspace, any linear combination is also an eigenstate. Perturbations select specific linear combinations, and atomic spectra show split lines when degeneracy is lifted. Understanding degeneracy is essential for spectroscopy and quantum chemistry.