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In quantum mechanics, we can show that $$ \langle r \rangle^{-1} \neq \langle r^{-1} \rangle $$

I can understand this mathematically as the integrals are different but can anyone explain physically - in the context of quantum mechanics and its interpretation - why this is the case?

JamalS
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SuperCiocia
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5 Answers5

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This is nothing to do with QM per se, it's simply comes from the definition of the expectation value and the fact that the expectation operator doesn't commute with an arbitary function of a random variable.

To justify, consider that the expectation value is the average value we would expect to see after many trials. The average value also has the property of not commuting with a function of a random variable, for example:

Lets say we perform an experiment 100 times and 50 times we get the result '1', 25 times we get the result '5' and 25 times we get the result '10'. The average value is 4.75 (whose reciprocal is ~0.235).

Now let's say we perform an experiment 100 times and 50 times we get the result '1', 25 times we get the result '0.2' and 25 times we get the result '0.1'. The average value is 0.575.

John Davis
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It seems worth mentioning that the inequality

$$\langle r\rangle ~\langle\frac{1}{r}\rangle ~>~1$$

follows directly from the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality

$$|| \sqrt{r}\psi ||~ || \frac{1}{\sqrt{r}}\psi ||~>~ || \psi ||^2~=~1$$

when the two functions $\sqrt{r}\psi $ and $\frac{1}{\sqrt{r}}\psi$ are not proportional. Here we have used the fact that an expectation value

$$\langle f\rangle~=~\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\! d^3r~f|\psi|^2=||\sqrt{f} \psi ||^2$$

of a non-negative function $f$ is related to the 2-norm $$ || \psi ||~:=~\sqrt{\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}\! d^3r~|\psi|^2} . $$

Qmechanic
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