
Erwin Schrödinger, 1887-1961.
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Schrödinger’s equation — what is it?
by Marianne Freiberger | Submitted on August 2, 2012
Here is a typical textbook question. Your car has run out of petrol. With how much force do you need to push it to accelerate it to a given speed?
The answer comes from Newton’s second law of motion:
![]()
where
is acceleration,
is force and
is mass. This wonderfully straightforward, yet subtle law allows you to describe motion of all kinds and so it can, in theory at least, answer pretty much any question a physicist might want to ask about the world.
Or can it? When people first started considering the world at the smallest scales, for example electrons orbiting the nucleus of an atom, they realised that things get very weird indeed and that Newton’s laws no longer apply. To describe this tiny world you need quantum mechanics, a theory developed at the beginning of the twentieth century. The core equation of this theory, the analogue of Newton’s second law, is called Schrödinger’s equation.
Waves and particles
“In classical mechanics we describe a state of a physical system using position and momentum,” explains Nazim Bouatta, a theoretical physicist at the University of Cambridge. For example, if you’ve got a table full of moving billiard balls and you know the position and the momentum (that’s the mass times the velocity) of each ball at some time
, then you know all there is to know about the system at that time
: where everything is, where everything is going and how fast. “The kind of question we then ask is: if we know the initial conditions of a system, that is, we know the system at time
what is the dynamical evolution of this system? And we use Newton’s second law for that. In quantum mechanics we ask the same question, but the answer is tricky because position and momentum are no longer the right variables to describe [the system].”
The problem is that the objects quantum mechanics tries to describe don’t always behave like tiny little billiard balls. Sometimes it is better to think of them as waves. “Take the example of light. Newton, apart from his work on gravity, was also interested in optics,” says Bouatta. “According to Newton, light was described by particles. But then, after the work of many scientists, including the theoretical understanding provided by James Clerk Maxwell, we discovered that light was described by waves.”
But in 1905 Einstein realised that the wave picture wasn’t entirely correct either. To explain the photoelectric effect(see the Plus article Light’s identity crisis) you need to think of a beam of light as a stream of particles, which Einstein dubbed photons. The number of photons is proportional to the intensity of the light, and the energy E of each photon is proportional to its frequency f:
Here,
is Planck’s constant, an incredibly small number named after the physicist Max Planck who had already guessed this formula in 1900 in his work on black body radiation. “So we were facing the situation that sometimes the correct way of describing light was as waves and sometimes it was as particles,” says Bouatta.

The double slit experiment: The top picture shows the interference pattern created by waves passing though the slits, the middle picture shows what you’d expect to see when particles are fired through the slits, and the bottom picture shows what actually happens when you fire particles such as electrons through the slits: you get the interference pattern you expect from waves, but the electrons are registered as arriving as particles.
Einstein’s result linked in with the age-old endeavour, started in the 17th century by Christiaan Huygens and explored again in the 19th century by William Hamilton: to unify the physics of optics (which was all about waves) and mechanics (which was all about particles). Inspired by the schizophrenic behaviour of light the young French physicistLouis de Broglie took a dramatic step in this journey: he postulated that not only light, but also matter suffered from the so-called wave-particle duality. The tiny building blocks of matter, such as electrons, also behave like particles in some situations and like waves in others.
De Broglie’s idea, which he announced in the 1920s, wasn’t based on experimental evidence, rather it sprung from theoretical considerations inspired by Einstein’s theory of relativity. But experimental evidence was soon to follow. In the late 1920s experiments involving particles scattering off a crystal confirmed the wave-like nature of electrons (see the Plus article Quantum uncertainty).
One of the most famous demonstrations of wave-particle duality is the double slit experiment. In it electrons (or other particles like photons or neutrons) are fired one at a time all over a screen containing two slits. Behind the screen there’s a second one which can detect where the electrons that made it through the slits end up. If the electrons behaved like particles, then you would expect them to pile up around two straight lines behind the two slits. But what you actually see on the detector screen is aninterference pattern: the pattern you would get if the electrons were waves, each wave passing through both slits at once and then interfering with itself as it spreads out again on the other side. Yet on the detector screen, the electrons are registered as arriving just as you would expect: as particles. It’s a very weird result indeed but one that has been replicated many times — we simply have to accept that this is the way the world works.
Schrödinger’s equation
The radical new picture proposed by de Broglie required new physics. What does a wave associated to a particle look like mathematically? Einstein had already related the energy
of a photon to the frequency
of light, which in turn is related to the wavelength
by the formula
Here
is the speed of light. Using results from relativity theory it is also possible to relate the energy of a photon to its momentum. Putting all this together gives the relationship
between the photon’s wavelength
and momentum
(
again is Planck’s constant).
(See Light’s identity crisis for details.)
Following on from this, de Broglie postulated that the same relationship between wavelength and momentum should hold for any particle.
At this point it’s best to suspend your intuition about what it really means to say that a particle behaves like a wave (we’ll have a look at that in the third article) and just follow through with the mathematics.
In classical mechanics the evolution over time of a wave, for example a sound wave or a water wave, is described by awave equation: a differential equation whose solution is awave function, which gives you the shape of the wave at any time
(subject to suitable boundary conditions).
For example, suppose you have waves travelling through a string that is stretched out along the
-axis and vibrates in the
-plane. In order to describe the wave completely, you need to find the displacement
of the string in the
-direction at every point
and every time
. Using Newton’s second law of motion it is possible to show that
obeys the following wave equation:
where
is the speed of the waves.

A snapshot in time of a string vibrating in the xy-plane. The wave shown here is described by the cosine function.
A general solution
to this equation is quite complicated, reflecting the fact that the string can be wiggling around in all sorts of ways, and that you need more information (initial conditions and boundary conditions) to find out exactly what kind of motion it is. But as an example, the function
describes a wave travelling in the positive
-direction with an angular frequency
, so as you would expect, it is a possible solution to the wave equation.
By analogy, there should be a wave equation governing the evolution of the mysterious “matter waves”, whatever they may be, over time. Its solution would be a wave function
(but resist thinking of it as describing an actual wave) which tells you all there is to know about your quantum system — for example a single particle moving around in a box — at any time
. It was the Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger who came up with this equation in 1926. For a single particle moving around in three dimensions the equation can be written as
Here
is the potential energy of the particle (a function of
,
,
and
),
is the mass of the particle and
is Planck’s constant. The solution to this equation is the wave function 
In some situations the potential energy does not depend on time
In this case we can often solve the problem by considering the simpler time-independent version of the Schrödinger equation for a function
depending only on space, i.e. 
where
is the total energy of the particle. The solution
to the full equation is then
These equations apply to one particle moving in three dimensions, but they have counterparts describing a system with any number of particles. And rather than formulating the wave function as a function of position and time, you can also formulate it as a function of momentum and time.
Enter uncertainty
We’ll see how to solve Schrödinger’s equation for a simple example in the second article, and also that its solution is indeed similar to the mathematical equation that describes a wave.
But what does this solution actually mean? It doesn’t give you a precise location for your particle at a given time
, so it doesn’t give you the trajectory of a particle over time. Rather it’s a function which, at a given time
gives you a value
for all possible locations
. What does this value mean? In 1926 the physicist Max Born came up with a probabilistic interpretation. He postulated that the square of the absolute value of the wave function,
gives you the probability density for finding the particle at position
at time
. In other words, the probability that the particle will be found in a region
at time
is given by the integral
![]()
(You can find out more about probability densities in any introduction to probability theory, for example here.)
This probabilistic picture links in with a rather shocking consequence of de Broglie’s formula for the wavelength and momentum of a particle, discovered by Werner Heisenbergin 1927. Heisenberg found that there is a fundamental limit to the precision to which you can measure the position and the momentum of a moving particle. The more precise you want to be about the one, the less you can say about the other. And this is not down to the quality of your measuring instrument, it is a fundamental uncertainty of nature. This result is now known as Heisenberg’s uncertainty principleand it’s one of the results that’s often quoted to illustrate the weirdness of quantum mechanics. It means that in quantum mechanics we simply cannot talk about the location or the trajectory of a particle.
“If we believe in this uncertainty picture, then we have to accept a probabilistic account [of what is happening] because we don’t have exact answers to questions like ’where is the electron at time
?’,” says Bouatta. In other words, all you can expect from the mathematical representation of a quantum state, from the wave function, is that it gives you a probability.
Whether or not the wave function has any physical interpretation was and still is a touchy question. “The question was, we have this wave function, but are we really thinking that there are waves propagating in space and time?” says Bouatta. “De Broglie, Schrödinger and Einstein were trying to provide a realistic account, that it’s like a light wave, for example, propagating in a vacuum. But [the physicists], Wolfgang Pauli, Werner Heisenberg and Niels Bohr were against this realistic picture. For them the wave function was only a tool for computing probabilities.” We’ll have a closer look at the interpretation of the wave function in the third article of this series.
Does it work?
Why should we believe this rather fantastical set-up? In this article we have presented Schrödinger’s equation as if it were plucked out of thin air, but where does it actually come from? How did Schrödinger derive it? The famous physicistRichard Feynmanconsidered this a futile question: “Where did we get that [equation] from? It’s not possible to derive it from anything you know. It came out of the mind of Schrödinger.”
Yet, the equation has held its own in every experiment so far. “It’s the most fundamental equation in quantum mechanics,” says Bouatta. “It’s the starting point for every quantum mechanical system we want to describe: electrons, protons, neutrons, whatever.” The equation’s earliest success, which was also one of Schrödinger’s motivations, was to describe a phenomenon that had helped to give birth to quantum mechanics in the first place: the discrete energy spectrum of the hydrogen atom. According to Ernest Rutherford’satomic model, the frequency of radiation emitted by atoms such as hydrogen should vary continuously. Experiments showed, however, that it doesn’t: the hydrogen atom only emits radiation at certain frequencies, there is a jump when the frequency changes. This discovery flew in the face of conventional wisdom, which endorsed a maxim set out by the 17th century philosopher and mathematician Gottfried Leibniz: “nature does not make jumps”.
In 1913 Niels Bohr came up with a new atomic model in which electrons are restricted to certain energy levels. Schrödinger applied his equation to the hydrogen atom and found that his solutions exactly reproduced the energy levels stipulated by Bohr. “This was an amazing result — and one of the first major achievement of Schrödinger’s equation.” says Bouatta.
With countless experimental successes under its belt, Schrödinger’s equation has become the established analogue of Newton’s second law of motion for quantum mechanics. Now let’s see Schrödinger’s equation in action, using the simple example of a particle moving around in a box. We will also explore another weird consequence of the equation called quantum tunneling.
Read the next article: Schrödinger’s equation — in action
But if you don’t feel like doing the maths you can skip straight to the third article which explores the interpretation of the wave function.
About this article
Nazim Bouatta is a Postdoctoral Fellow in Foundations of Physics at the University of Cambridge.
Marianne Freiberger is Editor of Plus. She interviewed Bouatta in Cambridge in May 2012. She would also like to thank Jeremy Butterfield, a philosopher of physics at the University of Cambridge, and Tony Short, a Royal Society Research Fellow in Foundations of Quantum Physics at the University of Cambridge, for their help in writing these articles.
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Marianne Freiberger (2012).![]()
Schrödinger’s equation — what is it?
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