Learn Quantum Mechanics with Haskell

Scott N. Walck
(Lebanon Valley College, Annville, Pennsylvania, USA)

To learn quantum mechanics, one must become adept in the use of various mathematical structures that make up the theory; one must also become familiar with some basic laboratory experiments that the theory is designed to explain. The laboratory ideas are naturally expressed in one language, and the theoretical ideas in another. We present a method for learning quantum mechanics that begins with a laboratory language for the description and simulation of simple but essential laboratory experiments, so that students can gain some intuition about the phenomena that a theory of quantum mechanics needs to explain. Then, in parallel with the introduction of the mathematical framework on which quantum mechanics is based, we introduce a calculational language for describing important mathematical objects and operations, allowing students to do calculations in quantum mechanics, including calculations that cannot be done by hand. Finally, we ask students to use the calculational language to implement a simplified version of the laboratory language, bringing together the theoretical and laboratory ideas.

In Johan Jeuring and Jay McCarthy: Proceedings of the 4th and 5th International Workshop on Trends in Functional Programming in Education (TFPIE 2015/6), Sophia-Antipolis, France and University of Maryland College Park, USA, 2nd June 2015 and 7th June 2016, Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 230, pp. 31–46.
Published: 26th November 2016.

ArXived at: https://dx.doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.230.3 bibtex PDF
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